Independent 11,482 by Gila

Gila kicks off our new week.

A distinctly American feel in places but a relatively easy solve in the end, thanks Gila.

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1. Editors of baseball’s first World Series broadcast (12)
BOWDLERISERS

A broadcast [B(aseball) WORLD SERIES]*. I assume Gila has been watching too much US TV.

9. When it gets dark, almost everybody hides stuff occasionally (9)
NIGHTFALL

NIGH – almost & sTuFf occasionally inside ALL – everybody

10. Rent out large facility (5)
LEASE

L(arge) & EASE – facility

11. Popular person stealing hearts, briefly (2,5)
IN SHORT

IN – popular & H(earts) inside SORT – person. He’s not a bad sort

12. Switch, perhaps, and offer comfort (7)
CONSOLE

A switch is a type of games console, so a double definition

13. Musical effects represented as sliding? (9)
GLISSANDI

A re-presented [AS SLIDING]*. Nicely spotted Gila.

16. From the outset, Federer’s looking exhausted, and it sucks! (4)
FLEA

Primary letter clue, oh, sorry it’s not Everyman, F(ederer’s) L(ooking) E(xhaused) A(nd)

18. Bread from store delivered (4)
CASH

Sounds like CACHE – store

19. Jeez, please leave something healthy to eat! (9)
MANGETOUT

MAN – jeez, oh man, oh jeez & GET OUT – please leave

22. Unknown writer collecting military award, etc (3,2,2)
AND SO ON

DSO – military award inside ANON – unknown

23. Pretty average results for gambler? (7)
WINSOME

WIN SOME, lose some

25. Vessel patrolling right round European city (5)
PORTO

I had P?R?? and spent ages trying to make PARIS fit. R(ight) inside POT – vessel & O – round

26. In the end, I’m all tired out running on this? (9)
TREADMILL

[(End of) iM ALL TIRED]* out

27. New grad’s told to embrace also being a model of excellence (4,8)
GOLD STANDARD

AND – also inside a new [GRADS TOLD]*

DOWN
1. Really great booze stocked by bar close to Reading (7)
BANGING

As in a banging tune or so I’m told. GIN – booze in BAN – to bar & end of (readin)G

2. They’re made with lots of time (5)
WAGES

W(ith) & AGES – lots of time

3. Free places to go in the summer in France (3,5)
LET LOOSE

LOOS – toilets, places to go inside L’ETE – the summer in France

4. Banter is, like, enveloped in nonsense (5)
ROAST

Roasting is where especially comedians tear strips off someone. AS – like inside ROT – nonsense

5. Choice of meals frequently ignored, in part (9)
SELECTION

Alternate letters of mEaLs inside SECTION – part

6. Back off, it’s about time to give up? (6)
RELENT

RE – about & LENT – time for giving up things

7. Australian soldier stationed in quiet, mostly distant West Coast city (4,4)
PALO ALTO

A(ustralian) & LT – lieutenant, soldier in P – quiet & most of ALOO(f) – distant.

8. No gun-toting Americans protect the First Lady? (5,1)
NEVER A

Not really an expression I use certainly, EVE first woman inside the ever so nice folks the N.R.A.

14. Pub drinks picked up for members of a clique (8)
INSIDERS

Sounds like INN CIDERS

15. Potentially award-winning foreign drama made money outside America (9)
NOMINATED

NO – Japanese drama & A(merica) inside MINTED – made money

17. Inhibited French queen ultimately stayed at home (6,2)
REINED IN

REINE – French for queen & end of (staye)D & IN – at home

18. Whine about phone software that’s rubbish (6)
CRAPPY

APP – software inside CRY – whine. Cue moans from the crowd about bad language

20. Extremely round betel nuts became measurably bigger? (7)
TREBLED

A nuts [R(oun)D BETEL]*

21. Ring grabbed by sweet, tailless monkey (6)
BONOBO

O – ring inside most of BON-BO(n) – sweet

23. Turn towards the left, crossing river (5)
WREST

Is west really to the left? Not if I’m heading south it’s not. Hmm anyway R(iver) in WEST

24. Board requiring assent from two EU representatives? (5)
OUIJA

French & German for yes – OUI & JA

 

26 comments on “Independent 11,482 by Gila”

  1. KVa

    Thanks, Gila and flashling!
    Liked NIGHTFALL, IN SHORT, PALO ALTO and NOMINATED.

