Afghan language / MON 4-13-26 / Big banking inits. in the U.K. / City NE of Manchester / "The Thin Man" terrier / Places to stick wallets / Risky time for beach property owners / Pleasingly round
Monday, April 13, 2026
Constructor: Brad Wiegmann
Relative difficulty: Medium (actually kind of tough when solved Downs-only)
Theme answers:
- HIP-HOP MUSIC (17A: Rap songs and such)
- HIP POCKETS (24A: Places to stick wallets)
- HURRICANE SEASON (39A: Risky time for beach property owners)
- RAY CHARLES (49A: Singer with the 1961 #1 hit "Hit the Road Jack")
Pashto (/ˈpʌʃtoʊ/,/ˈpæʃtoʊ/ PASH-toh; پښتو, Pəx̌tó, [pəʂˈto, pʊxˈto, pəʃˈto, pəçˈto]) is an Eastern Iranian language in the Indo-European language family, natively spoken in northwestern Pakistan and southern and eastern Afghanistan. It has official status in Afghanistan. It was also known in historical Persian literature as Afghani (افغانی, Afghāni).
Spoken as a native language mainly by ethnic Pashtuns, it is one of the two official languages of Afghanistan alongside Dari, and the second-largest language in Pakistan, spoken mainly in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and the northern districts of Balochistan. Likewise, it is the primary language of the Pashtun diaspora around the world. The total number of Pashto speakers is estimated at around 35 million to 55 million. Pashto is "one of the primary markers of ethnic identity" amongst Pashtuns. (wikipedia)
• • •
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| [the preferred spelling, I'd say] |
As for the theme: kind of bland. Not my thing. Not that exciting. Do the three cheers in THREE CHEERS represent the single phrase HIP HIP HURRAY (which is made up of three words) or is the idea that you say "HIP HIP HURRAY" three times. I thought the latter, in which case THREE CHEERS isn't a great revealer, since what you've got here with the fronts of the four theme answers is precisely one cheer. But even if I accept that the revealer was a bullseye, the whole concept just feels weak and rudimentary to me. Not enough good wordplay to constitute a good Monday theme. I think my brain is slightly bothered also by the extra "R" in HURRICANE. I assume I'm supposed to pay attention only to the first three letters of each answer, but with the other three answers, those are standalone words (or, in the case of HIP-HOP, word parts). With HURRICANE, I have to mentally break the answer myself, and breaking it between the two "R"s feels odd / arbitrary, especially since "HURRAY" has two "R"s in it. Or maybe the whole theme works on sound, not spelling (?). But this is a minor detail, a petty objection. The real issue is blandness.
Lots of little stumbles on my Downs-only solve. Wanted only APPLE PIE, and so was reluctant to put in any other "pastry" for a bit (3D: Fruit pastry that pairs well with vanilla ice cream). Absolutely and completely blanked on 30D: Baking quantity (CUP), even with the "U" in place. Once TSP. wouldn't work, I was out of ideas. Had ADHERE before COHERE (4D: Stick together). And as for "GET ME?" ... bah. Sure, I guess people say that, somewhere, but it was not immediately clear to me, at all. Oh, and I had some trouble inferring HIP POCKETS because I kept wanting it to have something to do with HIPPOs. And then HIPPOCRAT(E)S. There's not much to like in this puzzle, besides RAY CHARLES, and "AS WE SPEAK," which, despite its bedeviling me, I have to admit is a pretty colorful longer answer.
Bullets:
- 19A: Certain endurance race, in brief (TRI) — as in "triathlon"
- 28A: "There's ___ in 'team,' but there is one in 'win'" ("NO 'I'") — it's not bad enough we have to endure the terrible partial NOI, we have to get in the form of this corny bumper sticker aphorism. The cliché "there's NO 'I' in team" was bad enough on its own. Trying to make it funny isn't helping. It's just taking up more space.
