Theme B-ing - punning on the B-present participle riff:
18A. Flashy accessories for a vagabond?: BUM BLING
37A. Barn extension where pack animals sleep?: BURRO WING. This was the one that set me on the theme path.
61A. Heckle musician Gordon Sumner?: BOO STING. A lot of musical references from my youth today. Sting was a substitute teacher before the Police broke, my sister worked with him at a comprehensive school in South London.
3D. Owner of the most pubs in town?: BAR KING
45D. Warning at a spelling contest?: BEE PING. That reminds me, I must change the batteries in my smoke detectors.
When I collected the theme entries together, I just wanted a "BI-" to complete the vowel set, but it was not to be. Understandable, the only candidate I could find was replacing "BUMBLING" with "BIASSING" and I'm not sure how to clue that one. So fair enough, Gary, a good puzzle with a nice theme.
Let's tread the boards:
Across:
1. Troubleshoots, as programs: DEBUGS. Been there, done that. Back in the day, it was also known as "dump cracking" which involved going though a two-foot pile of fan-fold paper with a highlighter and a ruler looking through the memory dump of the mainframe. I got pretty good at it. Probably because I was pretty good at putting the bugs in there in the first place. The very first program I wrote had an infinite loop, but I still managed to make a career out of IT. I laughed when I first went to present at Apple HQ, their address was "One Infinite Loop", I felt they'd named the campus for me.
7. Sharp humor: WIT
10. Rain protection: TARP
14. Marked by twinkling: STARRY
15. Brian of ambient music: ENO. U2 producer of note, and elevator music king. He was a founder member of Roxy Music, here playing synth in spangly gloves with a youthful Bryan Ferry. Talented chap.
16. Diaper cream ingredient: ALOE
17. Like nickels, to dimes: LARGER. Yes, why is that? I want my currency to get heftier the more valuable it is.
20. Swedish retail giant: IKEA. I went to my local IKEA a couple of weeks ago. It's legendary that the store is impossible to find your way out of, but on the way back to my car a lady asked me how to get out of the parking lot. I tried to explain, but realized I had no idea either. I did help her figure out which of her stop lights was out though, so something good came of it.
21. Runs of luck: STREAKS. Good or bad.
22. "Moonlight" Oscar winner Mahershala: ALI. Thank you, crosses.
23. Most smooth: SUAVEST. Nice word.
25. Put to use: TAP. As "tap into".
28. Most likely to snap: TENSEST. Two "mostests" within a couple of entries.
30. One-named singer with 15 Grammys: ADELE. She helped fix my ALL-STAR/A-LISTER mess at 11D
32. "By that logic ... ": ERGO ...
33. Wrongdoing: SINS
36. Ventricular outlet: AORTA
40. Martin Van __: BUREN
43. "Heavens to Murgatroyd!": EGAD!
44. Trails off: EBBS
48. Astrologer to the rich and famous: O'MARR. Known to me only from crosswords.
49. Tasty bites: MORSELS
51. Boston's Back __: BAY
52. French chef's "Ta-da!": ET VOILA!
56. Years on end: EON
57. Potato gadgets: MASHERS. I use a ricer, a little more effort but a lot smoother result. If I want chunky mash I use the old fork technique.
59. Crunch at breakfast: CAP'N
63. Sex therapy subject: LIBIDO. Rich is getting racier in his editing.
65. Mom's sister: AUNT
66. Greek letter: ETA
67. Close soccer score: ONE NIL To the Arsenal. Last week's "Man. U." rivals reappear. If you want to know what Arsenal, One-Nil, the USSR and the Pet Shop Boys have in common, then you either have too much time on your hands, or you will Google "One-Nil to the Arsenal" as I did.
I'm usually judicious with my links, but this week there's too much good music, or weirdly awesome music, to ignore.
68. Calf-length skirt: MIDI
69. French film ending word: FIN
70. Packed (in): WEDGED
Down:
1. Broadband initials: DSL. Digital Subscriber Line. It seems a little old-fashioned, but I still have DSL broadband.
2. Online seller: E-TAILER
4. Impel: URGE
5. Musical set at Rydell High: GREASE. Los Angeles does have some wonderful Art Deco public buildings, this is Venice High School, one of the locations used in the movie to represent Rydell High.
