This one took me ages, especially finding an answer to start me off. We’re living through very difficult times when it’s hard to keep one’s head clear and focussed on anything for long so I’m not going to waste time speculating on other explanations, but I enjoyed the puzzle, which after is all the main thing.
As usual definitions are underlined in bold italics, {deletions and substitutions are in curly brackets} and [anagrinds, containment, reversal and other indicators in square ones]. I usually omit all reference to positional indicators unless there is a specific point that requires clarification.
Across | |
1 | Stern advocate to retire (4) |
BACK : Triple definition | |
3 | A delightful spin which makes a point (5,5) |
ACUTE ANGLE : A, CUTE (delightful), ANGLE (spin – a spin doctor pushes an angle) | |
10 | Managed to applaud heartless cowboy (7) |
RANCHER : RAN (managed), CH{e}ER (applaud) [heartless] | |
11 | Fruit is mostly loaded with nothing inside ready (7) |
APRICOT : RIC{h} (loaded) [mostly] + 0 (nothing) contained by [inside] APT (ready). Collins has the following under ‘ready’: apt; inclined – always ready to blame others. | |
12 | Wildly remonstrated with pet shop (10,5) |
DEPARTMENT STORE : Anagram [wildly] of REMONSTRATED PET | |
13 | Primate‘s Mass being performed by principal (6) |
MONKEY : M (mass), ON (being performed), KEY (principal) | |
14 | Judge dispatched — for this reason start of hearing is cancelled (8) |
SENTENCE : SENT (dispatched), {h}ENCE (for this reason) [start of hearing – h – is cancelled]. I’m struggling to see ‘judge’ as ‘sentence’ but it’s in Collins. | |
17 | Not a word! More ruddy office equipment (8) |
SHREDDER : SH (not a word!), REDDER (more ruddy) | |
18 | Gym fanatic consuming a source of protein (6) |
PEANUT : PE (gym) + NUT (fanatic) containing [consuming] A | |
21 | Why union’s not gone ahead with opening of semipro arrangement (6,2,7) |
BREACH OF PROMISE : BREACH (opening), OF, then anagram [arrangement] of SEMIPRO | |
23 | Observe ghost, about to move to the front (7) |
RESPECT : SPECT{re} (ghost) becomes RESPECT when RE (about) moves to the front | |
24 | Dish not often seen nibbled (7) |
RAREBIT : RARE (not often seen), BIT (nibbled) | |
25 | Rambler, say, with nothing much to write home about (10) |
PEDESTRIAN : Double definition | |
26 | Nice parent? Pure and simple (4) |
MERE : MÈRE (Nice parent? – ‘mother’ in French) |
Down | |
1 | Way to screw up irksome state (7) |
BOREDOM : MODE (way) + ROB (screw) reversed [up] | |
2 | One lifting lid or roof briefly upset Frenchman (3,6) |
CAN OPENER : CANOP{y} (roof) [briefly], then RENÉ (Frenchman) reversed [upset] | |
4 | Plate from church overlooking city (6) |
CHROME : CH (church), ROME (city) | |
5 | Toy teaches French also (5,3) |
TRAIN SET : TRAINS (teaches), ET (also – and – French). Model train enthusiasts may not be pleased to see the word ‘toy’ in this connection! | |
6 | Inclusive deal hero broadcasts (6-3-5) |
ACROSS-THE-BOARD : Anagram [deal] of HERO BROADCASTS | |
7 | One climbing the walls is up, not bad and constant, say (5) |
GECKO : OK (not bad) + C (constant) + EG (say) all reversed [up]. Apparently these lizards have adhesive pads on their feet to assist with climbing smooth surfaces. | |
8 | Exceptional leave I declined joining the Sappers (7) |
EXTREME : EX{i}T (leave) [I declined], REME (Sappers). We often see ‘Sappers’ cluing RE – (Corps of) Royal Engineers – but they are now under the unbrella of REME (Corps of) Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers which although incorprating units with other skills and disciplines still maintains the nickname ‘Sappers’. | |
9 | Kind class cheer reprinted novelist (7,7) |
CHARLES DICKENS : Anagram [reprinted] of KIND CLASS CHEER | |
15 | Vain and noble, otherwise impossible to sustain (9) |
NONVIABLE : Anagram [otherwise] of VAIN NOBLE | |
16 | Hack concerned with one who handles things in hotels (8) |
REPORTER : RE (concerned with), PORTER (one who handles things in hotels) | |
17 | Clear manager finally dismissed over order to quit the hard stuff (5,2) |
SOBER UP : PURE (clear) + BOS{s} (manager) [finally dismissed] all reversed [over] | |
19 | Support others in place of article in story (7) |
TRESTLE : REST (others) is in place of the ‘a’ (article) in T{a}LE (story) | |
20 | Hope to keep to the end a garden shrub (6) |
SPIREA : {a}SPIRE (hope) becomes SPIREA [to keep to the end ‘a’] | |
22 | Relieved being let out without cap (5) |
EASED : {l}EASED (let out) [without cap] |
My only quibble is that a rancher is not a cowboy, but a business owner who employs cowboys.
A thought: to distract the mind and pass the time could we create a – not a Christmas Turkey – but maybe an Easter Egg? Make a grid and let all who wish supply a clue to a word?
I fairly flew thru this one. Damn, wish I’d timed myself. I certainly empathize with anyone’s troubling distraction, though.
FOI SHREDDER, and then BREACH OF PROMISE and soon got the other 15-letter anagram sans crossers too. And so it went.
I would call Roy Rogers a “cowboy,” even if this is a loose usage, and he certainly owned his own ranch.