- 55A: "The Thin Man" terrier (ASTA) — one piece of crosswordese that will not die, which is also a piece of crosswordese that I don't mind (assuming the rest of the grid isn't drowning in it). Dogs and cats get a pass. ASTA, fine. TOTO, welcome. LASSIE ... sure, whatever. Are there any crosswordese cats? Oh, right, ELSA. You used to see ELSA (the lion from Born Free) all the time. Now you usually find ELSA in the Frozen section of the crosswordese supermarket. ELSA the lion is not to be confused with ILSA, Ingrid Bergman's character in Casablanca, even though I do, in fact, confuse them, all the time. to this day.
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| [FYI this is the first thing that comes up when I search ASTA now 🙁] |
- 24D: Big banking inits. in the U.K. (HSBC) — one of those initialisms that just kills a puzzle's vibe. Initials? Banking? U.K.? It's just a letter string to me, every time I see it (which always feels like too often and yet not often enough for the letters to stick). I think I went with HMBC this time, so I was at least close. Thankfully, the cross (TESS) was indisputably an "S".
- 53D: City NE of Manchester (LEEDS) — again, this puzzle is asking me to know way too much about the U.K., esp. on a Monday. I actually got this fairly quickly ... after I determined that Manchester was the one in England and not the one in New Hampshire.
That's all. See you next time. And congratulations to Erik Agard, crossword editor and constructor extraordinaire, for winning the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament yesterday for (I believe) the second time. Beat the fastest solvers in the world on the final puzzle by over a minute. Crazy.
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91 comments:
Yup - not a lot of depth here - it’s cute enough for early week but lacks any real nuance. I like the revealer and it seems apt.
Osaka Aquabus
Overall fill is serviceable but far from fun - Rex highlights most of it. I liked AS WE SPEAK and APPLE TART. Knew PASHTO so it didn’t bug me as much. Not a lot of pushback in the grid.
Pleasant enough I guess - a so-so Monday morning solve.
Live at LEEDS
I also didn't know PASHTO, so that became an issue. Not every keg has a TAP attached, but I went with it anyway and the music sounded. Nice puzzle...normal Monday difficulty.
7:30 for me last night... so medium challenging for Monday. Liked HURRICANESEASON and RAYCHARLES in my grid! Serviceable Monday theme, liked ASWESPEAK. PASHTO was a gimme for me cuz I work with Afghan clients. *** from me! Thanks, Brad! I do have a question.... where can one play the puzzles from ACPT, after the fact?
My favorite variant of the "no I in TEAM" saying is, "There IS an i in TEAM. It's in the middle of the A-hole..."
Even more confusingly, though it's a UK bank, the initials stand for Hongkong Shanghai Bank of China. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ adHERE before COHERE as well, and GET it before GET ME, but otherwise I thought this was easier than the usual Monday (I somehow know PASHTO is spoken by Pashtuns). Kind of agree on the theme, but I enjoyed it more than @Rex.
Why is Rumba lit up yellow instead of Ray Charles on the NYT on line version?
Great news about Erik! Anybody else here want to help mount a campaign to make him the next editor of the NYTXW?
Slightly harder than Medium for a Monday. I used to see PASHTO much more in the years after the US invaded Afghanistan, but today I got to PASH__ before it kicked in. Something like that happened with HSBC as well.
How old do you have to be to remember Howard COSELL? He used to be just about everywhere.
I can't get my mind now off of TORTE and its delicious LAYERS. Channeling Seinfeld: this puzzle is making me hungry.
So, with regard to Rex's comments on the revealer: I'm confident that it's that HIP HIP HURRAY is classically SAID THREE times in a row, and I also feel there's no actual problem since the clue for THREE CHEERS merely says it is suggested by the (three-letter) beginnings of those four clues, which seems true enough (and is not exactly a strong claim). I suppose all this could have been clearer at the expense of more words in the clue, but as for how yours truly REACTS: good enough for crosswords.
(Side note: from where I sit, there seems to be another software glitch on their END, since the cursor, when placed at 62 Across, lights up 49 Down and not 49 Across. Some similar glitch happened the other day.)
Hope you have a good Monday.