6. Turk. neighbor: SYR, Syria, to Turkey.
7. Streaming services, e.g.: WEB TV
8. Accustom (to): INURE
9. Some library volumes: TOMES
10. Chitchat: TALK
11. Big-time celeb: A-LISTER. I went with "ALL STAR" first, then gradually backed off as it slowly didn't work with anything else.
12. Youngest Weasley brother: RON. I didn't know he had brothers. Not a problem, I doubt any of the siblings are well-known enough to make the crossword.
13. Mastermind game piece: PEG
19. WWII Philippine battleground: BATAAN
21. Genre with bite: SATIRE
22. Had a bite: ATE
24. KGB country: USSR. "Go West! (with the Pet Shop Boys), Go West!"
26. Bottom-row PC key: ALT
27. Samosa veggie: PEA
29. Like a designated driver: SOBER
31. Venetian magistrates of yore: DOGES. Nice living quarters, too.
34. Holiday quaff: NOG
35. Hindu masters: SWAMIS
38. Turmoil: UNREST
39. Show that launched Clay Aiken's singing career, familiarly: IDOL. The "American Idol" talent show. I'm sure that I must have heard some of Mr. Aiken's output, but I couldn't name a song from him if my life depended on it.
40. Move up and down: BOB
41. Actress Thurman: UMA. One of those entries you might as well just print in the grid and have done with it.
42. Novelist Chandler: RAYMOND
46. Deborah Harry's band: BLONDIE. I saw Blondie live at Hammersmith Odeon in 1978. I was quite taken with Ms. Harry. I think it's OK to confess at this temporal distance that I was smoking weed before the gig which might have something to do with me thinking they were the best band I'd ever seen. I was distressed to discover later that she was dating the guitarist. Oh, the innocence of youth.
47. Tax form ID: SSN
50. Wisconsin city north of Chicago: RACINE. Aren't all Wisconsin cities north of Chicago? Just wondering ... I suppose north and north-west.
53. Fence supplier: THIEF. Nice clue. A fence traffics stolen goods, hence "thief".
54. Starbucks size: VENTI. I always forget the sizes in Starbucks, or maybe never bothered to remember them. "Small", "Medium" and "Large" work just fine.
55. "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida" instrument: ORGAN.
58. Spot of wine?: ASTI. Nice clue for an old crossword staple.
60. Under the covers: A-BED. Best use of the word comes in the eponymous monologue in Shakespeare's "Henry V"
61. Collision sound: BAM
62. Arles assent: OUI
63. Almost empty: LOW
64. Ancient: OLD
And with that, I think I'll disappear down the YouTube rabbit hole for a while and re-live the 70's and 80's.
Here's the grid! Et Fin
Steve
18A. Flashy accessories for a vagabond?: BUM BLING
37A. Barn extension where pack animals sleep?: BURRO WING. This was the one that set me on the theme path.
61A. Heckle musician Gordon Sumner?: BOO STING. A lot of musical references from my youth today. Sting was a substitute teacher before the Police broke, my sister worked with him at a comprehensive school in South London.
3D. Owner of the most pubs in town?: BAR KING
45D. Warning at a spelling contest?: BEE PING. That reminds me, I must change the batteries in my smoke detectors.
When I collected the theme entries together, I just wanted a "BI-" to complete the vowel set, but it was not to be. Understandable, the only candidate I could find was replacing "BUMBLING" with "BIASSING" and I'm not sure how to clue that one. So fair enough, Gary, a good puzzle with a nice theme.
Let's tread the boards:
Across:
1. Troubleshoots, as programs: DEBUGS. Been there, done that. Back in the day, it was also known as "dump cracking" which involved going though a two-foot pile of fan-fold paper with a highlighter and a ruler looking through the memory dump of the mainframe. I got pretty good at it. Probably because I was pretty good at putting the bugs in there in the first place. The very first program I wrote had an infinite loop, but I still managed to make a career out of IT. I laughed when I first went to present at Apple HQ, their address was "One Infinite Loop", I felt they'd named the campus for me.
7. Sharp humor: WIT
10. Rain protection: TARP
14. Marked by twinkling: STARRY
15. Brian of ambient music: ENO. U2 producer of note, and elevator music king. He was a founder member of Roxy Music, here playing synth in spangly gloves with a youthful Bryan Ferry. Talented chap.
