Monday, March 30, 2026

California city with a humble-sounding name / MON 3-30-26 / Kenya's second-largest city / Endless TikTok scrolling or Tetris playing, e.g. Like the original Broadway cast of "The Wiz" / Longtime record label or Beastie Boy / Major drags on a team's progress, metaphorically / Onetime AT&T competitor / Caustic paint stripper

Constructor: Gary Cee

Relative difficulty: Medium (solved Downs-only)

THEME: BACKED UP (64A: Went into reverse ... or what the ends of 17-, 20-, 38- and 59-Across might be) — last words of theme answers are things that might be backed up:

Theme answers:
  • TIME SINK (17A: Endless TikTok scrolling or Tetris playing, e.g.)
  • CIRCULAR FILE (20A: Wastebasket, jokingly)
  • DRUG TRAFFIC (38A: Illegal distribution of narcotics)
  • BAGGAGE CLAIM (59A: Where to pick up luggage at an airport)
Word of the Day: MOMBASA (42D: Kenya's second-largest city) —

Mombasa (/mɒmˈbæsə/ mom-BASSalso US/-ˈbɑːsə/ -⁠BAH-sə) is a coastal city in southeastern Kenya along the Indian Ocean. It was the first capital of British East Africa, before Nairobi was elevated to capital status in 1907. It now serves as the capital of Mombasa County. Buildings in the Central Business District are blue and white, representing the Indian Ocean.] It is the country's oldest (c. 900 A.D.) and second-largest city after Nairobi, with a population of about 1,208,333 people according to the 2019 census.
• • •

Pretty bland outing today. Nothing particularly wrong with it. Just blah. A bog-standard "last words"-type puzzle. Those last words all can get backed up, it's true. Can't argue with that. There's absolutely no sense of playfulness or cleverness about the revealer—just an ordinary phrase that happens to literally describe the theme. Conceptually, this is the opposite of yesterday's ambitious, inventive, daring puzzle. Now I expect Monday puzzles to be easy, and I expect themes to be relatively simple, but that doesn't mean they can't be executed with some flair or humor or ... something. I can't fault the puzzle for much; it's not doing anything particularly wrong or even unappealing. I don't love how choppy the grid is, how chock full o' 3s the grid seems to be because of the black-square arrangement, and (relatedly) I don't love the imbalance between the relatively wide-open NE and SW corners and the short answer-laden rest of the grid. It's aesthetically wonky, imbalanced, odd. But this is mostly a matter of personal taste; my objections don't have much to do with the theme concept or how the grid was filled. It's just blah to me. The four long Downs are pretty decent, though, especially INSIDE SCOOP and DEAD WEIGHTS. Beyond that, there was nothing I was particularly happy to see. But, again, there was nothing I was particularly sad to see, either. A real ho-hummer, this one. But professionally made. Fine. Reasonable. Forgettable, but acceptable [well, mostly ... see the first bullet point, below]


The Downs-only solve today was also pretty average, very doable, but tricky in precisely the places you'd expect a grid like this to be tricky for the Downs-only solver—namely, the NE and SW corners (the aforementioned "wide-open" corners, with lots of longer Downs running through them. Three parallel longer Downs in each corner. That can make it hard to get traction if you're solving Downs-only, as longer answers are simply harder to come up with if you have no letters in place and no crosses to help out (unless you're able to infer them). I managed to get through the NW pretty easily, largely because I grew up in the Central Valley of California and so know MODESTO well (well, I know the name well—I can't remember ever having gone there). The letters in MODESTO helped make the Acrosses up there easy to infer, which then helped me get INSIDE SCOOP (which I definitely needed a bunch of crosses to see). 