Normal Monday difficulty here, but then I knew PASHTO.
I'd argue that there are no typos in the clue for 60A, as both places where the letters are reversed are intentional, not accidental. Really that should read "Tehre are zero in tihs clue". Or "Tehre appear to be two in tihs clue".
I can never remember that it’s TESS, and COHERE just didn’t want to materialize for me. That crossing “E” was my last square to drop.
Fortunately, I avail myself of the clues on the across answers when I solve a crossword puzzle, which came in handy for PASHTO. It seemed a little unusual to encounter a term I’ve never heard of before on a Monday.
How many themes does Rex truly praise the themes? He usually points out the positive and negative aspects, and doesn’t frequently totally bash one as being complete garbage. On the flip side, he rarely uses superlatives either. I guess we are lucky if we get one truly good one (on the Rex scale) per week.
Feel free to chime in Rex. On balance, is the requirement to have a theme 5 days a week a net positive or a drawback?
I liked this a lot more than OFL, which is not unusual,, mostly because the revealer was one of those oh, of course! moments. Didn't see that one coming.
PASHTO? Well, it's a poor day when you can't learn something, LEEDS I know from watching the Premiere League but no idea about HSBC and can't imagine what it stands for. I have trouble connecting HIPHOP with MUSIC but I suspect that's an age thing.
Todays highlights are ASTA who appears soon after ARARAT, crossword classics. And of course RAYCHARLES. I'm still working on my campaign to make "America the Beautiful' our national anthem and have the RAYCHARLES version played before, well, everything.
OK Monday by me, BW. I Bet We get worse ones than this this week, and thanks for all the fun.
Hey All !
Shoot, had I made it (somehow, miraclely) to that ACPT final, I'd still be up there solving! (Alone, everyone would've gone home, and I'd turn around to find an empty room with some guy vacuuming!)
Congrats to Erik.
And Congrats to Brad on today's nice MonPuz. Although, I admit to trying to get the HURRI to transmogrify into HURRAY somehow. The RAY Themer just whooshed over my head. I blame the toughness of the lower half.
I had mALTA for YALTA , PASHTO a WOE, REair-RERuN-RERAN, making ATAD surprisingly tough to see. And though familiar with LEEDS as a crossword answer, the clue was vague. So combine all that, with the last letter change of the m to Y of YALTA, and failed to see the last two Themers as they were meant to be. Egads.
Interpreting the THREE CHEERS as the first three letters of each Themer, ergo said Revealer works just fine.
I actually had a credit card issued by HSBC at one time, years ago.
Welp, hope y'all have a great Monday!
One F
RooMonster
DarrinV
This made for an excellent puzzle for new solvers. There were plenty of gimmes for footholds, balanced by possible no-knows (THEA, ASTA, PASHTO, YALTA, i.e.) where the solver can learn that even unknown answers can be gotten.
It also has an easy-to-understand theme, and many new solvers come into Crosslandia not knowing that puzzles can have themes.
My brain liked playing Guess The Revealer, even though unsuccessful. I liked the zingy theme answers, as well as the local beauty: AS WE SPEAK, APPLE TART, PLUMP, AKITA.
And wordnerd me loved seeing five palindromes in the grid.
Just a lovely Monday that you made, Brad. It always feels good to travel through a patch of quality – thank you!
My five favorite original clues from last week
(in order of appearance):
1. Famous figure known for off-the-cuff performances? (7)
2. Oil bigwig (3)(7)
3. Figures in a speed trap? (5)
4. Dark green (4)
5. Line of latitude? (3)(5)(2)
HOUDINI
ART CURATOR
NARCS
KALE
I'LL ALLOW IT
Like Rex, I didn't like that HUR was only a syllable, not a word. I thought you might make the clue be "Famous Bens," with the answer being HUR, FRANKLIN,... But I couldn't think of a 4-letter Ben to finish it. But then I realized that you could read the revealer as THREE [letter] CHEERS, but there were four theme answers. So, yeah, it could use a little more polishing.