16. Diaper cream ingredient: ALOE
17. Like nickels, to dimes: LARGER. Yes, why is that? I want my currency to get heftier the more valuable it is.
20. Swedish retail giant: IKEA. I went to my local IKEA a couple of weeks ago. It's legendary that the store is impossible to find your way out of, but on the way back to my car a lady asked me how to get out of the parking lot. I tried to explain, but realized I had no idea either. I did help her figure out which of her stop lights was out though, so something good came of it.
21. Runs of luck: STREAKS. Good or bad.
22. "Moonlight" Oscar winner Mahershala: ALI. Thank you, crosses.
23. Most smooth: SUAVEST. Nice word.
25. Put to use: TAP. As "tap into".
28. Most likely to snap: TENSEST. Two "mostests" within a couple of entries.
30. One-named singer with 15 Grammys: ADELE. She helped fix my ALL-STAR/A-LISTER mess at 11D
32. "By that logic ... ": ERGO ...
33. Wrongdoing: SINS
36. Ventricular outlet: AORTA
40. Martin Van __: BUREN
43. "Heavens to Murgatroyd!": EGAD!
44. Trails off: EBBS
48. Astrologer to the rich and famous: O'MARR. Known to me only from crosswords.
49. Tasty bites: MORSELS
51. Boston's Back __: BAY
52. French chef's "Ta-da!": ET VOILA!
56. Years on end: EON
57. Potato gadgets: MASHERS. I use a ricer, a little more effort but a lot smoother result. If I want chunky mash I use the old fork technique.
59. Crunch at breakfast: CAP'N
63. Sex therapy subject: LIBIDO. Rich is getting racier in his editing.
65. Mom's sister: AUNT
66. Greek letter: ETA
67. Close soccer score: ONE NIL To the Arsenal. Last week's "Man. U." rivals reappear. If you want to know what Arsenal, One-Nil, the USSR and the Pet Shop Boys have in common, then you either have too much time on your hands, or you will Google "One-Nil to the Arsenal" as I did.
I'm usually judicious with my links, but this week there's too much good music, or weirdly awesome music, to ignore.
Producer: What effects do you want in this video?
Pet Shop Boys: Yes!
68. Calf-length skirt: MIDI
69. French film ending word: FIN
70. Packed (in): WEDGED
Down:
1. Broadband initials: DSL. Digital Subscriber Line. It seems a little old-fashioned, but I still have DSL broadband.
2. Online seller: E-TAILER
4. Impel: URGE
5. Musical set at Rydell High: GREASE. Los Angeles does have some wonderful Art Deco public buildings, this is Venice High School, one of the locations used in the movie to represent Rydell High.
This is my local power distribution station built in 1949 on Cahuenga Avenue in North Hollywood. We don't build 'em like that any more, more's the pity. I admire it every time I drive past.
7. Streaming services, e.g.: WEB TV
8. Accustom (to): INURE
9. Some library volumes: TOMES
10. Chitchat: TALK
11. Big-time celeb: A-LISTER. I went with "ALL STAR" first, then gradually backed off as it slowly didn't work with anything else.
12. Youngest Weasley brother: RON. I didn't know he had brothers. Not a problem, I doubt any of the siblings are well-known enough to make the crossword.
13. Mastermind game piece: PEG
19. WWII Philippine battleground: BATAAN
21. Genre with bite: SATIRE
22. Had a bite: ATE
24. KGB country: USSR. "Go West! (with the Pet Shop Boys), Go West!"
26. Bottom-row PC key: ALT
27. Samosa veggie: PEA
29. Like a designated driver: SOBER
31. Venetian magistrates of yore: DOGES. Nice living quarters, too.
34. Holiday quaff: NOG
35. Hindu masters: SWAMIS
38. Turmoil: UNREST
39. Show that launched Clay Aiken's singing career, familiarly: IDOL. The "American Idol" talent show. I'm sure that I must have heard some of Mr. Aiken's output, but I couldn't name a song from him if my life depended on it.
40. Move up and down: BOB
41. Actress Thurman: UMA. One of those entries you might as well just print in the grid and have done with it.
42. Novelist Chandler: RAYMOND
46. Deborah Harry's band: BLONDIE. I saw Blondie live at Hammersmith Odeon in 1978. I was quite taken with Ms. Harry. I think it's OK to confess at this temporal distance that I was smoking weed before the gig which might have something to do with me thinking they were the best band I'd ever seen. I was distressed to discover later that she was dating the guitarist. Oh, the innocence of youth.
