google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Sunday, Jun 22nd, 2025 ~ Christina Iverson

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Jun 22, 2025

Sunday, Jun 22nd, 2025 ~ Christina Iverson

 GENRE FUSION
OR
"I WANNA ROCK GARDEN"

Twisted Sister, "I wanna rockgarden

Splynter here, subbing for our unhappy hostess, who had her infusion done this past week, and was not feeling well.  This is my first time blogging a Sunday grid, but not my first Christina Iverson puzzle - her last LA Times contribution was Memorial Day this year; I blogged her Wednesday crossword back in Nov 2024.  Since I have no reference to any previous Sunday statistics, I can say that we have no circles, a few names, 50 four- but not foul- letter words, and not only are all the theme answers unique, but two of the 9-letter Downs are unique* as well.  I thought this was a well-made, clever crossword - the theme answers are a playful 'expansion' that ties an in-the-language phrase to a musical genre; 

23. Title of a memoir written by Madonna's daughter?: MOM AND POP MUSIC

39. Young and adorable Twisted Sister enthusiast?: 
PRECIOUS METAL HEAD

56. Exclamation upon finding "Honky Tonkin'" in the dumpster?: IT'S A FREE COUNTRY ALBUM

75. Spend every waking moment in one's Rolling Stones-themed bedroom?: 

LIVE UNDER A ROCK POSTER - I grew up with Iron Maiden, who had the best merchandising

The Trooper & Aces High, two of their coolest "Eddie" posters

89. Accidentally books the hip-hopper with no rhythm?: GETS A BAD RAP ARTIST

111. Go-to for Pete Seeger or Woody Guthrie?: COMMON FOLK SONG

 My favorite was not the METAL or ROCK reference, but the one genre I probably like the least - 

IT'S A FREE COUNTRY ALBUM~!

And Away We Go~!


ACROSS:

1. Card game also called contract whist: OH HELL - new one to me; more here

7. Jerks: SPASMS

13. Southwestern people: APACHE

19. Affectionate knuckle rub: NOOGIE


20. Many a social media opinion: HOT TAKE - Essentially, statements that play Devil's Advocate by raising people's ire - e.g., anything political posted here on the Corner

22. Comedy series starring Bob Odenkirk and David Cross: MRSHOW - never heard of this; I do know David Cross, as he appeared in Men in Black 1 & 2

25. Trig function: COSINE

26. Scraped (by): EKED

27. Gawk: GAPE

28. Clarinet kin: OBOE

30. Antlered deer: BUCKS - STAGS didn't work

31. Plus: ASSET - AND - 119A. Column on a record: LOSSES - this second clue stumped me because with the musical references of the theme, I was thinking of "record" as "LP"

33. Premier League team, to fans: MAN U - Manchester United - English soccer/football

35. Taken __: startled: ABACK

37. FD employee: EMT - a change-up on the typical clue for this abbr answer

45. Like fuzzy fruit: MOLDY - ah, not PEACH or KIWIS, but the ones gone bad . . . .

47. Recipe nos.: AMTS

48. Dowser's objective: WELL - WATER was too many letters

49. Confidentiality doc: NDA - Non-Disclosure Agreement; I will need this for my board games

50. Actor Rickman: ALAN - He made a compelling villain in "Die Hard"

"Die Hard" IS a Christmas movie in my home

51. Brought forth: BEGAT - there was a lot of Biblical begatting

53. Some nonalcoholic pours: BEERS - Years ago, I drank a half-dozen O'Doul's at a gentlemens' club; all you get are trips to the bathroom and a nagging headache

55. Sound from an enthusiastic diner: MOAN - I guess; I personally don't usually associate a moan with something good - or - food

60. "Thanks a __!": "LOT~!"

