Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging (***solved Downs-only***)
THEME: Four kinds of ID — the letters "ID" appear in four different theme answers, with a different meaning each time:
Theme answers:
- THE WIZARD OF ID (19A: Longtime comic strip set in a medieval kingdom)
- BOISE, ID (36A: Capital of the Gem State, in a mailing address)
- I.D. THEFT (38A: Possible cybercrime, informally)
- "I'D GO EITHER WAY" (54A: "Makes no difference to me")
Antigua is an island in the Lesser Antilles. It is one of the Leeward Islands in the Caribbean region and the most populous island of the country of Antigua and Barbuda. Antigua and Barbuda became an independent state within the Commonwealth of Nations on 1 November 1981.
The island's perimeter is roughly 87 km (54 mi) and its area 281 km2 (108 sq mi). Its population was 83,191 (at the 2011 Census). The economy is mainly reliant on tourism, with the agricultural sector serving the domestic market.
More than 22,000 people live in the main city, St. John's. The city is situated in the north-west and has a deep harbour which is able to accommodate large cruise ships. Most of the population lives in the island's Central Plain. Other leading population settlements are All Saints (3,412) and Liberta (2,239), according to the 2001 census. (wikipedia)
• • •
The Downs-only solve was pretty brutal. I had mistake after mistake, and then got to the end and stared down two longer Downs that I couldn't get at all. Started out with WHIPS instead of CLOTS (1D: Thickens, as cream) and then tried both ALOT and ATON before I ever got near SLEW (4D: Whole bunch). No one has called another person a DODO BIRD since god knows when. Feels like something children used to say, in times of yore (i.e. my childhood). That answer required many crosses. I thought I had inferred the first themer, but (not knowing what the theme was), I wrote in THE WIZARD OF OZ. That made AVOID and especially MAD DASHES hard to see for a bit. If you ABHOR something, you might give it 0 stars, but the act of giving 0 stars is not itself abhorring (31D: Give 0 stars in a review, say). First you ABHOR, and *then* you give the bad rating, as a result of that abhorrence. Did not love the cluing there. The rest of the puzzle was pretty doable, until the end, when first IN-CROWDS (a very odd plural) (37D: Glitterati) and finally ANTIGUA left me almost completely stumped. I kept singing the Beach Boys' "Kokomo" in my head, hoping I'd alight on the correct island, but only got as far as Key Largo and Montego—no ANTIGUA to be found. There are a lot of Leeward Islands; I certainly couldn't remember them all. I was really relying on inferred crosses to help me out, but they were in short supply. The only letter I had for certain was the "I"! NEAR could've been NE'ER, SCAN could've been SCAB, SCAM, SCAR, and on and on—all the missing letters had multiple possibilities. My main problem was only thinking of SPY and SPF for SP-. When I finally ran the alphabet, I (immediately) hit SPA, and that terminal "A" was the thing that finally got me going toward ANTIGUA. Spent as much time trying to put that one together as I did on most of the rest of the puzzle.
Bullets:
- 13A: Textile city NNE of Paris (LILLE) — seems kind of tough for a Monday. I know it well, and know its association with textiles, but had to read Alain de LILLE in grad school, so I have an advantage there.
![]() |
| [this is at least the second time I've featured this exact image on the blog when LILLE has been in the puzzle, so specific is my association of that place name with this exact book, a sodomy-obsessed 12th-century treatise on human sexual behavior that must've sat on my bookshelf for years and years in the '90s] |
- 20D: D.C.'s National ___ (ZOO) — no idea. None. Zero. Wanted MALL but it wouldn't fit. I guess D.C. has ... a ZOO. Cool. I did not know that. I'm not a big ZOO fan. Animal fan, yes. ZOOs, not really.
