Relative difficulty: Easy
Theme answers:
- ACCESS CODE (17A: *PIN, e.g.)
- ALLEY CAT (26A: *Stray feline)
- AMBULANCE CHASER (40A: *Overly eager personal injury lawyer, derisively)
- AL CAPONE (52A: *Gangster a.k.a. Scarface)
- ALARM CLOCK (66A: *Morning waker-upper)
- AREA CLOSED (10D: *Warning sign that might be seen on a chain-link fence)
- ALBUM COVER (30D: *Record art space)
Arthur Fleming Fazzin (May 1, 1924 – April 25, 1995) was an American actor and television host. He hosted the first version of the television game show Jeopardy!, which aired on NBC from 1964 until 1975 and again from 1978 to 1979. [...] After leaving the Navy, Fleming became an announcer at a radio station in Rocky Mount, North Carolina. Here, he changed his name to "Art Fleming". His radio career later took him to Akron, Ohio, and back home to New York. He was the first announcer to deliver the slogan "Winston tastes good, like a cigarette should" for Winston cigarettes. [...] Fleming also appeared in many television commercials, in addition to anchoring the eleven o’clock news on WNBC. He was first spotted by Merv Griffin on a commercial for Trans World Airlines. Griffin thought Fleming was "authoritative, yet warm and interesting", and Fleming was invited to audition to be the host of Griffin's new game show Jeopardy!. Fleming won the job, and hosted the show during its original run of March 30, 1964, to January 3, 1975, and again from October 2, 1978, to March 2, 1979. Rather than describe him as the "host" of the program, announcer Don Pardo introduced him by saying, "and here's the star of Jeopardy!, Art Fleming". Fleming would immediately return the favor and thank Pardo during his introduction. As "the world's greatest quiz show's" first host, Fleming earned two Emmy Award nominations. While he was host of Jeopardy!, Fleming never missed a taping. (wikipedia)
• • •
I have a little side-eye today for AXEMAN. It caught my attention because it looks like an "A.M." answer in a sea of "A.C." answers and I thought it was probably more elegant not to have any stray two-word phrases that started with "A." but whose second word did not start with "C." But then I thought, no, AXEMAN is probably one word, not two. Which is true. The problem is that AXEMAN isn't how you spell this "word" at all. It's AXMAN. Merriam-Webster dot com doesn't even list AXEMAN as a variant spelling. [actually, if you search "axeman" separately, it does say "variant spelling of AXMAN"—why isn't that variant listed in the AXMAN entry?]. The word is just AXMAN. Like "taxman," without the "t." There have only been six AXEMANs in all of NYTXW history, and today is the first time the clue has swung guitarward (in all other cases, the context is lumber). Eighteen years ago, there was an AXEMEN, plural, that had a guitar clue, but that's the last time anyone heard from that particular plural. What's weird to me is that for every iteration of this word (AXMAN/AXMEN, AXEMAN/AXEMEN) there has, to date, been one and only one guitar clue. All the other clues involve guys chopping trees. More oddly, given that AXMAN is the only correct spelling, and AXMAN is shorter (which means it should have more opportunities to appear in puzzles over time), is the fact that AXMAN does not appear that much more frequently. AXMAN beats AXEMAN by just 10 to 6. And AXMEN beats AXEMEN by 7 to 4. Which is to say that the NYTXW treats them as equally valid. But they aren't. The only good axman is an e-less axman. I'd rather see E-LESS in a puzzle than AXEMAN (that's not true, but it was fun to write).
As a Downs-only solve, this was astonishingly easy. The only slow-downs came, predictably, on the longer theme answers, particularly AREA CLOSED. I also hesitated at ALBUM cover, mainly because the clue seemed so inscrutable: 30D: *Record art space. I know all those words, but what they were doing in that order, my brain could not compute. It felt like three random words, or like a long lost collaboration between Yoko Ono and Sun Ra: RECORD / ART / SPACE (I'd listen to that album). "Record" has multiple meanings, obviously, and that was throwing me. But not for long. And every other clue I looked at, I got instantly, or nearly so. Maybe I hesitated for a few seconds (at MESA v. YUMA, for instance) (27D: Arizona city or Native American tribe), but a moment's hesitation was the closest I ever got to stuck.
