Dissension cause in Greek myth / MON 4-6-26 / Jedi who trained Luke, formally / Shipping company with a red-and-yellow logo / Poker tell, perhaps / Food court loiterer, say / Certain submission moves in wrestling / Fence-sitter's response

Monday, April 6, 2026

Constructor: John Ewbank

Relative difficulty: Easy (solved Downs-only)

[11D: Jedi who trained Luke, formally]

THEME: APPENDS (37A: Tacks on ... or, when parsed as two words, what 17-, 28-, 47- and 63-Across all have?) — every theme answer "ends" with an "app":
Theme answers:
  • BAT SIGNAL (17A: Gotham City SOS)
  • APPLE OF DISCORD (28A: Dissension cause in Greek myth)
  • "CUT ME SOME SLACK" (47A: "Take it easy, will you?!")
  • EYE TWITCH (63A: Poker tell, perhaps)
Word of the Day: APPLE OF DISCORD (see 28A) —

In Greek mythology, the Apple of Discord (Ancient Greekμῆλον τῆς Ἔριδος) was a golden apple thrown by Eris, the goddess of strife, at the wedding of Peleus and Thetis. She was not invited to the wedding and threw it out of anger to ruin the gathering (after showing up uninvited). It sparked a vanity-fueled dispute among HeraAthena, and Aphrodite that led to the Judgement of Paris and ultimately the Trojan War.

In common parlance, the "apple of discord" is the core, kernel, or crux of an argument, or a small matter that could lead to a bigger dispute. (wikipedia) // 

Eris, the goddess of discord, was not invited to the wedding of Peleus and Thetis. In revenge, she brought a golden apple, inscribed, "To the fairest one", which she threw into the wedding. Three guests, HeraAthena and Aphrodite, after some disputation, agreed to have Paris of Troy choose the fairest one. Paris chose Aphrodite, she having bribed him with the most beautiful mortal woman in the world, Helen of Sparta, wife of Menelaus. Consequently, Paris carried Helen off to Troy, and the Greeks invaded Troy for Helen's return. Eris's Apple of Discord (or her not being invited to the wedding in the first place) was thus the instrumental casus belli of the Trojan War. (wikipedia)
• • •

A very basic "last-words" theme type with a somewhat clever revealer and themers that not only fit the theme perfectly but that are colorful and interesting answers in their own right. In short, the theme is basic, but it's well executed, and almost nothing about it gave me an EYE TWITCH, so nice job. I've used only two of these apps (Twitch, Slack). Discord is a messaging system used primarily but not exclusively by gamers. I know there's a Crossword Discord, for instance, though I have never gone there. Signal is another messaging system. It's known to me primarily because the buffoonishly incompetent Secretary of ... is it War now? [Hard eyeroll]. Anyway, that guy violated Pentagon regulations by carrying on official business on Signal, potentially endangering service members by discussing ongoing operations in a non-secure environment. Signal is an encrypted messaging service. Aside from very dumb and careless government officials, I associate it with journalists, many of whom use it to communicate with sources. But my specific experience of these apps doesn't matter—they are all very popular one-word apps, making them perfect fodder for a puzzle like this. 


