Adam Vincent keeps us young at heart.
Jump to: Today’s Theme | Tricky Clues
TUESDAY PUZZLE — Today marks the first anniversary of my first day at The New York Times, a cause for celebration, certainly. But the milestone that comes to mind when I think about my beginnings here is the first appearance of one of my Wordplay BYLINES (20A) in print. And no, “milestone” is no exaggeration: I had a clipping of the column professionally framed and hung it in my apartment.
That day’s crossword — a Monday collaboration by Alina Abidi and Matthew Stock — featured common expressions using the names of animals, and to this day I retain a special fondness for any puzzle that uses animals in its theme. Imagine my delight, then, when I discovered what Adam Vincent had in store for us today.
There’s more to Mr. Vincent’s trick than just animals — depending on your interpretation of the term, I suppose — but I found it to be the perfect accompaniment to a happy occasion.
So, shall we brighten the day with a solve? Better ELATE (1A) than never, as they say.
Today’s Theme
The term for a “Certain immature adult” hints at each of today’s four themed entries at 16- and 62-Across, and 10- and 24-Down. Let’s take a look at one of our clues: The “Actor who played Oscar Wilde in ‘Wilde’” (16A) is STEPHEN FRY, which somehow also refers to a “fish.” At 10-Down, the “Mouseketeer peer of Britney Spears and Justin Timberlake,” RYAN GOSLING, is related to a “gander.” The tie-in here is clearer: a GOSLING is a young gander.
A “Certain immature adult” is a MAN BABY (see also: man child), the definition of which is self-evident; it’s a MAN who behaves like a BABY. The term seems to have emerged in its current definition in the 2010s. Google’s Ngram Viewer shows an odd spike in the term MAN BABY in the mid-19th century, though the term probablyhad a different meaning at the time: The New York Times, for instance, used the term in 1878 to refer to a medical anomaly.
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Source: Elections - nytimes.com