If I'd been solving the regular way (i.e. using the Across clues), I think I might've been slower, if only because I wouldn't have known ART Fleming right off the bat. The name rings a bell, but he was Jeopardy! host way before my time. I was happy to learn about him, though, as I found his wikipedia bio most entertaining. It seems I have seen ART Fleming before but just didn't remember: "Fleming reprised his role as host of Jeopardy! in the 1982 movie Airplane II: The Sequel and in "Weird Al" Yankovic's music video "I Lost on Jeopardy". Fleming was also often called upon to host mock versions of Jeopardy! at trade shows and conventions." I like '80s ART Fleming. He'll do anything.
![]() |
| [from Airplane II: The Sequel] |
He'll also say anything. This bit is gold. Go off, ART!:
Fleming declined an offer to reprise his role as Jeopardy! host when Merv Griffin began developing a revival of the show in 1983. As a result, Alex Trebek (a personal friend of Fleming's) took the position instead and continued to host the program until his death in 2020. In interviews conducted in the early years of the Trebek version, he stated that he disliked the show's new direction and the various changes that the revival's producers had made. He disapproved of moving production from his native New York to Los Angeles, suggesting to a Sports Illustrated journalist in 1989 that filming in California made the show feel superficial and anti-intellectual:
— Franz Lidz, "What is Jeopardy!", Sports Illustrated (May 1, 1989) (wikipedia)
"And then you look at each other"!! LOL I don't even know what that means, but I love it. Laugh-out-loud-at-4-in-the-morning love it. I grew up in California and I couldn't be less offended. You tell 'em, ART. I miss this kind of harmless regional prejudice. I think I'll let ART have the last word today. "New Yorkers are alive, with-it." Amazing. See you next time.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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What Art said.
ReplyDeleteMy five favorite original clues from last week
ReplyDelete(in order of appearance):
1. Felt something on your head? (6)
2. Having a strong sense of direction? (5)
3. It's cool while it's hot (3)
4. Provided entrees (6)(5)
5. Handled press agents (5)
FEDORA
BOSSY
FAD
OPENED DOORS
IRONS
My five favorite encore clues from last week:
Delete[Mythical luster?] (5)
[Small dessert sandwiches] (5)
SATYR
OREOS
That reminds me of an unanswered question I had from last week … HANDLED PRESS is past tense — whereas IRONS is present tense. What did I miss?!
Delete@Anon, HANDLED is being used as an adjective. The PRESS has a handle.
DeleteIrons is a noun, the agent that is handled
DeleteNothing like an AC theme as we toddle into Fall/Winter
ReplyDeleteRex’s write-up was way more entertaining than the puzzle itself. I didn’t know ART Fleming, but he sounds great and I loved the quote about NY vs. Cali. The theme was so dull that I missed it completely and solved this as an easy Monday themeless.
ReplyDeleteTotally agree
DeleteCute I guess but as Rex mentioned - slightly reactionary in its form and function. The revealer works fine and I like the crossing themers but it is highly straightforward.
ReplyDeleteShe Was Born to be My Unicorn
Liked AXEMAN - would have been neat to cross that with AL CAPONE. CRANIUM, MAUVE and even Nancy DREW are fun. Would have been really hot if the ancillary A’s and C’s were eliminated from the grid.
Voyage Into the Golden Screen
Pleasant enough Monday morning solve.
Roll Away the Dew 10.09.76
Nice easy Monday. Didn't see the theme until I was done.
ReplyDeleteEstoy marcada como segura y sobreviví al ajuste del reloj.
ReplyDeleteYou're on fire this morning 🦖! I've met plenty of New Yorkers and "alive and with it" are not my first adjectives for them. "Self obsessed and kinda mean," maybe? And for Californians, maybe "lucky" would be my first thought.
My problem with AXEMEN is the correct phrase is GUITARIST, or if you want to be more precise, "guy who is perpetually searching Reverb to buy another guitar that comes with less mistakes," or even more precisely, "weird white guy you'd best not make eye contact with lest he think you're his friend and want to play a twenty minute set for you." (By the way, I'm one of those guys. Look away and keep walking.)
Our AMBULANCE CHASERS down here emphasize they're born and bred in New Mexico as if that's a good thing. In one commercial, they need to call a turquoise low-rider Uber to get to court.
I guess Cain and Abel prove that Eve was Adam's REMATE.