- 32D: One giving support during childbirth (DOULA) — this was a gimme, but it also seems like a word of relatively recent fame. DOULA was not a thing I'd ever heard of until this century. But now it feels like a common term, definitely Monday-level vocabulary (and definitely built for crosswords—five letters, 60% vowels, terminal "A" ... it's got a lot going for it, from a constructor's POV). There's even a death DOULA (someone who assists the terminally ill in the dying process) on the current season of The Pitt. DOULA did not debut in the NYTXW until 2012 (courtesy of constructor Paula Gamache). It then promptly disappeared again for almost nine years. This is its sixth appearance in the 2020s. Perhaps not surprisingly, five of the seven NYTXW puzzles to feature DOULA have been constructed or co-constructed by women. That gender discrepancy is striking considering that even today (with representation considerably improved from the low of about a decade ago), women's names appear on the byline less than 1/3 of the time (108 puzzles in 2025) (15 out of 47 puzzles so far in 2026).
- 27D: Top-tier (BEST) — wanted A-ONE. I blame ... decades of crossword puzzles. Crossword history is littered with A-ONEs. Just SLEWs of A-ONEs, everywhere you look. 659 total NYTXW appearances, 208 in the Modern Era. That's against 255/88 for BEST. So my instincts were wrong, but sound. I played the higher percentage guess. These things don't always work out.
That's all. See you next time.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
P.S. if you contributed to my January blog fundraiser by check (i.e. through the mail), please know that anything I received through last week has been processed. If you sent a check and it hasn't cleared, please let me know. Thank you.
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Normally I enjoy your write-ups, but there was one thing I couldn’t abide today. The National Zoo is part of the Smithsonian. It’s been the center of panda diplomacy with China. To write it off this easily is ridiculous.
ReplyDeleteAgreed.
DeleteIt is also free, and a huge attraction for both locals and tourists.
The Zoo has recently undergone a significant expansion to a second site closer to the mall just north of E Street NW and south of Pennsylvania Ave NW, between 15th and 17th Streets NW - an expansion that has been very much in the news lately, especially because of its collection of wild and freakish creatures who are very much out of their habitat.
You all are offended that he didn’t know about the zoo? Did he say it didn’t belong here? That the clue was bad? He doesn’t enjoy zoos, why should this bother you? And I thought Rex was nitpicky…
DeleteI live in DC and I also had a hard time getting the National ZOO and also definitely wanted the MALL. The National Mall is a very specific to DC thing whereas there are zoos everywhere. It didn’t feel like a Monday clue.
Delete@Anon 5:37 am, I've been to Washington DC and visited several of the Smithsonian buildings, but like Rex would never have guessed there was a national ZOO.
DeleteVery weak puzzle but Ian (the constructor) is a NY Times puzzle editor so it was published. Seems like it would be an automatic rejection if it were a blind submission.
ReplyDeleteIt suspect it was their ID speaking, though it's very difficult to ID them since they are anonymous, except for the comments originating with an ISP located in ID. So, I'D just drop the whole thing and move on.
DeleteThese first two comments are really uncharitable. I hope things brighten up around here. I liked the puzzle. I liked the write-up. Have a nice day.
ReplyDeleteI have to agree with you. Rex isn't into zoos. If you want to share something about the National Zoo, just educate us all without dissing him. And no way this puzzle would be an automatic rejection. It was just fine for a Monday.
DeleteI expected more than just the ID boxes.I agree with Rex:Meh.( I would have given the puzzle two stars)
ReplyDeleteFour "id's" in one puzzle - not noteworthy or interesting. Look at any completed puzzle and you can find 10 or more U.S. states' postal abbreviations (La, Va, Pa, Ri, Ma, etc., etc.). Reliance on mundane two-letter entries is a non-starter. I would say it's "Meh", but I don't consider "Meh" to be a word - and that is my other gripe with this puzzle.
DeleteAnonymous 11:43 am
DeleteYou did use the word meh and then said it isn’t a word. It is.
Eight (not four) ID's in the puzzle, but only four were "Marquee Level" and (in the on-line version) shaded. Was there a shortage of shading? I don't get attraction of the theme (even on a Monday), the Willy-nilly addition of four more additional non-theme cousins, or Rex's third star. I'll amend what Anon wrote above and say I'D have given it two.
DeleteAnd nine plurals, including both vertical nines and an eight. Never heard of VAMP in context of jazz/music, but that's on me.
