Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging (for a Monday, solved Downs-only)
Theme answers:
- JAZZ QUARTET (17A: Saxophone, trumpet, piano and bass, perhaps)
- JEDI MASTERS (25A: Yoda and Obi-Wan Kenobi, for two)
- OPEN NOTES (35A: Some exams allow them)
- PERSNICKETY (52A: Overly fussy)
Mozilla is a free software community founded in 1998 by members of Netscape. The Mozilla community uses, develops, publishes, and supports Mozilla products, thereby promoting free software and open standards. The community is supported institutionally by the non-profit Mozilla Foundation and its tax-paying subsidiary, the Mozilla Corporation.
Mozilla's current products include the Firefox web browser, Thunderbird e-mail client (now through a subsidiary), the Bugzilla bug tracking system, and the Gecko layout engine. (wikipedia)
• • •
I don't love the idea of circled squares that contain, essentially, gibberish, but it's a meaningful gibberish, in the end. Non-gibberish cut short. So it's not so irksome. And it really helped me today. That is, knowing the theme did. I know I botched the GENTLY, but I wouldn't have been able to make anything out of it if I hadn't realized that those circled squares had to spell out "NICKE(L)." That realization got me to change CARAT to KARAT (which I always confuse) (53D: Gold standard) and got me that "E" in what turned out to be GENTLY. It also got me PERSNICKETY, which really opened up the SW. I found the crosses of PERSNICKETY the hardest of the themer crosses. We've covered GENTLY. There was also ENDS AT, which was tough for me to parse given the phrasing of the clue (48D: Is over by). I thought [Is over by] meant "is situated near." "Where's my scarf?" "It's over by the door." Sigh. Further, TOOTSY ... yeesh, that feels like a variant. I had it in place based on the first two letters, but I never trusted it until all the crosses ended up checking out. I thought the spelling was TOOTSIE, but it's possible I'm overly influenced by the ending of BOOTIE (which goes on a baby's foot). Or by "Tootsie Rolls." Or possibly the movie TOOTSIE.
I think the theme is cute and I actually used the theme to help me with my solve, which doesn't often happen with early puzzles ... unless you solve Downs-only, since you frequently need all the help you can get. I liked that the theme answers themselves were strong today. Not just appropriate for the theme, but solid, hearty answers in their own right (I know, I'm sick of all the Star Wars stuff too, but "DIM" breaks perfectly across JEDI and MASTERS and I'm more forgiving of Star Wars-ness when it's a result of theme constraint). Not often you get an answer as smooth and Scrabbly as JAZZ QUARTET on a Monday, or any day. Smooth jazz! Since I didn't know the theme up front, I actually didn't know if it was going to be a QUARTET or a QUINTET until I got the crosses, one of which, CIRRI (7D: Wispy clouds), did not come to me immediately. AWARDS was somewhat easier (6D: Oscars and Grammys, e.g.), and that forced "quart" over "quint." Not knowing the theme early meant that I had no idea what those circled squares were up to. QUARTE is nonsense, but DIM isn't, and neither is PENN ... which made me think maybe QUARTE was wrong, somehow. The revealer would eventually make sense of it all. Overall, the theme is decent, the theme answers are strong regardless of thematic content, and the open corners give the grid more sizzle than most early-week puzzles tend to have. MOZILLA is blah (to me—proper nouns from tech and other corporations are always gonna be blah to me), but the rest of those 7-letter Downs really hold up.
[JAZZ QUINTETs are real!]
- 39A: Cops, slangily (POPO) — I like slang, but somehow I'm embarrassed for the puzzle every time it uses this term. I don't like any slang that makes grown-ass adults sound like babies.
- 66A: Kind of lamp that's energy efficient ( L.E.D.) — I will never, ever understand opting for an abbr. clue like this when the answer is actually a perfectly good, real, unabbreviated word. Light-emitting diode. That's what L.E.D. stands for. I had to look it up. It's not that I hadn't heard of L.E.D. lights before. It's just zzzzzzzzz from a cluing standpoint.
- 11D: Don't blow it! (BIG LEAD) — I don't know what they call these "it" + exclamation point clues, where "it"-containing phrases are asking you to come up with a specific "it" as the answer. You know, [Step on it!] for STAIR, say, or [Hit it!] for GONG or [Dig it!] for ORE or whatever. Seven letters is kind of long as an answer for one of these clues. These types of clues are funnier when the answer takes you someplace that has nothing to do with the clue phrase—[Cut it out!] for COUPON, for example. Today's answer doesn't really take you anywhere surprising (i.e. the answer doesn't alter the meaning of "blow" as it appears in the clue), but I still liked the idea. I was pretty proud when I got this off of just the "E" and "D." In cryptic crosswords, clues ending in "!" are called "and lit" (stylized "&lit.") clues:
What, then, is this mythical beast? “&lit.” is short for “and literally.” What that means in the context of cryptics is that unlike all other clues, which can be broken into a straight definition portion and a wordplay portion, &lit. clues can be read in their entirety as both at the same time. Often, but not always, an exclamation point at the end of the clue is placed to indicate its &lit.-ness. (Stella Zawistowski, "Decrypting the Cryptic")
That's enough puzzle for today. Let's move on now to π²πHoliday Pet Picsππ²!
