google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Thursday, March 13, 2025, Catherine Cetta

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Mar 13, 2025

Thursday, March 13, 2025, Catherine Cetta

     The Sounds of Music 


Today our constructor Catherine Cetta presents us with a reveal that tells us all we need to know about her clever, elegant, musical theme ...

56. "By the way ...," and a hint to this puzzle's circled letters: ON A SIDE NOTE.  That is, the circles each contain a NOTE of the musical scale in descending order along on the left then right SIDE of the grid -- represented by the syllables TIDOSOLLAMIFADO, and RE.   This system has been around since the 11th Century and is called Solfège -- the use of mnemonics in teaching the sounds in a musical scale. 

Here's the grid ...
 

Here's the rest ...

Across:

 1. "Casablanca" heroine: ILSA.  Here she cajoles Sam into playing As Time Goes By ...
Judy Dench and Geoffrey Palmer cajoled that tune into a delightful 10 series romcom -- I think this is episode 1.

5. Is generally positive: HOPES.

10. Mavens: PROS.

14. Subject with lots of problems: MATH.  That's how you learn MATH -- by solving lots of problems, and the more problems you solve the more MATH you learn.

15. Weasel out of: EVADE.

16. "Rats!": DARN.

17. Attachments: TIES.

18. Old thing: RELIC.  My favorite relic is the Shroud of Turin, a sheet of linen 14' 3" long by 3' 7" wide containing a highly detailed image of a crucified man, which has several unique properties.  It is believed by some to be the burial shroud of Christ, certainly a debatable question, but as yet no one has come up with a satisfactory explanation for how it was created.   But there is no question that it is the most studied artifact of all time. Based on radiocarbon data collected in 1988 from a sample taken from a single location on the cloth, skeptics claim that it was created in the Middle Ages.  Others say that the carbon-14 measurements may have been accurate for the 2.5 sqin. sample taken from one of the corners, but that it is probably not representative of the age of the whole 50 sq ft. cloth. The skeptics have been challenged by David Rolfe, a British documentary film producer and researcher on the Shroud of Turin, who has offered a million dollars to anyone who can replicate it, the only stipulation being that they can use only technologies extant in the Middle Ages.  FWIW, Teri and I were fortunate to see the Shroud in TurinItaly in 2000; I have read several dozen books on the subject, both pro and con; and I still have no idea on how it was made.

19. Classic pet name: FIDO.

20. Amanda Gorman's "__ to Our Ocean": ODE.  In June 2020, Lonely Whale collaborated with Atmos and Future Earth to produce Ode to Our Ocean — a poem by Amanda Gorman written for World Oceans Day.
Amanda Gorman

21. Civil rights leader __ Scott King: CORETTA.  Coretta Scott King (née Scott; April 27, 1927 – January 30, 2006) was an American author, activist, and civil rights leader who was the wife of Martin Luther King Jr. from 1953 until his assassination in 1968.
Coretta Scott King
1964
23. Hem but not haw?: SEW.

24. A as in Aristotle: ALPHAALPHA is the first letter of the Greek alphabet, the alphabet used by the Greek philosopher Aristotle.
Aristotle
Marble portrait bust,
Roman copy (2nd century bce)
 of a Greek original (c. 325 bce)

26. Hasty getaway: LAM.

27. Hate the thought of: DREAD.

29. Footprint makers: SOLES.

30. Fútbol cheer: OLE.

31. Birthing coach: DOULA.  Doula vs midwife: what's the difference?

32. Dweeb: TWERP.  I think either the clue or the fill is a stretch ...

33. Kylo who is Darth Vader's grandson: REN.  Kylo Ren (born Ben Solo) is a fictional character in the Star Wars franchise. He was introduced in The Force Awakens (2015), the first film of the sequel trilogy as the main antagonist. He subsequently appeared in The Last Jedi (2017) and The Rise of Skywalker (2019).  Looks like a bad dude ... 
Kylo Ren
34. "What a butterfingers I am!": OOPSY.