The Downs-only solve was a cinch today. The only part that gave me any real trouble was the NE, where MASTER YODA was not something that came easily to me. Not a title of his that stands out in my memory. I'm sure Luke called him that at some point, but it doesn't exactly feel iconic. Then again, I gave up caring about all things Star Wars decades ago (during the years of the awful second trilogy), and I haven't revisited the original three movies very often over the years, so maybe the phrase MASTER YODA has more currency than I remember, or gained more currency in the 21st century. I tried to write in MANDALORIAN at one point (clearly I have not seen that show). The real issue in that corner wasn't MASTER YODA so much as LEG LOCKS, which I had as ARM LOCKS (there being nothing leg-specific about the clue) (9D: Certain submission moves in wrestling). With ARM in there, MASTER would not work with the Acrosses in that corner, so I pulled MASTER for a bit. Went away to solve other parts of the puzzle, then came back, thought "this has to be MASTER," and only then did I consider pulling ARM and inserting LEG. Puzzle mocked me by giving me ARM ... later (37D: Possible causes of in-flight disputes). I really like the symmetry of LEG LOCKS and ARM RESTS. Love happy accidents like that. The only other "huh?" moment for me came with GQ STYLE, but as with MASTER YODA, it's the first thing I thought of—I just wasn't sure of it. I know GQ, but not GQ STYLE, which feels ... redundant, as I thought GQ always dealt in some way with style (i.e. men's fashion). So I was tentative with STYLE, but it turned out to be right. No other problems with the Downs-only solve today.


Bullets:
  • 1A: Sound at the beginning and end of a meditation, perhaps (BONG)that's your clue for BONG? You'd think you'd go in a, let's say, different direction. I mean, you've got a WISP of smoke in your very next answer, so ... (5A: Bit of smoke).
  • 51A: Food court loiterer, say (MALLRAT) — what year is it? I don't think MALLRATs have existed in any numbers since roughly the time immediately following the release of the movie MALLRATs in the mid-'90s.
  • 52A: Shipping company with a red-and-yellow logo (DHL) — not a very evocative clue. Solving Downs-only, I made this DHS for a bit, thinking of designated hitters (in baseball), though DHS is more common as the abbr. for one of our more abolishable Cabinet departments.
  • 57A: "Freddie Mercury" or "Lady Gaga" (ALIAS) — no one would call those "aliases." They're stage names. Also, weird to put those alleged "aliases" in quotation marks, since that's simply how they're known.
  • 27D: Kind of deer (ROE) — I'm guessing there were a lot of DOEs out there, at least for a second or two.
  • 32D: ___ Maradona, Argentine soccer legend (DIEGO) — I don't know tons about soccer, but this guy was worldwide famous when I was in high school, and his name (and face, and demeanor) have stuck in my mind ever since. His most famous game was probably the World Cup quarterfinal against England: "In the 1986 World Cup quarter final, he scored both goals in a 2–1 victory over England that entered football history for two different reasons. The first goal was an unpenalized handling foul known as the "Hand of God", while the second goal followed a 60 m (66 yd) dribble past five England players, voted "Goal of the Century" by FIFA.com voters in 2002(wikipedia).
  • 49D: Go live on the internet (STREAM) — fitting that this crosses the TWITCH answer, since TWITCH is a STREAMing service. I read the "live" in this clue as if it rhymed with "give" and I was like "you go live there, buddy, I need to spend more time outside looking at birds."
That's all for today. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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70 comments:

mmorgan 6:18 AM  

I’m only marginally aware of these apps, but it was a surprisingly easy downs only solve, except for the NE, where I looked at a few across clues because I was running out of time. Some very nice stuff here, enjoyable Monday.

Paris 6:35 AM  

So these apps all seem to intersect somehow as communication, messaging or virtual community apps (I don't use them, so not sure what the correct term is). But the revealer refers to apps only generically. And given the proliferation of apps, I imagine that there are thousands of words that could have been used in the theme answers. In an otherwise very good and clever puzzle, it seems to me to be a weakness that the family or type of app to which these particular apps seem to belong is not somehow part of the reveal. As a result, the choice among thousands of apps appears arbitrary.

Or maybe I missing something?

Son Volt 7:08 AM  

Fine early week offering - liked the longer themers - APPENDS is apt and sits proudly dead center.

link text">MAYBE Baby

Overall fill had some clunkers for sure but for the most part was solid. Rex speaks of the obtuseness of 1a - ARM RESTS drew another side eye. POP CULTURE and I’LL LIVE are fun and WAG makes me smile.

Pleasant Monday morning solve.