Wow, this is one of the rare occurrences of my thinking a puzzle was easy and Rex medium challenging!! 2 silly mistakes, bodyhug for bearhug(6d) and Sen for dem(51a) thinking of house of representatives rathar than the party. Loved the song and reference to the 60's when we were so hopeful of making changes! Alas, look at where we are now.
ReplyDeleteHowever, found the puzzle an easy enjoyable Monday.
Try it downs-only. Definitely medium-challenging or more. That’s what Rex meant…
DeleteI suspect Rex's rating was based upon his "downs only" approach on Mondays and not an overall assessment of the puzzle's difficulty.
DeleteOdd theme no doubt - there isn’t anything deeper Rex. The shaded squares should have been left out to make it a little tougher - once the trick fell on BOISE I just filled in the remaining two locations.
ReplyDeleteA Fine LASS You Are
Liked the lack of a revealer and cluing alternative with Gem State. I read the WIZARD OF ID everyday still - it’s not overly funny but a comfortable strip - the crossing with BEAR HUG and DODO BIRD is cool. I thought BAD ASS was neat - I’m sure some here will not. POLLS is definitely a temporal topic currently.
DEVO
Enjoyable enough Monday morning solve.
Bonnie Prince Billy
Son Volt
DeleteMy reaction to the puzzle was exactly the same as yours. Well I don’t have your knowledge of music. Interesting that the Wizard of Id still exists. Not in my local paper anymore. Interesting that autocorrect turned Id to I’d.
I had trouble with this puzzle, so I was happy with the discussion. But including the JOHN PRINE video was great!!! I miss him & his music…RIP
DeleteI agree with Rex’s write-up. Puzzle was MEH and had some off cluing. Also I can’t stand plurals of convenience. INCROWDS? No. There is one INCROWD, that’s the whole point, if you’re not in it, you’re not cool. Which of course you might not care about at all! It also took me a lot of crosses to see DODOBIRD, which I don’t think anyone says.
ReplyDeleteHope you manage to fight off the cold, Rex.
Oh, excellent Monday cluing, with more-than-usual answers featuring The Beat, where just for a moment I had to think about the clue before putting the answer down. Without The Beat, it’s an immediate no-think slap-down, and a puzzle with too many slap-downs is a throwaway, forgettable. But with sufficient mind-engaging entries, this puzzle kept my interest throughout.
ReplyDeleteThus, just right for Monday -- not too difficult for newcomers, and not too boring for veterans.
I liked seeing THE WIZARD OF ID, which I haven’t thought about in ages, and read a bit about it after solving because I wondered why the Kingdom of Id was named for Freud’s “id”. Turns out It was ruled by a short, tyrannical and petty king who acts on his impulses, that is, he’s id-based. That strip is in its 62nd year, BTW.
Welcome back, Ian, after a decade’s absence, and congratulations on your 56th NYT puzzle. May this be the start of a new run. Thank you for a most lovely Monday puzzle!
I don't know how this got 3 stars from Rex. It's like the prototypical 2-star puzzle. There's nothing particularly wrong with the fill, but the theme goes absolutely nowhere. No early-week puzzle should get published if it doesn't have a funny revealer or an interesting hook, and this one had jack squat.
ReplyDeleteVoy en ambos sentidos. {heh}
ReplyDeleteThat's it? I thought I was missing something, so waited for 🦖 to explain it and he's as surprised as I am. Some IDs in gray boxes and a few not in gray boxes. Sheesk.
MEH, is about right, maybe a bit charitable.
❤️ DODOBIRD. Fiddlesticks. Glitterati (the word, not the people 🙄).
People: 6
Places: 5
Products: 9
Partials: 4
Foreignisms: 1
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 25 of 78 (32%)
Funny Factor: 0 😫
Tee-Hee: BADASS. After the last two days of juvenalia, I suppose this word is a victory?
