Financial Times 18,224 by SOLOMON

A fun puzzle from Solomon.

I really enjoyed solving this, even if parsing some of the clues required some mental gymnastics, a skill sorely lacking early in the morning. A fair smattering of pop culture is required to complete this (GAP, Who Framed Roger Rabbt, Will Self, Tutti Frutti etc). If I had any quibbles, they were minor (the clue for DEBRIEF doesn't quite scan IMHO, and the TALC in the clue for ITALICS gave away more than half the answer), but it was a refreshing fun puzzle over all.

Thanks Solomon.

ACROSS
1 BLEAK
Cheerless changing of sides during half-time? (5)

Changing sides in B(r)EAK ("half-time?") from R (right) to L(eft) yields B(L)EAK

4 WORM-EATEN
Old entry in early bird’s journal? (4-5)

As in the saying, "the early bird catches the worm".

9 KNOTTIEST
Wild kittens love time inside? Most puzzling… (9)

*(kittens) [anag:wild] with O (love, in tennis) + T (time) inside

10 TITAN
Giant bird with many wings taking flight (5)

TIT ("bird") with (m)AN(y), it's wings (outer letters) taking flight

11 REPTILE
Turning a letter in Scrabble to make SNAKE? (7)

[turning] <=PER ("a") + TILE ("letter in Scrabble")

13 ITALICS
Characters leaning forward, one covered in talc, one beginning to sling bottles (7)

I (one) + [beginning to] S(ling) bottles I (one) covered in TALC, so I(TAL(i)C)S

15 DRAMA
Excitement of the first whisky? (5)

DRAM A might be the "first whisky", if followed by DRAM B, DRAM C , etc

16 DIAMETRAL
Delayed servant travels west, covering close to quarter of the Circle Line? (9)

<=(LATE ("delayed") + MAID ("servant") travels west) covering [close to] (quarte)R

18 ZOOKEEPER
Unknown shot-stopper preserves goalless draw for manager of Wolves? (9)

Z (unknown, in mathematics) + KEEPER ("shot-stopper") preserves O-O (0-0) ("goalless draw")

21 TOTED
Carried small child by the end of wearisome day (5)

TOT ("small child") by [end of] (wearisom)E + D (day)

22 NULLIFY
Abolish naked attractions provided in New York (7)

[naked] (p)ULL(s) ("attractions") + IF ("provided") in NY (New York)

24 DEBRIEF
Interrogate FBI agent lying about cheese boards (7)

<=FED ("FBI agent", lying about) boards BRIE ("cheese")

25 GOYIM
Solomon’s accompanied by leaders in Galilee ordaining young gentiles (5)

[leaders in] G(alilee) O(rdaining) Y(oung) accompanied by I'M ("Solomon's")

26 EUCLIDEAN
Cryptic clue suggestion — ‘Newton’s inspired by Greek mathematician’ (9)

*(clue) [anag:cryptic] + IDEA ("suggestion") + N (newton, a derived SI unit of force)

28 PERMITTED
Licensed theatre backed by Cambridge University with material we rejected (9)

<=REP (repertory "theatre", backed) by MIT (Massechusetts Institute of Technology, a "university" in "Cambridge", USA) with T(we)ED ("material" with WE rejected)

29 HOUSE
Presumably you’ve slept in this riverside hotel? (5)

H (hotel) beside river OUSE

DOWN
1 BAKERS DOZEN
Tradesman’s exorbitant amount is wasted — zero’s banked (6,5)

*(zeros banked) [anag:wasted]

2 EGO
I lift skinned rabbit (3)

[lift] [skinned] <=(r)OGE(r) Rabbit, from the 1988 part-animated movie, Who Framed Roger Rabbit?

3 KITTIWAKE
Deathwatch taking place after cat caught bird (9)

WAKE ("death watch") taking place after homophone/pun/aural wordplay [caught] of KITTY ("cat")

4 WEEKEND
Go with male model on day/days off (7)

WEE ("go") with KEN ("male model" and Barbie's boyfriend) on D (day)

5 RETSINA
Wine in unopened box tipped over (7)

[unopened] <=(c)ANISTER [over]

6 EXTRA
Especially old carriage quietly departs (5)

EX ("old") + TRA(p) ("carriage") with P (piano, so "quietly") departing

7 TUTTI-FRUTTI
Sweet song from the fifties (5-6)

Double definition, the first referring to a confection, normally an ice cream (although there used to be a chewy sweet called Tutti Frutti in the UK) and the second to the Little Richard song, which was a hit in 1956.

8 NAN
News article bores old lady (3)

A (article) bored N + N (new twice, so "news")

12 PIANO PLAYER
Say, Rachmaninov, Brahms and Liszt only appear around one (5,6)

*(only appear) [anag:Brahms and Liszt] around I (one)

Brahms & Liszt is rhyming slang for "pissed", so drunk, a common anagram indicator.

14 SELF-DEFENCE
Will those leading duellists eschew fight with swords for judo? (4-7)

(Will) SELF (English author) + [leading] D(uellists) E(schew) + FENCE ("fight with swords")

17 ESTABLISH
Set up cycling firm with capital taken from shark? (9)

[cycling] the letter of STABLE becomes E-STABL with [capital taken from] (f)ISH ("shark?")

19 PAYMENT
Money made by secretary joining old boys in yacht on vacation (7)

PA (personal assistant, or "secretary") joining MEN ("old boys") in Y(ach)T [on vacation]

20 REDUCED
Cut grass cut by rolling grass that’s come back up? (7)

REED ("grass") cut by [rolling] <=CUD ("grass that's come back up")

23 IAMBI
An hour after midnight, finally rub one’s feet (5)

1 am ("an hour after midnight) + [finally] (ru)B + I (one)

25 GAP
Opening shop that was last open in 2021 (3)

Double definition, the second referring to Gap UK, a clothing store that closed its main branches in the UK in2021, although it still exists as a concession in some other stores, and online.

27 EMU
Large bird you can see in Melbourne Museum (3)

[you can see in] the letters of "melbournE MUseum"

5 comments on “Financial Times 18,224 by SOLOMON”

  1. Martyn

    Some inventive clues. It was generally not too difficult to get the answers from the straight clue and crossers. But I thought there was too much solving first then parsing

    Liked the surface of EMU, REPTILE, I thought WEEKEND interesting, and groaned at WORM EATEN

    I needed your help parsing EGO (could not work out what rabbit was stripped and lifted) and PERMITTED (did not see CU = MIT)

    Thanks Solomon and loonapick – solid work from both.

  2. James P

    Good fun, liked piano player.

    However, in 1d Solomon is unfairly criticising bakers. A baker’s dozen is thirteen, with one extra added to the dozen requested by the customer to ensure the total weight is achieved. Ie it is to ensure fair dealing and certainly not exorbitant!

  3. Hovis

    ‘Exorbitant’ really means ‘going beyond the usual limit’, so I think it’s ok. It often means ‘excessive’, which, I agree, doesn’t really fit here.

  4. Eric E.

    Quiet a lot of “do first, parse later” . . . or, to be more exact, do first and then have someone (in this case loonapick, to whom thanks . . . ) explain things to me. The NW was my last chunk in, because I had ‘moth-eaten’ in my head and it refused to budge, even though I knew it was wrong. I don’t recall ever having heard WORM-EATEN before, though it’s the obvious answer. DIAMETRAL, on the other hand, is always cropping up in daily conversation.

  5. Pelham Barton

    Thanks Solomon and Loonapick

    I think 24ac works as “FBI agent lying around” = FED reversed = DEF, and then “cheese boards” means BRIE is inserted into DEF.

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