35. Fuse together: MELD.  WELD fit, but didn't perp.

37. Coffee containers: URNS.  The preferred containers for holding coffee in crosswords.

39. Whole: ENTIRE.

42. "Don't be led __": ASTRAY.  Good advice!

46. Fog: MIST.

47. Tea region of India: ASSAM.  Actually there are three regions in India that cultivate tea, but NILGIRI and DARJEELING wouldn't fit.  Here's a lovely lady plucking tea in an Assam tea garden ...
Assam tea garden
51. Couch: SOFA.

52. Baseball Hall of Famer nicknamed "Master Melvin": OTT.  Melvin Thomas Ott (March 2, 1909 – November 21, 1958) was an American professional baseball right fielder, who played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the New York Giants, from 1926 through 1947.  He batted left-handed and threw right-handed. Though unusually slight in stature for a power hitter, at 5 feet 9 inches (1.75 m), 170 pounds (77 kg), Ott led the National League in home runs a then-record six times. He was an All-Star for 11 consecutive seasons, and was the first National League player to surpass 500 career home runs.
 

53. Round figures: SPHERES.

55. Farm pen: STY.

56. [Theme reveal]

59. Naturally curly styles: AFROS.  AFROS commonly style our crossword grids and my favorite wearer of them is Keith Jarrett.  Known primarily as a jazz pianist and improvisor, he is also equally at home playing classical piano.  I was first introduced to him with his performances of the Russian composer Dimitri Shostakovich's 24 Preludes and Fugues.  Here is Keith playing the latter's Op. 87: No. 1 in C Major ... 
 
 61. Fashion's Diane __ Fürstenberg: VON.  Diane von Fürstenberg (née Diane Simone Michele Halfin; 31 December 1946) is a Belgian fashion designer best known for her wrap dress. She initially rose to prominence in 1969 when she married into the German princely House of Fürstenberg, as the wife of Prince Egon von Fürstenberg. Following their separation in 1972 and divorce in 1983, she has continued to use his family name. 
Diane von Furstenberg

62. __-toothed tiger: SABER.  The scientific name for this beast is the Smilodon, an extinct genus of felids. It is one of the best known predators of prehistoric mammals. Although commonly known as the saber-toothed tiger, it was not closely related to the tiger or other modern cats, The hundreds of specimens obtained from the La Brea Tar Pits in Los Angeles constitute the largest collection of Smilodon fossils.  
Painting of Smilodon populator
the American Museum of Natural History
Charles R. Knight

65. Mosque toppers: DOMES.  The Dome of the Rock is an Islamic shrine at the center of the Al-Aqsa mosque compound on the Temple Mount in the Old City of Jerusalem. It is the world's oldest surviving work of Islamic architecture, the earliest archaeologically attested religious structure to be built by a Muslim ruler and its inscriptions contain the earliest epigraphic proclamations of Islam and of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. 
Dome of the Rock
 Temple Mount
Old City of Jerusalem
66. Terminus: END.

67. Cornflower kin: AZURE.  Both are shades of blue -- here are a few others.

68. "Rly?": SRSLY.  Text speak: "Really?":"Seriously!".  Seriously meh! 

  69. __ race: RAT.  ... the RATS appear to be winning.

70. Sidestep: DODGE.

Down:

 1. Lament from someone in big trouble: I'M TOAST. The birth of an idiom ...  

2. Knocked out of action: LAID LOW.

3. Church tower topper: STEEPLE.  Ulm Minster is a Lutheran church located in Ulm, State of Baden-Württemberg (Germany). It is the tallest church in the world.  The church is the fifth-tallest structure built before the 20th century, with a steeple measuring 161.53 metres. 
Ulm Minster
Lutheran church
4. Satisfied sounds: AHS.

5. Sub: HERO.

6. Authoritative ruler: OVERLORD.  A timely clue.

7. Hoppy brew: PALE ALE.

8. Word feature: EDIT MENU.  Microsoft Word that is.  I intended to illustrate this clue with a screen shot of the Word EDIT MENU, but Word has become so bloated with features that I couldn't find it.  The product seems to have overtaken by adverts for Microsoft's AI product, CO-PILOT.  Just tell it what you want and it will do the rest.