I had much more trouble in the SW, where MODESTO's symmetrical counterpart, MOMBASA, proved far (far) more elusive (42D: Kenya's second-largest city). I know precisely one Kenyan city (also seven letters!), but sadly (for me), that city is the first-largest, not today's second-largest. The only way I ended up getting MOMBASA was through testing letters from the crosses and seeing if they sounded like anything. It also took some doing to get ENCASES, which was not an obvious answer to 43D: Boxes up securely. As my wife said Sunday evening after she'd finished the puzzle: "There's nothing particularly 'secure" about ENCASES." I wanted RETAPES at first (!?). The only way I got to ENCASES was by finally guessing ONE SEED (instead of my previous guess, RYE SEED) as the answer to 48A: Top placement in a bracket, for a March Madness team, and then by guessing ASHAME from --HAME (63A: Regrettably unfortunate). Once I floated ENCASES as a possible answer, MEWLS and MCI went in (the one a near certainty, the other an educated guess), it was only the second-to-last letter of MOMBA-A that remained elusive. The whole time I was building MOMBASA, I honestly felt like I was just making up a name. I considered BETTER / MOMBABA at one point, but then MOMBASA occurred to me, and it just sounded right. Perhaps because it sounded like "Mufasa." Or "Mumbai," I don't know. I just know the puzzle gave me a "Congratulations" message and I was done. 


Bullets:
  • 39D: Take advantage of (USE) / 12D: Of no help (USELESS— You can't do this. You cannot. This is a DQ (that's "disqualification," not Dairy Queen). You can argue up and down that USE is presented as a verb, not a noun, and so USELESS isn't just the same word plus a suffix, but come on, man, even you don't believe the words that are coming out of your mouth. USE is USE is USE. You cannot put a word in your grid and then put the same damn word in your grid again with a suffix attached to it like some kind of fake mustache and pretend it's not a dupe. It's a dupe. Boo! 
  • 13D: California city with a humble-sounding name (MODESTO) — this is incorrect. It *looks* humble (because it's got "modest" in there), but it doesn't *sound* humble. It's mo-DEST-o, not MOD-est-o. Maybe "MODESTO" is Spanish for "modest," and so the city really is "humble-sounding" in Spanish, but for the regular-ass American pronunciation, the "sounding" part does not apply. 
[Few small cities get a song this good written about them.]
  • 40D: Like the original Broadway cast of "The Wiz" (ALL-BLACK) — interesting answer. Missed opportunity for some good NZ content, but The Wiz is good too, I like The Wiz.
  • 48A: Top placement in a bracket, for a March Madness team (ONE SEED) — timely! Looks like UConn beat Duke on a buzzer-beater last night, which kept the Final Four from being 75% ONE SEEDs. But still, two remain: Arizona and Michigan. Those two play each other next week for a place in the Championship (vs. the winner of UConn/Illinois). Needless to say: Go Blue* 
That's all for today. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

*This applies to the Michigan women's team too, who are playing ONE SEED Texas today for a spot in the Women's Final Four—pretty good year for Wolverines basketball

[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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77 comments:

  1. Solved it as a themeless.. OK puzzle, but I expect a torrent of criticism for ASHAME (didn't bother me).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:31 AM

      Yes, it's A SHAME. It did bother me.

      Delete
    2. DAVinHOP11:51 AM

      A SHAME bothersome in the same manner as A SANDWICH? That was my thought when I typed it in.

      If Rex's ratings each came with a one-word description, I think the word for 2-1/2 stars has to be "Meh". Appropriate today, as RP chronicled.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous1:32 PM

      @DAVinHOP 11:51 am A SHAME is a common idiom in English for describing a disappointing or unfortunate situation - which is how it was clued. Unlike the sandwich example you offered, the word SHAME takes on a different meaning without the A; the A is a necessary component of the idiom.

      Delete
  2. We used to rent a bedroom to people, mostly international, who needed to be in Boston for 1-3 months, and one of them was from MOMBASA. I think I would have known it anyway, but that certainly helped. I knew it was very hot (probably the reason the capital was moved to Nairobi), but not that it was the second-largest city. But it was the only other city I could think of, so in it went. As for MODESTO (and c'mon, Rex, that's an inherently nice pairing!), it's a name that it's hard to forget once you've seen it (the name, that is, I've certainly never been there).

    I liked the theme more than Rex did -- each one is backed up in a different sense, which is nice. I guess it could have been clued more humorously, but I can't think of an example that doesn't impinge on one of the theme answers.

