Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium (solved Downs-only)
Theme answers:
- (Sally) FIELD HOCKEY (16A: *Outdoor sport with sticks (1979, 1984))
- (Emma) STONE AGE (25A: *Period for Fred, Wilma and Pebbles (2016, 2023))
- (Jodie) FOSTER DOG (35A: *Temporary guest from a canine shelter (1988, 1991))
- (Halle) BERRY PIE (51A: *Popular fruit dessert (2001))
Efrem Zimbalist Jr. (November 30, 1918 – May 2, 2014) was an American actor and theatre producer. Known for his "mellifluous voice and air of sophistication," he was known to television audiences for his starring roles on the crime drama series 77 Sunset Strip (1958–64) and The F.B.I. (1965–74), his recurring role as "Dandy Jim" Buckley on Maverick (1957–58), and as the voice of Alfred Pennyworth in the DC Animated Universe. He also appeared in numerous films and on the Broadway stage. He was a Golden Globe Award winner (out of four total nominations) and a two-time Primetime Emmy Award nominee.
He was the son of classical musicians Efrem Zimbalist and Alma Gluck, and the father of actress Stephanie Zimbalist. In addition to his acting career, Zimbalist was also a decorated veteran of the Second World War, receiving both the Bronze Star and Purple Heart medals. In 1994, Zimbalist received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his contributions to television. (wikipedia)
• • •
I want to thank today's puzzle for ... well, reminding me that EFREM Zimbalist Jr. once existed (and that I couldn't pick him out of a line-up on a dare), as well as for reminding me that the Oscars are coming up (Sunday, Mar. 15). As for this theme, it's OK, I guess. A first-words theme. Feels like the kind of thing that's been done before, not terribly imaginative. But timely! I wish there were more to it. I wish the revealer were snappier instead of just literal and explanatory. I wish the fill were a little less ye olde (TET ARS URSA ... EFREM for god's sake). But all in all it's a totally acceptable Monday puzzle. The longer Downs aren't all that long, but they are solid, and even though its letters aren't terribly exciting, I really liked "SEE HERE!" I like quaint indignation. "I say! SEE HERE! That's not cricket!" I had a blarghy feeling about the fill after the NW corner (URSA AOL ESP already had me teetering, and then UNFED tipped me into mild gag territory). But things evened out. I don't really believe BERRY PIE is a thing. What Kind Of Berry!? No way I'm ordering some mystery "BERRY" PIE. That was the one answer that made me grimace when it came into view. But I love FOSTER DOG a ton, and UPSELLS is also pretty fab, so I come out on the thumbs-up side today.
So weird to find out today that so many of the Best Actress Oscar winners who fit this theme (i.e. whose last names are also ordinary words) are also multiple Best Actress Oscar winners. I'd forgotten that Sally Field won two. I can name every movie referred to in today's theme clues except the one Field won for in 1984—I remember the infamous speech ("You like me, you really like me..."), but I'll be damned if I can remember what she won for. Was it Places in the Heart!? [checks with the internet]. It was! Ha! Thank you, brain! Good ol' brain, still working. For now. For the record, the movies referred to today are:
- Sally Field: Norma RAE (of crossword fame!!) (1979); Places in the Heart (1984)
- Emma Stone: La La Land (2016); Poor Things (2023)
- Jodie Foster: The Accused (1988); The Silence of the Lambs (1991)
- Halle Berry: Monster’s Ball (2001)
Stone is nominated again this year for Bugonia, though I think it's something of a foregone conclusion that Jessie Buckley is going to win for Hamnet (a movie I have no interest in seeing ... I can't really explain it ... I like Shakespeare ... I love Paul Mescal ... Jessie Buckley is fantastic ... I think I'm just allergic to Oscar Bait). I just saw Halle Berry in Crime 101, which made me wonder why she isn't in more things. Or maybe she's been in a ton of things and I just missed them all. She is charming in Crime 101 as an insurance agent specializing in "high-wealth" customers who finds herself devalued by her bosses because she's "old" and (therefore?) (allegedly?) losing her ability to hook clients with sex appeal. This is the least plausible part of the movie, as Halle Berry looks stunning at all times. Hard to look at anyone else when she's on screen. But whatever, she plays the part really convincingly and endearingly, and she has an odd and compelling chemistry with Mark Ruffalo (a cop who figures out that Berry has gotten involved in some criminal shenanigans).