9. Offshoot: SECT.

10. Many an attachment: PDF.  Portable Document Format, a freeware product original developed by Adobe Acrobat, which has become an industry standard for document portability -- regardless of who you're sending it to, there is a good chance that they'll be able to read it.
Adobe Acrobat
11. Elevate: RAISE UP.

12. Major hassles: ORDEALS.  Or this could have been clued "Major ordeals:" HASSLES

13. Unscheduled winter break: SNOW DAY.  As retired folks we no longer break for SNOW DAYS --  but we can't break from SNOW SHOVELING

21. Wyoming's second-most populous city: CASPER.  Casper is a city in and the county seat of Natrona County, Wyoming, United States. Casper is the second-most populous city in the state after Cheyenne, with the population at 59,038 as of the 2020 census. Casper is nicknamed "The Oil City" and has a long history of oil boomtown and cowboy culture, dating back to the development of the nearby Salt Creek Oil Field. 
Casper skyline
22. Extras: ADD ONS.

25. Recluse: HERMIT.

28. Dove bars?: ROOSTS.  These ROOSTS are often found in Dovecotes.

36. By __ and bounds: LEAPS.

38. Japanese noodle dish: RAMEN.

39. Panic! at the Disco genre: EMO.  Panic! at the Disco was an American pop rock band formed in Las Vegas, Nevada in 2004 by childhood friends Ryan Ross, Spencer Smith, Brent Wilson, and Brendon Urie. Following several lineup changes, Panic! at the Disco operated as the solo project of front man Urie from 2015 until its discontinuation in 2023.  Here's their House of Memories ... 

40. Trivial objection: NIT.

41. Threatening NOAA forecasts: T STORMS.  The number of T STORMS that NOAA is allowed to forecast has recently been reduced by circumstances beyond its control -- weather is so chaotic! 😕

43. Last on-screen message in a classic film: ROSE BUD.  The film referred to in the clue is the 1941 drama Citizen Kane, a thinly veiled biopic of the publishing magnate, William Randolph Hearst.  The film was directed by Orson Wells to a score by Bernard Hermann.  Near the end of the film, as Kane dies his enigmatic last words are ROSE BUD.  Reporters and others launch a search for the meaning of these words, but are unable to discover them.  The very last scene shows workmen wandering through his warehouse, inspecting and disposing of various artifacts from his life -- but only we see the name ROSE BUD on his childhood sled as it is consumed by flames in the fireplace.  Some commentators describe Kane's words as his recollection of his childhood innocence at the moment of his death  ... 

 44. Toward the rudder: AFT.

45. "Oh, happy day!": YAY.  What kids SAY on 13Ds! 😀

48. Cold response: SHIVER.  What I do on 13Ds! 😕

49. City in Arizona's Verde Valley region: SEDONA.  Sedona is a city that straddles the county line between Coconino and Yavapai counties in the northern Verde Valley region of the U.S. state of Arizona. As of the 2010 census, its population was 10,031.  And CSOS to LucinaCMOE, and Prof. M.
Cathedral Rock
Coconino National Forest
Sedona, AZ

50. Political philosopher Hannah: ARENDT.  Another timely clue. Hannah Arendt (born Johanna Arendt; 14 October 1906 – 4 December 1975) was a German and American historian and philosopher. She was one of the most influential political theorists of the twentieth century.  She is probably best remembered for the controversy surrounding the trial of Adolf Eichmann; for her attempt to explain how ordinary people become actors in totalitarian systems; and perhaps most of all for the phrase "the banality of evil."
Hannah Arendt
53. Cheeky: SASSY.

54. "Makes me want to cry": SO SAD.

57. Carolers' tune: NOEL.  Here was the first one ...

58. Maker of Zen K-Cup pods: TAZO.  Tazo Tea Company (TAZO) is a tea and herbal tea blender and distributor founded in Portland, Oregon. It is now a Lipton Teas and Infusions division and is based in Kent, Washington.  This Britaphile finds the idea of getting green tea from plastic cups to be not very green, and quite frankly revolting! 😖
59. Some internet search results: ADS.

