google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Friday, January 31, 2025, Ricky J. Sirois

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Jan 31, 2025

Friday, January 31, 2025, Ricky J. Sirois

 Theme:  Risible (rhyming) repetition 



Puzzling thoughts:

Just 12 short days ago, Ricky J. Sirois provided us with a Sunday puzzle: his 4th LAT submission, according to NaomiZ.  And as NaomiZ will be doing the Friday blog in Moe's absence while he heals, believe every word she says!! 😀 

So, let's explore Ricky's 5th LAT puzzle before I take a brief hiatus:

Today's offering, while not as tough as some Friday puzzles I've blogged, did have its Moe-ments.  Every time there is some play-on-words it takes a couple of solved ones before the theme reveals itself.  At least for me ... 

So how did today's theme of repetition come about?  Let's look at the entries:

21-across. Dorothy's musing before heading back to Kansas?: DO I HAVE TOTO?  

I am certainly curious to know how Ricky came to think of the four entries he offered today.  The first is a solid example of how both of the expressions work: "Do I have to?" is a lament that many kids use when they don't want to do something.  And maybe Dorothy didn't want to return to Kansas after spending her wonderful dream in Oz.  But I'm sure that she double-checked before she did return that her dog, Toto was by her side.  

A Moe-ku, perhaps?  Be sure to read this a couple of times to see the double meaning ... 

        "C'mon, Dorothy,
        Ship's leaving; TOTO can't come."
        Her Auntie Em barks

33-across. All-clear before the big dance competition?: GOOD TO GOGO.

Once again, Ricky found a clued entry that exemplifies both meanings.  "Good to go!" is an expression that means everything is ready, or all-clear.  The word go-go is synonymous with a style or type of dancing.  It also was a term used by Inspector Gadget when he wanted to summon something:



42-across. Advice on how to prevent undue interest from influencers?: MAKE IT SO-SO.

One of our regular board influencers is our one and only Picard.  Sometimes a picture captures more than my words can describe!



53-across. Enthusiastic reply from a certain bird impersonator?: INDEED I DODO.

What ultimately led to my rating this puzzle a bit lower was this entry.  If our resident grammarian, Yellowrocks happens to stop by today, I hope she will offer her comments and thoughts about it

The first part of the phrase could be written "I do indeed" as well as "Indeed, I do".  Maybe the word "enthusiastic" in the clue leads us to the proper position of the word, "indeed".  But I digress ... 

The whole concept of "indeed, I dodo" just seemed forced.  A dodo is not just a "certain" bird, but an extinct one.  And unlike the other three entries the plausibility of that phrase just isn't there

How might the fourth entry be a little more plausible?  Here is a possible substitute for 53-across:

"Words from a department store Santa on his first day on the job"? I AM GUNG HO HO


He does check out who's naughty or nice


Today, Ricky had some pretty good mojo.  I give this puzzle ⭐⭐⭐ and 3/4⭐s - congrats!!


The filled grid.  Notice the Natick at 1-down and 13-across

Across:

1. Decoupage, e.g.: CRAFT.  Knowing what the word decoupage means led to solving this

Decoupage: the art or technique of decorating something with cut-outs of paper, linoleum, plastic, or other flat material over which varnish or lacquer is applied

6. Stroller passenger: TOT.  

9. Substance: HEFT.

13. Dark matter?: HUMOR.  I stuck with rumor for too long in this spot.  I didn't get the play-on-words of its perpendicular (1-down. Ring leader?): CHAMP, either.  This was Moe's "Natick", as described in the grid image

14. Had regrets: RUED. I hope I won't rue having my cataracts replaced

16. Largest of seven: ASIA.  Seven = continents - can you name them all?

17. Suspect's story: ALIBI.  Really, I didn't make this up 

18. Plot size: ACRE.

19. Villain in "The Lion King": SCAR.  This guy:




20. Memory unit, informally: MEG.  Gig also fits - I had to erase it when some of the perps solved

24. Undertaking: PROJECT.

26. Persian Gulf nation: IRAN.  Iraq also fits but I used Iran, initially


Persian Gulf


27. Durham sch.: UNH.  My first thought was Duke - a university in DurhamNorth Carolina.  But since the word school was abbreviated in the clue, I knew the answer must contain initials.  The Wildcats of UNH reside in Durham, New Hampshire

28. Ellipsis trio: DOTS.  Something that C-Moe uses often when blogging ... would it surprise you to know that one of C-Moe's favorite movie theater candy is this?