Bullets:
That's all. See you next time.
- 64A: Vietnamese holiday with a palindromic name (TET) — did we really need the "with a palindromic name" part? TET is one of the most common crossword words there is. Even if you're a total crossword novice and have never heard of TET, those crosses are all easy. No need to do so much handholding, NYT! I know it's Monday, but yeesh.
- 10D: They go to a higher court (APPEALS) — pretty straightforward, but from a Downs-only perspective, this was not so easy for me. The hardest answer of the puzzle, maybe. It just felt like there was some kind of mild trickery going on. Like, maybe the court was a basketball court or a tennis court, or a food court. Maybe "court" was being used to mean something like a "story" in a building and the answer was something like "escalators" or "elevators" or "stairways." Thankfully, none of these fit, and eventually I was able to infer some of the crosses and get to APPEALS.
- 11D: Round up, as cattle (WRANGLE) — again, easy enough, but with no letters in place I couldn't think of this word at first. The only thing that came to mind was RUSTLE, which wouldn't fit.
- 38D: Biceps, boastfully (GUNS) — this was great. Much more fun to think of arms than to think of ... arms.
- 54D: Group assisting a sheriff (POSSE) — this was grim. Made me think of lynching. I'll take a hip-hop POSSE over a sheriff's POSSE any day.
That's all. See you next time.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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Good Monday, with one glaring exception...SUBSIN. I played my first football game over 70 years ago, have watched it on TV since 1950, and never once heard the expression. A "better" clue might be "Overindulging on a hoagie, e.g."
ReplyDeleteI could hear it being said more at a basketball game.
DeleteAlways love a good Bob Mills troll job. And on a serious note, great to see another puzzle by ACM. Keep up the good work Andrea!
DeleteEleven-inch footlong.
DeleteNothing about the clue says football, although kind of weird that it mentions “at the half”. Soccer, perhaps? Unless that’s what they meant…
DeleteUnless I missed something in Sunday's write-up Bob, I see another glaring exception. Where's the rating?
DeleteWhen I don't see any stars, I instantly assume that another SUBS IN. But not today, evidenced by the brilliant, semi-fictional Efrem saga. Bravo!
We do the Sunday XW lazily over a few days, so if Rex announced the end of the Ratings Era, I'll be devastated. Hoping it's an oversight.
A quite common logical fallacy is judging information to be untrue or flawed because it does not conform to on'e familiarity heuristic.
DeleteThe LAT or WaPo recently had Sally Field clued as an actress with two Oscar’s. I wasn’t aware that the others also had a couple each. A neat idea for a theme.
ReplyDeleteI also thought that BERRY PIE was a real stretch when it came into focus - I guess we can put that one down to “poetic license”. I have a friend who frequently has a whole POSSE of FOSTER DOGs at her place (she works at a vet’s office). I’m treated to a symphony (actually more like a cacophony) of doggie greetings every time I visit her.
My answer to the question “What’s your favorite pie” would likely be “Just about any BERRYPIE.” It’s funny how we all can look at things differently.
Delete6:20 for me.... so I didn't quite make my stretch goal for Mondays of under 6 minutes. Thanks, ACM and Christina, for a fun Sunday Evening Romp! : ) flew by too fast, but that's what Mondays are supposed to do. I think "SUBSIN" is okay.... There are definitely some subthemes going on today.... we've got BEEFIER GUNS joining the POSSE to WRANGLE... Thanks! Flying today, so I'll be checking in from another time zone...
ReplyDeleteI put in the first three themers with no crosses, and not knowing the theme - but when I got to BERRYPIE I wasn’t so lucky, since as Rex notes, no one really says that, so I wasn’t sure on the PIE part. With PIEs, you want to know if you’re getting blueberry or cherry, etc.
ReplyDeleteYesterday was National Women’s Day as well
ReplyDeleteYes, Rex wrote about it.