47. Tax form ID: SSN
50. Wisconsin city north of Chicago: RACINE. Aren't all Wisconsin cities north of Chicago? Just wondering ... I suppose north and north-west.
53. Fence supplier: THIEF. Nice clue. A fence traffics stolen goods, hence "thief".
54. Starbucks size: VENTI. I always forget the sizes in Starbucks, or maybe never bothered to remember them. "Small", "Medium" and "Large" work just fine.
55. "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida" instrument: ORGAN.
Producer: How many solos do you want on the track?
Iron Butterfly: Yes!
58. Spot of wine?: ASTI. Nice clue for an old crossword staple.
60. Under the covers: A-BED. Best use of the word comes in the eponymous monologue in Shakespeare's "Henry V"
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;
For he to-day that sheds his blood with me
Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile,
This day shall gentle his condition:
And gentlemen in England now a-bed
Shall think themselves accursed they were not here,
And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks
That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day.
61. Collision sound: BAM
62. Arles assent: OUI
63. Almost empty: LOW
64. Ancient: OLD
And with that, I think I'll disappear down the YouTube rabbit hole for a while and re-live the 70's and 80's.
Here's the grid! Et Fin
Steve
ALISTER MacAlister, the noted WIT,
ReplyDeleteWas SUAVEST of all, he was sure of it.
But a blow to his LIBIDO
Was a HECKLING torpedo
From a feminist who'd had enough of it!
A blood-cell was in love with his inamorata,
And she with him, a classic tale, sorta.
But she was white, he was red.
To elope, out they bled
Thru a tiny nick in the AORTA!
{A-, A.}
Well, I'm batching it again. Brenda has taken off to have some cosmetic surgery done. Just the "upper", she assures me she has no interest in the "lower". She'll then be staying at a caregiver's home for 2 or 3 weeks to recuperate. I'm not really well enough to live without a caregiver myself, but I have no choice. I've asked some friends to check on me once in a while by phone. If I sometimes get a little maudlin in the next few weeks, well...
ReplyDeleteCarol and I FIR in 29:49 min.
ReplyDeleteGood morning Cornerites.
Thank you Gary Larson for your enjoyable Thursday CW.
Thank you Steve for your excellent review.
Ðave
ReplyDeleteGood morning. Thank you, Gary. Thank you, Steve.
Wow - It seemed like I was flying through at Monday time, but in the end when I looked at the clock, it was just under an average Thursday. It just felt fast. There probably should have been more names.
I don't know what I was thinking having FeN instead of FIN. I know I filled VENTE first, but still still should have caught FIN.
That makes two LA TIMES in a row with a one letter error.
Steve, your comment about a "comprehensive school" puzzled me. First reaction was that it would be better than a "patchy school", so I looked it up. Now I understand.
Sorry, I missed yesterday, but I was writing a Memorandum for a Court.
ReplyDeleteI had the pleasure of meeting BARBARA STANWYCK when I was in California for a week at a conference. This legend was a very sweet rather tiny silver-haired lady. She was always friendly each day when we would see her in the hotel. It was at what was the first all-suite hotel in the US. It was easy to recall the "Y" in the adopted name of RUBY CATHERINE STEVENS .
This was a fun Gary L. puzzle; I did not see the splitting of the words for a while. There was some very good cluing. Thanks, Gary.
I really enjoy your personal perspective and sharing memories of drooling over Debbie Harry. I must comment that your Irish take is not who SYDNEY OMARR born Sidney Kimmelman, was. But it was interesting to see the "Y" again. Very few shopping days until Chanukah.
I note that while the unsplit themers were all gerunds, verbs ending in ing, none of the split words were, even tho they still ended in ing.
ReplyDeleteFun while it lasted. Loved the theme, but I got through the grid too fast. Good times.
ReplyDeleteGood morning!
ReplyDeleteYup, I tried ALLSTAR (Hi, Steve), also VENTE (Hi, TTP), and DIE before PEG filled that hole. It's another blue-moon day -- d-o got the theme. Thanx, Gary and Steve (that was my exact thought about the Wisconsin city).
DEBUGS: My loops were normally OK. It was the uninitialized pointer that ate my lunch.
Smoke Detectors: I always replace the batteries in ours when DST begins in the spring (actually winter).