Uniclues:
1 How you lost your sex drive in Treasure Valley.
2 Why I woke up under a dumpster.
3 What happens when you marry a commoner or find your name in the Epstein files.
4 The very last possible way I could imagine using to see animals.
1 BOISE ID ID THEFT
2 ALLEY FINE WINES
3 PEDIGREE SAGS
4 ZOO IN CROWDS
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Sound heard in the college mail room when an envelope with someone's allowance arrives. COED'S SQUEAL OF FORTUNE.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
A well-filled grid with little junk. But apparently we have run out of themes.
ReplyDelete@kitshef 7:48 AM
DeleteThis is funny.
@kitshef, funny and apt.
DeleteWow VAMP definitely does not mean improvise in jazz. It’s kind of the opposite actually - to vamp in jazz means to just keep playing the same thing few bars over and over in a loop. It’s what we do to fill time while waiting for a singer to start a verse or to play under an emcee while they are speaking, or similar situations.
ReplyDeleteThat was my understanding as well the last time VAMP was clued, but the definition has drifted to include improvisation.
DeleteThis came up recently. I had RIFF, but it became obvious they were looking for VAMP. To lawyer it up, you can still be improvising even when not soloing - vamping is casually playing rhythmic patterns until the cue.
DeleteFor several famous examples of composed (not improvised) jazz vamps, see the Wikipedia entry for "Ostinato" (which contains a subsection headed "Vamp").
DeleteI've been a working musician for over 50 years. 'Vamp' simply remains 'repeat' or 'loop,' as in 'vamp until cue' or 'vamp until singer enters.' It is NOT synonymous with 'improvise.'
DeleteI thought “I’d go the other way” was the tevealer - as the ids were either at the beginnings or the ends of the answers.
ReplyDeleteLewis - you are the best. If only we all had the ability to find (not always obvious) the good in everything/one.
YES!
DeleteI agree with that :)
DeleteExcept it's ID GO EITHER WAY and there's two of each, of which this one, so that would be odd for a revealer...
DeleteSo do I agree with that! Thank you Lewis and thank you @minoridreams for reminding us!
DeleteLILLE, ADLER (?). Wow, and as Rex mentioned, there are ID’s all over the grid - so what is the point?
ReplyDeleteIt seems like the clues were deliberately trying to be difficult (for a Monday) as well. It just seemed off to me. I agree with a previous poster, I suspect that this one would have been rejected if it weren’t submitted by a CoW (Colleague of Will).
Southside Johnny
DeleteOpinions differ. A lot have already said it was a decent puzzle. I agree with them and don’t see anything wrong with the theme. It showed one of the quirks of American English.
Thought it was a bit unfair to suggest the constructor got favorable treatment. Not liking it puzzle is not evidence of bias
I have probably done over 2,000 Monday puzzles. To me this one seems typical.
3 days without a Star Wars reference
ReplyDeleteyou ruined it.
DeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteID liked this puz. 😁
Thought Ian would go for the Pangram, but no J, Q, or oddly, K.
The West Center section held me up a skosh. DOULA is not a front-of-the-brain word, and the RAW of RAWBAR surprisingly tough to get this morning. Even HUNT clued differently.
Chuckled at the City/State entry being a Themer, as those are often blasted here as bad fill. ERIEPA the most famous.
Good MonPuz. So sayeth this DODO BIRD.
Hope you have a great Monday!
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
I took the “I’D GO EITHER WAY” as the revealer because ID could be at the beginning or end of the expression in the theme answers. I guess Rex’s interpretation makes more sense but “either way” I thought the puzzle was fine for a Monday solve.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed it more than most of the crowd. Fairly challenging in a few places.
ReplyDeleteI also found this one enjoyable but Doula was a foola and went over my head.
DeleteYes, a brutal down-only and I started looking at across clues much earlier than I’d have liked. I didn’t notice it while solving, but those errant non-circled IDs really do detract from the puzzle.
ReplyDeleteHow do they detract from the puzzle if you didn’t notice them?
Delete@mmorgan 8:15 am totally agree.
DeleteThe crosses made this one relatively easy and can see why Rex had a hard time downs only. Even so, had a hard time with the BOISE/DOULA crossing. Good to learn the WIZARD I is still going—thought he had disappeared along with so many of his contemporaries of my younger days.