DeleteThis took me longer than most Mondays do, although I'm not sure why. Is it the time change? I almost think I COULDA saved time doing it downs-only today, instead of toggling between across and down, and in fact I can understand Rex's Easy-Medium. I think I'll split the difference and say Medium. It was a serviceable puzzle, and in service of continued celebration of Women's Month, which I think is quite all right. (In an ideal world where there is equity between men and women, perhaps we wouldn't feel a need for a special month to celebrate women and their accomplishments, but since that's not our world, a month of recognition and acknowledgment is not out of place.) I actually couldn't care less about Oscars and who wins them, but I have no doubt all of these gifted actresses deserved them in their years and they're all good choices for this puzzle, so thumbs up.
ReplyDeleteGreat review by Rex, especially for tabulating the XW ups and downs of EFREM Zimbalist, a name a word nerd can't help but love. I know (or knew) nothing about the dude, but I'm reading about him now and he sounds interesting. Both his parents were acclaimed musicians -- doesn't the very name Zimbalist sound so apt for a musician? ("One who places a cimbalom" -- that, I read, is a large trapezoidal dulcimer, used widely in central/eastern Europe and in Roma culture.) EZ starred in the series The F.B.I. (a Quinn-Martin production), and he and J. Edgar Hoover had a bromance during that time, even to the point where Hoover had a say in the actors chosen (he insisted they undergo a background check, just like actual agents!). Zimbalist became a model for how he (Hoover) thought FBI agents should look. Sounds like Rex, hinting at XW connections involving people who wanted to take Zimbalist down a peg during those years of dormancy in Crossworld, could be onto something here. Dah-dah-dah.
I'll check back later. Hope all of you are doing well.
Zimbalist starred in The FBI which was a good old-fashioned show where the bad guys always got caught and, frequently, blasted to bits by the cops. As with old-time cowboy and Indian shows, we were supposed to be thrilled to see the bullets fly and take down the bad guys. As a child, I thought that was a great thing.
DeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteWell, phooey. Unsure if this happened to anyone else, but, I had a DNF today! On a Monday! Had AtOp for ASOF, giving me (IMHO) correct answers NOtIER and pOSTERDOG. No nevermind that FOSTER DOG was a Themer. (And gets an F!) After getting the Almost There note, scoured the puz to find my mistake/typo. Nothing. Came here to view the completed RexPuz, and found my faux pas. Son of a ...
When I saw the two dates in the clue, I thought the Themers would be two names together. Got FIELDHOCKEY, and was trying to think of an actress with the last name HOCKEY. Realized at STONEAGE it had to be a first name only Theme, apparently multiple years' wins.
Did like the puz, nice to have an ACME sighting, but didn't enjoy my silly error.
Couple of @Uniclues for ya:
Fruit not as dried as normal?
RAISIN, BEEFIER
Letting Mr. Ceasar know his pasta is coming?
SOON ROTINI, SID
Enough from me. Hope y'all have a great Monday!
Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
An elegant early week theme that actually celebrates these women and integrates them into the solve. ACM has this type of thing down pat. Revealer is a bit flat but obviously apt.
ReplyDeleteI COULDA Been A Contender
FOSTER DOG is the highlight but I liked all the themers - no issue with BERRY PIE. SEE HERE, WRANGLE, STEPS ON are all top notch. WETTEST, BEEFIER, NOSIER - the superlatives stick out today.
Oh the prairie lights are burnin' bright
The Chinook wind is a-movin' in
Tomorrow night I'll be ALBERTA bound
Enjoyable Monday morning solve.
IRIS
Guess I'll go out to ALBERTA, weather's good there in the fall....
DeleteNah, just had that one.
I really liked this for a Monday. Better than yesterdays “as many proper names as possible” way to “celebrate” (not sure if that is the correct word for a crossword puzzle, not trying to be a jerk about the day) Women’s Day. In true early-week fashion it solves mostly as a themeless, with the revealer being a little bonus. If anything, the years in the theme clues might make them HARDER for a novice solver trying to make sense of them. But the puzzle is solid.
ReplyDeleteSome great non-theme cluing today. “Chicken Noodle Scoop” is one of those clues I misread on my first pass and gave me a big cheesy grin when I properly parsed it later. The On The Waterfront/Raging Bull reference was a nice touch for an Oscar-themed puzzle.