IN A GADDA DA VIDA: At first I thought they were saying "in the garden of Eden" in a Louie-Louie sorta way. It was a great song to play when the DJ needed a bathroom break; it was 17 minutes long.
M-o-W this morning followed by a haircut before the kids get out of school for the Christmas break. Thursday is senior day at SuperCuts; next week'd be too late.
Owenkl,
ReplyDeleteNot all verbs ending in "ING" are gerunds (verbal nouns) either. They can also be gerundives (verbal adjectives), depending on usage.
For example: The barking dog versus the dog's barking.
FIW. I was about to enter FIN, but thought "no, Jinx, that's Italian" and changed to FeN (hi TTP). No idea about the lingo at the overpriced coffee shop. At least I didn't erase anything.
ReplyDeleteIt's hard to think of DSL as broadband these days, but back in the day it was SO much faster than those 9600 baud modems. I was involved in GTE's DSL demonstration at the Byron Nelson Classic golf tournament, circa 1995.
I always think of the drum solo in In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida. Hand up for having a fan crush on Debbie Harry.
A Friday clue for RACINE would be "Wisconsin city north of North Lake". Abejo and I would get it easily, but Waukesha would be our first thought.
I am always the designated driver when my buddies and I go to our annual golf boondoggle in Myrtle Beach. I'm the only SOBER one of the bunch. We always go on Master's weekend, which is always held at yesterday's Augusta National. It is the only golf major that is always held on the same course.
Do non-computer nerds know that the term "BUG" came from a moth that was entangled in the backplane of an early mainframe, causing the program to malfunction?
Thanks to Gary for another terrific puzzle. And thanks to Steve for another fine tour.
Jinx, non-computer nerds are now scrambling to look up backplane.
ReplyDeleteNot too long after moving to Chicago, I qualified to bowl in a local tournament that was being held in Northlake, IL. I asked where Northlake was. "Drive east on North Avenue until you get to Lake Street. Another mile on the right is the bowling alley."
I enjoyed the word play of the theme and how the words were divided, as well as the person or thing was sometimes first and sometimes last (eg BOO STING).
ReplyDeleteGotta go - looked at my schedule for today - I think everyone who couldn't come Monday due to the snow was rescheduled into today - ACK!!
Thanks Steve (that Pet Shop Boys video WAS bizarre) and Gary!
Good Morning:
ReplyDeleteI can't remember seeing this type of theme before, but I thoroughly enjoyed the solve and all the B themers, especially, Heckle musician Gordon Sumner=Boo Sting. Any unknowns were easily perped and the only w/os were Cheery/Starry and Asia/USSR. I thought the cluing was a tad too straightforward for a Thursday puzzle and I thought Et Voila was a little forced. Nice CSO to Jazz (Ron). I liked the musical mini-theme: Grease, Idol, Organ, Adele, Sting, Blondie, and Eno.
Thanks, Gary, for a fun, fresh challenge and thanks, Steve, for your always interesting and informative commentary, especially your musings on your youthful antics and your culinary practices.
Owen, A+ today. Be well and stay safe and sound.
It's bitter cold today and, unfortunately, I must brave it as I have a medical appointment. Oh well, I'll just bundle up the best I can and grin and bear it.
Have a great day.
Terrfic theme. I worked from the bottom up. BEEPING established the pattern, which helped greatly. FIR, but not fast. Steve, interesting b;og.
ReplyDeleteALLSTAR at first, but it had to be ADELE, and BUMBLING gave me ASLISTER, all perps. OMARR was also new to me.
I know Heavens to Murgatroyd from the Snagglepuss cartoons. I never heard it anywhere else. I never have heard EGAD, either, except for movies and books. These days there are few minced oaths.
Peelers before mashers. My ricer makes the potatoes smooth, but it cools them down considerably, so I rarely use it.
We had an ice storm Monday night into Tuesday. By morning the roads, and especially the parking lots, were treacherous. On Wed. David came to help me put up my tree. There was snow squall just as he left my house. There were three accidents right in front of him within the first two miles. In a few more miles he called to say there was very little ice and snow the rest of the way back. Thankfully, he was safe. Here the the ice on the roads had begun to thaw from salt spreading and traffic. Then the squall quickly refroze the thawed ice from the storm and there was hidden ice under the snow.
OKL, the first one was my favorite. A+ Sorry you are alone. We can't help physically, but we are with you in spirit.