ReplyDeleteNo complaints here. I thought this was a perfectly serviceable Monday, maybe a bit bland. I did not even see the ID theme until I came here and I thought, "Oh, cute". And then @Diane Joan pointed out the revealer in IDGOEITHERWAY and then thought, "whoa, BADASS!"
ReplyDeleteLike @Roo, the middle West gave me some trouble. DOULA did not come easily to me and I misread the clue for 47A as : Where *claims* are served - I'm thinking court type places or some other legal venues. That one took a bit to sort out.
I like the themers (now that I know they are there!) and we have some solid long downs as well.
A nice Monday that made me work a little and always nice to experience an AHA moment when I come here. Thank you, Ian!
And now on to my early Monday morning weekly Hugh's Haikus:
Empty grid stares back
At faces struck with beauty
Word joy yet to come
I've only personally met one member of the NYT puzzle staff and it was only briefly at a tournament when we were seated at the same table. She seemed wonderful though, and I'd be surprised if I learned she engaged in unethical behavior such as improperly favoring someone's work because she knew him or her personally. It's one thing to criticize a puzzle for perceived flaws, but quite another to charge that it was only accepted because of favoritism. Such a charge, it seems to me, should be based on hard evidence and not simply surmise.
ReplyDeleteThe bisexual credo: IDGOEITHERWAY
ReplyDeleteWith [Religious offshoots] and [Capital of the Gem State] in the grid, we got a new take on SECTS and the City (or at least "a" city).
I think this would have worked better if you got rid of IDTHEFT and used that sense of ID in a revealer. Clue: Bar bouncers question or a hint for......
Answer: CANISEEYOURID
Anyway, it was a good tussle as a d.o. solve. And remember that the instructor has lived his whole life surrounded by ID. Thanks, Ian livengooD.
The instructor mentioned above is meant to be the constructor. Not someone who gets to use the TEACHEREDITION.
DeleteI had that "that's it?" feeling with the revealer too and started looking for something more. Found a vertical ID crossing at the end of THEWIZARDOFID and AVOID and another one at BOISEID and IDEA but that was that and it didn't really work so I reluctantly decided, "yeah, that's it". Oh well.
ReplyDeleteSolving the regular way was Monday easy, only paused at UNIX and ADLER. I often see ODOR clued as "stench" which bothers me in the same way that the "O stars" bothered OFL for ABHOR. Not the same degree. I do think BADASS is an acceptable use of ASS in a puzzle. Just hope this term doesn't die of overuse.
OK Monday , IL. Did I Like it, yeah. Did I Love it? Not really. thanks for a medium amount of fun.
Like others here, I took I(‘)D GO EITHER WAY as the revealer, which added another layer to the theme, but adds to the problem with that phrase. As Rex said, the phrase in common parlance would use “could” rather than “would,” so it was already weird; in the second meaning, no one would ever say “ID go either way.” So I think the theme does in fact have more layers, and gets even clunkier though more interesting when it does.
ReplyDeleteIf playing blackjack, would you hit or stand with a 16? "I'd go either way."
DeleteVAMP as in "improvise in jazz"? No, no, and no. I've been listening to this music for a very long time; I've met Wynton Marsalis, Joe Lovano, Dexter Gordon. They never used the word vamp, ever. They riff, get in a groove, etc. But they don't vamp. So stop this stupid cluing. (Sorry, it's Monday morning, I needed to rant.)
ReplyDeleteI see that Rex wasn’t complaining about the ZOO clue per se, and I’m sure on further reflection, he would remember the panda exchange with China.
ReplyDeleteLooking into the SAC FLY discussion yesterday, I was wondering about sacrificing yourself to advance a runner to 2nd or 3rd. A sac bunt doesn’t have to score a run. SACs don’t count as at-bats, so don’t lower a batters percentages. It seems that a fly ball that results in runners tagging up to 2nd or 3rd is just an out with runners tagging up.