I sort of knew PASHTO, except I thought it was PuSHTu, so that took correcting.
It used to be that if you flew into Heathrow, the very long corridor from your plane to passport control was lined with what seemed like hundreds of ads for HSBC. But I still wouldn't have remembered the S. Fortunately, I never saw that clue, as it was already filled from crosses.
My favorite encore clues from last week:
[It's a steal!] (5)
[Washington or Berlin] (6)
THEFT
IRVING
Yep, kinda tough for a Monday. Even knowing that the primary language of Afghanistan is Dari, I couldn’t come up with PASHTO. That’s Saturday stuff. And a British bank whose name is a string of letters? I can never get past the H.
But three (more) cheers for Hurray for the Riff Raff!
No chance for me downs only this week so I bailed early and did it the normal way. Too many I didn’t know right off the bat, including PASHTO and HSBC (which I had to double-check even before writing this) and then too many bad guesses for the ones I did “know” including ADHERE and GETIT and SAMBA. Then too many bad guesses for crosses like BASSET and TYROS.
Vive y deja vivir. ¿Entiendes lo que quiero decir?
Phew. That was more of a challenge than usual. Maybe because I don't get it. HIP HIP HURRICANE RUM? I'm sure 🦖 will explain it. {Oh, ha! The little blue highlights light up the wrong 49.}
I don't want to bring up a sensitive subject as I am far too much of a gentleman about these sort of things and you know how carefully I weigh every syllable I post, and I certainly want to apologize in advance to those who are sensitive about this subject, but can anyone anywhere name one single pastry that doesn't pair well with vanilla ice cream?
😩 SAIDAH.
People: 8
Places: 5
Products: 8
Partials: 1
Foreignisms: 3
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Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 25 of 78 (32%)
Funny Factor: 0 😫
Tee-Hee: Tit for TAT.
Uniclues:
1 So how long is it going to take before they create a container for it?
2 When her eyes say yes but her hips say no.
1 HIP POCKETS BEER (~)
2 LOINS END ASSENT
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Poet imposter prosecuted. SWOOP-IN FROST ON TRIAL.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
2-1/2 stars seems right, although for me more for the tired, short crosswordese (23 three-letter words) than the (not bad) theme.
Knew Pashtun, unfortunately, from the "Afghan conflict" era. Like Rex, PASHTO was a guess. Had Tad and Iota before BIT and ATAD, the latter of which confirmed PASHTO.
After HIP HOP MUSIC and HIP POCKETS, I assumed the central spanner would start with HIP, but APPLE TART nixed that.
I can still hear "Down goes Frazier" in COSELL's inimitable voice and cadence.
Anyone else read the clue for 2D (send out... as a disgraced leader"), see a five-letter answer, and either wistfully think "Trump"? or, after the results of elections in Hungary, "Orban"? The former's campaigning sure helped the latter, huh?
My app is highlighting RUMBA instead of RAYCHARLES so I was confused about the theme “Hip hip hoo-ruh” could anyone think that’s right?
Also, these words and clues were not Monday material. That’s two Mondays in a row that I’ve gone over my average time.
I don't think I've ever girded my loins. It sounds painful.
That's what I came here for! I was like "hip hip hurrum?"
Yeah, still wrong when I just did the puzzle at 8:15. They highlighted the down instead of the across. Not a great look when the idea is to be meticulous.
Nice and easy Monday puzzle with a little more bite to it than usual.
Good one on pastry and vanilla ice cream! :D (I cannot)
Morning all! I've been off for a couple of weeks as I JUST BECAME A GRANDFATHER FOR THE FIRST TIME! Fun stuff - not much is expected of me and so far the relationship with my grand daughter is going pretty smoothly as she deals with me much the same most other women have dealt with me in my life; that is, I start to talk and she either falls asleep, cries, or has to go to the bathroom- it's territory I know!.