61. Count (on): RELY

62. Thakhek locale: LAOS - More like Saturday cluing, filled via perps

63. __ bran: OAT

64. Amazes: WOWS

65. Be a cast member of: ACT IN

67. Scribbles (down): JOTS

69. Hat with a tassel: FEZ - everything you ever wanted to know about "The Fez"

Steely Dan from the album "The Royal Scam"

70. Inventor Sikorsky: IGOR - no, EYE-gor . . . .

71. Smudge on Santa's suit: SOOT

72. Letters on some protective lip balm: SPF - Sun Protection Factor

81. All the __: RAGE

82. Thick-__ boots: SOLED

83. Foil alternatives: ÉPÉES

84. Storybook bear: PAPA

85. German cry: ACH

86. French bean?: TETE - Frawnche for "head"

87. Transparent: OPEN

88. Colorful relative of a violet: PANSY

95. Knock: DIS - as in disrespect

96. Actress Hannah: DARYL - I know her from Blade Runner, Splash and Roxanne - her IMDb

97. Site with a Fashion Finds section: ETSY - the website here

98. Informal attempts: STABS

100. Like a Brit's proverbial milk: SPILT - as opposed to "Spilled"

102. Fashionably __: LATE

104. Prefix with fill or complete: AUTO - curses, Autocorrect~!

There were so many to choose from, but mostly NSFW

106. Italian musical phrase often abbreviated as "a2": A DUE - two players, in unison

109. Immature, in a way: LARVAL - $2 word

115. Playful aquatic mammals: OTTERS

116. One might end on a high note: SOPRANO

117. Bug with pincers and a flat body: EARWIG

118. Gym: PHYS. ED. - semi-meh; gym may be an abbr for gymnasium, but gym class better

120. Biases: SLANTS


DOWN:

1. "I'll treat": "ON ME."

2. Bit of fishing gear: HOOK

3. "Finally, I can sleep in my own bed!": "HOME AT LAST~!" - appeared one other time in the NYT

4. "Golly!": "EGADS~!"

5. Maya who designed the Civil Rights Memorial in Montgomery: LIN - her Webpage

6. Actor Heath: LEDGER - I liked him in "A Knight's Tale", and as the Joker in "The Dark Knight" - died at 28yrs old from a prescription drug overdose in NYC - his Wiki

7. Mart: SHOP

8. Catholic leader: POPE

9. Bread box?: ATM - another alternative clue for an over-used fill

10. "The Simpsons" disco guy: STU

11. Workers who may use concrete saws: MASONS - I tried PAVERS

12. Slopes habitué: SKI BUM

13. Regal competitor: AMC - Movie theatres


14. The big leagues: PRO BALL

15. Given that: AS SUCH

16. Get cold feet: CHICKEN OUT

17. Beep: HONK - I tried "TOOT"

18. Some flock members: EWES - AND - 42D. Fancy jugs: EWERS

21. System starter: ECO - ECOsystem

24. Party spread: PÂTÉ - "What am I, chopped liver~?"

29. Spot to get a bite: EATERY - can I get some PATE~?

32. Mole: SPY

33. Words to live by: MOTTO - Dah~! Not CREDO

34. Swimming powerhouse in the Olympics, for short: AUStralia - I was not sure where this clue was going; even after it filled via perps, I had to check online; here's a medal count by country

36. Model material: BALSA


37. Drafts folder filler: E-MAIL

38. Very, to Vivaldi: MOLTO - Italian 

40. Not forthcoming: CAGEY

41. Big Apple product: iMAC - I tried iPAD

43. Savage of "MythBusters": ADAM - I know him....

44. Savage of "Savage Love": DAN - I do NOT know him

46. Genetic material: DNA

51. Cold __ coffee: BREW

52. Slithering swimmers: EELS

53. "Children of," in temple names: B'NAI - Hebrew

54. Berkshire school: ETON - I was thinking Berkeley, and tried UCLA - hey, I am EAST coast....

55. Degs. for entrepreneurs: MBAs

57. Panicked, perhaps: FROZE - Fight, Flight or Freeze~?

58. Super: ULTRA

59. Game of luck: LOTTO

64. "I don't believe __ met": "WE'VE"

65. Posthumous Pulitzer winner James: AGEE - good WAG on my part

66. Firewood quantity: CORD 



67. One might start with a knock: JOKE - As in, "Knock Knock, who's there~?"

68. "My bad!": "OOPS~!"