San DIEGO Serenade

RooMonster 7:29 AM  

Hey All !
APPs. There's what, 163 Million of them? We get four, of which SIGNAL and DISCORD are non-heard-ofs by me before. But, puz was easy, and Themers quick to fill in.

Where's our Miss Piggy clue for MOI?

Neat ILLLI string in ILL LIVE. Nothing striking me as too egregious in the fill. Different kind of Theme. Liked puz overall.

Hope the Easter Bunny bestowed lots of candy to you yesterday. 😁

Have a great Monday!

One F
RooMonster
DarrinV

Lewis 7:31 AM  

Every theme answer is colorful. There’s lovely wordplay in the revealer. A grid peppered with sweet answers – BONG, WISP, CUT ME SOME SLACK, POP CULTURE, I’LL LIVE.

I like that the internet-based theme, far from the world of nature, is balanced by plenty of fauna – LEMUR, BAT, RAT, ANT, ROE, ELK.

Adding to these plusses were enough answers I couldn’t immediately get from the clue to get my brain engaged.

Adding more still were extra-curricular enrichments -- an online look at Maradona’s greatest goal, reviewing the story of the Apple of Discord, which, though fiction, strongly bears the stamp of truth, and, finally, warming my heart by looking at images of lemurs. Are they not a gift from God?

I’d call all this one heck of a Monday puzzle. Thank you, John!

Lewis 7:32 AM  

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

1. Bone that squeaks, maybe (3)(3)
2. Some kicks on Route 66, maybe (7)
3. Corn whole? (3)
4. Crystal and Rock, notably (5)(5)
5. They need fans to stay cool (5)


DOG TOY
JOYRIDE
EAR
OSCAR HOSTS
IDOLS

Lewis 7:33 AM  

My favorite encore clues from last week:

[They're often picked up at coffee shops] (6)
[What isn't anyone's fault?] (3)


AROMAS
LET

tht 7:46 AM  

Very surprised to see this rated Easy (for a Monday). I found it Hard for a Monday; my time was about 40% greater than average. I'LL LIVE, obviously. That by the way slowed me up: the three Ls, the DHL that I couldn't remember (I knew DHs was off, but I was thinking "it's" coming down, not I'LL, and I thought the "t" might have been part of StACK, not SLACK, especially as I am considerable more familiar with Stack Exchange than I am with SLACK -- I don't even have a clear idea what SLACK is).

Straight out of the gate, not getting BONG right away, I sensed this could be a slow Monday for me. DIEGO I didn't know. APPLE OF DISCORD I didn't know. (What myth is that?) Neither strike me as Mondayish. Wrote lOw CULTURE before POP CULTURE. And MASTER YODA: oh brother. Give it a REST.

I agree with Rex about ALIAS. It makes me question their EAR for language, "they" being the NYTXW editorial team.

Better get a move-on. Wishing you a happy Monday.

jberg 7:48 AM  

Enjoyable puzzle! I have to differ with the judgement of @Paris--for me, it was a plus that the theme answers were all social media apps, rather than Amazon or Yahoo Weather, for example. And APPENDS is such an elegant revealer it would have been a shame to add qualifiers. But tastes vary, of course.

Using "'tis but a scratch" to clue I'LL LIVE is odd, or at least ironic, since the phrase is uttered by Mercutio (in Romeo and Juliet) who then dies.

I got ROE deer from crosses without noticing it. I might have gone for Red or dOE, depending on which crosses I'd had in place.

SouthsideJohnny 7:49 AM  

I recognized the app names even though I have never used them, so the reveal tied it together nicely. My speed bumps were basically the same as OFL’S (Star Wars, wrestling and the men’s magazine crossing a BONG).

I also can’t seem to get used to seeing FOP as a clue or answer. It just doesn’t look like a real word, and is not one I can recall bumping into outside of crosswords. That caused a bit of a hiccup as I’m also not familiar with the whole APPLE OF DISCORD situation. In fact, I wonder if that Greek mythology grid spanner will cause many probs for Monday Newbs. I doubt that many first time solvers have stumbled upon this fine blog, so I doubt we will have a significant enough sample size to draw any meaningful conclusions.