30. Terr. divided in 1889: DAK.  My preferred clue for this would be: "Oft-injured QB Prescott of the Cowboys"

37. Stack: PILE.

38. Hierarchy levels: RUNGS.

39. Hockey's Bobby: ORR.  Oops - Ricky used one of the dreaded crossword-ese names

40. Civic, for one: SEDANHonda also fits, and I had to erase this before completing that section of the puzzle

41. "Ohhhh": I SEE.  Hopefully what Moe will say after he gets some new eyeball lenses

44. School org.: PTA.

45. Lean (on): RELY.

46. Foldable bed: COT.

47. Abbr. on an ESPN crawl: NCAA.  This usually applies to the NCAA as a whole. Right now, you'll see "WCBB" (for example) when ESPN is offering the scores of women's college basketball games on their "ticker" (crawl)

49. School papers: REPORTS.  The business world might refer to "reports" as those who work for their manager

57. One with a platonic partner, for short: ARO.  This was unknown by me but to be fair, it showed up recently in another LA Times puzzle

[ note: I wrote this recap before seeing ARO (in last Saturday's August Miller puzzle, e.g.) and then came back to edit it ... ]

58. Thoroughfare: ROAD

59. Leave out: OMIT.

60. Polling booth figure: VOTER.

62. Vegetable in the cabbage family: KALE.  I notice this vege being used in a lot of prepared salad mixes found at the grocery store 





63. Say hello quietly: WAVE.
  



64. __ planner: EVENT

65. Pizza joint in "Do the Right Thing": SAL'SSal's Pizza is a regional chain in NH and MA (surprisingly, there is none located @ UNH - see 27-across).  Sal's Pizzeria is found in Brooklyn, NY and was a venue in the movie, "Do the Right Thing".  And now you know, because prior to looking this up, I had no clue

66. Souvenir from an animated film: CEL.

67. Worshipper of Jah: RASTA.  I don't know about Jah but I do know that Joboo is for real.  Enjoy this clip! [rated PG-13 for a few choice words]





Down:

2. Help in keeping things straight: RULER.  I am guessing that Ricky/Patti meant one of these?


Notice the straight edge on the RULER



3. Compadre: AMIGO.  Would you use amiga if the clue was "Com-madre"??

4. Keyless key: FOB.  Moe-ku:

        Dick Van Dyke's TV 
        Wife said this before driving:
        "Lob me the FOB, Rob"

5. Weapons for Neptune and Shiva: TRIDENTS.  Many of us are aware of the god, Neptune 

I was unaware of the god, Shiva





6. Aspect: TRAIT.

7. "That sounds painful": OUCH.

8. Mega- squared: TERA.

9. "__ mañana": HASTA.

10. San Diego suburb whose name means "hidden": ESCONDIDO.




11. Italian automaker: FIATAlfa fit but I didn't bite

12. Primary ingredient in poi: TARO.

15. Danny of "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia": DE VITO.  A series on FX network.  The trailer:





22. Cuatro y cuatro: OCHO. [translation from Spanish to English] Four and four = eight

23. Hosp. sections: ERS.  ORS also fit.  Again, I chose the correct one initially

25. 2022 and 2024 AL MVP: JUDGE.  "Here comes the JUDGE"!  As in, Aaron Judge the center fielder of the NY Yankees



28. Not at all cool: DORKY.

29. Fairy tale baddie: OGRE.

31. "Too bad": ALAS.

32. Casino game: KENO.  How to play, courtesy of WikiHow

33. Golf clinic topic: GRIP.  Step-by-step guide to the perfect golf GRIP

34. Depose: OUST.

35. Everybody: ONE AND ALL. Not a phrase that we see a lot of in crossword puzzles

36. Hoped-for result: GOAL

37. Sauce made with pine nuts: PESTO.  Here is a simple recipe:





40. Short stay: STOPOVER.

42. Grazing location: MEADOW.

43. Coffee order: ICED.

45. "Run Away With Me" singer Carly __ Jepsen: RAE.

48. Gives way: CEDES.

49. Brand of canned chiles: ROTEL. My favorite of theirs, and one I use often in a variety of recipes:


Try this with black-eyed peas



50. Going prices: RATES

51. Reznor with two Oscars for Best Original Score: TRENTHis biography, courtesy of Wikipedia

52. "More or less": SORTA.

