google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Monday July 14, 2025 Joseph McIntyre

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Jul 14, 2025

Monday July 14, 2025 Joseph McIntyre

  

Happy Monday, everyone! sumdaze here with what seems to be an LAT debut for Joseph McIntyre. Congrats!  

Theme:            Coasting Through the EASTs

In today's grid we find four themed answers and a reveal. All of the themed answers end in EAST. Let's take a look:

17 Across. *Sourdough starter: WILD YEAST.
I enjoyed seeing sourdough in this clue. I learned how to work sourdough in 1986 from the (then) cowboss on the MC Ranch, Bill Black. I have been baking all things sourdough ever since -- though I did have to grow a new starter with WILD YEAST a few times over the years due to moves. My current starter is 11-years old. Here is a pic of my starter, all bubbly and ready for use:  
I simply pour off 2 cups to make my bread
then put the rest back into the refrigerator.
This method does not require "discard recipes".

24 Across. *News website created by Tina Brown: THE DAILY BEAST.  This is a news and opinion website that focuses on politics and pop culture. It launched in 2008.

38 Across. *Words before a grand finale: LAST BUT NOT LEAST.  
This was a fun grid-spanner!
50 Across. *Christian observance that's on a different day every year: MOVEABLE FEAST.
At first I was looking for a specific holiday that is not tied to a date. Think "Easter" as opposed to "Christmas". There is also the Hemingway memoir.

62. Londoner who may have a Cockney accent, and what can be found in the answer to each starred clue: EAST ENDER. This is "a native or inhabitant of the part of London that is EAST of the city as far as the River Lea, including the Docklands". 
EastEnders is also a popular British television 56-Down that first aired forty years ago. Here is a 2:30 min. video explaining the Cockney accent on the show.  

Here on The Corner, today's unifier has an extra connection because posters often describe the right-hand side of the grid as the EAST, as if we are talking about a map. Today's themers all END in the EAST with EAST. It is unlikely that this is what our constructor had in mind -- but it works. I'll add the grid now so you can see if you agree.  

We have more clues to review:

Across:

1. Sign-in sheet attachment: PEN.  

4. Brand of canned meat: SPAM.
Easy Hawaiian Spam Musubi with Sushi Nori Seaweed
SPAM musubis are popular in Hawaii.
They sell rice molds that match the SPAM shape.

8. "What's it all about, __": Dionne Warwick lyric: ALFIE.  Burt Bacharach and Hal David wrote Alfie for the 1966 film of the same name starring Michael Cane who, by the way, used his native Cockney accent for the film. Cilla Black of the UK was the first to record Alfie. Cher also released a cover. 

13. Commotion: ADO.

14. Congressional staffers: AIDES.

16. Downstairs, on a ship: BELOW.  as in "BELOW deck"   and   
28 Across. "All __": conductor's call: ABOARD.     and     44 Across. Assents, at sea: AYES.

19. Maine-to-Florida rte.: U.S. ONE.  This is the longest north-south road in the U.S.  
I found these two photos on the internet. Both were taken in Fort Kent, ME.
There seems to be some disagreement as to which end is the start.

20. Swear (to): ATTEST.

21. In a funk: SAD.  
Wild Cherry     ~     Play That Funky Music     ~     1976
They do not seem SAD, even though they are playing a funk-y song.

23. Smart talk: SASS.

27. "Yeah, I doubt that": UH, NO.

31. Sir __ Guinness: ALEC.  (1914 - 2000)  He won the 1958 Oscar for Best Actor for his role as Colonel Nicholson in The Bridge on the River Kwai. Here he is as Obi-Wan Kenobi in the Star Wars trilogy.
  Alec Guinness Hated Star Wars And Obi-Wan Kenobi Didn't Learn Anyone's  Names | GIANT FREAKIN ROBOT

34. Library search field: TITLE. When searching for a book on a library's website, one can search by TITLE, author, ISBN, keyword, etc. 
CSO to our library expert, NaomiZ!

37. Seek the affection of: WOO.  Who else enjoys seeing the various bird performances when they try to WOO a mate? Here is a 1:42 min. video of an impressive affection seeker.

42. 911 responder: Abbr.: EMT.