    Two long downs cross three themers each, and a slew of downs cross two, which is also nice. I thought of the rugby team too, but can you refer to it in the singular? Is one of the players an ALL-BLACK? Seems reasonable, but too hard for a Monday.

    One quibble--DEAD WEIGHTS in the plural. Never heard it.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Mewls? Glad I waited to fill that one in

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:03 AM

      “All the world’s a stage,
      And all the men and women merely players;
      They have their exits and their entrances;
      And one man in his time plays many parts,
      His acts being seven ages. At first the infant,
      Mewling and puking in the nurse’s arms;”
      —“As You Like It”, Shakespeare

      Delete
  4. Andy Freude7:12 AM

    Very satisfying Monday downs-mostly solve. Dropped in MODESTO and MOMBASA with no hesitation, though I’ve never visited either city. Agree with Rex’s and jberg’s nits, but must confess I didn’t notice them at the time. All in all, a few minutes of fun and a worthy way to postpone reading the morning headlines. Thanks, Gary Cee!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Workmanlike - common theme type and clean enough fill. Liked CIRCULAR FILE - revealer worked and had some spark.

    They found him in MOMBASA in a barroom drinking gin

    Rex provides the highs and lows of the fill - I liked LANCELOT, INSIDE SCOOP and SETTER. MCI, MCA, ATM, CSI etc - the short stuff here was rough.

    All This USELESS Beauty

    Pleasant enough Monday morning solve.

    DEAD WEIGHT

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Love the Warren Zevon reference. A great song!

      Delete
    2. Warren Zevon is also the reason I knew Mombasa. What a great song.

      Delete
    3. Same here on the Zevon/Mombasa connection. Lyrics are our friends.

      Delete
    4. Walk Away Renee12:02 PM

      Me three. Have often wondered if (the great) songwriters ever create on a date, like, “Here, do something with ‘Ashtabula’”

      Delete
    5. I'll join the chorus here this morning, Son Volt. Great clips. I miss Warren Zevon. Elvis was, as usual, poetic. And though I prefer The Band's version, the Dead Weight was pretty decent.

      Delete
    6. Re: "Eat a sandwich." On his last appearance, when Warren was asked by David Letterman what he learned about life and death, he said "Enjoy every sandwich." His performance of "Roland" during that show was his last public performance. (Wikipedia)

      Delete
    7. Liveprof
      Thanks for reminding me of Zevon’s appearance on Letterman. I saw it well after he died. It was an amazing performance and interview.
      Son Volt I didn’t think of that line when doing the puzzle but I knew what song it was immediately. A classic.

      Delete
  6. Hey All !
    Nice MonPuz. I guess "Digestive System" was too long. Har.

    Liked it, didn't have a negative reaction to this puz. There's 12 3's in the Acrosses, 17 in the Downs, total of 29, which is high. But most of them are actual words.

    Got @Anoa's POCproducing ASSESS in today. Only one of those S's doesn't provide a plural.

    Neat how each Themer ender can be parsed two ways, ala submerging something in the SINK is to SINK it.

    Hope y'all have a great Monday!

    Three F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:40 AM

      just to be nitty, one S is for verb form-ENCASES

      Delete
  7. I agree with OFL re the SW as a sticking point. I didn’t know ASHAME was a stand-alone word, MEWLS is not a word I ever personally use, ENCASES as clued was no gimme, and of course I needed every cross for MOMBASA. That’s kind of an odd little corner, especially for a Monday.

    I thought the reveal would only apply to the second word in each theme answer, but I’m drawing a blank on a “backed-up” CLAIM. Is there such a thing?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I believe it's A SHAME: two words. "That's regrettably unfortunate" -- that's A SHAME.

      Delete
    2. A claim may be BACKED UP by evidence, etc. (Sorry for two comments; I should have read the entirety before replying.)

      Delete
    3. Anonymous8:35 AM

      Good catch. CLAIM needs BAGGAGE to fir theme.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous8:36 AM

      Think of claim like an assertion, that is backed up with evidence.