I had a decent amount of fun with this one. Though there were some silly mishaps - rushed in and threw down *tad* for for 64A and *abit* for 65A! Had a total reversal there that took just a little too long fix. I don't know - *rumta* might be a dance I don't know and maybe they all met in *yalda* (??!!) as that location was not front of brain for me this morning. Anyway, that didn't all come together as quickly as it should have.
As for the theme, themers, and revealer, I thought, while basic, it was a fun Monday romp. I agree with @Lewis that this was a perfect outing for beginners.
As @Rex said, not much in the way of clever word play, but hey, it's a Monday so that doesn't bother me too much.
As I was catching up on the last couple of weeks, I feel a need to mention that this past Friday and Saturday were some of the finest puzzle experiences I've had in a while - both rock solid and both a joy.
Let's get a Monday morning Hugh's Haiku in:
Saba, it’s Hebrew
In Yiddish, it is Zede
Either way, I’m good
I suspected that Rex might not be effusive about the puzzle but I’m always A TAD surprised on the things he points out that seem nitpicky (to me)…like the HUR in HURRICANE not a separate word.
Like others above PASHtun was familiar to me so I only had to decide between U and O but the TONS cross took care of that. But…still probably NOT Monday level? And speaking of THAT…@tht asked the question of how old you have to be to remember Howard COSELL. That might depend on how many young people today have watched the old Ali matches. I’m pretty sure I wouldn’t have known who COSELL was ( but for the fact that EVERYBODY watched Clay/Ali fights when I was a kid.) But ya know…that’s the despicable “pop culture”...just from a different era.
Do you think maybe it's just a mistake? It happens. Sheesh!
Mazel tov , Hugh. Nice, easy Monday , Brad.🎈🎈🎊🎊
Yep. Same here at 8:09 CDT
Given that I wasn't solving downs only, PASHTO wasn't so hard for me to get. I did have PASHTi in first but that didn't last long after I saw Tit for TAT and took out REair at 52D.
I tried to put my phone in a zIP POCKET but the British bank didn't start with a Z.
PLUMP is a nice, soothing counterpart to RETCH.
Checking on the theme post-solve, I first tried to get three cheers from each theme answer but two HIPs in a row gave it away.
Three cheers for your Monday puzzle, Brad Wiegmann!
Congrats on the granddaughter! My late friend Hank, who had a dozen g'kids, said "Being a grandparent is one thing that is not overrated." If you can get to Baltimore, pick up a case of Zadie's Lager by the Union Craft Brewery, named in honor of the co-founder's grandpa.
So this grandmother is sitting on a park bench with her grandson playing nearby. A gentleman says to her, "Is that your grandson? He's gorgeous." And she replies: "That's nothing -- you should see the pictures!"
One of my quickest Mondays ever so must have been the downs-only approach that slowed Rex. Ever since our military involvement in Afghanistan, international crime thrillers on TV have tended to have someone on the hero’s team who semi-miraculously speaks fluent Pashto, so I think that in addition to actual war stories the name of that language has become embedded in our consciousness. THREECHEERS for a fun little puzzle.
Yes, "suggested by" gives a lot of leeway. Like those movies that are "inspired by actual events".
Had to check. Howard Cosell died in 1995…
HSBC is a gimme if you've ever flown into Heathrow. Seems like for 30 years the jetways have been plastered with HSBC ads.
Mrs. Egs is a college educated woman who, for some reason, has always spelled the little dried grape as RAISON. It tickles me so much, seeing RAISONS on my shopping list, that I've never corrected her. Though I certainly don't enjoy meandering the grocery aisles for RAISONS that escape me.
A short computer application can still be written with style. Hence the term APPLETART.
Stalin to Churchill and Roosevelt : I'm sponsoring a conference on the Crimean Penninsula and I'd like YALTA come.
Struggled with a D.O. solve but got there. HIP HIP HUR RUM seems like a good cheer. Thanks, Brad Wiegmann.
42A, 43A, 44A: Story of a shotgun wedding? OPTED MOTEL WED
What Trump is saying he'll turn Iranian ports into: EXPORTS.
Despite the general guidance on writing a story, their opponents in the Premier League will all be trying to bury LEEDS.