Anonymous 7:53 AM  

Nonsense! Such Hyperbole. Such gratuitous grumbling. There are, in fact, a mere 9 million mobile apps available from the big three stores (Apple. Google and Amazon).

And I have every one of them on my phone.

So stop your grumbling, This is a quite manageable number, whose names you ought easily to commit to memory if you are a serious and dedicated puzzle solver.

Anonymous 8:05 AM  

Wow. Maybe it was because I was not exactly functioning on all cylinders when I started this last night. But this was very difficult for me even this morning. MOI? POMP, FOP, APPENDS as clued and conjoined! Oh…there was a theme?

Anonymous 8:20 AM  

Tough NW corner for me. No idea about the meditation sound or the men’s mag. Ended up with IRAN (instead of IRAQ) crossing INSTYLE (isnt there a fashion mag with that name?) (instead of GQSTYLE).

kitshef 8:20 AM  

The theme fails on the most basic Monday requirement; the themers need to be familiar to all. Like @Roo, I have never heard of SIGNAL or DISCORD. I've heard of SLACK, although I have no idea what it does. TWITCH is the only really familiar one. FWIW, none of these appear on the list of the 50 most popular apps in the world, and only one is in the top 100 (Discord at #65).

Should have run on a Wednesday, which has a higher tolerance for lesser-known words.

Rug Crazy 8:36 AM  

Unlike Rex, I don't do apps, so I found this puzzle a bit more difficult. Never heard of apple of Discord, either

Anonymous 8:36 AM  

Not an easy Monday puzzle for me. I solved it but it wasn’t fun and I didn’t understand the theme. No 🎈for me.

DAVinHOP 8:39 AM  

Solved as themeless, which was a necessity since I knew exactly zero of them were APPS. Does that show my (1) age, (2) non-techie-ness, (3) general ignorance or (4) all of the above.

Knew Eris was the Goddess of Discord and side-eyed the phrase APPLE OF DISCORD until reading Rex and standing corrected.

Biggest stumbling block was 5A PUFF (my guess) before WISP (wife's guess); I was scribing, alas.

Never heard of TAO Te Ching (in quotes?!), but no sweat from crosses.

Not just a Star Wars reference, but need to know that he was small fry MASTER YODA before YODA, one-named, becoming he.

Anonymous 8:46 AM  

Lesser-known?? These are exceedingly popular apps. Step out of your bubble and have a look. The smug certainty some of you (presumably older) commenters have that your world view is the normative one — it’s staggering.

Beezer 8:46 AM  

Enjoyable Monday puzzle with interesting themers. I was at least familiar with the apps but for DISCORD but no matter, I figured either DISCORD or “cord” was a popular app.

I loved the clue for POPCULTURE and it seems apropos for some of the commentariat. The term always seems to have a trivial, “fly-by-night” implication when often popular culture morphs into classics. One just never knows.

Anonymous 8:46 AM  

Far more people use Discord than could define Apple of Discord, I guarantee you

Carolbb 8:57 AM  

Enjoyable, easy Monday puzzle. My age is also showing as the only one known to me was signal. Probably only because of the major administration security leak with it.

Anonymous 8:59 AM  

challenging

Michael 8:59 AM  

On the NYT app, why does ARM RESTS get a highlight when CUT ME SOME SLACK is selected?

egsforbreakfast 9:11 AM  

Kinda funny that one of the themers starts with APP and ends with an APP (APPLEOFDISCORD).

Missed opportunity today for a “why these…?” rant.

With everything going on in our language I find myself wondering CANOED still be the best dictionary?

Having a good time in Mexico, but now and then my LEGLOCKS. Tequila seems to loosen it up pretty quick.