      Delete
  8. Little subthemes serendipitously in this grid:
    • Animals – EEL, OWL, DOE, FLY.
    • First names – ELI, BEAU, ROSE, BOB, ERIK.
    • Words that sound like other words: DES, ORE, BEAU, OWE, LYE, IRE, SINE, DRE, TRE, PAIR, DOE.
    • Airports – BAGGAGE CLAIM, GATE, FLY, and at some airports, TIME SINK for waiting in line.

    I really like the theme – things that can be BACKED UP, four completely different meanings of that phrase. It’s so random – how did Gary come up with it? I also like the no-isolated-islands grid design.

    I failed at trying to guess the revealer after filling in the theme answers, but man, the wrestling and hoop-jumping I went through in the effort got my brain sweating and happy.

    It’s nice to see you again, Gary, here for your 41st Times puzzle after a six-year absence. You haven’t lost a step. Thank you for a splendid outing!

    ReplyDelete
  9. My five favorite original clues from last week
    (in order of appearance):

    1. Totally missing the big picture (11)
    2.Emily Dickinson's early period (4)
    3. Program for those trying to reduce screen time, familiarly (3)(3)
    4. One of two typically used when rowing, in brief (3)
    5. What you do when you tour a certain SoCal campus, phonetically? (4)


    NEARSIGHTED
    MORN
    TSA PRE
    LAT
    UCLA

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My favorite encore clues from last week:

      [Heart on one's sleeve, perhaps] (3)
      [Tired old advertising mascot?] (8)(3)


      TAT
      MICHELIN MAN

      Delete
    2. Anonymous12:36 PM

      I will die on the hill that “TSA Pre” is not a thing without the check. No one, anywhere ever calls it TSA pre. Sometimes you’ll see it as “TSA Pre” with a check mark but it still has the check mark. Even their website doesn’t have it abbreviated that way.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous6:32 PM

      Anonymous 11:36 AM
      Millions upon millions of people traveling through and talking about the system since it was started. Plus the tendency of people to shorten terms over time
      So I immediately figured that the term was a thing. A,I which vacuums up the internet has picked it up of course. Just because I haven’t heard of something ob this blog I don’t assume it doesn’t exist

      Delete
  10. Fun fact: DOEs correspond to bucks, but hinds correspond to stags. Don't ask me why.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous9:03 AM

      Fun fact: hinds correspond to harts (adult but age specific, tho 3 yrs for former and 5 for latter)

      Delete
  11. Anonymous8:21 AM

    The MCI/MOMBASA cross felt like a Natick. Google tells me that MCI merged into WorldCom in 1998. I’m not particularly young, but I am young enough not to have a working knowledge of 90s phone companies (outside of the Bells).

    ReplyDelete
  12. It's a Monday that does what Monday does. I expected, correctly, than Rex would object to USE and USELESS in the grid.

    But I also expected, wrongly, that he would show utter contempt for A SHAME. Are we just going to allow a + any word in the grid?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I suspect he tolerated it because in (very) Olde English there's the word ASHAME (bring shame on someone). Thought it would be controversial.

      Delete
    2. @kitshef, I had the same expectations, and was disappointed that Rex let A SHAME slide by. @Bob Mills, it has to be read as two words because the archaic "ashame" is a verb, and the clue calls for an adjective. This answer is no better than "a chair" or "a tree" IMO. It was the last answer I entered, because I really couldn't believe it was going to be correct.

      Delete
    3. I am surprised that people had a problem with A SHAME. It's something I say and hear a lot. I wonder whether it's age-related.



      Delete
    4. Anonymous3:38 PM

      @SAILOR (1:25 PM). A SHAME is a completely different from "a chair" and "a tree" (factually, not IMO). A SHAME is a common English idiomatic expression having the meaning with which it is clued here. The A is integral to the idiom; the word SHAME standing alone means something different.

      As such, It is a perfectly fine answer for a crossword and is clued correctly.

      Delete
  13. Anonymous8:32 AM

    Really old fill. When was the last time you heard anyone mention the circular file? 1984? I thought it was very easy but I wasn’t slowed down by Rex’s obsession with Mombasa and Modesto

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 8:32 AM Anonymous
      I guess I am really odd. I like and use the expression circular file. But I suppose I am also very old ((73).