My break is over. I will return when my back screams for rest.
Fairly easy for a Thursday. The clues I didn't know were filled by cross clues. Thanks for comments
ReplyDeleteMusings
ReplyDelete-If you called me a WIT, you’d be half right
-528 Earthlings have seen that stars do not twinkle when you are above the atmosphere
-I washed my car and then it rained. ERGO, my car washing cause it to rain. Post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy
-Van Buren from Kinderhook, NY carried the nickname of OK for “Old Kinderhook” in 1840 and it took off from there
-I’m becoming INURED to “A” words like ABED
-Fun learning from BLONDIE video – 1) Who wouldn’t love her from that LIBIDO-BOOSTING performance, 2) Her version of Oh Denise is sung Oh, DENIS (De NEE) about a French boy and 3) The original Oh Denise was by one-hit-wonders Randy and The Rainbows
-The “small” popcorn at our movie theater is called “medium”
We tended to call analyzing computer memory (ours was in octal, not hexadecimal) “dump busting” while DEBUGging was for when the program ran but didn’t get satisfactory results.
ReplyDeleteWhen I meet sportscasters I tell them they don’t have to say NIL just because it’s a soccer score. This is ‘Murica, dammit!
Loved the many references to pop songs.
ReplyDeleteJinx in Norfolk, you're not alone about Deborah Harry. I particularly liked the video "Rapture." Probably the only rap song I enjoyed.
Thought this was super easy for a Thursday. Guess I was just on the same wavelength as Gary. Only early screwup was ALLSTAR, even when I got it with the fills, I never heard of an alister. It’s A-LISTER...duh...
ReplyDeleteNo paper delivery again today. And I gave him what I thought was a nice Christmas tip. Will give him one more day before the dreaded call to the Gannett 800 number a thousand miles from where I live, Oh, the good old days of local customer service.
Hola!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Gary Larson, for the word play! And thank you, Steve, for your insightful Blog.
Jinx: that's interesting about BUG and new to me.
The theme opened up for me at BUM BLING but almost missed BOO STING because I did not know STING's name is Gordon Sumner. I toyed around with it since RAM was obscurely clued but settled on BOO and I'm glad I did.
VENTI required five perps and I vaguely recalled OMARR from long ago.
My daughter is an avid fan of GREASE and likely knows all the words and songs.
I admire Gary Larson's WIT.
Have a splendid day, everyone!
oops. That should be "since BAM was obscurely clued." RAM was one of my mental options.
ReplyDeletejfromvt, thank you. I wondered about the odd spelling of ALISTER as a name. Duh! A-lister, person on the A list, the most celebrated or sought-after individuals, especially in show business. I came upstairs to find a ribbon and checked in. Yield not to temptation.
ReplyDeleteTerrific Thursday. Thanks for the fun, Gary and Steve.
ReplyDeleteI thought the theme was "parse the INGs" and totally missed the Bs at the start until pointed out by Steve.
This was somewhat easier for me than Tuesday or yesterday. SW corner was the last to fall; I changed Peelers to MASHERS (hello YR). Roosting made no sense for heckling Gordon (Pooh's friend?) and then a lightbulb moment and Ram changed to BAM (hello Lucina). ET VOILA, c'est la FIN!
Upset was too short and changed to UNREST; I was sure of the N from Van BUREN (yeah, I know my American presidents!)
Ends changed to EBBS, and Vente to VENTI (hi TTP,d'o,Jinx).
Another lightbulb moment with Fence supplier=THIEF.
"Put to use=TAP" was a little obscure, and required an alphabet run to give the T.
jfromvt & YR- perhaps ALISTER is another of those "A" words to which we have become INURED. LOL
Busy time of year.
Wishing you all a great day.
All the themers were good. BUMBLING is great!
ReplyDeleteNot so good- Costars of the "Road to Rio"... BOBBING
Hi All!
ReplyDeleteFun puzzle Gary! BAR KING tipped me off to B-ing and BUM BLING confirmed MA KING(?) aiding in some of the solve.
Wonderful expo Steve. Knew that STING was a teacher and that makes Don't Stand So Close to Me a bit creepy. //Love The Police!
WO: STREeKS (yeah, it really looks wrong typed)
ESPs: OMARR. Didn't know RAYMOND but with enough perps my Bro's name became obvious. Same with BATAAN (double A's threw me for a moment but solid perps)
Fav: THIEF's clue. I was so looking for Hurricane's competitor until V8!
