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• • •
Today, the theme actually helped me finish this one. I could not think of a word that could follow CONTACT that was not HIGH or LENS or SOLUTION or BRIDGE (which I'm now realizing is wrong, since it's
contract bridge). Solving Downs-only, I had no access to the
CONTACT TRACE clue, so even when I got to CONTACT TR-, I wasn't sure.
CONTACT TRACE just isn't a phrase I'm very familiar with. A verb phrase? I'm sure it was used a bunch during early COVID, but [shrug]. Did not register. I kinda wanted TRACE, but since I couldn't really define the phrase, I just left it blank and hoped for crosses to help me out. Only they didn't. [
Start of a count?] in three letters??? That could just as easily have been TEN as
ONE. And
ICEES? Nah, was not seeing that from the clue (
42D: Colorful summer drinks). I was thinking of various Kool-Aid-type drinks, or limeade or lemonade or something. Plus I had SEEM- at 48A and assumed the answer would be SEEMS (not "
SEE ME," which is what it turned out to be). And I wasn't really entirely sure about
REPLAN, tbh (
45D: Come up with a new schedule). So right where I needed the Downs most, they failed me. But I was able to look at what I assumed (correctly) was the revealer (
DRAW CONCLUSIONS), see that the other two long answers ended in synonyms for "draw," and work out TRACE from there. And that was that.
Pretty easy, otherwise, from a Downs-only perspective. Definitely had a "leave it blank" moment at the end of SNO- (
25D: Arrogant sort). "Arrogance" says SNOB more than
SNOT. A
SNOT is just a pain in the ass, whereas a SNOB affects an air of superiority. This SNOB/
SNOT thing was an issue for a lot of people just a few days ago, where people who didn't know what GELT was ended up with GELB (!?) because they assumed that one of the answers was SNOB, not
SNOT. And here we are again. Coulda just gone FIDO at
34A and taken
SNOT right out of the grid (never a bad idea). But in the end, no big deal. MELBS is not a word, so the "T" won out (
37A: Sandwiches that often contain tuna = MELTS). One other Downs-only flummoxer:
TROWEL (44D: Gardner's tool). I had the "T" and went with TILLER (!?!). A
TROWEL is a kind of TILLER, isn't it?
I'm kind of glad I didn't have to deal with the Acrosses today, as not only would
CONTRACT TRACE have been somewhat of a struggle, but neither
TARA nor
RAUL would've been known to me. I'm pretty sure we've seen this particular
TARA a few times now, but her name's not sticking.
TARA Reid and
TARA Lipinski are reflexes, but
TARA Westover ... not yet (
16A: Westover with the best-selling memoir "Educated"). But since I was solving Downs-only, the only proper noun I had to deal with that I didn't know was
XO, Kitty (???!)—which sounds more romcom than "drama." It's the first Netflix series to be spun off of a Netflix original film (the
To All The Boys... film series). I still have a Netflix subscription, but it's mostly just a mediocre content generator now, producing the kind of shows designed to be followed when you just have them on in the background, and it doesn't have any movies older than 1973 at the moment, so I don't pay much attention to it.Thus the Netflixverse remains only dimly known to me. Luckily, I knew what
Riverdale was, and was able to get the entirety of
TEEN DRAMA off just the "T."
Bullet points:- 55A: Amy who voiced Joy in "Inside Out" (POEHLER) — easy to pick up Downs-only, but this clue does not seem so "Monday" to me. I (almost) never know who does the voice-acting in things. Amy POEHLER is Monday-famous for SNL and Parks & Rec. Still, it's Monday, and even if you didn't know she did this, her name shouldn't have been too hard to come up with. It's kind of nice to branch out from the predictable clues (as well as the predictable TARAs—see above). Fun fact: Amy POEHLER made her full-name NYTXW debut back in 2013, in one of my puzzles)
- 26A: Follower of double-you, ex, wye (ZEE)— really want ANDZEE here, but only 'cause I'm singing the alphabet song in my head.
- 61A: South Korea's second-largest city (BUSAN)— I know about this city because of a car chase in Black Panther. What? You learn geography however you learn it. The point is that you learn it.
- 34A: Modern anxiety source, in brief (FOMO)— Fear Of Missing Out. Because of internet/phone/social media, you know about too many events, too many for you to participate in, and so when you inevitably can't do everything, you ... have anxiety. You didn't used to know what you were missing and it was nice.
- 5A: Cookies that are sometimes dunked in milk (OREOS) — this had to be OREOS because ALLOFTHEM wouldn't fit.
This week I'm highlighting the best puzzles of 2024 by focusing on one day at a tie. I kept a spreadsheet of every puzzle I solved last year, complete with ratings from 0-100 (with 50 being my idea of an "average" NYTXW) (They really did average out to around 50, with Saturday being my fav day (avg 57.7), and Sunday (obviously) being my least fav (avg 42.9).
Here are my Top Three Monday Puzzles of 2024. (I'm not ranking them; it's nicer that way)
- Elliot Caroll, YOU CAN CALL ME AL (Monday, 12/9/24)—three things that can be abbreviated "AL"; simple, elegant, just what a Monday theme should be (with an interesting grid to boot)
- Alana Platt, ON THE BOARD (Monday, 6/3/24)—things found on a board. CHARCUTERIE, etc. Again, simple, clean, polished, entertaining.
- Peter Gordon, TOTAL ECLIPSE (Monday, 4/8/24)—a puzzle commemorating April's solar eclipse. It ran on the correct day and everything. Themers were songs that would be "apt" to play during an eclipse, with Bonnie Tyler's "TOTAL ECLIPSE / OF THE HEART" being broken into two parts so the first part could stand as the revealer (a particularly ingenious move)
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
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