RE: COSELL, the US Postal Service just issued a nice stamp honoring ALI. One of my favorite quotes of Ali's: "I don't want to be remembered as a fighter or a civil rights leader -- I want to be remembered for how pretty I was."
Thank you. My question as well.
Me too! I thought "Hip Hip Hurrumba!" might make a nice rousing cheer.
Lewis, you just saved the KALE clue from last week for me when. When I was solving, I was assuming it was suggesting a KALE-ish hue of green, and I hated the clue. Seeing you list it as a favorite made me realize I had missed something.
Living half-time in Vancouver, BC, we see lots of HSBC bank branches (that is, we saw them before RBC bank bought out HSBC in Canada in 2024). But, because the HSBC banks primarily served the thousands of Hong Kong expats living in Vancouver, we always assumed it was a Chinese bank. So today I learned this bank was British.
Can we have your list over the past 10 years? So interested in it.
Once, in a fit of frustration (over what I don't recall) I said, "There's no I in suck, but there's a U" and I can't be the only person to have ever said it, but I was pretty proud of myself. (I was also probably 22 at the time.)
Mine showed up like that also, but the clue clearly said across. Wouldn't be surprised if that gets magically fixed in the next couple of hours...
If you've been in a London airport HBSC ads are everywhere.
Except for PASHTO can't get any more 'Monday' easy than this. Thank you, Brad :)
Neither lemon meringue pie or cheesecake would be enhance by vanilla - or any - ice cream.
Medium. No WOEs but I did try to prematurely type in hip hip hooray where THREE CHEERS was supposed to go…didn’t fit.
I too knew PASHTO.
Very little junk, up-beat theme, liked it quite a bit more than @Rex did,
Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1104 was an easy one for me with an amusing center stack. Good luck!
Sounds good to me :)
I had enough trouble with this Monday puzzle that I'm thinking it is not a good time to blow through my tax forms.... maybe I (already?) need a little nap first. Or maybe it's just harder than normal for a Monday
There is a current version of Hit the Road Jack out, called Hit the Road, ICE. It's already out of date because of the line about Pam Bondi., Pam Bondi don't you treat me so mean, / you're meanest woman that I ever did seen, or however it goes. But it's a lot easier for people at rallies to sing than say the Star Spangled Banner.
HIP HIP HURRAY to Erik Agard indeed.
it feels like the monday downs are intentionally more difficult than tuesday downs. i couldn't see ASWESPEAK even either the EAK—i kept going to tyros or tycos both of which were TYPOS.
an improvement to the theme would have been to go with "hip hop hooray".
At 11:40am, it is still highlighting the wrong direction. I typically dont pay attention to it, but I can see where this oversight could cause confusion.
The usual first/last MonPuz theme mcguffin. It's now the official puztheme of Mondays. HOO-RAY?
staff weeject pick: NOI. Solid partial meat.
Nice weeject stacks, NE & SW, btw.
fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Send out of the country, as goods} = EXPORT. And primo crosser for {Send out of the country, as a disgraced leader} = EXILE. Speakin of which ...
... Orban & his party are o-u-t, in Hungary ... that settles it, [Jesus]Trump & Vance should definitely campaign hard [in person!] for Republican congress/senate folks, this fall.
fave stuff included: APPLETART & ASWESPEAK. BEER.
Thanx for the fun, Mr. Wiegmann dude. And ... CHEERS!
Masked & Anonymo4Us
p.s.
runt puzzle:
**gruntz**
M&A
Congratulations! I wish you much joy with this new little person in your life.
I agree with @Lewis that this is a very good early week puzzle, said with an eye to the newer solver in our household (my spouse). He won't know AKITA but the crosses should take care of that; the one potential failure point I see will be at the TESS, HSBC, ABDUL nexus. I liked the kind-of misdirection offered by the first two HIPs - I was sure there'd be a third and fourth, so HURRICANE brought me up short, and I needed the reveal to tie it all together, a satisfying close. As to PASHTO, I remember it from the days Tora Bora was in the news.
