Themeless Saturday by Jeanne Green & John Lieb
Jeanne and John served up a tough pre-Thanksgiving event for me. The fun fill of I'M HERE ALL WEEK was a big speed bump but after hunting and pecking around the edges, I earned a big DOH! when I finally figured it out. As you can see by the graphic, the red cells show the unique fill for this puzzle.
John shared this picture of him as Elvis in an outfit he wore for a special day at his school a few years ago when I did his first LA Puzzle.
Across:1. Vittles: CHOW.
5. Schools that don't play in bowl games: IVIES - Columbia pulled a huge upset in 1934 Rose Bowl but the IVIES, who give no athletic scholarships and have high academic standards, quit going to bowls in 1945.
10. Blown away: AWED.
14. Bring on: HIRE - Schools are always looking to HIRE more substitute teachers
15. Classic infomercial brand: GINSU.
16. "That's ... really off the mark": UH NO.
17. Team that went to the NBA Finals with Durant, Harden, and Westbrook, familiarly: OKC THUNDER.
21. Further: FOSTER - C.C. worked with me years ago to FOSTER my blogging skills
23. Attraction north of Syracuse: ETNA.
24. Category on a spa menu: FACIALS.
25. Product with Ground Ball Grape and Wild Pitch Watermelon flavors: BIG LEAGUE CHEW - So young kids could emulate MLB players who used to be able to "dip"
29. Key chain?: ATOLL.
30. Hit makers?: EPEES 😀
31. Backing: AID - Candidates require a lot of backing or AID to run
34. "¡__ mío!": DIOS - Add "Oh" and you have the Spanish version of OMG
35. Take to task: SCOLD.
37. Cap. of America: USD 1 U.S. Dollar is $1.39 in Canada
38. Goes over: SPANS - The Royal Gorge bridge that SPANS the Arkansas River in Colorado is the scariest structure I have ever walked on
39. Aromatic hydrocarbon: ESTER.
40. Alternative to a rim shot: I'M HERE ALL WEEK - What a comedian might hear or say if a joke goes over big
52. Placed: RECOGNIZED - I have trouble placing or recognizing most of my 14,000 former students.
54. Wizard: MAGE - We are more accustomed to them in plural form
55. "I'm free to help": USE ME.
56. Scruff of the neck: NAPE.
57. Architectural area whose name comes from the Greek for "vault": APSE - from the Latin apsis, "arch or vault," and the Greek root hapsis, "arch or loop." ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
58. Inquired (into): NOSED.
59. Shiraz locale: IRAN.
Down:
1. Baltimore __: infield hit with a high bounce: CHOP.
2. State park activity: HIKE.
3. One may catch some rays: ORCA - I suppose Shamu might have a ray over for lunch
4. Electrochemistry devices: WET CELLS - When I started teaching, the science store room only had these horrible Bell System dry cells that hadn't been used in many years.
7. Some voters, briefly: IND'S - Teddy Roosevelt got the most electoral votes running as an INDependent (Progressive) candidate in the 1912 presidential election.
8. -speak: ESE - We speak crosswordESE here
9. Arose: SURFACED.
10. Oz dweller: AUSSIE - Australia is sometimes called "Oz" because the first three letters of when pronounced make a hissing sound like OZ.
11. Cry over spilled milk?: WHAT A WASTE.
13. People of action: DOERS.
18. Suite spot: HOTEL 😀
22. Folk singer Phil: OCHS - I remember the folk music era so well. My favorite song of Phil's was There But For Fortune - There But For Fortune
24. Is completely comfortable: FEELS AT HOME - Our Lily
35. Gamer's mad dash to complete a level: SPEED RUN - Speedrunning is the act of playing a video game, or section of a video game, with the goal of completing it as fast as possible. We have solvers here that do the same with our puzzles.
36. Africa's last absolute monarchy: ESWATINI - ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Changed from Swaziland in 2018.
43. Scylla's head?: SIGMA - Σκύλλα A meta gimmick but done in Greek this time
47. Fab: ACES.
48. House of Fabergé patron: CZAR - Nicholas III commissioned the House of Fabergé to make an Easter egg as a gift for his wife in 1885
53. Spanish "that": ESO - Paul Anka always saves me for this cluing
“Eswatini” was all perps, of course, and there were a few others like that. Nevertheless, I thought the constructor(s) played fair with us, for the most part. FIR, so I’m happy.
ReplyDeleteI spent about 20 minutes working on this puzzle before hitting a brick wall. I turned on the red letters and saw that almost all of my fill was wrong. Decided to go back to sleep. On a happier note, later I’ll be doing the shopping for the Thanksgiving feast. Food and football. What’s not to love?
ReplyDeleteSure didn’t make my Saturday morning. A big Bronx cheer.
ReplyDeleteDNF, answering 24, only 19 correctly. Oh well, there are always the Sudokus and a couple more xwords to get to.
ReplyDeleteI wasted too much time on this puzzle already this morning, so I will make my review short and sweet. Lame.