I finished listening to Nancy Drew #1 yesterday and apparently I have 174 left to go. Not to spoil it, but Nancy solves the mystery.
Love it when 🦖 makes the puzzle. I also love Diddly-SQUAT.
People: 12 {punch in the face Monday}
Places: 3
Products: 6
Partials: 4
Foreignisms: 2
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 27 of 78 (35%)
Funny Factor: 1 🤨
Uniclues:
1 Despite being a wildly famous movie star in a hugely successful film franchise, the big dino couldn't win the Arabs' admiration.
2 Feral frescoes.
3 Cause of a rude awakening in Pompeii.
4 Bit of a seafood dinner for God's #1 fan.
5 Robot takes up gymnastics.
6 What happened when you zipped up.
1 T-REX BORED IRAQ
2 ALLEY CAT ART (~)
3 LAVA ALARM CLOCK
4 ALLAH STAN CLAM (~)
5 SIRI LEAPS
6 LOCO AREA CLOSED (~)
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Smart alec comments. GODDAUGHTER AMMO.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I’m looking for that same guitar.
DeletePhooey on your comment about New Yorkers, many of whom are on this blog, of course.
DeleteHe’s just trying to see how many people read his comments!
DeleteGuess New Mexicans have a chip on their shoulder, huh?
DeleteAgree with Anonymous from 8:28
DeleteVarious Anonymous responses to Gary
DeleteHe’s riffing. Based on his comments, he is an equal opportunity insulter , including and especially himself.
He is very humorous about his new State and equally so about Colorado where he last lived
Gary
Great uniclues today!!
Gold—all of it
DeleteA+ write up. C- puzzle. Thank you Rex for using the English language to its full capacity.
ReplyDeleteVery easy, helped by picking up the theme early.
ReplyDelete10D reminds me of a sign seen on a trip to Panama that read "Area Closed: Sensitive Biological Area". Around here, such a sign would be routinely ignored and people would tromp through the area all the time. But there, people complied. It turned out that there was a pregnant fer-de-lance (highly venomous snake) in the area, and that was the 'sensitive biological' inhabitant. A very understated warning, I thought.
Another of my favorite signs was "No Camping: Septic Field". I think that sign would have been completely effective without the first two words.
My bike club regularly goes into an area that says to watch out for unexploded ordinance.
DeleteWow, where do you bike, burtonkd?
DeleteLaugh out loud funny :)
DeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteAs you may know, this ROO is a fan of a lot of Theme. And boy howdy, this one delivers! Seven Themers, plus a Revealer! Holy cow! And, three (3!) Themers cross each other, Twice! Impressive. And And, the fill is clean! I bow down to the constructors. Normally, this much Theme puts so much stress on the fill, you end up with gibberish. But ACME and Kevin pulled off a clean grid. Wow.
And made it Monday easy. I'm a STAN of this puz. 😁
Theme was neat. Never understand why Rex says why these answers? Any Theme is a why these? It's a Theme for a puz, that's all it's gotta be. It could be birds, dogs, elements, planets, various words for ASS, whatever. Could've been a PJS Theme. PRIVATEJET, PONDJUMPER, POPEJOHN, whatever. Still would've been fine. Just sayin'.
Anyway, cool puz, great fill, Themers abounding, and multiple ROOS. Not even upset there's no F's! And that's saying something.
Have a great Monday!
No F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
My mom actually was on Jeopardy! When ART Fleming was host. Won all her practice games, then tanked at the actual taping. She thought ART was a really nice man.
ReplyDeleteI would have loved this puzzle when I was a beginner. In fact, this puzzle could have run back when I was a beginner, it’s that stale. Are there any cultural/historical referents later than ART Fleming-era Jeopardy?
ReplyDeleteThanks, Rex, for reminding me of the great fun I had—no kidding—the time I lost on Jeopardy (Alex Trebek era, of course. I’m not *that* old!)
Well Andy, your words are begging for a search! Seriously though…I admire ANYONE who could put themself “out there” by being on Jeopardy. I would be the person who was in the red after Double Jeop and couldn’t do Final Jeop. Not to mention, I’d probably be holding back embarrassed tears.
DeleteArt Fleming gave the answers. Oh! But I couldn’t get the questions right-ight-ight.
ReplyDeleteMuch easier down only solve than most (for me) so I had a great time. I remember Art Fleming very well. Thanks, ACME!