Edited at 2020-03-31 03:44 am (UTC)
If the clue were “hack” and the answer were “cab” or “cab driver,” no pejorative sense would be implied.
But I was mainly just having fun, y’know.
Edited at 2020-03-31 05:57 am (UTC)
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hack_writer
‘ In the US, the term “hack” is used as a pejorative attack, among writers, journalists, bloggers, and comedians. It is especially used for journalists that are perceived to take partisan sides.
‘ The term “hack” has been used by some UK journalists as a form of humorous, self-deprecating self-description. The term was popularized in the UK by Private Eye magazine, which refers to male journalists as “hacks” and female journalists as “hackettes.” ‘
COD to 16D – Lewis and Orwell had it about right….
Really, Jackkt, it seems you may be calling me a hack! Well!
I am not arguing about whether the clue is legitimate in crosswordland. I was taking the clue as s springboard to approach with some leavening levity a much more weighty matter—exemplified by your own prime minister, who knowingly disseminated false information about the EU in newspaper columns during his career as a hack.
Getting good information to the people is a noble calling. An essential service.
Edited at 2020-03-31 06:50 am (UTC)
Time 45 minutes.
COD 1ac BACK and my LOI!
FOI 10ac RANCHER a cowboy in the UK methink!
WOD 20dn SPIREA – a favourite of my mother’s
Guy, please get started on ‘Enemies of the People’.
Edited at 2020-03-31 12:49 pm (UTC)
All done in 14.26
13a helped by my re-watch of 12 Monkeys last night—currently availble for free on iPlayer if anyone wants any apocalyptic pandemic stories to go with their perfectly normal, nothing-out-of-the-ordinary week…
My Old Man was in REME on the Ak-Aks (20 mile snipers!).
Here’s Collins, then.
In the Learner department:
‘If you refer to a professional writer, such as a journalist, as a hack, you disapprove of them because they write for money without worrying very much about the quality of their writing.’
in US:
‘a person hired to do routine, often dull, writing; literary drudge’
‘employed as a hack
a hack writer
done by a hack
a hack job
stale; trite; hackneyed
hack writing’
in British:
‘a person who produces mediocre literary or journalistic work’
“Hack” doesn’t equal “journalist” on this Collins page.
In the clue, I take it as an unflagged DBE.
The word “Sappers” is not found on this page.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Electrical_and_Mechanical_Engineers
I think ‘hack’ has more pejorative sting in the US: as the wiki article says UK journalists routinely refer to themselves as such in an ironic/self-deprecating way.
I believe the NYT is high on the list of FAKE NEWS purveyors, often asking nasty questions of our beloved POTUS. Or so he says.
Thank goodness he’s not responsible in any way whatsoever for the fight against the Chinese Disease. Dear me no.
And they used to say Honkies were apolitical and only interested in money. Tsk!
I knew BREACH OF PROMISE from The French Lieutenant’s Woman and other sources – does it still exist?
I rather liked ACUTE ANGLE. And I managed 17′ 08″ today.
Thanks jack and setter.
Mostly I was trying to justify: Ready, Judge, Irksome state, Deal (as anag indicator in the context used) and the ‘with’ in 25ac.
Not really my cup’o’tea.
Thanks setter and J.
LOI GECKO
COD 6dn ACROSS-THE-BOARD although I didn’t find any of the clues really clever
Yesterday’s answer: a French grab is seize, a German pixie is elf and one time in Spain is once, adding to 38 when translated into English. Inspired by SEIZE
Today’s question: of freshwater lakes/lochs in the UK, which is the (a) largest by surface area (b) largest by volume?
Richard
Anyway, AC/DC once had a “Lock up your Daughters” tour: “Lock up your daughters, lock up your wife, lock up your back door, run for your life.”
I parsed SOBER UP afterwards.
I thought two of the solutions were self-descriptive : PEDESTRIAN and NONVIABLE (which would probably be non-viable if it were not unviable because the hyphen is inviolable !)
FOI RANCHER
LOI EXTREME
COD BOREDOM
TIME 10:46
Time 33.18
Thank you to setter and blogger.
Apparently horses for hire were pastured in Hackney, hence the metonym “hackney” for a carriage for hire, later abbreviated to “hack”.
Cheers, Dave.
Biffed APRICOT (with only the R checker), SPIREA and EXTREME
Like many others I couldn’t parse APRICOT either, so thanks!
FOI was 12a Department Store so that gave me plenty to work with. Shortly after Charles Dickens whose Tale of Two Cities I have just started (am struggling to get into it actually).
En route I went for HARICOT at 11a but couldn’t parse it and then went for the more likely APRICOT which I also could not parse.
I was another TIN OPENER who then tried to manipulate the BUTT of the club. And 7d went from Wacko to Sicko to Gecko which was LOI after ACUTE ANGLE.
I ticked MERE as COD early but admired TRAIN SET just as much.
David
COD: Monkey.
I did have my doubts about REME being the sappers but went with the flow, not being knowledgeable enough about the subject to question too deeply. I was also confused by non-viable, which I would always hyphenate. I didn’t fully parse Sober up and biffed Across the board, so thanks Jack for the clarifications.
Lots to enjoy, though – Charles Dickens and Department store were great anagrams. No problems with the hack / reporter clue, as discussed above, but it does go to show how careful we have to be sometimes. An American friend sent me a email yesterday referring to Wu Flu, which – frankly – I thought was pretty tasteless, as well as inaccurate. But there we are …
FOI Can opener
LOI Across the board – couldn’t see that anagrind
COD Mere
Time 28 minutes but for the shrub