43. Make into law: ENACT.  The M-W Word of the Day for "today" was the opposite of ENACT. It was rescind

45. "This Is __ Tap": SPINAL.  This is Spinal Tap is the title of a brilliant 1984 mocumentary movie directed by Rob Reiner. As it turns out, its sequel is set to be released in theaters on Sept. 12, 2025. Fans of the original will enjoy this very short teaser trailer. I like how they made the Roman numeral II an homage to their Stonehenge stage prank in the original.

47. Triumphant cries: AHAS.  

56. Native Czech, e.g.: SLAV.  Slovenians are a South SLAVic ethnic group so I will take this opportunity to insert here a photo of Slovenian Tadej Pogacar, wearing the yellow jersey in Stage 6 of this year's Tour de France.  

58. Give it a go: TRY.  

59. Whitney Houston's record label: ARISTA.  Click here to see which artists Arista currently represents. How many do you recognize? 

60. Inner's opposite: OUTER.

64. Fast train to Boston: ACELA.  I know this from doing XWD puzzles. My memory trick is ACE-Los Angeles...even though it is a northEAST train.

65. Worshippers at a gurdwara: SIKHS. A gurdwara is a Sikh shrine or place of worship.

66. Granola grain: OAT.  

67. Out of fashion: PASS
É.  The way the fashion industry keeps recycling past looks, it is difficult to know what is out.    
Heidi Klum knows.
68. Impulsive: RASH.  
69. Online convos: IMS.  conversations and Instant Messages

Down:

1. Play with, as a kitten might: PAW AT.  

2. Novelist Wharton: EDITH.  (1862-1937)  In 1921 she became the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for her 46-Down, The Age of Innocence.

3. Nick of "The Prince of Tides": NOLTE.  his IMDb page

4. Opens up to a doctor?: SAYS AH.  Husker Gary gave us a fun Norman Rockwell image the Saturday before last. He wrote, "Nobody did it better than Norman Rockwell." I agree.  

5. Metal baking container: PIE TIN.  Metal steered me toward TIN.

6. Letters on a toothpaste tube: ADA.  American Dental Association

7. Stylike: MESSY.  like a pig sty

8. __ Dhabi: ABU.  Abu Dhabi is both a city and a an emirate within the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Also, Abu Dhabi the city is both the capital of the Abu Dhabi emirate and the capital of the UAE. (I'll wait while you reread those last two sentences a few times so they make sense.)

9. To a smaller degree: LESS SO.  I liked the three S's in a row.

10. Drift from the pier: FLOAT AWAY.  
11. Charged particles: IONS.

12. Female sheep: EWES.  Sheep can be singular or plural.

15. Shot in the dark: STAB.  as in "I'm not sure but I'll take a STAB at the answer"

18. Subtract: DEDUCT.

22. Coped (with): DEALT.

25. "Whole __ Red": Playboi Carti album: LOTTA.  
learning moment
26. Cain's brother: ABEL.

29. Pink wine: ROS
É.  Summer is a good time to experiment with a ROSÉ.  

30. Connect the __: DOTS.  American Phil Hansen set the world record for the most dots in a dot-to-dot puzzle in 2017 with 52,901 dots.

31. Pub quaffs: ALES.  A quaff is an enjoyable beverage...not to be confused with coif, an elaborate hairdo.

32. "Aladdin" treasure: LAMP.  

33. Best guesses: ESTIMATES.  You will need to get these if your vehicle is 36-Down-ed.

35. "Monsters, __": INC.  This is a 2001 Disney Pixar film. It's cute. You should see it.

36. Wreck beyond repair: TOTAL.  

39. Wally Cleaver's little brother, for short: BEAV.  The TV series Leave It to Beaver ran from 1957-1963. 
Golly gee, BEAV, what do you think Dad's gonna say
when he gets home from work and finds out you are keeping a frog in the bathtub?

40. Not yet rented: UNLET.  One definition of let is "to rent".

41. Enter slowly: EASE IN.  Are you one to EASE IN to a cold swimming pool or do you go for it and jump right in?

46. Fiction section selections: NOVELS.  Last month I read The Henna Artist by Alka Joshi. I sometimes see Alka at the pool where I swim but we are not on a first-name basis or anything like that. 
Do her other two NOVELS center around the same characters? 