ReplyDeleteWhen I saw ART Fleming was an answer, I knew there'd be lots of comments about this being a Boomers-only puzzle. Even Renee Fleming probably would have been more familiar to younger people. Or Ian Fleming. Anyway, the puzzle went very fast for me, whoosh whoosh, so it was a fine Monday.
ReplyDeleteThis one was so much on the easy side that I almost had an inadvertent downs only solve. I was just dropping them in without checking. I generally check a cross or two out of habit, so getting through an entire grid without glancing at an across clue would require reprogramming my brain, which would feel like work. Plus, I do remember watching ART Fleming host Jeopardy, along with Hollywood Squares hosted by Peter Marshall when they were both staples of daytime TV (I have a lot of trouble with PPP, so I cherish even the small victories).
ReplyDeleteAs a bonus, Rex’s dissertation on AXEMAN was as enjoyable as solving the puzzle itself. I wish I had that level of intellectual curiosity, lol. Contrast his diligence with my laziness and I’ll bet there is some correlation with the fact that Rex can remember items that haven’t appeared for years, while I can’t remember answers to some of the clues we had last week. Although, I will state for the record that I’m hoping for a WICCA trifecta sometime soon.
I had the same experience. I got to the end and realized I'd only looked at one or two of the across clues. And I think this was one of my fastest solve times ever.
DeleteVery easy. Solved downs only and the only answer that didn’t go in right away was AREA CLOSED. My fastest time by far since I started solving Mondays using downs only. Maybe my fastest time ever for any Monday.
ReplyDeleteWell, shucks, I liked this puzzle. Sure, the revealer’s minimalist, but that’s fine. Like @Roo, I was impressed by the density of themers and the way the two down ones each intersect two across ones – wow. I did notice the theme while solving but I don’t think knowing that the answer was going to be two words, the first starting with A and the second with C, helped the solve particularly – it was all pretty easy. I share @Rex’s doubts about AREA CLOSED as a recognizable, often-used phrase, but think the rest are solid.
ReplyDeleteLike HAIR DYE crossed with ROLLER. Reminds me of many tedious hours spent in hair salons in my younger life. Also enjoyed LEASH crossing ALLEY CAT. I’ve just started to notice on my street people who walk a large-ish grey and white CAT – yes, on a LEASH. Most often the CAT is accompanied by a serious, earnest-looking man, but sometimes by a woman. It’s slow going – I don’t think CATs can be persuaded to buy into the concept of heeling. So this particular feline halts, sniffs, lies down and tries to wander into people’s yards all the time. I once saw it do a CAT-wallow in a dusty, dried-up puddle. Its walkers must have large reserves of patience. I’d like to ask why they walk their CAT on a LEASH in the first place – next time I see the SMALL, slow-moving parade, I’ll pop out and pose the question.
My mother was once staying in a hotel with a florist shop and one day when she was buying flowers, an elegantly dressed woman came in with a CAT on a LEASH. They strolled around and the CAT nuzzled all the plants at floor-level. When my mother commented on how comfortable the CAT seemed on its LEASH, the woman said that she travels extensively, stays in hotels, normally brings the CAT, and lets it commune with plants and flowers whenever possible. Unusual lifestyle.
Robbie Robertson’s “AXMAN.”
@Barbara, once someone talked me into buying a leash for my cat. I put it on her, and for 10 excruciating minutes she tried desperately and violently to rip it off. Evidently you have to train them early!
DeleteVery easy, maybe the third or fourth time I’ve been able to finish entirely downs only. Really great write-up Rex!
ReplyDeleteGiving away my age range, but I loved Art Fleming, and thought Jeopardy during his era was far superior. Happy to see that Art did, too.
ReplyDeleteBasic trivia and common categories "Potpourri for fifty, Art", versus the cutesy-named categories and over-produced answers/clues that developed after he left. IMO.
And the by-play with Don Pardo seemed genuine and was also entertaining. About once a show, Art would follow up a correct guess with a comment tying it to something about Pardo. Loved it.
Always hoped to go on Jeopardy some day, alas. Many thanks for the insights from Rex.
I got the theme early on, and was hoping that the revealer would be more than just A/C. It wasn’t, and I had Rex’s same thought that with the exception of AMBULANCE CHASER at the top and AREA CLOSED at the bottom, most of the themers just sat there. But for a Monday puzzle with seven themers, it’s pretty impressively clean. Solid puzzle for beginners.