    WREST
    I agree with the comment in the blog about ‘left=west’.

  2. IanSW3

    West is left on a map. Worked for me.

  3. Hovis

    I figure that, in crosswords, we often refer to NSEW as the top, bottom, right and left of the grid. WEST (or, more likely, WESTWARD) is often used in across clues to mean a reversal (to the left). As such, I’m ok with it.

  4. Tatrasman

    As well as WREST, I thought quite a few of these were a bit of a stretch (bowdlerisers, banging, wages), but mental stretching is just as necessary for good health as the physical sort, so thanks Gila and Flashling.

  5. Widdersbel

    Thanks, Gila and flashling. A very enjoyable mental workout. Always good to see setters use up-to-date(ish) terms like BANGING – though no doubt my son would tell me no one says that any more apart from old fogeys like me.

    I agree with Hovis on west=left – it’s just one of those crossword conventions.

  6. PostMark

    I liked all of this … but it is clearly a very personal thing re West/left. Some respected commenters have already okayed it but it raised an eyebrow with me (somehow, it felt a tad more stretchy as it’s a down clue). But it’s a small thing and probably best left alone.

    Whether influenced by US TV or not, the B+World Series anagram is very neat indeed.

    Thanks Gila and flashling

  7. KVa

    Postmark@6
    WREST
    Agree. It is best west it alone. 🙂

  8. KVa

    Ooops!
    It is best west alone.

  9. FrankieG

    I loved this – especially the &littish surfaces: GLISSANDI, TREADMILL, WINSOME
    P+(ALO (A+LT)O[f]) was knotty enough for anyone who likes parsing. I liked the simple WREST & WAGES too.
    “L’ETE – the summer in France” seems to be cropping up a lot of late – this time with a REINE to boot.
    What about le printemps, l’automne & l’hiver? – I believe in equal opportunities for all seasons.
    OUI JA is a bit long-in-the-tooth, though.
    BANGIN’ – usually followed by CHOON! – was slightly more up-to-date – from the ’90s & ’00s (nineties & noughties)
    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2008/jul/20/electronicmusic.bbc
    contains this comment on the ‘new’ Doctor Who theme:
    “Actually, the latest version is bombastic and thumpy. I always expect a delinquent Cyberman to pop up and deem it to be a ‘bangin’ choon’.”
    https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/banging
    can also be ‘Noun – A session of sexual intercourse’ and ‘Adjective – (colloquial, dated) – Huge; great in size’

  10. KVa

    FrankieG@9
    TREADMILL: I noticed this as extended def.
    WINSOME: Could work as a CAD. Saw that too.
    GLISSANDI: Missed the sliding aspect of GLISSANDI. Thanks for pointing it out.

  11. FrankieG

    Watch Obama ROAST Trump (2011)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HHckZCxdRkA

  12. PostMark

    KVa @ 7 & 8: glad you spotted that 😀

  13. FrankieG

    KVa@10 – I aim to please – yes, GLISSANDI is the standout clue with the “Nicely spotted” and appropriate anagram.
    NEVER A – Thought I might have spotted another 50-year-old album, but it’s from ’72 – so I’m a year too late.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Never_a_Dull_Moment_(Rod_Stewart_album)
    I like to misquote Charlton Heston of the NRA over matters of grammar – “I’ll give you my subjunctive when you pry it from my cold, dead hands” .
    He was born in 1923 – so I claim a centennial.
    Thanks G&f – from FG

  14. WordPlodder

    V. pleasant way to start the week. My favourites were as mentioned by FrankieG @9 and KVa @10: GLISSANDI, WINSOME and TREADMILL, all of which would do as semi-&lits for me. Good to work out a bit of tricky parsing too, including PORTO (harder than it looked) and PALO ALTO.