48. Shrubby tracts: HEATHS.  I was temporarily stymied on this one because I typed in HEdgeS.
Perhaps you've heard of HEATHS and heathers. A HEATH is an area of open, uncultivated land, especially in Britain, with characteristic vegetation of heather, gorse, and coarse grasses.

49. From the start: AFRESH.  Def.:  from the beginning; anew; again.

51. Greek war god: ARES. He was also a lover as well as a fighter. ARES and Aphrodite had a thing but she was married to Hephaestus so that did not go well. Eros, another crossword regular, is an offspring of ARES and Aphrodite.

52. Via plane: BY AIR.

53. Prim "Same for me": AS DO I.

54. Cook blue crabs, perhaps: STEAM.

55. Fruity desserts: TARTS.

56. __ opera: SOAPEastEnders, for example

57. Pixar film set in the fictional Italian town of Portorosso: LUCA.  This is a coming-of-age story about a young boy experiencing an unforgettable summer with his friends. The catch is his human friends do not know that he is a sea monster.

61. Norma __: Sally Field role: RAE.  Sally Field (b. Nov. 6, 1946) won an Oscar for Norma Rae in 1979. She won again in 1984 for Places in the Heart.
Sally Field as Norma Rae

63. Reggae-adjacent genre: SKA.  For about a year now I have been asking my smart speaker to play SKA music when I am doing housework. The tempo keeps me moving and I love the horns! We'll go out today on one of my favorite SKA covers:  
Come on Eileen     ~     Save Ferris     ~     1997

Have a great week, everyone!

30 comments:

Subgenius said...

While there were a
couple of semi-obscure names, I think that I can still call this puzzle “a walk in the park.” Let’s hope you all agree. Anyway, FIR, so I’m happy.

desper-otto said...

Good morning!

If this is a debut, it's a good one -- four themers plus a reveal. Nice for a Monday. Dw was an East Enders devotee at one time when the local PBS station was rerunning it. I visited ABU DHABI back in the '80s. It was kinda stark; I'm sure I wouldn't recognize it today. AFRESH is one of those words that I've seen in print, but have never heard anyone say. Nicely done, Joseph and sundaze. (I enjoyed that SKA tune.)

desper-otto said...

Oops, sumdaze. Sorry.

Jinx in Norfolk said...

FIR, but lesser->LESS SO.

What kind of sign in sheet has a PEN attached? I've seen clipboards with a sheet and a PEN attached. Maybe I've always worked for companies that buy cheap paper.

I counted all of the current acts that I've heard of that are available on ARISTA. My total is "zero."

Never heard of MOVEABLE FEAST. Looking it up, it appears that 1) it is more commonly speld MOVABLE FEAST, and B) that it's usage in print peaked in 1980. Seems like it is mostly used these days in the way Papa Hemingway used it - as a metaphor for "things change over time."

Thanks to Joseph for the fun start to the week, and to sumdaze for another fine review. Gorse will be a topic of conversation during next week's Open Championship, which we colonists call "The British Open."


Anonymous said...

Took 4:56 today for me to get this off my breast.

I didn't know the Warwick song (Alfie), the sikhs clue/answer, the news website (The Daily Beast), or Whitney Houston's (or anyone else's) label, but I agree with the SubG labeling this one a WITP.

I wish the constructors and editors would not use "words" such as "afresh".
I find them archaic, annoying, and alazy.

KS said...

FIR. Once again a bunch of obscure proper names in what should be an easy Monday puzzle. I suppose next we'll have the constructor's cat's mother's name as a clue. I do not believe proper names belong in any puzzle ever. But enough of my rant.
Fortunately the perps took care of the insane proper names and the solve was otherwise fair.
I got the theme early on with the second long answer and that helped a lot.
Overall, given my rant aside, a so so puzzle.

Irish Miss said...

Good Morning:

The reveal gave the theme a boost from just four rhyming words to an actual geographic group, so a pleasant surprise. I agree wit subgenius that it was a WITP and I also agree with SS about the use of “convenient” A words, which are seldom (if ever) heard in every day speech.