ReplyDeleteNice refreshing breeze for another warmish AZ morning where we still need AC later in the day. Should have guessed it was ACME before coming here. Easy, humorous, and low on crosswordese. Image of TREX as AMBULENCECHASER is right out of some silly B movie.
ReplyDeleteI didn't notice the constructors until someone above thanked ACME; I guess the theme idea originated with Andrea Carla. Very simple theme, but lots of answers, and lots of other good stuff.
ReplyDeleteOnly -- has anyone ever seen Lassie with a LEASH? Like a lot of rural dogs, I don't think she had one.
I don't have a picture, but I'm pretty sure my favorite riverside park, which is separated from the Neponset River by a chain-link fence, has signs on the fence reading "Area closed. Restoration Area" But maybe it's not literally the same -- I'll try to check later today.
I had the same thought: Lassie was so well trained that I don't think they ever put her on a leash!
DeleteI think y'all missed the eighth themer. Constructor Mitchell: Andrea Carla.
ReplyDeleteI grew up in a lumber and hippie town, Eugene Oregon (while watching a lot of Art Fleming on Jeopardy). The two high schools were creatively named North Eugene H.S. and South Eugene H.S. The South Eugene teams were the Axemen until 2018 when the name began to seem too exclusionary. Now they are called the Axe. I'm silently chuckling while imagining the marching band for the Axemen being a large group of guitar players.
I think I'll invent a drink called the AMBULANCE just so that I can ask my local barkeep for a Bud Light with an AMBULANCECHASER.
It's fun to see LEAH crossing YEAH. The EAH sound becomes so radically different by changing the opening letter.
Fun write up today. Thanks @Rex. Quick D.O. solve. Thanks, Kevin Christian and Andrea Carla Michaels.
I thought the same thing, that AC was sly self-reference. I wanted to get the M in there too, and wondered whether AXEMAN was a nod in that direction.
Delete@egs, Andrea Carla Michaels!
DeleteThanks @okanaganer, and sorry ACME. I guess I was thinking of fearless reporter Andrea Mitchell.
DeleteGreat post @egs.
DeleteI chuckled at the idea of Sophocles writing plays about too many grid theme answers. What's Greek for "No More Than Six", as a title warning against crossword hubris?
ReplyDeleteI knew Rex wouldn't find this theme all that amazing and it is pretty basic. But AMBULANCE CHASER, ALLEY CAT and ALBUM COVER are all nice. I'm afraid the clue for 10D had me thinking, "uh oh, radiation, let's get out of here" (AREA CLOSED!!!) Yikes.
When I'm not in a hurry, I like taking the LOCAL train, stopping at each stop instead of watching the non-stopped(?) station sign speed by so fast it's barely readable. My last trip to the ACPT, I was on the express train to Stamford, CT and there was a gentleman who only spoke French, and didn't know the train wouldn't be stopping at Rochelle. We zipped by and a passenger and conductor struggled to explain to him that he would have to get off and take a train back to his stop. I hope he made it with no further errors.
I see Rex had an axe to grind re: AXEMAN, which I only took note of because it gave rise to the thought, is there ever an axe-woman?
Kevin and Andrea, thanks for a breezy Monday puzzle.
Stan met Naomi in Natick.
ReplyDeleteThis is the 5th time Stan has been clued that way in the past 12 months.
DeleteDoesn’t get much simpler than this. The old starting letters thing. But that’s OK cuz it was over quick enough to give me a chance to catch up on my Jimmy Kimmel and Jon Stewart habit. Only thing that slowed my downs-only solve was 10D. Was it closed area or AREA CLOSED?
ReplyDeleteI miss ALBUM COVER art (30D) and liner notes. Streaming’s good cuz I can’t take my turntable in the truck with me but something has definitely been lost.
Hope Tuesday puts up more of a fight. It’s about 5 degrees Celsius out there - about 40 Fahrenheit by my reckoning, but @Okanagener will probably correct me - but at least it’s not expected to rain so I might get some work done in the morning. My dear wife has me building a 4 x 8 foot herb garden just off the back deck. Why now? I don’t know, but does anyone out there remember an old British TV show called Rumpole of the Bailey in which a constant refrain was “she who must be obeyed”?
Yes, 41 degrees F to be absolutely precise.