69. Hit below the belt: FIGHT DIRTY *- I tried SUCKER PUNC, ran out of spaces

70. Ran in place, maybe: IDLED

71. Trademarked element of Play-Doh: SCENT - HA~!  I tried "TASTE" first

72. Gives up: STANDS DOWN *- neat contradictory clue/answer

73. "Is __ OK?": response to a request for Coke: PEPSI - in the South, the question is always "What kind of Coke do you want~?" "I'll have a Diet Pepsi."

74. Becomes ragged: FRAYS

75. Weblike fabric: LACE
Ballerina Black Secret Scarlet Lace Tights

76. Milk carton phrase: USE BY

77. Some: NOT ALL - that would be the definition....

78. "How can I ever __ you?": REPAY

79. Abbr. on old phones: OPERator; here's a funny Millennial video

Four minutes to dial a number....

80. Place for a couples retreat: SPA

81. Joplin work: RAG - SCOTT Joplin - The Entertainer kind of rag

86. Steak __: TARTARE - Basically, raw beef - a recipe

87. Batter's stat: OPS - Baseball lingo for On-Base Plus Slugging

88. Gp. that might plan a readathon: PTA

90. Soothing balms: SALVES - ALOES was too short

91. Make more suitable: RETOOL

92. "Resume speed," to a musician: A TEMPO - definition

93. Colon, at times: IS TO - analogy; see 35A.


94. Wraps: STOLES

99. Iraqi port city: BASRA

100. Piggie's favorite dish in the "Elephant and Piggie" books: SLOP - makes sense

101. Line on a trail map: PATH - I followed the advice of two Cornerites, desper-otto & TTP, ordered me a pair of New Balance 608 V5s
The brown ones were $10 less - I'm not picky, and they match my sweatpants~!

103. Bldg. coolers: A/Cs - gotta put my big window unit in; we are going to get close to 100° this week here in Connecticut 😝

104. Green Gables girl: ANNE

105. Blurry craft in tabloid pics: UFOs

107. Storage __: UNIT

108. Quiche need: EGGS

110. Acid letters: LSD

112. Peacock title: MRS. - Definitely Saturday cluing, and a reference to the board game Clue; I had an inkling this was what we were looking for; I also considered "MRT", as Mr. T was in the NBC "Peacock" show "The A-Team"

113. Western treaty gp.: OAS - Organziation of American States - the Wiki

114. Actor Penn: KAL - His IMDb; I knew of him from "House, M.D."

Splynter



27 comments:

  1. The theme was clear from
    the beginning, and that helped me solve this not too difficult puzzle. One thing: for a while I had “Rus” instead of “Aus” as the “swimming powerhouse” but finally saw that “Mrnu” didn’t make any sense, so I fixed that and got the “congratulatory” flip.
    Anyway, FIR, so I’m happy.

    ReplyDelete
  2. And, by the way, I hope you feel better soon, C.C. You’re the best!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Good morning!

    Tried LEGEND before LEDGER barged in; guess I confused Heath with John. Is OPS really a baseball thingee? It took 25+ to fill the grid this morning, slightly longer than usual for a Sunday pzl. Enjoyed it, though. Thanx, Christina and our designated hitter, Splynter. (Hope you enjoy those 608's, not GOBs.)

    BALSA: I remember older brother spending the better part of a week constructing and painting his rubber-band-powered model airplane. Finally the day came for the maiden flight. The plane soared right against the second story of the bank building across the street. Total loss.

    DIE HARD: Yes, Splynter, Die Hard is definitely a Christmas movie. Yippee Ki Yay!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Sorry to hear you're under the weather, C.C. I've had several drugs by infusion, but never experienced an adverse reaction.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Took 17:20 today for me to find my rhythm and blues.