@Lewis. Thanks for the Best list. Agreed. Loved all those clues/answers and enjoyed being reminded of them
When reading the revealer clue, I somehow missed 49-Across.
So I thought it didn't work well because Huuri, not hurry.
Once I saw what i'd missed I thought it quite a cute theme.
I only ever had accounts at Lloyds so HSBC meaningless to me. But I did not even see it while solving because I do across and down
@ Lewis Thanks for the favorites list. Agree they were all good and it brought a smile being reminded of them.
While reading the revealer cue I somehow missed "49-Across". So was thinking it didn't really work. Because: hurri instead of hurra. But now thta I know what I missed I think it a cute theme.
Would have struggled with HSBC if I did downs only. (Why ?)
because I only ever had accounts at Lloyds. But with the four crosses sliding right in, I never saw it.
After one pass at down clues only, I had so many blanks I gave up and solved normally. This seemed very tricky for a Monday, especially the downs. At the top, the only gimmes were STP and KFC. And that bottom!... YALTA PASHTO LEEDS TORTE on a Monday?
Hands up for ADHERE before COHERE. I can't remember what I had at 2 down... possibly EVICT? And at 5 down, I thought Priam and Hector were towns! Not my best effort.
Here in western Canada we have lots of HSBCs; I think pretty much every city over about 20,000 people has one.
Oh, and re 28 across: every time I see the phrase "there's no I in team", I want to say: but in French there is not only an I, but also a U: EQUIPE! (sorry can't be bothered with the accent.)
Had SAMBA before RUMBA and MALTA before YALTA, which was tricky because it resulted in SAM CHARLES which, while not correct, was certainly plausible!
That entire Hurray for the Riff Raff album is fantastic. One of my favorites of the last couple of years. "Hawkmoon" moves me to tears just about every time I hear it.
Not bad for a Monday D-O solve. I was especially happy to see that the themers spelled out HIP HIP HURRAY, rather than hooray, which I never hear in real life but often see in crosswords. Well done, Brad Wiegmann.
Biggest hold-up for me was PASHTO. It was one of those things I knew I knew but, at the moment, didn’t know. (Yes, all you millennials and Gen-Zs, this will someday happen to you.) So I did what any sane person would do - I went up to the house to wrestle with my 20 year old espresso machine and successfully manufactured a double-shot latte. Returned to the studio, looked at _A_H__ and dropped in PASHTu. Looked at it for a bit and decided that the “u” wasn’t right because TuNS (wine barrels) was a little too niche for Monday. O looked better. Finished up with the A and the W in AS WE SPEAK. And the music played and the dancing girls danced and the corks popped while the confetti fell, and I had to pick it out of my champagne. Life is hard.
I want to thank @Rex for including a picture of Asta in his write-up. Unlike many of you, I am not a big fan of the films of the 1930s, 1940s, and early 50s. My kind of films began appearing in France in the late 50s, so I am not sure I have ever seen a film with this crossword-famous dog in it. Very cute.
Good post. Man. I guess I’m the only one in the crowd here whose happiest day of my NYT puzzle app life was when I turned off that awful tune in settings…:D
Well Mr Okanager…you’re just ASKIN’ for me to recommend that you watch the movie Troy with Peter O’Toole as Priam, Eric Bana as Hector, and (Brad Pitt as Achilles). :)
okanaganer. Re: HSBC. Not so much any more. They have been "acquired" by RBC (Royal Bank of Canada, for all of you south of here) and are being phased out.
@SharonAk, methinks you’ve led an interesting life…
“I’d like YALTA COME.” Hahaha!!!
Someone was paying attention to today’s EPL schedule
@Teedmn…you made me laugh with zIPPOCKET. I have an iPhone mini, and there are very few zIPPOCKETs I can fit it into! But…it actually WAS a good alternative.
Fun fact (to me, anyway): in today's Spelling Bee, one of the pangrams is a 7 letter word, that if you remove 4 of the letters you get a 3 letter word that is pronounced identically.