DeleteI've heard of Rumpole of the Bailey, but if I'm not mistaken, the phrase "she who must be obeyed" goes back even further to Rider Haggard's She (which I had begun reading but never finished -- I should go back).
@Les, here in Penticton we were forecast to get snow on Tuesday but I see they've changed it to "showers". But they are forecasting flurries next weekend!
DeleteAha! Just spent a few minutes on the Rumpole Wikipedia site and you are right. It's originally from Haggard.
DeleteRumple was a great show, loved Leo McKern as Rumpole. Rider Haggard's name rang a bell, after googling I was reminded he was the author of the Allan Quartermain novels. Read those many years ago, probably when Art was still doing Jeopardy, but I preferred the Doc Savage series.
DeleteI’m glad to see that someone else looks at a Monday puz and thinks…ok, I can get on with my day! Well. I’m sure many think that (like me), but you said the words.
Delete@Beezer. Just so you know, I'm not having too much luck getting on with my day. I'd rather be puzzling, actually. Seems that "she who must be obeyed" has changed the plan half way through the process and I may need to order in another truckload of gravel to accommodate her garden design and redesign my perimeter road while I'm at it. C'est la vie. I got a bit done. It didn't rain. But with this stupid time change, it's now 5 o'clock and it's dark. Aaargh! Any hope or a really productive day is dashed.
DeleteEasy. No WOEs and no erasures.
ReplyDeleteA simple theme nicely executed, liked it quite a bit more than @Rex did.
Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1058 was mostly a medium Croce for me with the exception of the SW which required a whole bunch of staring. Looking back over it I think some of the clueing was especially vague/misleading. I still don’t get 63d. Good luck!
Croce 1058 was in general hard, and finished with a one-square DNF at the cross of 5A and 6D. 63D is being used as a noun, as in clue word #1 is a 63D of clue word #3.
DeleteA bit of irony: ART Fleming said New Yorkers (of which he was one) are more intelligent, yet the writeup said he was the first announcer to say “Winston tastes good, like a cigarette should.” Back in the day, when these things actually seemed to matter, there was a lot of criticism of that line being grammatically incorrect: “like” should have been “as,” as the good nuns taught us (and were they ever sticklers for grammar. Thank you, Sisters!). Like is followed by a noun or pronoun, while as is followed by a clause.
ReplyDeleteIt's possible the cigarette line was written for Art. Not sure whether this clarifies as irony, either.
DeleteIt's also possible that the ad copy writers chose "like" because it sounds folksier. After all, they were trying to sell cigarettes, not uphold standards of grammatical correctness.
DeleteGot through this one so quickly I barely noticed there was a theme until the end. Lovely easy Monday.
ReplyDeleteSolved in 8 minutes with no typos.
ReplyDeleteToo young for Art Fleming (thank God for SOMETHING).
That's all I have to say except thank you for an extremely easy Monday. Now I have no excuse not to do chores :(
Where was this puzzle 20 years ago when I was struggling to finish my first xword? Anyhoo, I feel like I got a taste of what Rex feels like everyday.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed it. I needed some crosses to complete it. Good variety of entries, no junk, only eleven threes.
ReplyDeleteA bit unfair, but...ACME has spoiled me with the wit and sense of fun in her previous puzzles, so for me this one fell more into the "serviceable Monday" category. But AMBULANCE CHASER was definitely a bright spot. As was @Rex's write-up!
ReplyDeleteyour link to the replacements was fun to see just as i was disagreeing about your axman v. axeman discussion as Todd the Axeman is a great beer from minn. all good things minnesotan !
ReplyDeletealas, upon research, they do seperate Axe and Man on the beer can.
Minnesota also has a chain of stores called Ax-Man Surplus (and styled with the hyphen): https://www.ax-man.com/
DeleteSenior year of high school went home for lunch and watched Jeopardy with Art Fleming. Fan ever since. Class of 1966.
ReplyDeleteAn initial offering -- wonder why they decided to go with A-C-ers? [Probably not so they could triumphantly sport AREACLOSED, I'd predict. har]
ReplyDelete7 puzthemers in a 78-worder puzgrid. Don't leave lotsa room for extra longball answers larger than 6. They did squeeze two 7-long entries, tho.