ReplyDeleteYes. It's like a ground out (that's not a bunt) that advances a runner. The batter gets no statistical benefit from it, but it's appreciated if it benefits the team under the circumstances.
DeleteHad ANTILLE as "One of the Leeward Island" for too long, I mean it works in the singular ("One"), before landing on ANTIGUA.
ReplyDeleteWas happy to see DODOBIRD, it is in heavy rotation for me because I use it to refer to bad drivers when my young child is in the car with me.
I thought this was fine for a Monday, though I did look at those IDs at the end and think, Huh? But it's Monday and there wasn't a lot of junk, so I can't complain a lot.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Rex, for posting John Prine singing one of his best songs. He's one of my favorite musicians, gone too soon.
A pretty good Monday. The best part was listening to John Prine. I really miss him, even though I never met him.
ReplyDeleteThank you to @Minoridreams 8:01 and @Diane Joan for proposing ID GO EITHER WAY as the reveal, indicating that ID can either begin or end a theme answer. I tried to make "either way" work by playing with ID and DI but got nowhere. MAD DASHES was fun, and I enjoyed pondering whether DODO BIRD was extinct as an expression.
ReplyDeleteDo-over: LIsLE before LILLE. No idea: DEVO. Why clue it as a plural noun instead of a verb?: RUSTS.
A first comment before I read either rex or the other comments. Why isn't there a revealer? Once I had the first two IDs I put in the other two, and avoided looking at the bottom of the puzzle while I tried to guess what it was. Finally I gve up and looked -- and no revealer. Is it so obvious that I shouldn't need one? I do, though. Did John Cage writte a "Quartet for IDs," in which four arrogant rich white men rant at each other? Otherwise, I'm lost.
ReplyDeleteOK, now I'll go look.
I solved in 8 minutes. I found myself rushing to reach a new PB. Easy puzzles will do that to you (?).
ReplyDeleteI liked it & thank you, Ian (but now I gotta do chores - ugh).
Hard Downs-only solve for me as well, but I somehow managed to pull ANTIGUA out of hammerspace. I had trouble with ABHOR DOULA BEST INCROWDS and parsing BOISE, ID. I knew it was AONE or BEST but ARO and BRO are both valid fill. ABHOR just wasn't coming to me. And DOULA was my first thought, but if [Art supporter] can be EASEL even on a Monday, then the "one giving support" in the DOULA clue might not have been a person after all.
ReplyDeleteI sorted that area out by... completely misunderstanding the theme. You see, I solved on an interface that didn't show any shaded squares. And I noticed crossings (RAID x OVID, THEWIZARDOFID x AVOID) with "ID"s going either way, Across and Down! So I guessed I at the start of 37D (crossing the ID in 36A with the ID in IDEA) and then managed to suss out INCROWDS. The solved grid confused me because I was left with only one stray ID (not counting the one in the "revealer"), the one in IDTHEFT.
Had to bail on the downs only on this one. Too many answers I couldn't put together.
ReplyDeleteMedium.
ReplyDeleteI did not know ADLER.
I did know the WIZARD OF ID.
I did not like RUSTS.
Odd idea, pretty smooth grid, a tad meh, liked it.
Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1088 was medium for me. The SE gave me the most resistance. Good luck!
I concur on the medium rating. Nothing really stood out as particularly tough, though.
DeleteFelt like a Tuesday to me. 🤷♀️
ReplyDelete"Plaint of Nature" sounds like dandruff or constipation. Sodomy, not so much. :-)
ReplyDeleteVery challenging downs only, had to hit up the acrosses to finish.
ReplyDeleteUNIX a gimme (between BEARHUG and FAX it seemed the only possibility), being a Labby brat. What an amazing place that was to visit as a kid!
But if yer gonna have ID as yer theme, there should be no others in the puzz! And sadly overall, despite the downy challenge, it felt MEH to meh.
ID-fest-ed puz. Different -- and the ultimate EZ-er-than-snot MonPuztheme.