I also found subs in somewhat jarring.But I enjoyed this puzzle by these two pros.🎈🎈🎊🎊
ReplyDeleteI thought this was a pleasant Monday puzzle. No fireworks, but solid. It made me wonder if Sharon STONE ever won an Oscar when she was all the rage in the nineties. Looked it up – nope, but she was nominated for Casino in 1995. I solved the puzzle as a themeless and only took notice of the actress’s names after the fact. It’s probably better if the theme is more intrinsic to the solve, but hey, the whole thing works.
ReplyDeleteI’ve experienced an amusing phenomenon this week. I’ve been solving late at night, just before bedtime, and I’ve found myself dreaming about answers in the puzzle. On Thursday night, I did Friday’s puzzle and in one of my dreams, I ate an ICE CREAM BAR (55A), a treat I normally never have. On Saturday night, after having done Sunday’s puzzle, I dreamed about a neighbor of my parents who lived close by for many years, DOTTIE Martin. I hadn’t thought about her for years, but DOTTIE was the answer to 129A. And then last night, I seemed to be mother to two dogs (I’ve never actually owned dogs – only cats), and I told my friend that these two were rescue dogs – not quite FOSTER DOGs (35A), but close enough. I seem to be getting increasingly suggestible!
Thanks for Monday fun to crossword stalwarts, Christina Iverson and Andrea Carla Michaels.
I have had berry pie. I ordered it because I love raspberries, blackberries, blueberries. Delicious!
ReplyDeleteMe too!
DeleteAs an avid seeker of fruit pies in the diners of America, I’ve seen BERRY pie now and then, although not nearly as commonly as “Jumbleberry” pie.
DeleteWe made a BERRY PIE just last night, and yes, that is exactly what we call it. Mixture of blackberries and blueberries. Often, but not last night, we'll add currants, as well.
ReplyDeleteIt seems odd to have three two-time best actress winners, then Halle BERRY, with her measly one. That spot could have gone to another two-time winner, with:
High-end golf equipment manufacturer (1960, 1966): TAYLORmade
This comment was for yesterday but it didn't go through. I'd love to see a counter similar to Number of days without a RIA ORA reference . This singer is simply dreadful but what a great crosswordese name. She's slowly replacing ISSA RAE, who at least is a unique talent, so I don't mind Issa
ReplyDeletewhat, you don't remember the classic Warrant song "Berry Pie"?
ReplyDeletePretty sure that’s “Larry Pie”
DeleteMaybe it's because the coffee hasn't kicked yet, but I don't understand LADLE and the cluing, could someone please explain it to me? Thank you!
ReplyDeleteChicken noodle scoop, as in "scoop for chicken noodle soup". You scoop soups in general with ladles.
DeleteAnon 9:03 - I also had to look twice - the clue is Chicken noodle SCOOP, not soup as I read at first. You scoop it with a LADLE...
DeleteYou scoop up your chicken noodle soup with a ladle.
DeleteIt's funny, we often complain about "too many propers" in a puzzle but I kinda love it when proper names make up the theme! And this one was tons of fun. A Monday that really held my attention throughout. Plus the fact that I didn't know what was going on until the revealer fell. That was a nice "aha" moment - and that's a moment that I would think would be difficult to create in a Monday difficulty-level solve. Kudos to the constructors for this!
ReplyDeleteAgree with @Rex that BERRYPIE is indeed a stretch but that it didn't take away from the fun.
Loved seeing COULDA, I just watched On the Waterfront in it's entirety for the first time (yeah, I'm embarrassed to admit that) and what absolute genius - both Brando and Eva Marie Saint. I don't need to tell the crowd here about all the brilliance, but I saw it on DVD that my wife got our of our local library and it came with all sorts of cool commentary... go see it again.
Is it my imagination or is EXTOL making a few appearances lately??
Anyway - thanks for the fun Monday Christina and Andrea!
And now for my next installment of a Monday Hugh's Haiku:
Shall I keep this up?
Roomonster commented twice
I think, ”Yes I will!”
Hugh
DeleteI did like On the Waterfront. I saw it on TV when young.
Interesting back story. Elia Kazan ( old crosswordese). was its director. That was the vicious era of McCarthyism and many movie people were forced to “name names”. Elia Kazan succumbed to the pressure. And playwright Arthur Miller was furious with him
The result was dueling shows. Miller’s the Crucible, a parable about McCarthyism (which did involve rattling out innocent people). set during the Salem witch trials and Kazan’s on the Waterfront where the lead character feels he must report criminal activity.