Congrats on your fine debut, Joseph, and thanks, sumdaze, for the usual fun and facts. Your observation of the East endings being on the East side of the grid was appreciated by this wool-gathering solver who manages to miss seeing the big picture, the little picture, and mostly everything in between! 😂

Have a great day.

Monkey said...

After á few erasures, like PAt AT which had to morph so I could get the WILD YEAST, FIR.

I noticed the EAST after the second long answer. Nice remark sumdaze about the EAST words all ending up in the east.

I remember the movie ALFIE probably because of the lovely, haunting song. After that movie I was á fan of Michael Caine.

Thank you sumdaze for that fine review. I liked the picture of your WILD YEAST. Congratulations for keeping it going this long. Many years ago I started one, but á move killed it and I wasn’t conscientious like you to start another.

Monkey said...

Hemingway referred to Paris as á MOVEABLE FEAST.

unclefred said...

FIR in 10 with no W/Os. 12 names, but only DNK 3, so not too bad in that respect, but I totally agree with KS@7:44 about proper names in CWs. I especially object to putting names next to each other (2D, 3D) or crossing (9A, 9D) although I knew both 9A and 9D so that one was no problem. 64A, 57D another pair. NW was last to fill. Overall, a clever CW, nice clues, thanx JM, and congrats if this is indeed your first LAT CW. Thanx too to the fine write-up by Sumdaze.

Anonymous said...

After doing the LAT crossword puzzle, I will usually do the NYT crossword puzzle, by way the Seattle Times website. I think the Seattle Times' site runs puzzles six weeks after they appear in the NYT. Today's puzzle has these theme answers: Belly of the Beast; Moveable Feast; Brewery Yeast; and, Last But Not Least.

Sounds awfully, awfully familiar.

-anonymous at 7:24 a.m.

Jinx in Norfolk said...

Sailors are really bad about using those "a" words. Alee, aport (but not "astarboard,") ashore, aloft, aground, afloat, a(b)aft, astern, aback, aboard, adrift, and probably some others I can't remember.

Ray - O - Sunshine said...

Typical Monday. The _ EAST part of the theme answers were all EAST of the midline of the grid (East end) except YEAST (middle EAST?)
My only nit would be to have used a more Monday-like clue for “LOTTA”

“Shot in the dark” STAB (so was it a gun or a knife?). “Stylike” I read it as Stylelike for awhile. “Opens up to a doc” thought might relate to stirrups 🤭

Start playing your instruments?” not THAT kind of conductor!

“Library search field” I Remember searching forever through all those typed card catalog oak drawer index cards trying to find a book!! 😩😤

Inkover: bat at/PAW AT,

They’re faking, it’s just ___ … ENACT
They’re faking, it’s just ____… ATTEST
The only UNLET vehicle left in the Hertz lot… LAST BUT NOT LEAST

Have a nice week 😊

Husker Gary said...

Musings
-My biggest obstacle was in Sumdaze’s fine write-up: Not knowing how Sumdaze grows yeast, why she had to start over and what discard recipes are.
-My neighbor used to be in charge of SPAM production here in Fremont but Hormel
-I wonder if libraries still use card catalogs for TITLE searches
-It’s embarrassing to have a RASH and the PA who helps you is a former female student. BTW, she did great.
-I think everyone knows what the PIE TIN from the Frisbee Pie Company morphed into.
-Failure to connect the dots is the same as not seeing the forest for the trees
-If you’d like to EASE IN to solving crossword puzzles, I’d wait a while before you try one by Erik Agard :-). Any other constructor come to your mind?
-You have moved up in pro baseball when you travel BY AIR and not bus
-SOAP OPERA: I asked a teen age checker name Peyton if he had ever heard of Peyton Place? I got a quizzical look.

Anonymous said...

Fresh content and a bit of Brit. Fun!

A couple of the obscure clues “ Playboi Carti album” were not Monday level.

🙌Hands up for not knowing any of the musicians on the 2025 Arista label.

If you visit a Gurdwara you are always welcomed with a free meal.

Thanks Sumdaze for the detailed recap.

Anonymous said...

Does anyone else do the NYT crossword? This puzzle is almost identical to theirs from 6/09, by Aimee Lucido!

Charlie Echo said...

Jinx...what about "Hard astarboard!" as a helm order?