I never ERRED. Nothing to ERASE. But a good solid puzzle. Thanks, John Ewbank.

Rachel 9:13 AM  

I truly don't understand why it was BONG instead of GONG. It's a GONG, right?

Liveprof 9:15 AM  

ARMRESTS: What ARM does when it's tired.

LEGLOCKS: French handguns.

NATO: Sources say Finland and Sweden only joined NATO after a better deal fell through for them to join the Big Ten.

POPCULTURE: The section in the bookstore where you'll find the six-volume set on the history of Fresca.

Re: I'LL LIVE

Many years ago I was on line at the supermarket in Bristol VT with my friend Robert who lives up there. The fellow in front of us had some empty bottles to return for a refund. The young woman at the register told him he would get 65 cents and that she'll take care of it after ringing up his items. He said fine. But by the time they finished, they both forgot about the refund. She remembered just as he was reaching the exit. So she shouted: "Sir! Sir! Your 65 cents!" But it was too late. He didn't hear her and he left the store. We could sense she didn't run after him because there must have been a strict rule against leaving the register unattended. By now she was holding 65 cents in her hand that didn't belong to her and there was no way to get it to him. She was completely flummoxed. She looked up at us in utter despair. And Robert said: "He'll live."

Anonymous 9:21 AM  

Same here.

Anonymous 9:26 AM  

This is the classic familiarity fallacy. “I know what discord is and so does everyone I know except my parents who are old.” Translation: “I live in a milieu where discord is ubiquitous, thus obscuring my perspective of its broader ubiquity.”

Also, comparing two exceedingly obscure (by universal standards) concepts and declaring one less obscure than the other doesn’t make either less obscure overall.

This is not a Monday puzzle.

Alice Pollard 9:34 AM  

Maybe I am old (66) but I don't think I've heard of ANY of these apps. 34A - (hard copy clue) Exclamation of faux innocence . (online clue) "Apres___, le Deluge". Why the difference? Hard copy much easier. I never heard of Apple of Discord. ROE I always thought of as fish eggs or Return on Equity, not a deer. MASTER YODA? This was a difficult Monday for me

pabloinnh 9:35 AM  

Guess I'm with the "older" crowd this morning as I needed the revealer to discover that these are all popular APPS, as SIGNAL is the only one I'm familiar with, for reasons stated by OFL. Gratifying to know I'm not alone in my ignorance. Somehow my life goes on without using any of these. So be it.

Side eye to BONG for an opener, I do have some experience with BONGs but that is more recreational than meditative. GQ I know but GQSTYLE? Nope. Ditto for APPLEOFDISCORD, which was sort of kind of vaguely familiar. Nice to get the whole story,

My moo-cows for the day (Hi M&A) ARE EAR and ERA. See how that works?

OK Monday, JE. Sorry I can't Join Expert APP users in appreciating it all, but thanks for some thorny Monday fun.

Anonymous 9:36 AM  

With such a clear revealer it didn't really matter what the APPS were. It was easy to simply accept that SLACK, e.g., is an APP without really knowing of it. I had Red before ROE. I didn't consider dOE because it doesn't strike me as a "kind" of deer, but some judges would allow it. Is dissension different from dissent? (28A)

Anonymous 9:50 AM  

@Anonymous 8:46 I believe checking the list of most popular apps and finding none of these is "having a look". And your gratuitous nastiness - it's staggering.

EasyEd 9:59 AM  

Had no familiarity at all with the Apps, but still one of my quickest Mondays ever. Actually started with MMMM as the meditation sound but the crosses made correction to BONG easy. Thing just fell into place—like seeing that IRAQ and GQ were made for each other…Like @Rex had to figure out STYLE but in my case the crosses again came to the rescue…MOI immediately brought Miss Piggy to mind, so POPCULTURE rules!