ReplyDeleteDitto
DeleteTook 16:47 for me to err with "oh gotcha" rather than "ah gotcha". While "aces" makes sense, I reasoned that "ices" could work for "fab."
ReplyDeleteUnknowns for me included: today's writer and her series (dork), today's actress (Engel), the actor and his show/movie (Aden), Graf's nickname, Eswatini, itband, and that Syracuse isn't just in NY.
I actually passed today's foreign language lessons (Dios, eso, & the apse clue).
DNF. I admitted defeat and went down in flames today.
ReplyDeleteI struggled throughout, but the SW was my ultimate roadblock. It band? Wow! Never heard of it.
And Eswatini was all perps as was Aussie. But I have to ask, since when is Okc short for Oklahoma? Am I missing something here?
So overall, I didn't enjoy this puzzle at all.
Hi KS, OKC is short for Oklahoma City, as in Oklahoma City Thunder.
DeleteI hate to defend the puzzle, or pretend that I know about the NBA for that matter, but OKC is short for Oklahoma City, which is in the name of the team. Folks around Dallas call it "Oak City."
DeleteThanks.
DeleteI can take the occasional FIW, but today I had to settle for the dreaded DNF, looking at about a dozen blank spaces I knew I couldn’t WAG my way out of this one. Never got I’M HERE ALL WEEK, no chance with a clue I still don’t get. Also in the SW, I DNK IT BAND, GOODIE BAGS or SIGMA as clued. Like SubG, ESWATINI was all perps. Oh well, as HG says, “it’s a game and not a test. Thank you Jeanne and John for the Saturday worthy challenge, even if I didn’t quite make the grade. Also to Gary for making sense of most of it 👊🏼
ReplyDeleteI'm one of the two constructors of this puzzle. In the editing process, a number of clues were changed, which ended up making the solve, in my opinion, a bit trickier. An example: for DORK, we'd had 'Sheldon Cooper, for one'; this was replaced with 'Diary writer in a Rachel Renee Russell series', which would have stumped me! Another example: for ADEN, we'd had 'Yemeni port'; this was replaced with '"Rectify" star Young'.
ReplyDeleteThanks Jeanne or John for confirming what we have heard before about the editor changing the clues. This one was a Saturday Stumper.
DeleteThis CW was above my pay grade, as is true for many Saturday creations. I spent too much time before I TITT.
ReplyDelete48D clue overturned my rule of thumb for deciding between Tsar and CZAR. (Tsar for the Russian monarch, and CZAR for the business tycoon.)
Wishing you all a great day.
Above my pay grade also. TITT. I appreciate the constructor(s) commenting. It is bizarre that their product would include a clue they wouldn’t be able to solve.
ReplyDeleteThanks you HG for your valiant recap.
There is no getting around the fact that today's puzzle was, well, to use a technical term, HARD. I had to keep reminding myself that this is Saturday, after all. And in the end, what saved me and let me struggle to an FIR was the fact that I follow sports. The puzzle was replete with sports entries, especially in the Across clues. And it was comprehensive: baseball, football, basketball, tennis, even fencing. So all those mostly horizontal sports clues were gimmes.
ReplyDeleteJeanne and John came up with some clever clues, such as "Key chain?" (ATOLL), and "Further," which normally would be considered a comparative adverb or adjective, but not this time; it was a verb. I wasn't crazy about FOSTER, though, as their answer, because that is not really an apt synonym for "further." And with "Cap. Of America," I felt they went a bit overboard with the cutesies, with USD.
Hey, I have a question (non-puzzle) for everybody. For Thanksgiving, son Jim (Arizona Jim) and girlfriend will be here for Thanksgiving. We decided to be different this year, and have duck instead of turkey. Does anyone have advice on how to cook a duck? I bought it yesterday; it's 5.5 pounds. Thanks!
Thanks again, Jeanne and John, for your challenging workout.
I enjoyed all the new and creative fill for this puzzle - felt like I was slogging but then came in under my usual Saturday times. Our older cornerites should be happy with the oldie OCHS and ENGEL answers
ReplyDeleteI love maps and geography so the ESWATINI was a gimme. My daughter used to work for the Sporcle trivia website and every time there was a new country name like ESWATINI, South Sudan, and North Macedonia or a new president or prime minister, they had a team that would go through and update all the former quizzes affected by it.
When my kids were young my rule was that their birthday parties only had the same number of invitees as their age - but only to a max of 7 because all the packs of GOODIE BAGS, plates, and napkins had 8 to a pack- one for birthday kid and 7 for their friends.
IT BAND syndrome is very common, but often confused for other knee and hip injuries
Saturday switch from Tsar to CZAR
I wore a PEACOAT most of my junior high/high school years
Thanks HG for the blog, and Jeanne & John for the puzzle
Easy peasy! NOT!! This was struggle from top to bottom. Constructor's notes on clue changes just added to my woes. Wrote in guesses here and there, and changed most of them by the end.
ReplyDeleteEventually got pretty close - had AUNTIE (for Auntie Em) instead of AUSSIE and couldn't let it go, making FOSTER impossible to see. I barely see it now!