    Once again the foreign words weren't kind to me as I didn't know the Hebrew (bnai), the Italian musical phrase (adue), and the German cry (ach). I didn't know the designer Maya (Lin) or "Mr. Show"/Mrs. How". Took a long time to parse "ate mpo" or "at empo" for "a tempo."

    Cute theme. Enjoyable puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  6. All the themers were also "before and after phrases" similar to what "Wheel of Fortune" does. For example, the first one: Mom and Pop and Pop Music. The 2nd one: Precious Metal and Metal Head.

    ReplyDelete
  7. FIR, getting my mild WAGs @ BEERS x BNAI, and MOAN x DAN. ogle->GAPE, tsps->AMTS, awes->WOWS, and obp->OPS.

    I knew DARYL more for Dancing at the Blue Iguana and Summer Lovers.

    The big leagues are PRO BALL, but so are the minor leagues. "The show" is a baseball term used exclusively for the big leagues.

    Splynter gave us Steely Dan's The Fez, but missed the opportunity to link their better-known Home at Last.

    Thanks to Christina for the fun Sunday exercise, and to Splynter for stepping up to the plate. Hope CC feels better soon.

    ReplyDelete
  8. FIR. I had a struggle with today's puzzle as I found it had a little bite to it. Fortunately the theme became clear from the first long answer and that helped a lot with the solve.
    But I did find some of the clues to be more of what you might expect in a Saturday CW.
    So overall this was not an enjoyable puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Good Morning:

    Sunday puzzles are usually either a slog fest or a fun fest for me. Today’s was the latter, with a cute and well-executed theme. The themers were all solid, in the language phrases, nicely transitioned into music genres. Other than Mr. Show, Adam, and Dan, which were unknowns, the fill was pretty straightforward and free of dreck. I was happy to see two of my favorite foods in the grid, Pâté and Steak Tartare. Yummers, as Hahtoolah would say!

    Thanks, Christine, for a Sunday treat and thanks, Splynter, for coming to CC’s rescue. You did a great job on your Sunday debut.

    Stay cool everyone and have a great day.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Very nice Sunday from Christina. Got stuck on 1A, which isn't an auspicious start, but once I got over that bridge (instead of OH HELL), I was on my way.

    Bob Odenkirk starred in two of the best TV shows in recent memory: Breaking Bad and it's prequel, Better Call Saul.

    RightBrain and I had dinner at Rock n Roll Ribs last night, a great local place owned by Iron Maiden's drummer, Nicko McBrain (no relation!).

    I first saw Daryl Hannah in "Splash" with Tom Hanks. Now she is married to Neil Young who is 15 years older.

    CC, I hope you feel better soon (my autocorrect just changed that to "fell better soon", which is way different!). And thanks to Splynter for filling in and linking OH HELL that I now want to try.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. RB, I liked both series but thought Better Call Saul had more depth beyond the drug focus of Braking Bad. This may have something to do with Bob Odenkirk’s stellar performance in the starring role.

      Delete
  11. I stumbled out of the gate, whiffing on several of the early across clues, and wondered if I was headed for abject failure.
    But I somehow got on the constructor's wavelength, leading to a walk in the park the rest of the way.
    I even knew who Dan Savage is, as his syndicated advice column appeared in a weekly (free) newspaper that populated racks throughout San Francisco in the nineties.
    Altogether, a fun puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Musings
    -A nice diversion on a day where the “feel like” temp will be 110F+.
    -How did we ever survive childhood without A/C?
    -_RSHOW/A_C yielded to a lucky guess
    -An AMC car would have been no competitor to a Buick REGAL but that’s where my mind went.
    -NOOGIE – the ones I got as a child from my uncles would qualify as child abuse today
    -LAOS: Countries with four-letter names
    -Best knock, knock JOKE I’ve ever heard. I jumped the first time a student screamed the punchline.
    -Many American industries RETOOLED to win WWII
    -In the 50’s a woman who was smoking while wearing a STOLE, white gloves and a hat was common on TV shows
    -Get well, C.C.!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Here's one for the Chairman:
      Knock, knock.
      Who’s there?
      Hike.
      Hike who?