Here's Foxglove the cat, looking at new family member Willow the dog like, "hmm, yes, adorable, I'm sure, just make sure she doesn't come anywhere near my Christmas tree spot."
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| [Look at this good dog! She means well, Foxglove!] [Thanks, Anthony] |
Henry and Lily return to the blog for maybe the third time. They do not miss a chance to participate in Christmas fun. They got outfits and everything. "Where do you want us?" They offered several poses. Eventually, Carol had to say "We're good, guys, I think we got enough options. Shoot's over. No, I'm not getting you an Instagram account. We talked about screen time, remember?" "But we could be Dogfluencers! Christmas dogfluencers! Come on!"
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| [Thanks, Carol!] |
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| [Thanks, Liam] |
I laughed out loud at this next one. Salix looks not so much like she is hiding as she looks like she's lost. Or stuck. We'll get you out, Salix, don't worry!
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| [Thanks, Anne!] |
Barrel will allow you to place exactly one more plush toy around him before things get violent. One. Just one.
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| [Thanks, Janet!] |
Lastly, Mac, who decorated the tree all by himself this year. Look how proud he is!
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| [Thanks, Chip!] |
That's it. See you next time.
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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Let’s place a set of arbitrary circles in the grid to back into a theme and call it a day. Lazy and boring.
ReplyDeleteOld 97’s
“Lazy” is an ignorant comment. If you hate the theme, great, but the circles are purposeful and precisely the opposite of “arbitrary.”
DeleteRex is right: those long downs, especially in the corners, made this one a trickier-than-usual Monday downs-mostly solve. My hangup was POPFOUL, a WoE for the sportball nonfan.
ReplyDeleteWas kinda hoping [Don’t blow it!] would be BASS TUBA, but it didn’t fit.
As a baseball fan, gotta quibble with POPFOUL. No one says this. It is comprehensible, but not really a thing. Pop fly? yes Fly out? yes Pop up? yes Pop Foul? not really
ReplyDeleteI’m a baseball fan too and it sounds very in-the-language to me π€·π»
DeleteHey Rick, I agree with @6:30 am on this one. My pet peeve is when knowledgeable baseball people butcher “foul tip”, which is different from a POP FOUL. See Rule 2.00 (Definition of Terms) in the MLB official rule book. A foul tip is caught by the catcher and is always considered a strike, thus it is not synonymous with “foul ball”.
Delete"Pop foul" is very familiar to baseball fans and ex-players (like yours truly). I hit a few.
DeleteA pop-up that is caught in foul territory is a POPFOUL. Hear the term used all the time during broadcasts.
Delete@Southside…wow. You have the official MLB rule book. (I’m not being flip). Haha! When it comes to baseball, I only know enough to be dangerous, PLUS they ALL sound “in the language” to me, so sometimes ignorance is…blissful ignorance.
DeleteShort entry but it's in the Dickson Baseball Dictionary:
Deletepop foul A pop fly batted into foul territory.
I also had DEFTLY instead of GENTLY in my down-only solve and I wouldn’t call it a dumb error! DAS and AFI are perfectly fine Monday answers. (Am I feeling sensitive that it took me 25 minutes and I had to consult the crosses? Yes.)
ReplyDeleteMe too. And I had to read all the across clues to find the error.
DeleteThis looked like it would have been hard Downs-Only. It took me longer than usual doing it the usual way, and some of those words look a step beyond Monday-level: CIRRI, ASANA, MOZILLA, POP FOUL, ESAI (I first put in Erin, perhaps subconsciously thinking of Erin Moran).
ReplyDeleteI really FOULed myself up at the very beginning with DIETing instead of ON A DIET -- I blame the -ing in the clue.
I was not really clear on the distinction between KARAT and cARAT until today.
That'll be it for now -- have a good day!
I always have to remind myself that gold rings will be stamped inside, ie 14K or 18K. It is strange that a gold ring with a precious gem will have both KARAT and carat designations.
DeleteI thought Rex might push back a bit on “deep sleeps” for COMAS. It’s certainly a correct clue/answer combo. To me, deep sleep tends to indicate a positive thing, while COMAS not so much (unless you are on the couch after Thanksgiving dinner I suppose, so perhaps my own personal bias is showing through there).