While I agree with Miller’s anti McCarthyism stance, I have sympathy with Kazan about the pressure he was under. Miller was mostly in the New York theater world which suffered much less from McCarthyism than Hollywood. Easier for him to take the moral stand.
Miller & Kazan had been friends. I don’t think they ever reconciled.
I appreciate Rex’s critique but I must admit that I loved this puzzle for its quaintly normal quality. That’s something that’s been missing as the puzzles seem to have become far more punny, slangy and arcane since Will Short returned.
ReplyDeleteKnowing who won Oscars is just not my thing, so I was puzzled by the dates. But once I got the revealer, I did recognize that those first words were the last names of actresses. Ideally if three of the four are two-time winners, it would have been nice to find another repeater for the 4th--but I don't know enough about movies to know if that was possible.
ReplyDeleteI'm here in Captiva, with no printer, for a couple weeks so I solved thie online. It wasn't as painful as I thought, so I may try tomorrow, but I doubt if I'll do it every day.
Are there any shells left on the beaches?
DeleteOverheard in London: Andrew looks like he's seen a ghost and Fergie's put on some STONEAGE.
ReplyDeleteMom teaching ballroom dancing to her MALE offspring: STEPSON! LEADSON! Not that arm, DISARM! Make your ARS RISEUP!
Scrabble player's silent prayer while drawing tiles: MAYANS come my way.
A puzzle that APPEALS from a couple of pros. Thanks, Christina Iverson and Andrea Carla Michaels.
I've made a pie and called it "Berry"! It was blueberries, blackberries, and raspberries all together. To list every berry would be a mouthful. You could say "Mixed Berry Pie", I suppose, but I don't see anything wrong with "Berry Pie" on its own either.
ReplyDeleteFast and breezy. One of those puzzles where I could appreciate the theme after the puzzle was complete, but it wasn't worth taking time to understand it while working the puzzle because it would only have slowed me down.
ReplyDelete"Chicken noodle scoop" was very cute.
1 Days since a Styx reference
ReplyDeleteEasy here and had all the themers but still didn't guess the revealer, which when it appeared was an of course! Nothing so annoying as an obvious truth. My knowledge of the Oscars is obviously lacking.
ReplyDeleteI guess that a BERRYPIE is a real thing since folks here make them and eat them but the term is not terribly familiar to me. See also FOSTERDOG, which I'm sure is common, but I'm more familiar with "rescue dog".
I was going to hail the return of EFREM who I hadn't seen in so long and then OFL mace him the star of the write up, which made me happy. Thanks chief.
Nice enough and timely Monday, CL and ACM. I Could Love it more if I were an Ardent Cinemaphile, Maybe, but not your fault. Thanks for a decent amount of fun.
PS-Pro tip from yesterday--If you've ever wondered if anyone reads your astute comments, misread a clue and wonder how the answer can possibly be correct. You'll get lots of explanations from our friends here, (Thanks everybody.)
@Pablo…my SIL is big into dog rescue and she will often take in a FOSTERDOG (she fosters it) until a permanent home is found. Some rescue dogs go immediately from a shelter to a permanent home. I guess one could say a FOSTERDOG is a subset of rescue dogs.
DeleteRescue dog is a dog from a shelter. Foster is a dog someone takes care of and possibly trains to be ready for a different home.
DeleteA very solid Monday offering by two reliably good constructors! While the themers contain the last names of actresses, the rest of the puzzle seems to be very low on proper names. My “bag” isn’t counting those things up, but the only thing that jumped out was EFREM and DRE…there’s probably more.
ReplyDeleteI found Rex’s tongue in cheek xword history of EZ,Jr. amusing. I could see a lot of people not being familiar with him. I only knew him as being on 77 Sunset Strip, which was on when I was 3-8 years old. My sister, being several several yearsolder than me, watched it because of “heart throb” Ed Byrnes (or Burns…Cookie lend me your comb).
More support for BERRYPIE! It’s “a thing”!
I'll bet Mary Berry could make a mean BERRY PIE! (Alas, I did not find a recipe for one in her Baking Bible.)