ReplyDeletestaff weeject picks: AVO, RA, and OV. The bonus ID bunch.
fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Fictional lab assistant with a hunchback} = IGOR. Luvly, schlocky.
other fave stuff included: The ZOO parade mini-theme [BEARHUG. DODOBIRD. GEESE. Horse PEDIGREE.] Also liked that there EASEL clue.
Thanx for all the id-ling-o, Mr. Livengood dude.
Masked & Anonymo4Us
p.s.
runt puzzle 1:
**gruntz**
runt puzzle 2:
**gruntz**
... and, a non-runtpuz by M&A [15x15-er] has been posted over at runtpuz.blogspot.com, if y'all wanna suitably suffer.
M&A
Any day that features a John Prine song is a good day as far as I am concerned. And this one really fit the puzzle.
ReplyDeleteI could never have solved this one downs only. And even going both ways, I found it surprisingly tough for a Monday.
@old timer and others. I've never been a huge John Prine fan, though I certainly appreciate his talent. The one song of his that I might put on repeat is "When I Get to Heaven" because the idea of having a cocktail and smoking "a cigarette nine miles long" kind of appeals to me.
DeleteHands up for trying to solve down clues only, but having to give up and read some acrosses. I blame some overly tough answers like ANTIGUA (and I even know someone from Antigua!) and BOISEID. I couldn't get PEDIGREE at all, so looking at BOIS-ID without the clue I could not for the life of me imagine what possible Monday answer it could be. BOISHID? BOISKID?
ReplyDeleteSome other challenging answers at RAWBAR (what?) and ADLER (even though I'm an astronomy buff). But I always appreciate not too many Unknown Names.
As for the theme, yeah pretty lame. As @kitshef said "apparently we have run out of themes".
My solve was eerily similar to Rex's. A bit of a downs only struggle. One difference was that I somehow knew ANTIGUA. Don't know why. Never been there. Never been to any Caribbean islands, actually, but I saw Leeward Islands and dropped in ANTIGUA. Bizarre.
ReplyDeleteI was a bit disappointed with this one. I used to do a lot of puzzles in those reprint collections the NYT likes to flog. Some of the books had titles indicating that they were very difficult. Some were collections of puzzles from a particular day of the week. I liked to buy the ones with Friday or Saturday in the title and many of them included tough but entertaining grids by Ian Livengood. So when I saw his name on the top of this one I thought it would be great. It wasn't. Four ways of using ID? That's it? OK. When your biggest challenges are choosing between A-one and BEST and correcting your misspelling of DOULA, it's just not that great.
I was glad to see the rating as I found it quite hard for a Monday. About a third of the way though I started leaving huge blanks.
ReplyDeleteAter I finished and look back over it I could ot remember what had been so difficult. I think 20D was one of the early ??!'s It got filled in by crosses and I didn't even notice until reading Rex's writieupl Yes, the NationalZoo has been famous or pandas as a commenter said, but...
And I agree with Rex that the revealer was weak. For me the problem wasn't the sentence form - didn't mind "I'd" rather than "I could", but either way seems like it was meant for answers where the id alternated with di.
OK puzzle, if a bit bland. They could have at least used a bisexual-themed clue for that revealer...
ReplyDeleteDRAT is not a synonym for Fiddlesticks! DRAT essentiality means DARN. Fiddlesticks essentially means NONSENSE.
ReplyDeleteis Yoko Ono the most used trivia fill starting to think maybe it is she wields the force so its basically a Star Wars clue
ReplyDelete@ac, is your keyboard missing the part with the comma, period, and question mark keys? Not complaining, just... wondering. Kinda like reading Cormac McCarthy.
DeleteJohn Prine was wonderful; he was a deceptively sophisticated wordsmith. Here's his song about a "Long Monday"—"stuck like the tick of a clock that's come unwound again." Hope you're all having a good Monday!
ReplyDeleteLong Monday
I enjoyed this nice Monday puzzle! I too thank you, Lewis! TIL DODOBIRD HUNT and RAWBAR. Seemed close to themeless to me but that’s okay.