      Delete
  14. Oh, and I think of "Endless TikTok scrolling or Tetris playing" as "TIME suck", rather than TIME SINK. But oddly enough, another clue, "Major drags on a team's progress, metaphorically", fits TIME SINK perfectly.

    Time sink = something that takes a lot of time that is part of a larger (presumably worthwhile) project.

    Time suck - something that is a standalone waste of time.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Kitshef.
      I see your point about time sink but there is no way people in general are going to make such a fine distinction. Sure enough, the first site I looked at had a trivia game as a time sink.

      Delete
  15. Anonymous8:43 AM

    I would have given the puzzle more stars than Rex did. I liked it a lot. I even got emery right as opposed to Emory( the university).After all these years, maybe I’ve learned the correct spelling.🎈🎈🎊🎊

    ReplyDelete
  16. Anonymous8:48 AM

    Couldn’t quite finish this as a Downs Only puzzle (my DO solve rate is about 75%). My brain could only see DEAD WEIGHT, without the plural, and for some reason I always think MOMBASA is in Uganda.
    The experience has me contemplating the whole Downs Only project. I’d never considered it until I saw it talked about in this blog. In the old paper days I used to fill in all the acrosses first on Monday and Tuesday. The idea was to make the puzzle, and therefore the pleasure of the activity, last longer.
    But now I’m not so sure it ends up being more pleasurable. I couldn’t finish this puzzle with Downs Only, so it sort of feels like I failed. And when I’m successful I don’t even read half the clues. I’m potentially missing the constructor’s most brilliant word play.
    I’ll probably keep attempting DO solving on Mondays, but maybe not. Yat

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey Yat.
      Two things. First, you can change your Anonymous tag to Yat by hitting the box to the right of the Comment as: thingie. (Or maybe that's just with the version I use?)
      Second, I solve the "incorrect" way, according to Rex. He solves 1A nine times out of ten, then does the Downs he gets from that, then more Acrosses from the Downs, etc.
      I like to go through all the Acrosses in order first, filling what I can, then go through all the Downs, again filling what I can. Then I go back willy-nilly through the grid, filling what I can until finished.
      They way you don't miss any clues.

      Two schools of thought. I guess you can chalk my way up to FOMO on clues. 😁

      Roo

      Delete
    2. Roo
      I look at all acrosses first before I look at the downs and I have been doing the Times puzzle for over fifty years!

      Delete
  17. I did pretty well Down Only, except for the very lower left corner (MOMBASA and ENCASES), and I couldn’t decipher the theme — Downs Only, I didn’t know what the revealer was and couldn’t figure out a connection among what seemed to be the theme answers.

    But I had a pleasant time with it and think Rex is being a little nit picky with USE (I assumed it was intentional) and MODESTO, but that’s fine!

    ReplyDelete
  18. A workaday Monday offering. I think I liked it a DRIB (?) more than Rex. A lot of toggling between Across and Down, due to all the short fill, which slowed me up a bit, so not the whooshiest of Mondays, but EVEN SO I liked, e.g., CIRCULAR FILE and INSIDE SCOOP and DEADWEIGHTS (as a word in isolation -- @jberg says he's never seen it used as clued, and I wasn't able to find that usage either after consulting a few online dictionaries, but I'll wait to see whether it will be BACKED UP by others).

    Rex of course has a point about USE and USELESS both being in the grid. The Times standards, they are a-changin'.

    Speaking of DRIB: I've never seen nor heard the singular form, nor have I seen the plural anywhere outside the expression "DRIBS and drabs". It's like "crannies" -- oh sure, you'll find it on its own in the dictionary, but in real life, it seems too shy to appear on its own without its mate "nooks", where the PAIR make their most celebrated appearances in Thomas' English Muffin ads. (They do have a corner on the English Muffin racket. I haven't been happy with their product as of late. To me, something disagreeably chemical about the taste. A SHAME, I say.)

