I'm with RuthRobin here. There is a place for nicely constructed simpler Listeners such as this. I'd greatly prefer one of these to a poorly-constructed ambiguous Listener of which there have been a few recently. I'm of the opinion that it's harder to set a fun simple puzzle than a good medium-difficulty puzzle.
Piccadilly won't see any of the snide comments, fortunately, as I believe he is not connected to the internet, and so sets his puzzles by hand - drawing grids out with ruler and pen, getting a fill by literally writing in words until he finds a grid where they will all fit, and typing up his clues on an old-fashioned typewriter.
When you look at some of his puzzles and how elegantly set they are, given these constraints, I doubt that many of the new breed of setters could do better. It's a lot harder to set a puzzle as Piccadilly does, than it is to type a few thematic words into a stock grid in Crossword Compiler or Sympathy, click onto 'Fill', and then see the software fill the grid automatically.
So give Piccadilly a break. I thought this was a nice example of a simpler puzzle, a good one for new solvers to have a go at (the Listener needs new solvers, or in a few years time due to death and other attrition, the entry numbers will collapse to zero), with clear, concise clues. I wouldn't want one this simple every week, but I'd like one every now and then. Nice puzzle.