Anonymous 10:08 AM  

“ As of January 2025, Twitch was the 30th-most-visited website in the world with 23.46% of its traffic coming from the United States, followed by Russia with 8.87%, Germany with 7.08% and France with 6.26%.[21][22] In late 2023, Twitch announced that they would stop operating in South Korea in 2024 because of its network fee policy, citing prohibitive costs.”

Anonymous 10:12 AM  

Anyone who works in teams at a business knows what slack is. It’s ubiquitous.

jb129 10:14 AM  

Easiest Monday ever - there was a theme?

Anonymous 10:15 AM  

“ As of March 2024, Discord is the 30th most visited website in the world, and 22.98% of its traffic comes from the United States.”

tht 10:15 AM  

You're right. Some software glitch, I guess.

Anonymous 10:16 AM  

The only app that’s even slightly “not well known” is Signal and anyone who keeps up with the news has heard of it

Anonymous 10:19 AM  

Good stuff as usual, @Liveprof. Especially like Le Glock

Gary Jugert 10:34 AM  

Tenme un poco de paciencia.

There are more than 5 million apps on Go-ogle and Apple alone. So I was hoping 🦖 would say, "Why these apps?" but not today. They're just four random popular apps. I've used all of the four listed in this puzzle, but I have 5 million left to try. I really only need the NYTXW app, the map (remember paper maps?), texting and emailing, and of course my Chrome friend Go-ogle, who I learned after a weekend of Anon baiting, leads me to having fun wrong.

Biggest hiccup was replacing INSTYLE magazine with GQSTYLE. I thought maybe BONI was some kind of ASANA. I don't know what an ASANA is, but I wouldn't be surprised to learn on is a BONI.

If I want to start meditating, do I need to go out and buy a gong? Do you go to a gong store? Do they have starter gongs and advanced gongs? I hope there's a Gonging for Dummies. Gatherings of gongists meet at Gong-a-Con and GongFest and Gongapalooza. Gongaphile harumphers say you're not gonging good. Rich gongigensia are in the gongeosie.

❤️ I was a MALL RAT before I was a Gongster.

People: 7
Places: 1
Products: 7
Partials: 4
Foreignisms: 1
--
Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 20 of 78 (26%)

Funny Factor: 2 😕

Tee-Hee: GAY BONG.

Uniclues:

1 Hotboxing monkey.
2 Eau de electronic guano.
3 inside my doctor's cranium / he thinks I need titanium / I'll be a robot Elvis / with a fancy metal pelvis
4 Jay Leno.
5 Line from a Sixth Sense adjacent film about a boy with visions of La-Z-Boys.
6 Those checking into a bed and breakfast near a Fancy Boy's convention.
7 Agenda entry where a little green man intends to complain about crossword wonks complaining about Star Wars wonks.

1 BONG WISP LEMUR
2 BAT SIGNAL GASES
3 HIP-APPENDS ODE
4 CAR-GAY IDOL
5 I SEE ARMRESTS
6 INN'S FOP STREAM
7 MASTER YODA ITEM

My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: What my friends (and enemies) call me. TRASHY S.O.B. SLEEZE.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

tht 10:40 AM  

A gong is an instrument. The sound it produces when struck is sometimes called a BONG. I checked Merriam-Webster to see whether one of the meanings of "gong" is the sound it makes, but that wasn't one of them.

jae 10:44 AM  

On the tough side for me.

I too knew about GQ but not GQSTYLE.

APPLE OF DISCORD was also a WOE as well as the app DISCORD

No erasures but I jumped around a lot to finish this one.

Minimal junk, fun theme answers, a bit of crunch (for me), liked it a bunch!


Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1102 was medium-tough for me. The center stack took some effort. Good luck!