60. Supporting: FOR.

63. Bit of energy: ERG.  The ERG is a unit of energy equal to 10−7 joules (100 nJ). It is not an SI unit, instead originating from the centimeter–gram–second system of units (CGS). Its name is derived from ergon (ἔργον), a Greek word meaning 'work' or 'task'.

64. "The Pioneer Woman" host Drummond: REE.  Anne Marie "Ree" Drummond (née Smith, born January 6, 1969) is an American blogger, author, food writer, and television personality. Drummond became known for her blog, The Pioneer Woman, which documented her life in rural Oklahoma, and her cookbook.  Here's how she makes Orange Chicken ... 

And her recipe for Slow Cooker Chicken Alfredo looks good too ...
 
Slow Cooker Chicken Alfredo

Cheers, 
Bill

And as always, thanks to Teri for proofreading and for her constructive criticism.

waseeley


40 comments:

  1. This puzzle looked
    tough at first, but was pretty quickly conquered. It helped that I understood the gimmick pretty fast, too. Pretty good.
    FIR, so I’m happy.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Good morning!

    Failed to notice the circles; totally missed the theme. [Sigh] Thought something was amiss when TST... appeared. Nope. Catherine set a nice table for us this morning, and waseeley and Teri provided the toppings for our cereal. Thanx to y'all.

    ReplyDelete
  3. FIW, missing my WAG @ AZURa x RaE. But I got my WAGs at VON x ARENDT and AZURo x TAZO, so I got that goin' for me. Which is nice. Erased cloreta for CORETTA.

    I thought the note was spelled "RE," but convinced myself that RaE was more likely than REE. With my speling prowes, I should have trusted RE(E).

    It never occurred to me that "cornflower" was a color. I knew corn meal (or corn flour,) and was trying to remember if I had ever seen the plant's flowers except for the tassels, which don't look like flowers to me.

    From living in Atlanta, I learned that Dr. King was a man of the people. However, Mrs. King had a reputation as a diva. I remember being told that she insisted that the Delta flight attendants vacate the first-class cabin while she boarded, and that they were not to speak to her unless she spoke to them first.

    I buy only the best decaf K-Cups that Ollie's Discount store has to offer.

    DOULAs also help folks who are nearing the end of their life.

    Thanks to Catherine for the fun challenge, except for that nasty VON x ARENDT. And thanks to Bill 'n' Teri for another fine review. Loved seeing ILSA and Sam.

    ReplyDelete
  4. No trouble completing the grid but did not get the theme.

    ReplyDelete
  5. FIR. This puzzle had everything I dislike, circles, proper names galore, and a vertical grid. Yuk!
    I looked at the theme after the fact, as it wasn't needed for the solve. And I must admit to a couple of WAG's near the bottom.
    So it's done, so there's that, but overall an emphatic UGH!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Took 5:56 today to scale up.

    I didn't look for the theme or pay attention to the circles, so thank you B&T for the review.

    Looks like I guessed better than Jinx at the crossing of "azure" with "Ree" & "Tazo", and the intersection of "von" with "Arendt". I knew none of those.

    Oh joy, circles! Again!

    ReplyDelete
  7. P.S. I should add that I love Sedona. It's beautiful there.

    ReplyDelete
  8. A nicely themed puzzle from a veteran constructor, not as difficult as some Thursdays can be, for me anyway, FIR in 12:30. I’d say the theme notes are descending in reverse order right to left, but ascending in the correct order left to right. Notes also appear in DOula, RElic, LAm, enTIre and a couple others. ARENDT and SEDONA were perped. Had A__URE and an a-run in my head told me only a Z worked, never heard of Cornflower as a shade of blue. Wasn’t sure if it was SABER or SABRE (hi C Eh!🇨🇦). Thanks Catherine for today’s creation, and to Bill and Teri for your very informative recap, always an education on Thursdays.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Great catch on the other hidden musical notes. Noon I see more with MEld, doMEs, REn, dREad, seDOna, and maybe even alPHA. LOL!

