Another very easy puzzle, if anything easier than last week's, but an enjoyable theme humorously provided by the name.
However, at the risk of sparking a further outbreak of hostilities (re last week's thread) might I suggest the grid leaves a lot to be desired. Philoctetes has already mentioned the 'plethora of three-letter answers.' I would add the over-unching in some entries, the odd barring and the unbalanced appearance of the grid as a whole, particularly in the NE corner. At first glance it all suggests that there is a lot of thematic material crammed into the grid, but unless I've missed something, I don't think there is.
I shall probably be shot down for my note of dissent, but grid design is an important aspect of the setter's art, and I feel that a number of principles have been neglected here. It would be unfair of me to make these criticisms without giving some thought to the constraints faced by the setter, so I set myself the task of producing a grid that addressed my concerns. I can say with confidence that an alternative, near-symmetrical grid is possible with only two three-letter entries and checking that is fully Ximenean. It wasn't easy, but I accomplished it in three or four hours.