There's a Q in the puzgrid. Pangrammer? Nope. No Z. Also, unusually, no F or G [Them A's & C's just ate up too much free space.]
staff weeject pick: ACS. A weeject puz-revealer moment.
fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Eve's mate} = ADAM.
some fave stuff included: CRANIUM. SQUAT. JAWS clue.
Thanx for gangin up on us, Mr. Christian dude & Ms. ACME darlin. M&A notes that ACME does suspiciously start with A-C.
Masked & Anonymo5Us
... and now, somethin designed to put y'all to sleep ...
"Bedtime Story" - 7x7 12 min. themed runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
M & A
DeleteToday was a day where the “ moo cow easy “ answer you would pick was a no brainer.
An ORCA is not a whale. It’s a dolphin.
ReplyDeleteOriginally called “whale killer” which morphed into “killer whale”
Wow, good catch. If only the editor had caught it!
DeleteAnonymous 11:46 AN
DeleteYou are correct that orcas are (the largest member) of the dolphin family. But all dolphins are part of the whale sub order Cetacea. Online sites refer to orcas as whales. Clearly close enough for crosswords. The clue answer is not wrong.
Hard for me because my ability to read fine print is failing. But yeah, fairly easy as Mondays usually are. What I don’t get is OFL’s problem with AXEMAN. Electric guitarists play an AXE. It would never occur to me to leave out the E.
ReplyDeleteAn ORCA IS NOT A WHALE!
ReplyDelete@Danger Man. It's bit muddy. I'm assuming you are going to tell me, hopefully not in ALL CAPS, that orcas are dolphins, which seems to be correct but I found this from the good folks at SeaWorld:
Delete"all dolphins are whales, but not all whales are dolphins. That's because the Cetacean order of sea animals encompasses dolphins, porpoises and what we think of as whales". Other definitions weren't this clearly stated but pointed to this one. Maybe close enough for crosswords.
You’re mistaken, and there is no reason to shout at us. The dolphin family that ORCA is a member of is a subset of the toothed whales (odontocetes), which also includes porpoises and sperm whales.
DeleteLoved Jeopardy with Art and Don !!
ReplyDeleteNice writeup Rex! I had the same experience solving down clues only; like @Gar 8:39 am probably my fastest ever at under 7 minutes. After my first pass through, I had only a few blanks, like 10 down where all I could think of was something like HIGH VOLTAGE which didn't fit.
ReplyDeleteLots of names, but the only Unknown was LEAH Remini.
Okanaganer
DeleteNothing to do with the puzzle but at the end of his HBO show shown last night John Oliver went on a riff about John Oliver label wines which come from the Okanagan Valley and named after a BC famous premier ( or is it pm?) from the early 20th.Century Of course Americans know nothing about him. Sounds like an interesting man. John Oliver gave a short very complementary bio of him.humorously contrasting himself as being the opposite BTW he said he liked the wine though it is very difficult to obtain in the. US.
@dgd... I am not a wine connoisseur, and had not heard of John Oliver wines. I have heard of Road 13 Winery which makes them, though. Too pricey for me!
DeleteLooking him up, John Oliver was a BC Premier about 125 years ago. he promoted the Okanagan as an agricultural area, and has the town of Oliver (where Road 13 is) named after him. Nice to know... thanks for bringing this up!
My first Downs-Only. Apparently, according to the comments of others, if there was ever a day to start doing DO, then today was that day -- I've seen the memo about how easy the DOing was. It was an interesting experience.
ReplyDeleteAnd now that I've combed through the Across cluing, it's confirmed that this puzzle would be a good entree for noobs to the NYTXW. (For those of you who recently insisted that "entree" can only be a course in a meal and that the NYTXW was wrong in its cluing, that sentence was for you. Some people are breathtaking in their self-assurance!) Anyway, it was indeed very easy, is what I'm saying, because of how it was clued. The grid was nice enough. Nothing really objectionable in it, not even AREA CLOSED, nor AXEMAN.