      Delete
    2. Noon should be Now. DARN auto-correct.

      Delete
  9. Good Morning:

    I didn’t pay much attention to the circles while solving because they made no sense, but once I read the reveal clue, the theme was evident. While this wasn’t as sophisticated as some of Catherine’s themes and executions, the fill was fresh and several clues were very clever. (However, I agree with Bill that Dweeb and Twerp are not even remotely related). No unknowns and no w/os led to a smooth and fast solve.

    Thanks, Catherine, for a Thursday treat and thanks, Bill, for enlightening and entertaining us to such an enjoyable extent. The Sound of Music evokes memories of taking my mother to see it and having her sleep through almost the entire movie and, then, throwing caution to the wind, taking 5 nieces and nephews, all under the age of 10, to see it. I dare say they were better behaved than my mother! I never tire of seeing the doomed Ilsa and Rick and Sam, either. The article on Doula vs Midwife was very interesting. Thanks to Teri, as always, for her contributions.

    Have a great day.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Catherine Cetta provided us an enjoyable and clever Thursday challenge. I liked her musical theme, with the octave notes all ascending from SW to NE.

    The cluing was fair for the most part, except for the SE corner, which could have used better editing. The tangle of TAZO, REE, and AZURE (as clued) produced an easily avoidable Natick muddle.

    And I hope to never see SRSLY again.

    It was nice to see Sedona make an appearance. It was my home for fifteen years.

    I can weigh in on the midwife/doula discussion a bit, because my children were born at home, and we used a midwife for both births. My understanding is that midwives and doulas both provide assistance during the labor process, but there is some blurring in the distinctions. In general, one can think of a midwife as a medical professional, and a doula's strengths being rooted in his/her emotional support skills, not only in a labor setting, but also in hospice support. But I'll be glad to stand corrected.

    Thanks, Catherine, for a refreshing and fair Thursday-appropriate challenge. And thanks, Waseeley, for the helpful recep. Incidentally, in your shout-out to Arizonans, there is one more: son Arizona Jim.

    ReplyDelete
  11. In this musical puzzle there was only one unheard of unknown- Hannah ARENDT. The photo is spelled HANNA. I didn't know 'Cornflower' was a color and had no idea who made 'Zen K-Cups', but thanks to perps, TAZO and AZURE made it on the grid.
    Ditto for 'Panic at the Disco' and EMO.

    Wasn't sure or the spelling of YEY or YAY, same for REA or REE.
    I learned the word DOULA when our legislature passed some ordinance to pay them for assistance in childbirth. They are not medically qualified.
    Seriously, I hate the fact that I now know SRSLY.

    Well I'm off to play pickleball at the Mel OTT Center in Gretna. It was the first place in the NOLA area to be able to play and there are at least 12 indoor facilities where you can play, and nine of them don't cost any money. FREE.
    With my skin condition I don't play outdoors.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Musings
    -The triple play of AZURE, REE AND TAZO condemned the SE for probably only me. Sigh…
    -The gimmick was obvious but the reveal was fun to discover
    -MATH teachers have lots of problems
    -DOULA birthed itself
    -ASTRAY – Have you gotten a call or text from someone claiming to be your [relative] saying they need money right now? I led one such scammer ASTRAY as I played along for quite a while.
    -Operation OVERLORD was the code name for D-Day
    -ADD ONS – I really do not need a heated steering wheel but it came with the car
    -DOVE – Not chocolate nor soap. BARS – Not bans nor pubs.

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  13. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Unusually easy for a Thursday, was blasting right thru then came to a screeching halt in the SE. Luckily I realized I actually use TAZO teas to make chai lattes… leading to the color AZURE, cuz I didn’t know the “Drummond” host. Liked the SIDE NOTE theme but first filled as a then in a finally ON A 😳

    “Hem but not haw” SEW clever!

    I
    knew!
    LORETTAsounded wrong.