      Delete
  13. Thx - twas a very enjoyable puzzle. I do love music. Sports not so much: two crossed sports clues tripped me - so was reluctant to put in my last (most “sensible”) letter (“a”) at manu-aus crossing.

    CC - sending best wishes for quick healing.

    ReplyDelete
  14. I liked this puzzle, even though I ran into two personal Naticks: (1) the M crossing AMC and MRSHOW, and (2) the A crossing MANU and AUS.
    Several writeovers: NAVAJO-->APACHE, BRIDGE-->OHHELL, MORE-->MOAN, and RAP-->DIS.
    Good wishes to you, C.C.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Sorry to hear the news C.C. I hope that you feel better very soon.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Prayers for you, C.C.

    ReplyDelete
  17. A lovely puzzle by Christina Iverson today, and an excellent review by Splynter. Thanks for filling in for C.C. I sure hope she feels better soon.

    When I think I'm very clever because I can solve the puzzle, I take another look and am reminded that I'm not nearly as clever as the constructor. It's pretty neat to come up with "Mom and Pop / pop music," and the rest of the Genre Fusion entries, but to place them symmetrically into a grid like this? That WOWS me.

    I DNK the card game, the comedy series, the Savages, the batter's stat, Piggie's favorite dish, or the Peacock title, but the puzzle was so well constructed that I FIR on paper, no cheating, and enjoyed it. Many thanks to Christina, to Patti, to Splynter, and to C.C.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Loved this puzzle. Fun theme and although some difficult entries stopped me sometimes, I always managed with p and p as Irish Miss ☘️ would state.

    I could repeat Jayce’s first paragraph. I had the same problems.

    Thank you Splynter for all the good info. CC, best wishes for á speedy recovery.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Hola! My guests went to Sedona for the afternoon, so I had time to solve this puzzle. Thank you, Christina, for the diversion. For some reason I did not finish SPASMS and didn't notice. Everything else filled in good time though not on AUTO. I don't know why Peacock title would be "MRS".
    C.C., I'm sorry you are not well. Please take care of yourself and get better soon.
    Enjoy your day, everyone!

    ReplyDelete
  20. After over 50 years in solving LAT Xword puzzles today's entry "did me in"! Couldn't get a start in any section. Rather than tossing it, I used as a starter in my fireplace. The crackling flames made me feel a LOT better!!

    ReplyDelete
  21. I just was not in wavelength for today’s offering; it felt like a Saturday puzzle on steroids! No FIR in the cards for me — the two music notation references did me in (and having EbaY in place of ETSY didn’t help…). I’ve played guitar since I was 10, but can’t read a stitch of music; it’s all been by ear, much easier imho.

    Hand up, too, for being hung out on “stags” for way too long, and thinking NYC for the “ Big Apple product” clue — embarrassing for a 40-yr Mac addict… 😖

    side note: today’s puzzle had an answer for a big discourse here on the Corner recently: if a homie knocks some one, did he “diss” them, or DIS them? See 95A 😎

    Splynter, great job on the review above — thanks for jumping in! You dropped in some funny refs: IGOR (“EYE-gor”) from one of my favorite movies (“Nice knockers!”🤣) and the Joplin link was most “entertaining”. Tough one to play on guitar! Also while we’re on the subject of music, while I’m also not a big fan of country, it has come a long way since the old days — Keith Urban absolutely rips. Plus I appreciated the racy LACY graphic — OOLALA (from the other day, hee hee!).

    C.C., sending you the best vibes I can muster, hoping you get through your ordeal smoothly ❤️

    ====> Darren / L.A.

    ReplyDelete
  22. PS hmmm, it appears that my closing remark about Saturday’s puzzle re: “DHS” ruffled someone’s feathers… my apologies.

    ReplyDelete

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