Solving time 11:38, a much easier one than the previous week’s, helped by four crossing 15-letter entries that all went in straight away. Would have been a bit quicker but I carelessly put NUTS in at 16A, which stopped me getting 13D for a while. Other than that, plain sailing.
| Across |
| 1 |
BOMBSHELL – double definition. I think Jean Harlow was the original “blonde bombshell”. |
| 6 |
HOP IT – OP in HIT. |
| 9 |
VIDEOCONFERENCE – (overconfidence)* + (rac)E. |
| 10 |
YELLOW – double definition. Not sure why it’s “offensively sensational” though. Chambers has yellow as offensive when referring to oriental races, but just informal in its sensational meaning. What am I missing? |
| 11 |
CHARTIST – CHAR + T(w)IST. Chartism was a political and social reform movement in the mid-19th century. |
| 13 |
HOOTENANNY – (anyone not)* after H(our). I always watch Jools Holland’s annual Hootenanny around midnight on New Years Eve. |
| 14 |
ISLE – (m)ISLE(d). |
| 16 |
BATS – STAB reversed. |
| 17 |
TAKEN APART – TAKEN A PART. |
| 19 |
OPEN-PLAN – OPEN (flower) + PLAN(e) |
| 20 |
ADEPTS – AS housing (i.e. containing) DEPT |
| 23 |
LEONARDO DA VINCI – (I can, vain doodler)*. Nice anagram, but my favourite one for this artist is “Vindaloo and rice”. |
| 24 |
NUDGE – E (point) + GUN around D(aughters), all reversed. |
| 25 |
REASSURED – REARED around [S(outh) + US reversed]. |
| Down |
| 1 |
BEVVY – sounds like “bevy”. Short for “beverage”, and can also be spelled with a single V. |
| 2 |
MIDDLE-OF-THE-ROAD – cryptic definition. (6-2-3-4) gave it away without having to read the clue. |
| 3 |
STOP OVER – V(ery) inside (poorest)* |
| 4 |
ETON – E(uropean) TON (style). An Eton jacket and an Eton collar both take their names from the school, where pupils still have to wear them. |
| 5 |
LEFT-HANDER – LEFT HER around AND (with). I’m a sinister person and proud of it. In the middle ages I’d have been accused of being possessed by the devil though, hence the more usual meaning of the word. |
| 6 |
HARARE – HARE around R.A. (Royal Artillery). Capital of Zimbabwe. |
| 7 |
PENCIL-SHARPENER – cryptic definition. |
| 8 |
TREATMENT – double definition. |
| 12 |
SALAMANDER – (deals)* around A MAN + R(ation). Not the newt-like amphibian here, but an elemental spirit that lives in fire. |
| 13 |
HOBGOBLIN – GO (shot) inside HOBBLIN’. Puck is one such in A Midsummer Night’s Dream. |
| 15 |
MALDIVES – DIVES (a rich man in the Bible) after MAL (short for Malachi, last book of the Old Testament). |
| 18 |
UPDATE – UP (higher) + DATE (court). |
| 21 |
SHIED – SHED around I |
| 22 |
EDNA – ANDE(s) reversed. |
This took me an hour with a couple of cheats but I failed to get 16ac correctly. In desperation I had BITE (lunch, as in ‘a bite to eat’) by taking the BACK out of BACKBITE (meaning to go for someone). I wasn’t confident but it’s all I could think of.
The yellow press originates from New York and refers to scurrilous and sensational fiction invented in pursuit of a circulation war. Agree with you on the long clues. They were fairly obvious with 7D being a bit of a chestnut and the painter (8,2,5) with a “v” in the anagram leads straight to the vindaloo and rice eater (how sad are we when we know anagrams off by heart?)
I thought 15D was a bit too biblical with two slightly obscure references in the one wordplay but no quibbles about the rest of it.