    ADDONS: like utility bill fees😠. Thought “Major hassels” might be a military clue. I SRSLY don’t like clues like RLY and the answer OOPSY or its variant “OOPSie”… ah, so Fred Flinstone’s cat was actually a “Smildon” (Are there ghosts 👻👻👻in CASPER? 😱)

    A Dowtown abandoned Methodist church ready for demolition converted to a mosque by our large Bosnian immigrant population.
    I pass it everyday on my way to the hospital which explains why my first thought was minaret not DOME.

    Snow is almost gone. No more SNOW DAYS kids!! Sorry 😌

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. We haven’t had our St Patrick’s Day storm yet!

      Delete
  15. A tad crunchier today, but managed to FIR, despite the clues being a little off my wavelength. Fortunately, the perps were SRSLY(?) helpful, and I managed to luck out with my WAGs in the SE corner. Also enjoyed the Sam & Ilsa clip. One of my all-time favorite movies.

    ReplyDelete
  16. The UC Men’s Octet won an international contest about 25 years ago with a presentation that began with “Fraulein Jeff” saying (with a continental accent):

    “Children, children, children: Do-re-mi-fa-sol and so on are only the tools we use to build a song. Once we have these notes in our heads, we can build a millllllion different tunes, just by mixing them up. Like this: . . .”

    Subsequent varsity octets have performed it, as has our senior octet. It’s much more ludicrous for the “children” to be 70 years old than 20 years old. It’s a lot of fun.

    Nevertheless, the theme was slight, although neither that nor two of my pet peeves spoiled the puzzle.

    Hand up for mend before MELD. Considering Brits “mend” a fuse (and considering the phrase “mending a fuse” appears in one of my go-to Karaoke songs, “When I’m Sixty-Four”), well, I get huffy. I still contend “meld” should be limited to Pinochle. I also am trained to remove the “up” from a redundancy like “RAISE UP.”

    I did like the dove bar clue. I enjoyed seeing Hannah ARENDT, CORETTA Scott King, ASSAM, DOULA, and CASPER in the puzzle. The latter was a gimme. I spent three unforgettable weeks there in April 1957, when I was 5 and had just completed kindergarten in Portland. It was cold, in more ways than one. Worst drinking water I’ve ever tasted. For the only time in my life, I even preferred milk.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Copy Editor--
      A couple things:
      1) You mentioned recently that Fort Sumter in a recent puzzle reminded you of a mishap you had on "Jeopardy!". Why did I think it had something to do with John Paul Jones ("I have not yet begun to fight"), and the "Bonhomme Richard" vs. "HMS Serapis"?
      2) I am a member of Learned League, a web-based quiz league, and a lot of fun. If you (or any other Cornerites reading this) might be interested to know more about it, let me know. Most of the quiz questions would probably remind you of "Jeopardy!"-type questions.

      Delete
  17. Learning moment: Colors can be named anything, just like people. And when inserted into crossword puzzles, do not provide the "aha" moment that I live for... so, on a side note, I wonder what memorizing thousands of trivial useless things can possibly do to improve my crossword skills?

    Thanks for the splainin, I bookmarked lots of links that I am sure will lead me down dark rabbit holes. Here's an excerpt from one of the darkest:

    "Banality of evil

    Arendt's book introduced the expression and concept of the banality of evil.[15] Her thesis is that Eichmann was actually not a fanatic or a sociopath, but instead an average and mundane person who relied on clichéd defenses rather than thinking for himself,"

    Hmm,,,

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And the reversal, the “evil of banality.”

      Delete
  18. I also got caught off guard by AZURE not thinking cornflower was á color. I needed the reveal to figure out the circled entries. I learned music with solfège as Waseeley names it.

    Á few unknown names, though I knew CORETTA, REE and ARENDT. So all in all á fairly easy CW.

    Thank you Waseeley for á nice review.

    ReplyDelete
  19. As a long term docent at the Natural History Museum I must inform all who were misled that there is no such critter as a saber tooth tiger. Either use the official term Smilodon or saber tooth cat. We purists thank you.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh it’s Smilodon (Greek for happy kitty?🤭) … LIU “knife-tooth”

      Delete
  20. I have shared a photo of me with my AFRO in the past. But yesterday I had a startling discovery. The MIT magazine Technology Review had an article about our MIT Juggling Club, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary. They had a big group photo that I had never seen before. Complete with me in my AFRO.