Congrats! Being a grandfather is the best. Also, I had a grandfather who was a Hugh so now I know two grandfathers named Hugh. Enjoy!
Congrats @Hugh!
"That’s two Mondays in a row that I’ve gone over my average time."
Some guys have got it rough ... May you have a quicker than average Tuesday!
I think that in France they say "there's no moi in equipe." Which is true but unremarkable.
Yes, pretty easy, with no areas standing out for difficulty. Here's hoping that clue style at 65A is a one-off, and not a sign of things to come.
So true. And of course, there is an i in victory. And twice that many in winning.
I spent my professional life in sportsball. The number of morons—not the players ,God bless ‘em— but team staffs, league suits, television execs, was breathtaking.
Anonymous 6:36 AM
HSBC was founded in Hong Kong when the British controlled it When the British decided to hand over Hong Kong to China the bank moved its base to London It also
made its official name just the intitials
There's a great character, Asta, in the awesome show "Resident Alien", which would bring this clue into the modern error.
easy Monday the theme is fun not sure what all the beefs are about - speaking of fun Elizabeth Gorski's newyorker.com puzzle today April 13th is a gem of a puzzle
Enjoyed this fine Monday puzzle! I was glad to get the theme, and I liked it. TIL PASHTO - thanks for the Wikipedia article. I wanted Costel before COSELL but the crosses fixed that. I did think the clue Right Now was clever for AS WE SPEAK.
Despite the fact that Rex was doing downs only AND didn’t know PASHTO, I am sure he was much faster than me.He said he had a moral dnf. I wonder if that influenced his negative reaction to the puzzle. I knew the people are Pashtuns ( read too much about the war in this Times) and so all I needed to get was the O. Doing the puzzle the normal way, I liked the puzzle and thought it easy In my wheelhouse, eg my brother and his family had an AKITA which I dog sat once. The theme seemed fine to me. As usual I don’t agree with Rex’s criticism of it
Long-time reader, first-time commenter. 28A is actually a quote from Michael Jordan to his then-coach Doug Collins.
Easy, Rex, it’s a Monday and better than many/most. It’s ok to roll into the week with something benign.
@Hugh 8:40 AM
❤️ Congratulations.
Legitimately, what does a puzzle have to do to get more than a medium if you had to get lucky to even solve it? Especially for a MONDAY?
Time is weird. Felt like it took me forever for a Monday but clocked in well short of 5:00 (4:44), which is super quick for me.
@Beezer, I don’t have any HIP pockets my phone fits in either, even though I don’t have the largest phone out there. I only carry it, most days, because it also functions as my car key.
Hong Kong Shangai Banking Corp. The 2nd best bank name after BNP Paribas (pronounced with French accent) Banque Nationale de Paris & Banque Paris et des Pays Bas. Sorry I'm a finance nerd.
Wow, it’s been ages since I’ve seen ASTA in the puzzle! He was a regular and one of my first recognizable crosswordese answers. Gran loved finding clues I would know or could figure out from my earliest days watching her solve.
Our favorite ASTA movie was “Bringing Up Baby,” and Katharine Hepburn was my first favorite movie star. I was in love with her and her iconic trousers from the first time I ever saw them. Her name and those trousers were my battle cry for years as I argued that girls had just as much right to wear pants as boys did.
On a camping trip, I found a 1940s Vogue pattern for a pair at a flea market in upstate NY near Ticonderoga on my 14th birthday. It’s my favorite 25 cent find of my entire life - at least to date.
Couldn’t wait to get home. Gran helped me by deconstructing one of Grandfather’s best suits because she said the quality fabric would make the project easier and she also said that the suit was one she knew he wore for important days in his job at the Ohio AG’s office. She helped me learn all the men’s tailoring tricks and I wore those trousers until the seat and the left hand front pocket started to shred. I had (and still have) a bad habit of pacing with my hand in my left pants pocket. All these great memories started in crosswords featuring ASTA the dog. THREE CHEERS for crisswords!
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