53. Bothers: IRKS.

54. U.S. weather agency: NOAA.  NOAA and NCAA were a bit too close to each other in the grid for my liking ... 




55. Apple desktop: IMAC.  I am a PC guy (laptop) with an iPhone

56. Deep __: DIVE

61. Eggs, biologically: OVA.  Not sure how much they'd charge for an ova, but a dozen hen's eggs were $6.99 this past week, and that was for the "store" brand

I'll close with a -ku:

    Manicurist earned
    Vet School degree. She now can
    Give a pet a cure

The Chairman has left the building ... see you in March or April

41 comments:

Subgenius said...

I pretty much knew what the theme was right away, and that helped me solve this pretty challenging puzzle. It didn’t help that I had forgotten what “decoupage” was, but eventually everything fell into place. FIR, so I’m happy.

desper-otto said...

Good morning!

D-o fell into the CRAMP/RUMOR trap, and never got out of it. Bzzzzzzt. I waited for C-Moe to explain how CRAMP matched the clue. D'oh. Not my finest moment. Thanx, Ricky and C-Moe. (Good luck with the cataract surgery. Mine wasn't a great success -- I still need glasses for both reading and distance.)

YooperPhil said...

Well I managed a FIR in 17:41, but about half that time was trying to decipher the NW corner after the rest of the grid was filled. Along the way I had to make some quick changes when the perps wouldn’t concur, Honda to SEDAN, dish to DIVE, and ranks to RUNGS, and I knew UNC is in Chapel Hill and not Durham but I still put it in before perps demanded OCHO. Not knowing what a decoupage was didn’t help, after I successfully WAGed CRAFT, (I thought maybe a boat till the expo), nor did some other vague clues in that area, (still don’t know how CHAMP is a ring leader as 1D was missing in the blog). The theme was easy to suss after getting the top two, and it did help with the solve. ARO made another appearance, but now I remember it anyway. RO ⭐️ TEL makes some good stuff, adds some bite to homemade chili and marinara, but I think of it as diced tomatoes that include chilies, not chilies alone. Thank you Rick for the Friday challenge! C~Moe, a very enjoyable read today, will miss your blog in your absence, but Friday’s will be in good hands with NaomiZ holding the reins. Hope your surgery and recovery goes well!

Big Easy said...

The NW took a couple of minutes but after filling TOTO, the rest was a breeze. Like the Chairman, it took a while for HUMOR and CHAMP to arrive. I've heard the San Diego suburb ESCONDIDO but never saw it in print. But it was the V8 that gave me TOTO. I was amused at the cross of INDEED I DODO crossing 56D--"Deep _____". My first thought was Deep DODO but I had to take a Deep DIVE.

UNH- first thought was NC State but it's in Raleigh, close to DUKE and UNC. The Research Triangle. I know Danny De VITO but didn't know he was on that show.

Jinx in Norfolk said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Jinx in Norfolk said...

FIR, but gig->MEG, ranks->RUNGS, fares->RATES, and ados->IRKS.

I knew ESCONDIDO, but not what it meant.

Last month I read Isaac's Storm by Erik Larson. The book is about a time before NOAA, when the art and science of meteorology were just beginning. Houston and Galveston were vying to be the "it" city in South Texas, and it looked like Galveston would win. Then, in 1900, a giant hurricane hit the Galveston area, destroying almost all its buildings and killing almost all its inhabitants. Oh, and in the Houston area they discovered oil about the same time. Game, set and match. Larson is also the author of The Splendid and the Vile and The Devil in the White City, both fantastic reads. If you thought you hated history in school, give a Larson book a try. If you loved history in school, his books are must-reads.

CSO to Bayou "Fix It Again" Tony.
I really expected our Chairman to link Wham's Wake Me Up Before You GO-GO.

Thanks to RJS for the fun Friday challenge. And thanks to our Chairman for another great review. I'll bet your eyes will be better than they were pre-op.

Anonymous said...

UNC is in Chapel Hill not Durham🤦‍♀️.

Anonymous said...

Took 8:28 today to avoid a no no.

I didn't know Escondido, hasta, wondered if ocho would be whatever 16 is in Spanish, and fell for the wrong Durham trap for a while (UNC? Duke? Elon? NCState?).

Can we please retire "aro"?

Lemonade714 said...