    Hope you all have a pleasant Monday.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Easy enough but couldn't get the revealer and when I did, I thought--oho! A Connections puzzle. This is an example of when I would probably have SINK, TRAFFIC, FILE and CLAIM as my last four and then find out they are all "things that can be backed up", and then I would say, of course.

    Only two slight hesitations were on MCI and MCA. Interesting. Agree with @kitshef on TIMESINK vs. TIMESUCK, which was the first thing I thought of but almost as quickly saw that it wouldn't work.

    Very serviceable Mondecito, GC. Good Connections, and thanks for a fair amount of fun.

    ReplyDelete
  20. the MOMBASA - MCI cross was brutal

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. crayon beam
      It’s partially an age thing MCI was a gimme for me. When deregulation came I used MCI for my office phone. Also Mombasa was a gimme for me too.i read a lot of international news.

      Delete
  21. Anonymous9:45 AM

    Anyone else have GTE before MCI? That error slowed me down for quite a while is the SW. I think that GTE was the telephone service provider where my family lived 50 years ago.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Stephen C.9:45 AM

    Au contraire. Humble people with pretensions say mo-DEST all the time.

    ReplyDelete
  23. Did you know that the printed version of the puzzle is done in the proprietary TIMESINK which is ALLBLACK?

    In the upper center acrosses we have an exact replication of how my Lithuanian grandfather would have pronounced the former Giants QB: ELI MAN INK.

    I think @Rex is saying that if you USE USELESS he'll like it more.

    Nice to see BEAU BIDEN in the puzzle. Good guy. RIP.

    I thought this was a nice theme/revealer combo, and I'm speaking as a guy who's often been BACKEDUP. Thanks, Gary Cee.

    ReplyDelete
  24. Alice Pollard10:01 AM

    We're supposed to know the second largest city in Kenya on a Monday? I had topSEED before ONESEED, that did not help. 8 minutes on a Monday - UGH.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:04 AM

      Top is in the clue.

      Delete
    2. Alice Pollard11:37 AM

      Yes, it is,,, Double UGH. :)

      Delete
  25. Pretty easy but kind of meh like Rex said.

    ReplyDelete
  26. EasyEd10:21 AM

    As I moved through this puzzle everything felt easily “in the language”. Had to quickly change TIMESucK to TIMESINK at the beginning, and initially thought CIRCUSsomething before registering an old favorite CIRCULARFILE. As kids, throwing crushed wads of paper into a trash basket from long distance was a great indoor game. Maybe not an exhilarating ride but liked this one from MODESTO to it’s ASHAME.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Glad to see others beat me to it on the Zevon connection. Made my day.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Medium. No erasures but I did not know MOMBASA and I needed crosses for MCA and MCI.

    Fun theme answers with some fine long downs, liked it more than @Rex did.


    Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1100 was mostly easy for me, however I did struggle a little bit in the SW. Good luck!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I make 1100 as easy, edging towards medium. Lots of noises used as interjections where you have to guess at which random spelling is wanted.

      Delete
  29. Old Salt10:43 AM

    Guys on the ship used the phrase "beyond Mombasa" to mean "way out there."

    ReplyDelete
  30. MONDAY ... A new week of NYTPuzs to solve. Time to RELACE & INKUP.
    [0] Mondays without a first-/last- word puztheme mcguffin. Ah, well -- I tried hard not to peek at the revealer ahead of time, so that helped it score an har moment, at least.

    staff weeject pick, of 29 choices: IRE/ORE was kinda decorative. Primo weeject stacks, NW & SE, btw.

    fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Like the Mariana Trench among all the world's underwater places} = DEEPEST.

    other faves: INSIDESCOOP. LANCELOT. DEADWEIGHTS. synched-up MODESTO/MOMBASA.

    Thanx for the easy, RADIUM-active fun, Mr. Cee dude.