    Thanks to Gila and flashling

  15. Hovis

    I feel that, although I agree that GLISSANDI is a wonderful anagram, it is far from an original one. For example Picaroon had slides, as sliding rocks a couple of years ago. I imagine if you were to search through the archives, you’d find other instances. Not as many as the OUIJA chestnut I feel safe in saying. This is not a criticism of Gila. Most setters insert the odd chestnut or two in their puzzles, possibly not deliberately in many cases.

  16. Hovis

    Whoops, something went wrong with my italics. Slides, as sliding rocks was the intended bit.

  17. Hovis

    Aargh! It was meant to be Slides, as with sliding rocks. Apologies.

  18. FrankieG

    NEVER A is strange, though. Plenty of other single words would fit there.
    I think there must be some “well-known phrase or saying” hiding in the grid.

  19. FrankieG

    Hovis@15,16,17 – You’re right on GLISSANDI – it’s a chestnut. Here’s a Rufus from 14 years ago:
    https://www.theguardian.com/crosswords/cryptic/24756
    ‘In Italian it translates as “sliding one’s fingers along the keyboards” (9)’
    The blog is so old the clues aren’t included. The blogger can’t parse the clue, so Eileen helps, then the man himself turns up to explain.
    https://www.fifteensquared.net/2009/07/20/guardian-24756-rufus/
    Rufus – July 20, 2009 at 9:56 am
    ‘Re:GLISSANDI, I didn’t want to use this word but it was the only one that fitted as I struggled to fill in the top right corner! But finding that an anagram turned out to be its English meaning made me think it had possibilities. My intention was that the anagram indicator was “translates” and the letter fodder was “as sliding” – the quotation marks did make it more confusing. I tried to indicate the “I” ending by making “keyboards” plural.’

  20. ele

    just a plea for biological accuracy in Crosswordland. Bonobos are apes not monkeys. Quite a big difference. As a long-term attempter of the Indy crossward who very rarely manages to finish it without help, am very grateful to all the more skilled solvers on fifteensquared. Thanks to Gila and flashling

  21. Gila

    Hovis@15/FrankieG@19 – and, as for OUIJA, you’d be hard-pressed to find any clue in the archive that doesn’t use either the OUI + JA construction or the other chestnut, i.e. some cryptic definition about people being ‘late’ or whathaveyou. The real skill is in avoiding painting yourself into the O?I?A corner in the first place! 🙂

    Many thanks to flashling for the blog and to all who’ve commented so far

  22. TFO

    Thanks both. Didn’t know PALO ALTO and had become preoccupied with fitting the soldier behind the first ‘a’. On which matter, I am still unsure if NEVER A is intended to be seen as an expression in itself, or just an excerpt from everyday speech e.g. ‘never a penalty’?

  23. jane

    Something of a mixed bag for me consisting of some I really liked – GLISSANDI, AND SO ON, WINSOME & TREADMILL and some I didn’t – NEVER A, BANGING & CRAPPY. Ah well, so be it!

    Thanks to Gila and to flashling for confirming some of my parsing.

  24. Widdersbel

    TFO @22 – the word for such excerpts from everyday speech is simply ‘adjective’ – ie a word or phrase that modifies a noun such as penalty (nice example that any football fan will be familiar with). ‘Never a’ is listed in Chambers with the definition ‘no’, so the clue is unimpeachable in my book.

  25. FrankieG

    Wiktionary doesn’t have NEVER A but it does have this:
    https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/ne%27er_a
    ‘NE’ER A – Adjective – Alternative forms ne’ery, nary – Not a single; no; NEVER A.
    Etymology – Univerbation of ne’er +? a.
    (univerbation – A single word formed from a fixed expression of several words. For example, the single word albeit comes from the Middle English expression al be it, in which al means although.)’

  26. FrankieG

    Etymology – Univerbation of ne’er + a.

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