DeleteIt's Edd "Kookie" Byrnes, not cookie
DeleteGo see Hamnet, he won’t regret it. It’s More than it’s plot.
ReplyDeleteI second the recommendation to see Hamnet; it is a beautifully told story. Or read the beautifully-written novel from which the screenplay was adapted.
DeleteI agree with going to see Hamnet. Beautiful story.
DeleteRe 60D: Though the award is quite commonly (though erroneously) referred to as "Best Actress" (so no real foul here), it's good to remind ourselves that the acting awards are given for the best performance by an actor/actress in a leading/supporting role) The Academy makes no claim to anoint a best actor/actress of the previous year, but only to recognize that one particular performance.in that one particular role. Any one of them could have easily sucked in every other role they may have played in that year.
ReplyDeleteKate
DeleteYour parsing of terms best actor & best actress was very interesting. Never thought of them that way.
The English language at its trickiest!
Always nice to have an ACME puzzle. So smooth. Even after entering the revealer the theme didn’t register with me but before coming here I felt I had to look for one and took about two seconds to get it. Loved the blog opening troll. Did I miss something, or has Rex stopped awarding stars?
ReplyDeleteSolved in under 9 minutes.
ReplyDeleteA fun Monday by 2 pros. Nice not to have to even stop to think (obsess?) for a change.
As a kid, I always thought Efrem Zimbalist was so handsome on
77 Sunset Strip (he was on that show, right?).
Thank you, Andrea & Christina :)
Easy-medium.
ReplyDeleteNo WOEs or costly erasures but BERRY PIE seems like a stretch (hi @Rex)
No chance of me getting the theme without the reveal…the dates were not helpful.
Solid or pretty much what @Rex said, liked it.
Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1094 was an easy-medium Croce for me with the top a skosh easier than the bottom and a fun center stack. Good luck!
Solid medium for me. 56D and 64A were both WoEs, but the cross was inferrable.
DeleteINFED, ASOF, BEEFIER were the only tricky spots for me. other than those it was mostly a top-to-bottom downs-only solve. medium seems generous. POSSE reminded me of the sheriff's attempt to get one to go after butch & sundance.
ReplyDeletethis one really sucked. efrem and berry pie ugh
ReplyDeleteAnonymous 10:30 AM
DeleteBerry pie is a thing.
Many people on the blog said they use the term for a pie with 2 or berry types. So not ugh. As Rex said EFREM is old crosswordese. Not obscure. to older people.
The dates in the FIELD HOCKEY clue along with Oscar season made me. wonder, "Sally?" Then confirmed by the following Emma STONE..I thought this was a really good, straightforward Monday puzzle. The comment by @Anonymous 9:17 struck a chord with me - this is a puzzle I can recommend to my spouse, for whom the last couple of early week puzzles have been too "punny, slangy, and arcane."
ReplyDeleteThat was Carola - I forgot to check whether I was signed in.
Delete“Can she bake a berry pie, Billy boy, Billy boy” would be alliteratively better than a cherry pie. I vote yes on berry pie, cousin of mixed berry jam or berry smoothie.
ReplyDeleteI think we could do a female pie puzzle:(Fiona) Apple pie, Whoopie pie, Cherry (Jones) pie (Tony winner), (Sophie) Mudd pie,
Enjoyed it after yesterday’s International Women’s Day name-fest. Appreciated that the constructor is actually doing something interesting with these women’s names.
ReplyDeleteI was [googles] 11 years old when Halle Berry played the villain in the Flintstones live action film, which was the first thing that put her on my radar. Because childhood is so impressionable, I will forever think of that film when I hear her name, which she probably wouldn’t appreciate since she is in fact a very serious actress. But anyway, all that to say, for me the clue on STONE AGE connected to the first-word theme meaning of BERRY PIE in a surprising way.
Rex, thanks so much for the imaginative history of the EFRON drought. As a newer solver, I had to get it entirely through crosses, and that F was the last letter I entered (BEEFIER? Really?). That might have been enough to cement his name in my memory for the future!
A rare down-only Monday success! Yay!! But not seeing the across clues with the asterisks, I had no idea what the theme was.