    Masked & Anonymo5Us

    p.s.
    It's Runtpuz Monday again ...
    runt #1:
    **gruntz**
    runt #2:
    **gruntz**
    non-runt #1 (for extended sufferin):
    **gruntz**

    M&A

    ReplyDelete
  31. On TIME SINK: Headline in The Onion this week: Entire Spring Break Spent In Airport Security Line

    On BACKED UP: Philip Roth described his dad as a long-time sufferer from constipation. When the U.S. dropped the atom bomb, he muttered "Maybe that will help."



    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Just what is the difference between Philip Roth and Alexander Portnoy, anyway? Is there any?

      Delete
  32. I thought it was a good Monday puzzle. I liked the four different kinds of things that can be backed up, while in the theme phrases, the SINK, FILE, TRAFFIC, and CLAIM appeared in other, non-back-upable senses. And, I guess being able to guess the reveal with no crosses increases the liking. :). I thought DEAD WEIGHTS was great, and I enjoyed the surprise of A SHAME and dredging up MOMBASA from deep recesses.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous1:10 PM

      My sister in law’s name is Carola. Beautiful name you don’t see much.

      Delete
  33. Nice hip-hop references in the write-up!!!

    #gogreen

    ReplyDelete
  34. Anonymous1:13 PM

    Mewl? New one for me.

    ReplyDelete
  35. I enjoyed this as a late night downs-only solve. Because I dropped in nukes for ICBMS at 56D, I had a little unraveling to do. I never seem to know the difference between “informally” and “for short”. Nothing too difficult to sort out, though. A comfy kind of Monday topped off by the image of drinking gin in Mombasa, minus the gunfire and death and all that.

    ReplyDelete
  36. SharonAK1:54 PM

    I just reread my completed (last night) puzzle and think Rex shortchanged it. I like all the long answers TIME SINK AND DEADWEIGHT make a statement of their own Might have been better if they crossed , but there they are on the side.
    INSIDE SCOOP, BAGGAGE CLAIM, DRUGTRAFFIC and CIRCULAR FILE are all kind of strong phrases.
    As for 12D and 39D. I guess never read the rule book and I'm just as glad. I take those sorts of "duplicates" as a kind of word play showing the different things words can do/be.

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  37. A slightly challenging down clues only solve, and I almost got there clean. No Happy Pencil at the end because I had ENCAGES at 43 down, and simply forgot to check that AGHAME is probably incorrect. Careless! But the theme was obvious as soon as I saw BACKED UP.

    Unlike Rex, for me MOMBASA came easy (but MODESTO came hard!). The only two Kenyan cities I know are it and Nairobi; "Mombasa Kenya" is familiar to my ear. But in California I know many many cities, and guessing 8 across was RADIUS and 19 across was LEASES and 26 across was DEW DEN DEB... so... SOSENTO? There were just so many wrong guesses without the across clues. But I did eventually get there! Only to be foiled by AGHAME.

    Weather news: lots of rain was forecast for the weekend; in the end we got nothing measurable. Still only 1.9 mm (0.07") this month and 6 mm (0.23") total for 2026.

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    1. Ooooh. Get set for forest fire season.

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    2. @Les, I'm trying not to think too much about it. The horror of 2023 is still fresh!

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  38. SharonAK2:08 PM

    Kitchef, Mils, etc.
    Did you read any comments before posting? Early on it was clearly pointed out that A Shame is a common phrase in our language

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  39. I think of deadweight primarily as an adjective or as an invariant noun. "He is deadweight. They are deadweight. The Astros have a lot of deadweight this season." Merriam Webster is not backing me up on deadweight as an adjective. Nonetheless... pluralizing it with an S seems dead wrong.

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    1. My suggestion is to weight and sea.

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  40. I agree with SharonAK A. K.
    Dupes do not bother me in the least.
    Also. Clearly, Shortz, if he ever followed such a rule, has long abandoned it So Rex , there is no such rule in the Times, period! You have said on other occasions that since there are so many dupes you only point out egregious ( your word) ones. Which is fine. But I think Shortz is entitled to his own rules.
    The puzzle wasn’t blah for me. Then I never do downs only. Aren’t those that do missing half the clues? So Rex is talking about a different puzzle!
    As others have said, maybe unfair to criticize a puzzle for being boring when you do that.

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