Charlie Echo said...

Pretty good Monday outing, and I agree on the use of names. Too much of "you know it or you don't" for my taste. Forgot to look for the theme again. Thanks, sumdaze!

YooperPhil said...

One won’t EASE IN on a Saturday with any puzzle by Stella Z, Katie Hale or Rebecca Goldstein.

Ray - O - Sunshine said...

Those oak library card catalog cabinets with a hundred of little drawers are considered antiques now.

desper-otto said...

Both puzzles were probably "in the hopper" for weeks with neither being aware of the other.

YooperPhil said...

DNK LUCA or LOTTA, and a few others by the clue, but everything perped for a WITP FIR in under 10, typical of a Monday, thank you Joseph for your creation. Thanks also to sumdaze for another sparkling Monday review! I understand your affinity for sourdough as DW has been babysitting her starter for a few years now, and is of course becoming an expert on the subject 😂. Last week she made a jalapeño/cheddar loaf and a garlic/parmesan/cracked pepper loaf, we kept half and gave half to friends. She uses the “discard” to make biscuits and pancakes to freeze and have at the ready.

Jinx in Norfolk said...

I've only heard "hard to starboard" or "hard starboard," but that doesn't mean that there isn't a sailing community somewhere that uses "hard astarboard."

Jinx in Norfolk said...

Or,
The only UNLET vehicle left in the Hertz lot… LAST BUT NOT LEASED.

Misty said...

Delightful Monday puzzle, many thanks, Joseph. And thank you, Sumdaze, for your always helpful commentary--also much appreciated.

Well, once I saw that what was eating that WILD YEAST was THE DAILY BEAST, I knew that we were in trouble and were going to need the assistance of some AIDES to help us out with all that ADO. I tried to make some ESTIMATES about how to DEDUCT any bad effects from all this, and figured out that if we could publish some NOVELS, either in print or BY AIR, we might be able to get a FRESH START and make enough money to pay off any possible debts and survive this mess. It worked, and our problems did all FLOAT AWAY (at least in my imagination) so that we could celebrate our MOVEABLE FEAST. Yay!

Have a wonderful week coming up, everybody.

Inanehiker said...

This was a nice smooth solve that was easy to get the theme before the reveal answer.
Renee- Alka Joshi's first three novels are called the Jaipur trilogy that starts in India and end up in Paris - interesting to learn about India in the early years after independence from the British Raj. Her newest book "Six Days in Bombay" is stand alone - it just came out this spring.
Small world story - Alka and I both went to high school in a Kansas City suburb- I was friends with her younger brother Piyush a class below hers. She also went to Stanford the year before me. The Henna Artist was her debut novel at age 62 and was set to launch in March 2020- so her book tour was cancelled and she ending up marketing it by going to hundreds of virtual book clubs over it's first year after publication. It ended up a New York Times bestseller and a Reese Witherspoon Book club pick
https://www.alkajoshi.com/about-alka

Thanks SD for the fun blog and Joseph for the puzzle

MissScarlet said...

Yes, I agree with anonymous at 7:24am. Todays LA Times Xword bears a striking resemblence to the Monday, June 9, 2025 NYT Xword by Aimee Lucido.
Seems quite odd that no credit was given to Aimee.

Jayce said...

I liked the EAST theme.
BAT AT --> PAW AT. ON LET --> UNLET. SIHKS --> SIKHS.

CanadianEh! said...

Marvellous Monday. Thanks for the fun, Joseph (congrats on your debut) and sumdaze.
I FIRed in a little more than good Monday time, and saw the EAST ENDER in the East. I too was looking for EASTer in 50A. That would have been a literal Easter Egg LOL.
Perhaps the most famous EAST ENDER is Eliza Doolittle.

Several inkblots.
Hand up for Lesser before LESS TO, and HEdgeS before HEATHS (although hedges are not usually tracts).
“Me too” was not prim enough. AS DO I perped.
I had _ I_LE and wondered if we were searching in the library aisle. TITLE was a better fit, and I found the NOVELS.

Pixar was popular today with Monsters INC. and LUCA. Aladdin predates Pixar.

Wishing you all a great day.

sumdaze said...

YP@12:22. Those are some creative loaves!