Chris I wish you better results with your cataract surgery than your comment 14. Had regrets: RUED. I hope I won't rue having my cataracts replaced . If your surgeon is planning on replacing your cataracts, please find another surgeon ASAP! If they have advised you it will take two months to recover, that also is not encouraging. Most go back to work the same week of the operation. Good luck.

Irish Miss said...

Good Morning:

This was a cute theme, executed well, but not what I’d like on a Friday. Gone are the days of Friday stumpers that were fun and challenging warm-ups for the Saturday teeth gnashers and hair-pullers. Other than a these stumbles, e.g., Ranks/Rungs and Honda/Sedan, the solve was pretty straightforward with the cluing and fill.

Thanks, Ricky, and thanks, Moe, for the analysis and commentary and the fun Moe-kus, the favorite being the Pet A Cure. Best wishes for a successful surgery and desired outcome.

Have a great day.

JR said...

What did the comment about notice the Natick mean?

KS said...

FIR. What a struggle I had in the NW, even after correctly throwing down amigo. That was the last area to fall for me.
I got the theme early on with toto which really helped a lot.
But overall this was not a fun puzzle with answers like Escondido and aro, which spellchecker hates as well.

Tehachapi Ken said...

Today's puzzle struck me as the least troublesome Friday challenge in a while. The theme was cute, and most of the theme answers I found clever and amusing.

The SE corner slowed me down a bit. That is where ARO, TRENT, and RASTA met, creating a Natick for me. Luckily some neighboring event planners, voters, and one of my least favorite answers in crosswords--SORTA--came to the rescue.

I loved the misdirections in some clues, and appreciated the virtual lack (except for TARO) of crosswordese vowel-rich staples. I suspect that the prevailing epidemic of such overused words in puzzles comes mainly from grid fillers like Crossword Compiler.

I fell for UNC Durham like many others. Oops! Forgot about the Durham in New Hampshire. And I've been on the UNH campus there!

Good luck with everything, Ch-Moe. I hope you'll still be able to take occasional phone calls. Son Jim and I owe you one.

Thanks, Ricky, for a fresh and stimulating Friday challenge today.

Chairman Moe said...

Jason, I'm not replacing my cataracts, I'm getting new lenses 😉
Also, I'm expecting to be just fine. Met the surgeon, checked his credentials, asked all the right questions. But regardless of whether everything goes well, I'm taking some time off (blogging) afterwards. I may pop in occasionally but I need/earned a break

Anonymous said...

Yooper Phil@7:06.
A boxing “champ” is a “ring” leader because he is the leader in the boxing “ring.” At least, that’s what I got out of it, Phil.

(And this is Subgenius- the app wouldn’t let me print this under my avatar)

Chairman Moe said...

JR, if you look at the picture of the solved grid, there is a little black triangle in the corner of where CHAMP and HUMOR cross. When I solve the puzzle I use a software called Across Lite. In Across Lite you can "check" as you go to see if all of your current fill is accurate. If you make a mistake you can erase the letter and replace with another, but the Across Lite program "marks" that square to permanently let you know you erred. That was my "Natick"

Chairman Moe said...

T Ken: thanks for the well-wishes. Feel free to call or text or email. Curious to hear about your updates with your puzzles

Anonymous said...

YP here ~ thanks for the explanation SubG, but still a lame clue IMO.

Monkey said...

If you have one eye done at á time, two weeks in between surgeries, it takes á little adjusting but the only real annoyance is the many drops, otherwise you can go about your business within á day or two. I do not RUE my surgery.

Monkey said...

Fun fun puzzle this morning. It was easier than most Friday fare, but I appreciated the lack of reliance on proper names. I too experienced á dark moment in the NW, rumor/HUMOR but that got straightened out. I too had Honda before SEDAN. NCAA paired with NOAA.

Cute theme that was pretty obvious to me by the second theme answers. At first I had TOGO for Dorothy’s question, but the GOGO revealed the trick.

Best of luck C-Moe on your surgery. Thank you for the neat recap and Moe-kus.

Charlie Echo said...

Got 'er done, with lot of P&P and a generous application of WiteOut. I have to rate this one as sorta so-so, as the clues were not really in my wheelhouse. C-Moe, good luck with the surgery, and enjoy the time off!

Copy Editor said...

Houston/Galveston aren't usually considered to be part of South Texas. They're considered "southeast." San Antonio and Corpus Christi are the major cities of South Texas, and the Rio Grande Valley is a major component. For all those reasons, South Texas is considered largely Hispanic/Latino, whereas Houston is so multi-ethnic that Hispanics barely stand out there.