ReplyDeletefoster dogs often become "rescued" by the fosterer -- my daughter has two such pooches she thought she would be keeping for only a short time. 10 years for one and 2 years for the other. (I have one rescue dog.)
ReplyDeleteAnother "first word" MonPuztheme. But a real nice collection of Oscar nominees/winners, plus a nod to Patrick BERRY(PIE). Kinda explains why he's been too busy to crank out any FriPuzs, anymore.
ReplyDeleteAlso liked the Jaws of Mondayness black square fillins.
staff weeject pick: DRE. A rare MonPuz no-know weeject.
fave moo-cow easy-E MonPuz clue: {"Coming ___ to a theater near you"} = SOON. Nice Oscar-theme go-with, too boot.
another fave: STEPSON. Conveniently parses two different ways: STEP SON/STEPS ON.
And, great to see ESP back in the puz. Better clue? = {Ability to see the "N" coming, before one dials up the sports channel??].
Thanx for gangin up on us, Ms. Iverson & ACME darlins. And primo job, hostin the first-word awards ceremonies, today.
Masked & Anonymo5Us
p.s.
Monday runt puzzle trio:
runt1:
**gruntz**
runt2:
**gruntz**
and runt3:
**gruntz**
M&A
After zooming through yesterday’s puzzle I had this short exchange with an anonymous commenter:
ReplyDeleteMe: I’m hoping tomorrow’s grid is more challenging.
Anonymous: Tomorrow being Monday I kinda doubt it…?
Me: Well, I do downs-only on Monday so there's a slim chance.
Well, Anon, had it right.This might have been the fastest D-O Monday I’ve ever done. But it was still quite enjoyable. Only trouble was in the NE where two words that are not at all foreign to me just would not come to mind: APPEALS and WRANGLE. So I just took a flyer on a few partially completed acrosses (AGENT and UPSELLS) and it all came together. Didn’t really notice the theme while solving but, after the lovely musical thingie, looked at BEST ACTRESS and said, “Of course. Nice.”
No rating? Or is it just not loading for me?
ReplyDeleteNice Monday puzzle.
ReplyDeleteAmused by Rex’s dissertation on EFREM’s appearance in the puzzle. I probably watched Sunset Strip but only remember the intro. The actor sounded interesting.
Reasonably easy theme to get (for me). though I had to complete the puzzle to do so I also thought reScue DOG before FOSTER.
Double-decker. I had a slight glitch. When I was born, my family lived in a double- decker. Let me explain. A Southeastern New England term for a very common house style built in the late 19th century and well into the 20th. Double decker ( also triple). Story goes that as shipwrights who made wooden boats lost jobs as much of the industry switched to metal, they ended working on the two or three family houses built to accommodate the wave of immigrants coming in They used the term “decks” instead of floors, because that was what they were used to.
As X used to say, sometimes you know too much! The answer eventually dawned on me
Crazy but fun Zimbalist story Rex! I vividly remember him from "The FBI" series; here's a quote from the intro: "A Quinn Martin production! Starring: Efrem Zimbalist Junior!" Watched it every week.
ReplyDeleteSolving down clues only it went pretty smooth. I didn't get the theme until BEST ACTRESS got filled in from crosses. Women's names again, two days in a row, but a much saner number.
Unlike Rex I got 10 down APPEALS instantly from the clue; just on the right wavelength I guess. A few others weren't at all obvious, especially 44 down SEE HERE which from the clue could have been almost anything else. And my final square was the crossing of BERRY PIE with EXTOL, whose clue gave me nothing. I ended up with BERRYPI- and put in BERRY PIT, until finally EXTOL popped into my head. Just over 8 minutes flat!
I didn't have to change my clocks this weekend. That's because for several years now I haven't bothered; I've just left them on daylight time all year. (My computer and phone kept me reminded of the "real" time.) As I mentioned some days ago, the BC government made a surprise announcement that we will no longer be using "Standard Time" any more, so I guess I was really ahead of the curve!
Omg. Now I feel old having remembered him in 77 Sunset Strip. All I can say is I was a “late in life” baby and probably watched things early on that a lot of people my age did not. Good for xwords though!
