Financial Times 15,416 by SAYANG

A solid mid-week shift from Sayan.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       

completed grid
One could argue that a few of the clues are somewhat self-referential, but actually I’m too tired. Brilliant charity gig last night and I need to go and get my head down. Thanks to Sayang and all you droppers-in.
Across
1, 6 AUTOMATIC PILOT George rewriting Act I to omit Paul (9,5)
  Anagram (‘rewritng’) of ACT I TO OMIT PAUL. Nice clue if you haven’t seen it before, which (fortunately for me) I have, several times.
9 OVERDUE Behind schedule on subscription? Not quite (7)
  OVER for ‘on’ (as in, say, ‘a discussion on blame’) + shortened (‘not quite’) DUES (‘subscription’),
10 TRAITOR Rat! Riot! Rat! Riot! (7)
  Fun to parse. It’s an anagram (‘riot’) of RAT RIOT, whichever way round you like, I think.
11 ELATE Cheer the Spanish goddess of mischief (5)
  EL (‘the’ in Spanish) and ATE (Greek goddess of mischief).
12 REBELLION British rugby player behind guerrilla insurgence (9)
  LION (British international Rugby player) after REBEL (‘guerilla’). More than a hint of duplication here, I felt.
14 SAY State power (3)
  Double definition. To have ‘say’ in a matter is to have power therein.
15 IN AGREEMENT United me with Argentine doctor (2,9)
  Anagram (‘doctor’) of ME + ARGENTINE
17 STUN GRENADE Fired a red sten gun? No, another weapon (4,7)
  Anagram (‘fired’) of A RED STEN GUN.
19 ROC Reptile decapitated by monster bird (3)
 

CROC (a ‘reptile’) withoiut its initial ‘C’ (thus, ‘decapitated’).

20 INELASTIC The Sentinel, a stickler for holding rigid (9)
  Inclusion in ‘sentinEL A STICkler’.
22 EDICT Order from editor, principally involving cadet training (5)
  ED then first letters (‘principally’) of last three words.
24 INEXACT Popular former legislative enactment is muddled (7)
  IN (‘popular’) + EX (‘former’) + ACT (‘legislative enactment’: more duplication, I fear).
26 ATTABOY A non-drinking lad receiving a word of encouragement (7)
  A + TT (teetotal, ‘non-drinking’) + A (once more) + BOY (‘lad’).
27 NOSEY Inquisitive – negative turning positive (5)
  NO + YES, reversed.
28 MAYFLOWER Hawthorn may blossom on transatlantic ship (9)
  Double definition plus another not-so-cryptic one: ‘hawthorn’ and ‘transatlantic ship’ are both ‘mayflowers’; and ‘may’ (as it appears in the clue) + ‘flower’ for ‘blossom’. H’mm.
Down
1, 14 ABOVE SUSPICION “Caesar’s Wife” must be a television series (5,9)
  Double def: ‘Caesar’s wife must be above suspicion’ is an idiom meaning that those in public life should, as it were, have spotlessly clean hands and ‘Above Suspicion’ was a Lynda La Plante-scripted T.V. series from 2009 to 2012.
2 THERAPY Cars not used in search party rummaging for cure (7)
  Anagram (‘rummaging’) of SEARCH PARTY minus CARS.
3 MADDENING Demanding treatment for vexatious (9)
  Anagram (‘treatment’) of DEMANDING.
4 THE GREATEST Boxer’s handle for 1977 film (3,8)
  Muhammed Ali, of course, ‘handle’ being ‘name’. The film – it’s not that bad – told the tale of Ali’s struggle with and against celebrity. But I still think the clue is duplicitous, if that’s a synonym for duplicatory (and if there is such a word).
5 COT Finish without a bed (3)
  COAT (a painted ‘finish’) without its ‘A’.
6 PEARL Organ in place of a jewel (5)
  EAR (an ‘organ’) in PL, for ‘place’.
7 LATRINE Let rain wash the public toilet (7)
 

Anagram (‘wash’) of LET RAIN.

8 THRENETIC Chain letters Sal omitted rewritten as mournful (9)
  Another anagram-with-omissions [same as 2 down] and with an indicator – ‘rewritten’ – that we’ve seen before [see 1a]  of, here we go, CHAIN LETTERS, minus SAL. ‘Threnody’ I knew but ‘threnodic’ was a new one on me. Not my favourite clue.
13 BUREAUCRACY Red tape to install air- conditioning in office by Currys odd (11)
 

Insert (‘install’) AC (for ‘air-conditioning’) in BUREAU next to the ‘odd’, i.e., not even letters of CuRrY.
I think that covers it, tho’ you may have to pick the parse apart a bit. 

14   See 1
 
16 ELEMENTAL Basic English to the French intellectual (9)
  E for English, LE for the French ‘the’, then MENTAL (as in ‘mental excercise’) for ‘intellectual’.
18 USELESS Vain Monica in the States (7)
  Monica SELES, the famous tennis-player, contained in ‘US’.
19 RAINBOW Gunner home with weapon shaped thus (7)
  RA (Royal Artillery, suffix for such as Gunner ‘Spike’ Milligan, RA) + IN (‘home’) + BOW (‘weapon’) + cryptic def of the shape of, e.g., a longbow. I think.
21 ATAXY Inability to co-ordinate movements within USA tax year (5)
  Inclusion in ‘usA TAX Year’.
23 TRYER He is keen to cram rye into empty transporter (5)
  RYE inserted into TR, being the emptied ‘shell’ of TransporteR
25 TOM Cruise with Noddy the fool (3)
  Tom Cruise is, of course, the height-challenged actor. A tom-noddy is an old name for a simpleton (or, more pleasingly, a puffin).

*anagram

3 comments on “Financial Times 15,416 by SAYANG”

  1. Thanks GB and Sayang, our former Uncle Yap.

    Quite straightforward. 10ac was quite good. Haven’t heard of tom-noddy before. Crosswords are so educational!

  2. Thanks Sayang and Grant

    (Good to see you enjoy your night out !!!)

    Similarly, I had the same feeling of repetition with a number of clue devices as well as internal structures of the clues highlighted in the blog above.

    There were a number of clues that I didn’t parse – OVERDUE, MADDENING (just didn’t see the anagram) and BUREAUCRACY – maybe it was due to my attention focused on doing an old August Bank Holiday alphabetical puzzle that I’d found from the Guardian !!

    Had not heard of the ‘tom-noddy’ term before. Smiled when I came across NOSEY (am sure that I must have come across this clue before but it felt like the first time) and liked unravelling the parsing of TRAITOR.

  3. 10A definitely did give me a smile once I saw it. Not once having seen 1/6, I thought it a nice clue indeed.
    Do you suppose 18’s surface and solution comprise a nasty cryptic clue & answer?
    Thanks to SAYANG and Mr. Baynham.

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