    You can see me in my AFRO, sitting at far right on the lowest step, behind a unicycle.

    Bill Thank you for pointing out how timely is the mention of HANNAH ARENDT (and OVERLORD). ARENDT and her "Banality of Evil" was a frequent dinner table topic in our home. As CrossEyedDave noted, we see how easily ordinary people can be swept up in participating in horrific behavior. Timely, indeed. I am feeling a thin ray of hope today with the ruling from Judge Alsup.

    ReplyDelete
  21. From Yesterday:
    Jinx, NaomiZ, AnonT Thank you for your thoughtful comments on the FOWL at our Orchid Show. I just spent 20 minutes on the phone with the FOWL lady Jamie trying to get all of the details for my article.

    NaomiZ Indeed, that is the main take away I got from Jamie: Don't buy birds. Not nice to put them in a cage. And there are many other reasons as well that I am trying to include in my article. Jamie's hearing has been damaged by the 125-decibel screech of these birds.

    Jinx Yes, I got the joke about Orcutt/Orchid. That is why I threw in the comment about our Farmer's Market lady named Orchid. Yes, Orcutt is very small. I think I have been there once. It is near Vandenberg, where we have many spectacular rocket launches lately. I got a nice video of one on Tuesday.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Fun puzzle with a creative theme, but a faster solve for a Thursday than usual. Some may be because of answers that were in my wheelhouse.
    It may be because of different generations between me and IM, but TWERP was a common term when I was in junior high and interchangeable with dweeb and dork
    I don't watch her show, but I like to get recipes from REE Drummond on The Pioneer Woman website. And you can go visit her store/restaurant in Pawhuska, OK near her family's ranch. Pawhuska is also where the headquarters of the Osage nation of crossword fame is and also infamous for the recent book and movie "Killers of the Flower Moon"
    I'm also a big TAZO tea fan - but not a fan of KCups for coffee or tea with all the plastic waste.

    Thanks Bill & Teri for the entertaining blog and to Catherine for the creative puzzle

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, IH, it’s definitely a generational gap. In my younger days, twerp was used to describe a pest or a bothersome younger sibling, think a Dennis the Menace type. It wasn’t a harsh derogatory label, just a synonym for an annoying, younger tagalong kid. Dweeb and Nerd were unknown expressions in those days. Srsly! 😂

      Delete
  23. Get 'er done with a few lucky WAGs. 13 names, 8 DNK, ASSAM/ARENDT lucky guess with the "A" in the cross. I forgot to time myself but would guess 15-20. Thanx CC(2) for the entertaining CW, even with all the unknown names, much of it was still fun. Thanx too to Bill for the terrific write-up. Good video explaining the difference between a midwife and a doula. Learn something every day.

    ReplyDelete
  24. Terrific Thursday. Thanks for the fun, Catherine, and waseeley and Teri.
    I FIRed and saw the musical theme half-way through the fill, which allowed me to fill the remaining circles. YAY.
    I really would have liked the notes to actually be in ascending/descending order on the grid, and not on the same lines across from each other. Small NIT.

    I waited for perps to decide if 15A was Avoid or EVADE. 70A was DODGE, and Avoid gets thrown on the word pile for another day.

    We had dog names the other day, but FIDO made today’s list.
    We use “couch” in this area (I remember using “chesterfield” but no longer hear it). Sometimes SOFA is used.

    This Canadian entered SNOW DAY immediately. Our kids usually miss at least two days of school per year due to snow or ice.

    Favourite clues today were Dove bars=ROOST, and A as in Aristotle = ALPHA.
    I agree that Dweeb does not exactly mean TWERP, but your usage may differ. Close, but not a match.

    Wishing you all a great day.