ReplyDeleteZoos are the animal kingdom’s ambassadors to us humans, especially children. It’s not too bad a life for most of the animals in the best zoo. The worst thing I saw was a wild mother duck killing the baby duck of another wild mother duck in the rhino exhibit ( I think it was ) of Portland zoo. That is, life in the wild is hard
RUST is corrosion. RUSTS are corrosions.
ReplyDeleteSo, RUSTS are signs of RUSTS. Corrosions are signs of corrosions.
This is this.
That's that.
Nice to see so many John Prine fans here. I'm off to the Monday night hootenanny, where he's always well represented. i recently dusted off "Dear Abby", which is a bunch of fun.
ReplyDeleteIf they waited a couple of weeks, we could have had the ĪDs of March.
ReplyDelete54a. "I'd" clanks Why not use IDEGOSUPEREGO? perfect fit.
ReplyDeleteVAMP - repeat a few bars of music, leave jazz out of it. I hope someone has a 100 YEARS OF MILES DAVIS puzzle in the works. May 26, 1926!
@Anon 6:49. My take on that is that THE WIZARD OF ID already covers that meaning of ID.
Delete@Les S. More -- Indeed it does. This, from my 7:28 a.m. post:
DeleteI liked seeing THE WIZARD OF ID, which I haven’t thought about in ages, and read a bit about it after solving because I wondered why the Kingdom of Id was named for Freud’s “id”. Turns out It was ruled by a short, tyrannical and petty king who acts on his impulses, that is, he’s id-based. That strip is in its 62nd year, BTW.
This is the first time in history that I seem to have found the crossword clues easier than you did. Amazing. It must be your cold. Hope you feel better soon.
ReplyDeleteHope you feel better soon, @Rex. Sounds like you have caught the virus that stormed through the NorCal schools and surrounding areas during this month. My Son-in-Law has had half his cast for the spring musical out and I succumbed and it spawned a sinus/ear infection. Take
ReplyDeletecare of yourself!
My take on the them mirrored OFL’s, and I couldn’t figure out anything more clever than just a bunch of ways to use the letters ID. When this occurs, I check in with the NYT Wordplay column to see if the constructor left some comments. He did today, and while you may read the entire column, it appears that Mr. Livengood had some trouble bringing his theme together. After experimenting with the idea of a “half baked theme that just wouldn’t gel, he says: “ I pivoted to the more straightforward approach you see here, swapping in I’D GO EITHER WAY, and featuring four types of IDs.” And as Porky Pig would say, “That’s all folks!” Or maybe e Peggy Lee sang it more precisely: “Is that all there is?”
I know that sounds like a big thumbs down. OK, the theme is not solid, it isn’t tricky or clever, but I have to admit that with all the other words containing ID (see OFL’s list, supra), I honestly kept expecting something to smush all the various and sundry IDs into a meaningful - something. Obviously not. But that doesn’t mean the puzzle had nothing in its favor. It did.
As Mondays go, this had some higher than usual spots for a Monday - at least from my perspective. THE WIZARD OF ID? Yes!! My favorite strip is a bigger fave since it’s being created by the next generation of original creators’ (Parker and Hart) families! That kind of devotion, humor and creativity is extraordinary. Of course the world chaos provides them with unlimited material.
Other favorite entries include DODOBIRD and good old IGOR. His appearance reminded me that I haven’t watched “Young Frankenstein” in a couple years. Time to introduce Grace to her late Grandfather’s humor through his favorite movie.
The very odditiy and loosey-goosey-ness of the theme made this a fun Monday solve. And Mr. Livengood, I’m not such a fan of your Pips puzzle, but look forward to your next crossword.
Prince Valiant has the same number of letters as WIZARDOFID
ReplyDeleteID = Ian livengooD
ReplyDelete4 ids- because it’s the ides of February?
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I ABHORed this one. How did it get three stars from Rex since he also hated the gimmick?
ReplyDeleteCHIC PEDIGREE
ReplyDeleteANNA’s BOD is not BAD,
IN FAX, SHE’s one FINE LASS,
THE SECTS drives one MAD,
THEWIZARDOF BEST ASS.
--- IGOR ADLER, DEM-ID