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Channel: Rex Parker Does the NYT Crossword Puzzle
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Kate's kisser in classic tongue twister / WED 4-1-15 / 1925 Pulitzer Prize Edna Ferber / Smarter Planet company / Kurtis Mayfield's Move / Region off the Cote d'Azur / Irvin first art director of The New Yorker

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Constructor: Sharon Delorme

Relative difficulty: Wednesdayish


THEME: Hijinks!— A selection of jolly pranks for April Fools' Day.

Word of the Day: INDC [Visiting the Library of Cong., say] —
Hmmm, turns out this isn't a word. My bad. But I'd love to visit the Library of Kong.
• • •
Howdy, puzzlers. Rex is on vacation somewhere, so this is Doug filling in for PuzzleGirl, who is probably asleep right now. And I don't blame her. We had an amazing and utterly exhausting weekend at the ACPT.

I considered doing some elaborate April Fools' Day post, but I'm sure Rex would get cranky emails if I posted a fake grid or made up extra theme entries. So let's just dive into today's puzzle.

Theme answers:
  • 18A: JOY BUZZER ["Put 'er there, pal!"]
  • 24A: DRIBBLE GLASS ["Here, have a drink"] 
  • 38A: SQUIRTING FLOWER ["Smell my corsage"]— This one sounds weird. I can't imagine someone coming up to me and saying "Smell my corsage." And sticking your nose into a woman's corsage is a good way to get your face slapped.
  • 51A: TRICK CANDLES ["Happy birthday! Make a wish and blow"] 
  • 62A: PRANKSTER [Speaker of the clue for 18-, 24-, 38-, and 51-Across] 
So we've got a collection of pranks someone found in an old comic book ad. I once bought a joy buzzer (and a pair of x-ray glasses) from a comic book ad. The joy buzzer was a huge disappointment. Instead of delivering the shocking agony shown in the ad, all it did was vibrate weakly in my victim's palm. Where's the joy in that? The x-ray glasses, however, worked like a charm. I use them to watch HBO through my neighbor's wall.

I like the old-timey vibe of the pranks, but I bet this puzzle disappointed some solvers, who were hoping for a wacky April Fools' Day-esque gimmick in the grid and/or the clues. Maybe the trick is that there is no trick. Did you ever think of that? So meta.

Bullets:
  • 1A: SO BIG! [1925 Pulitzer Prize winner for Edna Ferber]— The actual title doesn't have an exclamation point, but I think it needs one. I'm trying really hard not to type "That's what she said," so let's just move on. 
  • 32A: ESAU [Kate's kisser in a classic tongue twister]— I have no idea. Let me Google that: "I saw Esau kissing Kate. I saw Esau, he saw me. And she saw I saw Esau." I want to add "... by the seashore" in there somewhere.
  • 17A: STIEG [Larsson who wrote "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo"]— Good timing on this clue. I read today that a sequel to the late Stieg Larsson's Millennium Trilogy will be published in September. Cool.
  • 42D: LOVE/HATE [Kind of relationship]— Nice entry. I also like 9D: COBWEB [Sign of disuse].
  • 31A: OEN / 63D: NEO and 57A: OTRO / 2D: ORTO— Two sets of reversed entries. That's kind of weird. And they're all kinda ugly.
  • 59D: ABBA [Group with the hit 1978 album "The Album"]— Let's go out on a high note with an ABBA/Van Halen mash-up.

    Signed, Doug Peterson, Laughing Boy of CrossWorld

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