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  25. I thought Catherine's puzzle was a treat. I saw the SIDE NOTEs, although they didn't really help with the solve. Nothing obscure to me, but I needed perps for toeholds throughout. For instance, I have been to beautiful SEDONA, but I don't recognize the Verde Valley region name, so I needed a few crossing entries to help me name the place. Bill and Teri always do a nice job explaining, illustrating, and educating. Thoroughly thoughtful Thursday!

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  26. Fun Thursday puzzle, many thanks Catherine. And thanks for letting us listen to Julie Andrews singing her Do-Re-Mi song in 'The Sound of Music' again, Bill and Teri. A real pleasure.

    Well, it was fun to think of an OVERLORD and a HERO ready to RAISE UP a glass of PALE ALE at the beginning of this puzzle, and enjoy some RAMEN, with HOPES that they'd continue to have a delightful day. But then it looks as though things didn't go so well, as they suddenly had things to DREAD, and were obliged to consider themselves LAID LOW, and ended up saying I'M TOAST. That's a lot of ORDEALS, unfortunately, and we can only pray that they don't also have a SNOW DAY or a T STORM that makes them SHIVER. Let's get them some ADD-ONS to their morning snacks and maybe even write them an ODE in their honor. That's probably the best we can do.

    Have a happy day, everybody.

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  27. ehh, dweebs, twerps, dorks…it’s all pretty much interchangeable these days, lol!

    Anyway, got off to a stuttering start in the NE, but as things progressed they pretty much fell into place, even that mish-mosh down in AZURE/REE/TAZO-ville, and I managed a FIR on Ms. Cetta’s puzzle. Snazzy little hook with the DO-RE-ME theme; even those dreaded circles worked (for once).

    The Waseeley Walkthrough was its usual treat. Funny tidbit re: Keith Jarrett: he had this rather annoying (esp. to the sound engineers during his sessions in studio ) propensity to hum along with his playing when he’d get in his “zone”. If you listen carefully to some of his albums, it’s there.

    Thank you, Anonymous@12:34, for reminding everyone that our friendly local SMILODON was a Saber-Tooth Cat, not a “tiger”! I spent a lot of days as a kid at the La Brea tar pits, and learned that detail early on.

    “Citizen Kane” is arguably the best American motion picture of all time; in college, as a budding photographer/cinematographer, I was mesmerized by the camera work and visual richness of that flick. Wells was a genius of his time. “Rosebud”!!

    At the rate things are going with the wannabe OVERLORD in D.C., this country is going to need a DOULA unless more rulings like the one from Judge Alsup can be effectively enforced…

    I’m with Copy Editor with RAISE UP — ever hear anyone “raise down”? Not ever, even in poker🤣. And like T. Ken, it’s time to ban SRSLY from these pages. Seriously.

    Finally — Picard, you call that an Afro?? C’mon, dude, it’s just long hair, like I had too back in my hippie days ✌🏽

    ====> Darren / L.A.

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  28. RAISE UP is in the same category as SEPARATE OUT. Redundant, but often heard.

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  29. Hola! I've been back for two days but I had paused my newspaper for a week thinking we would be gone that long. However, I missed the memo that we would return earlier since my niece had to tutor yesterday. Then I had problems with my computer and though I called the number given it was always busy. Long story short, I tried ESC and it stopped! It's the second time that has happened; I get a notice that the computer had been blocked and i can't access it. It is definitely the year of the snake!
    Anyway, the puzzle was a breeze compared to all that. Thanks to Catherine Cetta for the nice workout. I love seeing ILSA or any reference to "Casablanca" and I also liked seeing REE Drummond's name. I love her cookware.
    In the 70s I, too, had an AFRO and there's a photo somewhere.
    I hope you all have had a great week. It's raining here! YAY! I brought in my laundry just in time. I love hanging my clothes out in the bright sunshine.

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  30. Thanks to Catherine! I liked how the notes (mostly) rose in pitch as they rose up the grid. The STEEPLES/DOMES clecho was fun, too. That troublesome Z was my last fill.

    Thanks to Mr. & Mrs. waseeley for the informative tour with excellent illustrations!

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  31. My daughter gave me a box of TAZO tea a while back otherwise I had not heard of it.

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