DeleteAnd then there’s Bumbleberry pie:
ReplyDeleteBumbleberry pie is a mixed berry pie. It is made of at least three kinds of berries, but generally refers to a mixed berry pie, as there is no such berry as a "bumbleberry". This pie often also contains apple or rhubarb. Berries commonly used in this pie may include blueberries, raspberries, strawberries, and blackberries. (Wikipedia)
Apparently it’s Canadian in origin (or at least the term is), which would explain why I’ve consumed lots of it in my lifetime. It’s essentially a tasty way to use up a bunch of seasonal fruit before it spoils.
And, yes, we often just called it Berry Pie.
And then there's dingleberry pie
Delete"One Battle After Another" can and should win best picture but last five minutes of "Hamnet" are the best five minutes of the year and should leave anyone in tears.
ReplyDeleteBeing told this over and over means it will absolutely not have this effect on me (and I cry pretty easy). Plus, I resent having to sit through two hours of meh just to get to the good part.
DeleteLove that Rex! That is what I’d think.
DeleteDidn't know that EZJr. had run afoul of Reagan and Bush I and had supported John Anderson in 1980 (I did too; the only time I voted for a third party candidate in all the presidential elections I've participated in, starting with 1976; it's all Dems otherwise, though often while holding my nose). That raises his stature for me. Was a bit too young to watch him on "77 Sunset Strip," but I remember him from the "The FBI" series and as Sam Hendricks, the New York photographer and blind woman's (Audrey Hepburn) husband in 1967's "Wait Until Dark," whose decision to accept a package from a perfect stranger at JFK Airport sets that movie's far-fetched but gripping plot in motion. (The movie is largely watchable because of Alan Arkin's superb performance as one of the great screen villains of all time, hipster/drug dealer /murderer Harry Roat). I know Zimbalist fell away from his Jewish heritage/faith and supported Barry Goldwater for president in 1964, but apparently he moderated his views later on, enough to be on the Reaganites' blacklist, so perhaps I'll forgive his earlier far-right forays. I never thought he was a particularly interesting or nuanced actor.
ReplyDeleteSensible B.C. and it’s permanent daylight savings time! I wish Oregon would do that.
ReplyDeleteGood easy, for a Monday, puzzle. Some clues too helpful eg for URSA. I solved this as themeless, not knowing actors/actresses, although I did understand once the theme appeared.
Enjoyed remembering Happy XMAS (War is Over)
The FBI was broadcast on Sunday, as I recall. I watched it and Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom without fail.
ReplyDeleteI support more partially (or even totally!) absurdist posts from Rex about quotidian crossword minutiae like Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. Has Rex entered his "Efrem Phase"? I, for one, hope so.
ReplyDeleteAhora mira aquí. Escúchame.
ReplyDeleteWell, there ya go. Four people with Oscars. Really long day yesterday and fighting the end of a cold, so I'm too out of it to get worked up over this one. Seems fine. Pleasant really.
I kept reading [Grunt from a pigeon] (rather than pigpen) and was surprised to learn pigeons OINK. I wish they did.
❤️ COULDA. NOSIER.
People: 6
Places: 2
Products: 9
Partials: 4
Foreignisms: 3
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 24 of 74 (32%)
Funny Factor: 3 😐
Tee-Hee: Sex SYMBOL.
Uniclues:
1 When you use a stick to bash a dude running through the park.
2 Pig who negotiates a deal with your dead grandmother.
3 Take their rocks away.
4 When they talk you into rhinoplasty during lipo, a tuck, and a face lift.
5 Gives that come hither look to meat.
6 Effect among those who know it's a thing when you say it isn't a thing.
7 A plum, or a wrinkled plum that'll kick your ass.
8 Makes root wine.
9 Orange fingers.
10 These years when we spend half our day turning off unnecessary notifications from our phones.
11 The native who likes to reed.
12 Those who take showers together after some wrangling.
1 FIELD HOCKEY PAT
2 ESP OINK AGENT
3 DISARM STONE AGE
4 NOSIER UPSELLS
5 LEADS ON T-BONES
6 BERRY PIE RISE-UP
7 BEEFIER RAISIN (~)
8 STEPS ON CARROTS
9 DORITO SYMBOL
10 CHIME STOP ERA
11 MAYANS' OBOIST
12 WETTEST POSSE
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Why you're sitting in the parking lot with a black eye. "AW COME ON," IN TOPLESS BAR.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