Copy Editor said...

We’ll miss Chris.

This was an easier than usual Friday puzzle for me, thanks to proper names and my knowledge of Spanish. ESCONDIDO and HASTA were early successes. Aaron JUDGE, Danny DeVITO, SAL’S Pizza, and NOAA helped too. The HASTA-RASTA combo was amusing, and so was the Durham misdirection for UNH.

The theme wasn’t amusing, but it was serviceable, I suppose. SO-SO, perhaps. I’m not sure Dorothy is “musing” in the TOTO clue, though.

“Aspect” as a clue for TRAIT was meaningless. I’ve been taught not to use “aspect”; that it’s an “empty word.” Factor is another no-no I’ve been taught to avoid. I might have tried to work “no-no” into the puzzle if I’d been the constructor.

Maybe my ignorance at 1A was amusing. I was probably thinking of decolletage instead of decoupage when I came up with “cleft” before CRAFT.

Lucina said...

Hola! An easy Friday puzzle; ;thank you Ricky J. Sirois. It recalls the GO-GO fad of the 70s or was it the 80s? Anyway I still have my GO-GO shorts or did I finally get rid of them? I'll have to look in my closet.
If I had not already filled OCHO I would have been unsure about UNH and did not think about New Hampshire. I only know of Durham, NC.
AMIGO and OCHO as well as ESCONDIDO are definitely in my wheel house but they might have been totally unknown to the east coasters. We had a school in ESCONDIDO which I visited many times.
ICED coffee would NEVER be my order. I remember ARO from a previous puzzle. I've never seen the show but DEVITO was easy enough to fill.
MEG could also have been the actress, Ryan.
Good luck with your cataract surgery, Moe. It's the best thing that's happened to my eyes and I do wear readers for close-up reading.
Have a fabulous Friday, ONE AND ALL!

Anonymous T said...

YooperPhil - think boxing Ring leader for CHAMP

Jinx in Norfolk said...

My fault. From my Dallas days, I think of anything below Grand Prairie as "South Texas."

Jinx in Norfolk said...

Good idea. I wouldn't poopoo it.

Copy Editor said...

Which brings up my annoyance whenever some sports announcer claims a game played in Dallas/Arlington/Fort Worth is "deep in the heart of Texas." No, it ain't.

Yellowrocks said...

Easier than most Friday puzzles. I see that I'm not the only one who had trouble in the NW. I knew decoupage, but ignored the "e.g." Of course, decoupage is an example of a craft. I was looking for a synonym. Someone gifted me a decoupage item.
I also had trouble with humor and Meg. In retrospect, it should have been easy.
I did finally see the theme with TOTO. That made the other theme answers easier which then provided many perps.
I thought amigo and ocho were common in most US areas. Ocho is frequently used in the LAT puzzles. I have heard of Escondido, CA, so s few perps and wags got it.
"Some people consider Houston to be in South Texas for several reasons: numerous businesses in the Houston region contain 'South Texas' in their titles. The United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas includes the Houston division. However, Houston is most accurately classified as being within Southeast Texas, a subregion of East Texas.
Good luck with your cataract surgery Moe. I hope it goes as well as both of mine did. No pain, just 2 or 3 days of taking it easy, then right back to normal.

Anonymous said...

Fun Friday. Thanks to Ricky and CMoe (hope your cataract surgery and recovery go well).
Officially a DNF, since I had a personal Natick at the A in SALS and NOAA (Canadian disadvantage?). Plus I FIWed like many of you with RUMOR ( that fits the clue) and CRAMP (that doesn’t fit the clue!).
I did smile at the O-O theme. I did note that TOTO and DODO required a pronunciation change from Ew to OH.
More Canadian disadvantage with UNH and ROTEL, but perps were friendly.
I WAGged RASTA with just a couple of letters.
We have seen ARO here in the past.

Wishing you all a great day.

Anonymous T said...

Hi All!

What a fun GO TO, TOday! Thanks Ricky for a fine doable Friday grid.

Great expo, C. Moe. I had a similar issue with 13's square. I had ClAMP (thinking 3-Ring binder) but lUMOR looked funny. An ABC-run and the penny-dropped at CHAMP.
Good luck with the eye procedure.

WO: [See: above]
ESPs: ESCONDIDO ,UNH, TRENT
Fav: Ring leader? == CHAMP for the aha!