REX's write-up was enjoyable -- it usually is, you know -- although I do not understand the insistence that AXEMAN is wrong and "the only correct spelling is AXMAN". (There was more than a little side-eye, RP.) Spelling is a notoriously thorny issue just generally, and warrants at least a bit of circumspection before getting all dogmatic, methinks. Rex writes "Merriam-Webster dot com doesn't even list AXEMAN as a variant spelling", which literally speaking is not true, because it is belied by the very next parenthentical remark: "actually, if you search "axeman" separately, it does say "variant spelling of AXMAN"—why isn't that variant listed in the AXMAN entry?" So they do list it as a variant spelling, just not under the entry for Axman. May I gently suggest that this may have been a simple oversight at m-w.com? Then comes the stat, "AXMAN beats AXEMAN by just 10 to 6", which to me further undermines the insistence that there can only be one right spelling. In the face of all this, my natural inclination would be that either is acceptable and certainly both are reasonably well attested, even if one is slightly more frequently observed. Perhaps more research is needed. Or the authoritative weight of a professional lexicographer.
(Or perhaps Rex has his tongue in his cheek somewhere, along the lines of "that's my story and I'm sticking to it".)
@tht. Glad you enjoyed your first downs-only solve. The thing is, if you only have 10 or 15 minutes to spend on a Monday or Tuesday, do it the normal way and get off to work. If, like me, you can schedule your own hours, D-O allows you to linger over that morning coffee, or nightcap if you solve after dark.
DeleteBy the way, I had no problem with AXEMAN.
I enjoyed this breezy Monday - thank you. Clues were good for people new to crosswords. Weird Al fun!
ReplyDeleteThe AREA CLOSED reminded me of the less well known verse from "This Land is Your Land": "There was a big high wall there that tried to stop me
ReplyDeleteSign was painted, said, "Private Property" But on the back side, it didn't say nothing. This land was made for you and me"
Re: AMBULANCE CHASER
ReplyDeleteSatan appears before a lawyer and says: My offer to you is wealth beyond your wildest dreams and fame as the greatest lawyer in the land. What I ask in return are the souls for all eternity of your wife and your children.
The lawyer replies: What's the catch?
Would love to see LEO clued one day as "Jerry is his nephew."
ReplyDeleteUncle Leo! Where’s your wallet?
DeleteHis pride and joy Jeffrey does important work at the Parks Department.
DeleteA guitar is an AX. No "E". There is a 60-year-old guitar shop in our town called "Ax In Hand." But no one has called a[n electric] guitar an AX unironically in a long time.
ReplyDeleteLate to the party because I turned in my post-retirement laptop today and now I am fully retired! Not much to say except I thought it was GREAT puzzle for people who are just starting the daily NYT xword experience. I still resist the downs-only solve because I don’t think I can avert my eyes from the across clue when on my iPad. (My phone doesn’t show both but it’s an iPhone mini and I only solve on it in emergencies!).
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on the retirement! May your retirement years be mentally stimulating ones!
Deletehttps://youtu.be/TCqnjBf6O3k
ReplyDeleteanother excellent AC musician? (thanks for the videos, rex!)
Had no issue with axeman - the guitar is much more commonly called an axe than it is an ax.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed this one - yes, a bit basic and straightforward and I didn't even notice the revealer as it was just filled in with the crosses, but there were some lovely long answers for a Monday and as @Rex said - it was chock full of themers - SEVEN, wow! So my solving experience was exactly the same as @Rex's, I guess I just had a bit more fun.
ReplyDeleteThanks @Rex for the great Art Fleming trivia! As a native New Yorker (thought reluctantly out of state for the past 25 years) I APPRECIATE!!
My mom was a jeopardy addict and I do have very vague memories watching Fleming on our black and white TV as (what was probably) a toddler. She actually tried out for the show - she knew everything but couldn't get the hang of the darn buzzers. Apparently, if you buzz in too early, the buzzer is rendered useless, if you buzz in too late... well you're too late... that was the story she told, anyway...
This puzzle made me feel "very alive and with it", thank you Kevin and Andrea!
AXEMAN, aside from all that R.P. said, is so cringe-ily sexist. Icky and dated.
ReplyDeleteI went through the puzzle fast for me I never do one direction only , but I do across first then downs, a 50 year habit. I happened to fill in the revealer from the crosses and never looked at the clue. I forgot about the theme so was reminded by Rex. I liked the theme after the fact but wish I went to look for the revealer.
ReplyDeleteThought Rex was overly critical.
its a nice puzzle cmon its Monday not Friday Saturday folks of different levels are trying to learn to play words mean so many things to people personally this is a sweet Monday puzzle new players would be put off by being told its not a good puzzle crosswords are how we communicate without meeting each other after all
ReplyDelete