Jnlzbth 10:53 AM  

I'll take Rex's word for it that those four things are apps, but I've never heard of them so I didn't understand the theme. I liked the puzzle, though, because for me it was chewier than the usual Monday; in fact, going through, I thought, "This must be challenging for those doing Downs-only." As for the Across answers, I didn't know BAT SIGNAL or APPLE OF DISCORD so definitely had to do the crosses to get those, and I alternated Acrosses and Downs pretty much all the way through in order to get the fill. So a satisfying challenge with little junk. Thanks, John Eubank!

Beezer 10:58 AM  

I wondered about that also.

Gary Jugert 11:15 AM  

@Rachel9:13 AM & @tht10:40 AM
I'm with you @tht. A gong bongs.

Bob Mills 11:27 AM  

I'm still unable to access either the Spelling Bee or the Crossword. I spoke to "customer service" (sic) twice. They changed their records to accommodate a recent change I made in my email address, and said the problem was solved.

NO. I still can't access either site unless I want to subscribe. Question...what the f--- has my email address to do with eligibility? I'm paying the Times automatically from my checking account, not from my email address.

Am I the only one who has experienced this?

Teedmn 11:43 AM  

Well-known apps to everyone else were no-knows to me (I guess I've heard of Twitch?) but weren't all that hard to fill in. Not doing downs only meant that LEMUR went in without crosses and thus LEG LOCKS was not controversial in my solve.

I know nothing about soccer except Messi, Pele and that United shows up in a lot of team names. Not helpful with DIEGO today.

IRAn being on everyone's mind these days caused a brief kerfuffle in the NW, but GQ took care of that in style.

John Ewbank, thanks for a clean Monday puzzle.

Liveprof 11:43 AM  

You are not old.

CDilly52 11:45 AM  

@egs, CANOED!!! You beat me to it. I didn’t need a clue for that, and was grumpily searching for a typo when my brain scanned over the SW and saw CAN OED. You frequently see words as “other words.” It’s often a highlight of your clever posts for me.

CDilly52 11:48 AM  

Excellent anecdote @Liveprof, and LE Glock - just excellent.

Jeremy 11:58 AM  

I had no problem with ROE, but probably because I didn't even know it was there until reading Rex's writeup. It just dropped in by solving the acrosses in that area. Also, I agree BONG could have been clued better, i.e. "Jeremy's preferred device for smoking pot while in high school." 😉😉

Masked and Anonymous 12:19 PM  

Put m&e in the 4 themer app no-knows camp. So the APPENDS revealer didn't reveal a whole lot, at our house.
Another first/last word puztheme -- typical, on most Mondays.
Sure did luv seein the BATSIGNAL & its clue, tho. It was tryin to alert M&A to the nanosecond trouble brewin ahead.

staff weeject pick: MOI, with its all-French clue of mystery. And crossin a no-know soccer dude, too boot.
honrable mention to near-pick TAO and its equally mysterious clue.

fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Jedi who trained Luke, formally} = MASTERYODA. [Yo[da], @RP star-day counter meter!]
And honrable eazy-E mention to BATSIGNAL.

other faves included: ILLLIVE [primo trip-consonant entry]. POPCULTURE [= somethin grown in a Petri dish full of Pepsi?]. Symmetric(al) LEGLOCKS & ARMRESTS mini-theme.

Thanx for UP-ENDin M&A's nanoseconds with weirdo APPs, Mr. Ewbank dude. Nice challenge, for a MonPuz.

Masked & Anonymo3Us

p.s.
Essential American Crossword Puzzle Tournament trainin:
compact size:
**gruntz**
regular tourney size:
**gruntz**

M&A

Carola 12:19 PM  

I left the reveal space blank, to see if I could guess it after having all of the theme answers. If only the BAT SIGNAL hadn't contained a hidden AT SIGN....and sent on a fruitless search for other internet-related signs and symbols. Coming up empty, I allowed myself the A and P, and then saw the APP ENDS. Nicely done! And the theme phrases are all top notch. The reference to EDEN lurking at the bottom of the grid made me wonder why APPLEs have gotten such a bad rap - associated with DISCORD, sin, poison (Snow White)...