And again, a FIAT where Alfa should be :-)
//Jinx - I think it was from Click and Clack that I learned "Fix it again, Tony"

I had the luck to attend the 2021 Home Run Derby. These Yankees fans would stand and yell, "Here comes the JUDGE!" whenever he came to bat.

Lucina - I'm pretty sure it was the '60's when GO GO hit our shores (from France(?)). //You wouldn't find '70's hippies dressed like that :-)

Copy Editor - I assume you've been to Houston then. The exurb Sugar Land is even more diverse and has some of the best Indian & Vietnamese (not to mention Middle-East & Tex-Mex) restaurants around H-Town.

Cheers, -Tony

CanadianEh! said...

You probably all guessed that the above was my post!

Misty said...

Interesting Friday puzzle, many thanks, Ricky. And your commentaries are always a huge help, Chairman Moe, thanks for those too.

Well, after being asked to CRAFT a PROJECT, I said "DO I HAVE TO?" and I was told, yes, "you're GOOD TO GO." So I took a DIVE into it, and did my best to MAKE IT more than SO-SO, which actually led me to my GOAL. Thankfully the organizers loved my work ONE AND ALL, and did JUDGE it very well. In the end they asked me if I'd like to do another project, and I said INDEED I DO.

Have a great weekend coming up, everybody.

Ray - O - Sunshine said...

FIR but got held up with gig for “memory”

Inkovers: wolf/OGRE (sorry Shrek)

The “ It’s always sunny” cast made a cameo appearance on “Abbott Elementary” including “Danny” DEVITO(TO) recently “
If I don’t have an ALIBI for DW, Do I find myself INDEEP __ __? INDEEDIDODO!! 😳

The twin KENO brothers of PBS “Antiques road show” are from nearby Mohawk NY

Running a funeral home is quite an “undertaking” 😀 …

I am absolutely sure (that) I don’t know what an ellipsis is.

Canada Eh @ at 12:59…..

Starting tomorrow a dollar (American) will be imposed on each word in your comments that you export to the blog. Hiding behind “ anonymous” won’t work.


unclefred said...

OK, I managed to FIR in 16. Many Friday CWs just end with a TITT, so happy with getting 'er done. 14 names by my count, 8 DNKs, needing most or all perps and a couple WAGs. WMOS about the NW. HOBBY persisted at 1A for too long. Finally I realized 4D HAD to be FOB, and 3D HAD to be "AMIGO", which broke things open. ARO along with BAE should be put in the penalty box...and left there. I've never heard or seen them anywhere but in CWs. With 21A I already got the theme, which helped. Thanx RJS for your fun, entertaining (and DOABLE) CW. CMOE, good luck with your cataract surgery. I wish I hadn't done mine, I ended up with multiple retinal detachments and eye surgeries. I continue to struggle, and may need yet another surgery (number 5) on my right eye, while I also continue to hafta put multiple drops in my eyes throughout the day. Call me "Mr. Lucky", I guess. Most people have no problems, which is the most likely outcome for you.

Prof M said...

Perhaps JR is asking the more general question of what a “Natick” is. The answer is found in this link: http://crosswordcorner.blogspot.com/2009/02/comments-section-abbreviations.html

Anonymous said...

Friday puzzle. Theme came…corners remained quite white.
No Football weekend a bummer.
Greet the day.

Prof M said...

The above refers to JR @ 8:46

CrossEyedDave said...

Completed in ink on dead tree at the beach... (complete with elipses)
Definitely took some sussing, probably because I misread a clue and out Oman instead of Iran, leading to Desoto b/4 Devito. However I like it when a Friday gimmick helps with the solve. My only Nit is that personally, I think that Aro crossing Trent is real doodoo...

(No extinct birds were harmed in the posting of this post...)

CanadianEh! said...

Lol Ray-o. I am a proud Canadian. Have you seen our new T-shirts - “Canada already great eh!”

Husker Gary said...

Musings
-Clever.
-The Peter Principle means some reach one RUNG too high
-I’m so old that I remember when a school REPORT meant copying encyclopedia pages with a pen
-I know Patti has used/allowed ACE for asexual where other cluing was available but ARO is a fill with no other obvious alternative
-A inexcusable misJUDGEment by an MVP
-Our local KENO bar is a great place to eat and has returned millions to the community
-The world where I sub is awash in PC machines (Chromebooks)