Financial Times 18,165 by GAFF

A fun challenge from GAFF.

Preamble says its a 50th year anniversary puzzle. I dont know what this could be referring to so help here would be much appreciated.

FF: 9 DD: 7

 picture of the completed grid

ACROSS
1 WALDORF SALAD
Mix wads of lard with a large dish of fruit and nut (7,5)

[ WAD OF LARD A L ( large ) ]*

10 SEA VIEW
Directions about mid-year contest for prospect of holiday, maybe (3,4)

SW ( directions, South , West ) around [ EA ( yEAr, mid ) VIE ( contest ) ]

11 AVOCADO
Leaderless chaos and trouble for plant (7)

hAVOC ( chaos, without starting letter ) ADO ( trouble )

12 COURT
Pay attention to faulty area? (5)

cryptic def ; doubly so in my opinion … on a tennis court and a regular judicial court

13 VEHEMENT
Heated issue about European border (8)

VENT ( issue ) around [ E ( european ) HEM ( border ) ]

15 INSPECTORS
Bill members since sport changed (10)

[ SINCE SPORT ]*

16 STYE
Involved in last year’s infection (4)

hidden in "..laST YEar's.."

18 TUTU
Skirt bishop’s two French addresses (4)

dual def; TU TU ( french for you , twice ); referring to a skirt and bishop desmond tutu

20 WILDEBEEST
Antelope furious with visitor collecting insects (10)

WILD ( furious ) [ ET ( visitor ) collecting BEES ( insects ) ]

22 INRUSHES
How banks may be covered for sudden arrivals (8)

cryptic def; bank here refers to sides of the river etc

24 RHINO
Nose may be black or white (5)

cryptic def; i am iffy about direct equivalence between the def and the solve

26 TOURACO
Duty to answer company flier (7)

TOUR ( duty ) A ( answer ) CO ( company ) ; i managed a successful solve without knowing the bird

27 ORIGAMI
In central Nairobi, biblical characters are going back to folding sheets (7)

reverse of MAGI ( biblical characters ) in reverse of IRO ( naIRObi, central characters )

28 YOU STARTED IT
Get rid of cunning change after unknown solver opened hostilities (3,7,2)

[ OUST ( get rid of ) ART ( cunning ) EDIT ( change ) ] after Y ( unknown )

DOWN
2 ALARUMS
Old warnings unfortunately smother spirit (7)

RUM ( spirit ) in ALAS ( unfortunately )

3 DRIFT NET
Uprising likely to be about split in fishing gear (5,3)

reverse of TEND ( likely ) containing RIFT ( split )

4 ROWS
Scraps right of way system in capitals (4)

starting letter of "..Right Of Way System.."

5 SLAVE TRADE
Roll away from traveller’s load upset in terrible traffic (5,5)

[ TrAVEllER'S LoAD ( without letters of ROLL ) ]

6 LOOSE
Free cans at finishing line (5)

LOOS ( cans ) E ( linE, last letter )

7 DIALECT
Local speech is part of media lecture (7)

hidden, reversed "..meDIA LECTure"

8 PSYCHIATRISTS
Shrinks T-shirts with a spicy mixture (13)

[ T-SHIRTS A SPICY ]*

9 DONT MENTION IT
You’re welcome to tinned duck cooked with mint (4,7,2)

[ TO TINNED O ( duck ) MINT ]*

14 STRIKES OUT
Removes firm admitting Keir’s mistake (7,3)

STOUT ( firm ) containing [ KEIR'S ]*

17 ABORTIVE
Failed by over-eating protein regularly (8)

ABOVE ( over ) containing RTI ( pRoTeIn, alternate letters of )

19 TORQUAY
Resort starts to take open returns to dock (7)

TOR ( starting letters of "..Take Open Returns.." ) QUAY ( dock )

21 EMIRATI
Irregular air-time for Arab (7)

[ AIR TIME ]*

23 SNAFU
Upper class supporters turn up by mistake (5)

U ( upper class ) FANS ( supporters ), reverse of

25 DOUR
No love for smell that’s severe (4)

oDOUR ( smell, without O – 0 – love )

16 comments on “Financial Times 18,165 by GAFF”

  1. Hovis

    Fawlty Towers

  2. KVa

    Liked WILDEBEEST, INRUSHES, YOU STARTED IT, ROWS, SLAVE TRADE and ABORTIVE.

    Thanks Gaff and Turbolegs.