ReplyDeleteI feel bad for Pink FLOYD. Genesis and Yes got “genres” while PF only got a “rock band”. I wonder if they are feeling SHORT CHANGED? Note - I am DEFINITELY not campaigning for more “genre” clues, and I do not want to be the one who leads us down a progressive vs psychedelic vs art rabbit hole. I merely noticed it and wanted to mention it in passing. My vote would be to let sleeping genres lie (or should that be lay?).
I also noticed that even on a Monday we can’t escape the Star Wars trivia. Rex makes a good point that it gets a bit of a pass today due to the theme constraint (unlike the previous 1200 appearances). Still, it is appropriate that it is placed right above OUTRAGE, which I wish there were more of when we are confronted with a franchise that wore out its welcome a long time ago.
A couple of coincidences I found interesting today. One row consists of “ON A TEAR GAS LOW” which actually could be a thing, and I also wonder if some disreputable service stations might try to get away with an OIL SHORT CHANGE if an unsuspecting solver stopped by and were too engrossed in their Crossword Puzzle.
I definitely found it harder than usual. While it's probably asking too much, I would love to have seen the coins in order--I'm surprised @Rex didn't mention that the order should have been QUARTEr, DIMe, NICKEl, and then PENNy. I expect the construction didn't allow it, and from that reaction it's clear I've been reading this blog for far too long. :)
ReplyDeleteDefinitely a harder-than-usual Monday, even solving in the normal way (not downs-only.) I didn’t get the theme till the very end and then a little light went on, which was nice.
ReplyDeletegot POPFOUL and this led me to PIGS for 39A… nice while it lasted…
ReplyDeleteGood Monday puzzle. Didn't know Mozilla, but the crosses were enough. Theme was easy, but worked.
ReplyDeleteOnly slightly persnickety.
ReplyDeleteI will admit to having no clue what the theme was until post-solve. Of course, I had JEDI knightS for a while, so was trying to find something in common between DIK and PENN.
ReplyDeleteSame here with the knights. I always tend to forget the MASTER biz, but it always seemed like the “council” were knights emeritus that were too old to go out and fight.
DeleteA brief history of SHORTCHANGE as a Crosslandia revealer.
ReplyDeleteIt’s been used twice before, but never as in today’s puzzle, and never in the Times. In one puzzle, the last words of theme phrases were anagrams of synonyms for “short”, such as EXTRA MALLS.
In the other, anagrams of “short” were circled and embedded in theme phrases, such as GIF(T)(H)(O)(R)(S)E.
The end.
I liked today’s version best of the three. I reacted to those above with an, “Oh, I see”. Whereas today’s gave me a fist-pump “Hah!”.
I also liked:
• LOW in today’s grid echoing “short”.
• Semordnilaps LEE and EEL cohabitating the box.
• How PERSNIKETY and CAJOLES, beautified the grid as the Scrabbly JAZZ QUARTET sparked it up.
• And, on a ONA note, ON A DIET, ON A TEAR, and nONAgon.
I love how your mind saw “shortchange”, Suzanne, and morphed it into this theme. That whets my appetite for more from you – and may there be! Congratulations on your debut, and thank you for a splendid outing.
PERSNICKETY in my Monday Xword? It's more likely than you think!
ReplyDeleteBeing PERSNICKETY. 49A should be: "What ALL-electric cars don't use". Hybrid and plug-in hybrid cars have electric motors but still use gas.
ReplyDeletei would put this one in the easy category. not a personal best but a minute off average. good for a monday, and accessible to those new at crosswords!
ReplyDeleteFirst we lose the mighty PENN
ReplyDeleteA coin once stubborn as a JENN
Next to go will be the NICKE
Which has slowed down to a TRICKE
Followed by the mighty DIM
Certainly, it’s past its PRIM
Sadly, next will be the QUARTE
I’ll drown my sorrows in a PORTE
I guess I find it very STRANG
To have to say goodbye to CHANG
Impressive!!!
DeleteNice, @Lewis!
DeleteI'll give you a holle, if you give me a dolla
DeleteHa, very nice, Lewis!
DeleteI am quite sure that IRL I wouldn't recognize Esai Morales if I fell over him, but I never fail to recognize him instantly in crosswords - like an old, but never long-lost, friend.
ReplyDeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteNeat puz. Missing V and X for the Pangram. Most of the unusual letters are in the Themers.
Liked it, simple Theme, apt Revealer. As Rex said, nice open corners, which is a rarity for a MonPuz.
Waiting for the "I've never heard of police as POPO" postings, as seems to happen every time this answer comes up.
In case ya missed it, Yesterday was the First Day of Winter, the shortest sun-shining day of the year. Days get progressively longer from here. Something to look forward to.
CIRRI, har, know from SB. The triplets I check for whenever the letters look correct, CIRRI, CROCI, COCCI. Put those in your memory bank.
Have a great Monday!