Anonymous 12:34 PM  

Mercutio: "Ay, ay, a scratch, a scratch; marry, 'tis enough."

"'Tis but a scratch" is the Black Knight's famous line (after losing an arm) from Monty Python and the Holy Grail.

Anonymous 12:41 PM  

It should be 37A (rather than 37D) that is highlighted, as with all the other themers. Sure feels like a coding glitch.

Anonymous 12:58 PM  

Bang a gong to get a BONG.

Anonymous 1:54 PM  

Why does selecting 47A (CUTMESOMESLACK) cause highlighting of 37D (ARMRESTS) online? Usually this happens when two clues are related, eg "What you might say to someone hogging the 37-Down", but I don't see the connection today.

J. Dassin 1:56 PM  

There are eight million apps is the naked city. These are four of them.

Anoa Bob 2:07 PM  

The pace of cybertech development is truly exponential. It was only about 12 years ago that I got an acceptance of a xword puzzle submission to the Lo Angeles Times. The editor at that time, Rich Norris, asked me to make one change. I had put APP in the grid clued as a software package and he thought that would be unfamiliar to most solvers so I had to rework that section. And now we get an entire puzzle centered around APP names.

So I think I know what an APP is though until today I had never heard of these four. Not sure why anyone would want to name their product SLACK or DISCORD. TWITCH sounds like it could be a porn APP.

On the other side of the coin, do MALL RATs even exist anymore?

Les S. More 2:31 PM  

"This must be challenging for those doing Downs-only." Not for this D-O solver, jnlzbth. This went pretty smoothly. Couldn't see the theme for a while but thought it might be about apps because SIGNAL, SLACK, and TWITCH. Never used any of the apps and never heard of DISCORD, but that did not slow down the solve. I had fun with this, even though I think I might not want to go anywhere near an app that brings to mind nasty arguments.

RooMonster 3:11 PM  

@Anon 7:53
My sincerest apologies for the superfluous hyperinflation of APPs. I'm not sure what came over me. 9 million is capable of memory commitment. I will learn them all forthwith.

Sorry to cause such consternation on your part.

Roo

RJ 3:22 PM  

I remember thinking when I first started reading this blog that xword people would be nice.....still naive after all my (70) years. I recently retired from company that only used Teams, so I'd never heard of Slack until a colleague told me he used it at his company. Old does not mean out of it - it's often that we realize that our time left is limited and we have interests other than gaming.

Beezer 3:42 PM  

Bob, maybe you need to get a new password since you changed your email address? I don’t know if you have the NYT app, or IF that matters, but you may need to reset your password. Depends on what message, if any, you get when you try to get on.

dgd 6:37 PM  

jberg
a poster named Paris
said the same about social media, but I don’t think that applies to Signal. When I looked it up, it sounded more like an UNsocial medium! It’s very commonly used by reporters communicating with secret source (as Rex said ) The last thing they want to use is a social medium

dgd 7:08 PM  

Liveprof
On line
You grew up in NYC ?
I only heard that from New Yorkers
( I am not one)

dgd 7:26 PM  

I see fop caused trouble. I have to disagree with Southside Johnny. It most definitely used
outside crosswords. I was really surprised by his comment. . I googled it and the word is still in common use.
As usual on a Monday, I did the puzzle as a themeless. I let Rex explain the theme. The puzzle was easy enough without knowing the gimmic. None of the apps are complicated or weird words.

I liked the puzzle.

Liveprof 11:44 PM  

Brooklyn.

Anonymous 12:21 PM  

Yep same. And with “bong” as the only way the discern the two, this really brought down my enjoyment of an otherwise nice puzzle

Anonymous 9:37 PM  

“Alias” is an alias for “stage name.” Also, putting the names in quotes makes the clue about the names not the people. Crossword clues can omit quotation marks as a misdirect, but perhaps it was meant to reduce the difficulty for a Monday.

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