{A+, A-} //Your eFriends are here from you (even if you >5 post once in a while :-))
Jinx - None other than the Grace Hopper discovered the 'BUG.'
Some of Grace's quotes
I'd add more IT nerd Words (8, 16, and 32 bits!) but I don't want to run off LL'sM again. :-)
Have a fantastic Thursday!
Cheers, -T
I will not TAP into my retirement funds for ordinary expenses or for a vacation. Did you ever hear someone who is short on funds point to his pocket and say,"I'm all tapped out"?
ReplyDeleteWe don't allow our family to TAP into our Christmas cookie supply until Dec. 24.
I just didn't parse ALISTER correctly until jfromt separated the A from LISTER. It is not the same kind of A word as abed, although I have no nit with abed. (I rather like it,). The A in A-lister is like the A we give OKL, top notch, the best.
See my post @9:52. I quite frequently see and/or hear A-list and A-lister in the Hollywood news.
A-lister
//www.imdb.com/list/ls008173417/
Fun Thursday puzzle, many thanks, Gary. And liked your giving us Shakespeare this morning, Steve. I too had ALL STAR before A LISTER. Loved having the twinkling turn out to be STARRY. Nice to see ADELE and UMA, a frequent puzzle visitor. IKEA seems to turn up a lot in puzzles these days, also. Liked your explanation about BUG, Jinx. Never heard of OMARR. Anyway, lots of neat stuff this morning.
ReplyDeleteSo sorry to hear about your difficult situation, Owen. Take good care of yourself.
Stay warm on your medical trip, Irish Miss.
Have a good day, everybody.
Enjoyed this puzzle very much, especially BUM BLING and BOO STING. So clever.
ReplyDeleteI also enjoy the various comments and personal tidbits about solvers' lives. Good luck, Owen. Yellow Rock, I couldn't parse your comment about resisting temptation. jfromvt, good luck with the paper delivery issue. I like the actual paper newspaper too.
Hello everyone.
ReplyDeleteThought I was gonna DNF but then WAGged ALISTER correctly not knowing the parse to A-LISTER. Also had wite-out in the BLONDIE/……NIL cross. So: FIR. Solving was helped by the theme fills all being gerunds, so the ING's were fairly certain.
RACINE - I think it was the HQ of the J I Case Company (tractors, choppers, etc.)
I remember seeing Admiral Hopper on TV (60 minutes?). I was wowed. My favorite was when she handed out "nanoseconds" to the audience. They were short (about a foot IIRC) pieces of wire that were cut to the distance light travels in that length of time. Provided an easy way to understand a concept that was hard to grasp, and demonstrated speed limits of the discrete-component computers of the time.
ReplyDeleteSpitz, also the home of Johnson's Wax.
ReplyDeleteI caught the B-ING at BAR -KING. A much easier than normal Thursday puzzle, with only ET VOILA & PEG (and Mastermind) as unknowns solved by perps.
ReplyDeleteGotta Go.
I liked this puzzle a lot. Been deriving great enjoyment from all your comments, too.
ReplyDeleteDidn't do the puzzle yesterday. LW and I were semi-glued to the TV all day. Gonna go and do yesterday's puzzle now.
Ciao!
Now I understand why Lemonade mentioned Barbara Stanwyck.
ReplyDeleteMy cellphone is ors de combat. This is Wilbur Charles. I'll make this brief because I'm not sure if this will publish.
ReplyDeleteI saw the theme as a substitution of the first letter: eg BUM BLING would be Fumbling. Two F's, two P's. The last? I forget.
WC
BTW, if the above doesn't register, just exactly what was the consensus re. The ",theme"?
ReplyDeleteWC
The theme is taking B-words and splitting them in two and cluing them as a two-word answer
ReplyDeleteHand up for not understanding ALISTER until I came here.
ReplyDeleteTTP, I believe you had some spelling errors in your post today. I lived in the town you mentioned for 17 years, and I can attest that the street is Nort’ Ave and the town is Nort’lake. ;)
Gary, excellent puzzle today... my favorite in a long time. Steve, I enjoyed your writeup even more than usual.
I’m late, I’m late, for a very important date (apologies to the white rabbit), so I’ll just fade away now.