One F
RooMonster
DarrinV
I really enjoyed this puzzle, easy and clever. Loved the short change concept. Had to change audio to aural which actually was far more correct. Persnickety was my favorite word. First thought was open book rather than open notes.
ReplyDeleteI actually had PENN filled in first, which made me think the theme was going to be Ivy League schools.
ReplyDeleteSolving downs only, hesitating at BIG L-AD, thinking, “they wouldn’t, would they?”
ReplyDeleteThou canst power huge beasts,
ReplyDeleteThat are but slumberers
Until your magic spark is unleashed by men with keys.
Forces tied to the ground insist and insist
That you have no power
But that which drains your very being.
Yet when red is called for, paired with black,
Then you, source of the bestial energy,
So gladly spur my charge toward bliss.
ANODE to an ANODE
Speaking of which, has anybody heard that Raggedy ANN owed an ANODE to Andy?
If you're trying to avoid Lyme Disease, is ATIC problemATIC?
Is BIGLEAD the past tense of bigly?
I think it must have been Chekhov who wrote the little-known drama, ANTON a Hot Tin Roof.
We'll definitely be short of PENNies soon. Now I'm off to a performance of the Almost a Nickel Opera. Nice puzzle. Thanks, and congrats, Suzanne Oliver.
My five favorite original clues from last week
ReplyDelete(in order of appearance):
1. Just about anything on a string (3)(3)
2. Bills first introduced in 1861 (5)
3. Generate clippings, say (3)
4. Extremely rare, facetiously (5)(6)
5. Timer setting (4)
CAT TOY
FIVES
MOW
STILL MOOING
OVEN
My favorite encore clues from last week:
Delete[Person in hot pants?] (4)
[Appropriate inappropriately] (5)
LIAR
USURP
Found a bit tougher than the usual Monday but liked it. For some reason had a had time seeing TOOTSY and kept trying to enter TOe-something. This despite the fact that I grew up with phrases like “keep your TOOTSies warm”. Other hangup was misreading Breyers as Bayers—try finding a four-letter aspirin!
ReplyDeleteEnjoyable crunchy Monday! Unlike @Rex I looked at 1a and thought, hmmm…COMAS? But, LIKE Rex I quickly looked at 1D and thought…wouldn’t it be cool if it was CAJOLES? Like everyone else…I really liked PERSNICKETY. I also kind of like MOZILLA too since it is/or was open source tech driven.
ReplyDeleteI had FOULPOP and FUZZ which made the SW slow. Never heard of POPO or CIRRI either. Otherwise enjoyable, a tad over my average time.
ReplyDeleteHere I am in Englewood FL, on a 10-day visit, and I forgot to pack my computer’s mouse. I long ago disabled the touchpad. So I solved on my phone, which was a crossed-only, but check the downs if you get stuck. As a result I never noticed that OPEN bOokS was wrong, and had to make a long hunt to change kASY to EASY and ANb to ANT. Ah well.
ReplyDeleteOur daughter turns out to have a number of mice on hand, so I’ll try the computer again!
Thank you, @Lewis and @egs, for your poetic offerings! And thank you, @Rex, for creating the space for them to follow their muses. And thanks to Suzanne Oliver for the puzzle that served as inspiration. My day is brightened and enriched by you all.
ReplyDeleteIn an attempt to repay you I'll pass forward something that enriched my day yesterday. I was at a performance but not playing on a particular selection. I’d heard the piece many times before (as I’m sure some of you have), but this time, sitting with my horn in my lap and my eyes closed, I was completely transported to a place of bliss. For that moment, all worries were gently but completely banished by the power of the music. If anyone needs a moment like that, here is the music: Lauridsen; O magnum mysterium.
Yep, tough for a Monday, especially if you solve downs-only, which I don't, so I tend to skim OFL's Monday analysis. Today's embarrassment was looking at all those circled letters, which were correct, and having no idea what they had in common. One of those "Connections" themes with a revealer of "coins missing a letter" that I sometimes miss too. Oh well.
ReplyDeleteToday's WOE is MOZILLA and today's why can't I remember that? is ESAI. Otherwise no problems. Hand up for having no issue with POPFOUL and liking PERSNICKETY.
Certainly an above-average Monday, SO. The only thing that Stood Out for me was the slight ONADIET/ONATEAR dupe, but no big deal.. Thanks for all the fun.
OPENNOTES made me hesitate, but not for long, because the crosses were clear. I liked the theme and the extra crunch on a Monday.
ReplyDeleteRex, I am loving the pet pics! Haven't seen too many comments about them lately, but I think they're a treat, and I look forward to seeing them.
Having never heard anyone say POPO or TOOTSY in real life, I struggled to make something plausible in that cross. It eventually worked out, and I feel zero shame in admitting my ignorance.
ReplyDelete