    RHINO
    Black and white rhinos are being referred to, I think.
    (Not balck and white money, I guess).

    INRUSHES
    The banks are covered IN RUSHES (the rush plants). Maybe the blog says the same thing.

  3. Cineraria

    Theme solutions include all of the perimeter, SEA VIEW, VEHEMENT, INSPECTORS, WILDEBEEST, ALARUMS, ROWS, DIALECT, TORQUAY, SNAFU, DOUR. I have watched and enjoyed this brilliant series many times.

  4. James P

    Yes Fawlty Towers which was first broadcast in 1975 and has (mainly) aged very well. I counted 8 references.

    Waldorf Salad was an episode name. There were also episodes about hotel Inspectors and a Psyschiatrist.

    A guest complained about the Sea view: Basil asked her if she expected to see Wildebeests rather than Torquay.

    In the Germans Basil was telling the team Dont Mention it (the war), but ending up insulting them by saying You started it

  5. Shanne

    As Hovis @1 says, it’s Fawlty Towers, first broadcast 50 years ago, set in TORQUAY, with a SEA VIEW, maybe, and episodes including WALDORF SALAD, DON’T MENTION (the war), the PSYCHIATRISTS and the food INSPECTORs, also the catch phrase YOU STARTED IT. I’d add ROWS and VEHEMENT to the theme word.

    Fun puzzle – thank you to Turbolegs and Gaff

  6. James P

    Apart from the lightbulb moment of understanding the theme (afterwards) I enjoyed this one, liking Waldorf Salad, inspectors, tutu, alarums, psychiatrists.

    24a Rhino = nose as in Rhinoplasty (nose job)/ black and white rhinos.

  7. Diane

    Great fun from Gaff: DON’T MENTION IT WALDORF SALAD tipped me off to the ‘watery fowls’ theme. Liked INSPECTORS, TUTU, ORIGAMI and the aforementioned 1a and 9d best.
    Thanks to Gaff and Turbolegs.

  8. Perplexus

    Very cleverly done by Gaff and for once I got the theme very early, which helped things along. A couple of quibbles, though doubtless someone will tell me they are unjustified:
    “Rhino” works as part of a longer word (as James P@6 says) but I am not sure that it on its own means nose, so I agree with Turbolegs on that ;
    not convinced that “tour” equals “duty” – one can have a tour of duty, but the tour is not itself the duty.

  9. Perplexus

    Further on “tour”: I see that Chambers says that it can mean eg a diplomatic posting and simply says “(also tour of duty)”, so perhaps I was being too picky, though I am still inclined to think that the tour is really the period, not the duty.

  10. grantinfreo

    Thought Fawlty T upon seeing Waldorf Salad, but hadn’t looked at Puzzle Info so it was just a passing flicker.
    [Cleese was brilliant, especially at being apoplectic with rage then by huge effort physically squeezing it all down to answer the phone in best British polite voice]
    Great puzzle, All Heil Gaff … oops.

  11. Martyn

    Liked WALDORF SALAD and DOUR. ALARUMS, and were TOURACO jorums

    I missed parsing VEHEMENT, and had the same problems as others with RHINO and COURT

    I am a great fan of Fawlty Towers. I thought it was very funny to commemorate such a witty show with such a dry and humorless set of clues.

    Thanks Gaff and Turbolegs

  12. mrpenney

    My first thought for COURT was CRUST–the earth’s crust has geological faults all over the place (which by definition do not extend into the mantle)–but of course that doesn’t fit the other half of the clue. Maybe one day a setter will use that one, though, so I’ll keep it in mind.

  13. Big Al

    I didn’t watch the series, apart from seeing brief snatches but I knew enough about it to get the theme. It was all solvable though without knowing all the references.
    Thanks, Gaff and Turbolegs.

  14. Anil

    I need to watch a good dose of the series this weekend! As an American for a long time I thought of DOUR but couldn’t figure out where the extra U was supposed to be coming from in odor! Thank you all.

  15. TJOB

    Query from across the pond: how do bill members equate to INSPECTORS?

    I am a fan of Fawlty Towers but haven’t internalized it to the point that I recognized any of the references before the reminders in the comments.

    Thanks, Gaff, Turbolegs, and all the contributors.

  16. Tom

    TJOB@15 – “the bill” is one of (many) UK slang terms for police; inspector is a rank of police officer (roughly equivalent to your lieutenants, I think)

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