google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Saturday, September 27, 2025, Doug Peterson and Samuel A. Donaldson

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Sep 27, 2025

Saturday, September 27, 2025, Doug Peterson and Samuel A. Donaldson

Saturday Themeless by Doug Peterson and Samuel A. Donaldson

I had a collaborative puzzle by these two veterans a year ago. This one was just as much fun as that one. This beautiful grid only had 29 blocks amid the 98 open squares comprising a lot of white space. Symmetric grid spanners adds to the puzzles skill level. I got a hard-earned a "got 'er done" 



Sam Donaldson
Doug Peterson


Across

1. Technique employed by funk artists: SLAP BASS.


9. Many group chat texts: MEMES


14. Garbage genre: ALTERNATIVE ROCK - Garbage is an alternative rock band. Their  incorporates elements of electronic rock, electropop, trip hop, post-grunge and industrial rock.  
¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 


17. "What are you even saying?": MAKE IT MAKE SENSE - What I would say about the description of the music played by the group above.

18. On Signal, say: IMING - Internet MessagING on a private messaging service known as Signal

19. Ketanji colleague: ELENA and 
28. Ketanji colleague: SONIA - Amy Coney Barrett, SONIA Sotomayor,  Ketanji Brown and ELENA Kagan,


20. Processed food: ATE.

21. Salon offerings: TANS.

22. Google crossword clues, some say: CHEAT - If you Google (verb) a crossword clue, it is not a CHEATING, it is learning. Constructor Malaika Handa said, "
Also, when you’re solving, look up entries that you don’t know! It’s a game, not a test."

23. Gazebo board: SLAT.

24. Count ender?: ESS.

Violet Crawley the Dowager
COUNTESS of Grantham

25. 25-Down, in Toledo: TRES 
25. 25-Across, in Toledo: THREE The first one applies in Toledo, Spain. The second one is in Toledo, Ohio. πŸ˜€

26. Like most Iraqis: SHIITE.


28. Wiring problem: SHORT - An electrical SHORT in the Service Module provided the spark for the explosion on Apollo 13.


29. Norse pantheon: AESIR.


30. Launch-related stress: G-FORCE - Jet pilots launched off an aircraft carrier go from 0 - 140 mph to two seconds and feel 3-4 G's of FORCE.


32. Tool used to go suck a lemon?: CARVAC πŸ˜€ I use a CARVAC in my non-lemon car ! My last fill!


34. Queeg's ship: CAINE Was Queeg mentally ill?


35. County, across the pond: SHIRE - Robin Hood "lived" in NOTTINGHAMSHIRE.


36. Jumps on board?: OLLIES.


38. Hard to grab hold of: EELY.

39. Lotion letters: SPF.

42. Jessica of "Sin City": ALBA.


43. Coward's offerings: PLAYS πŸ˜€


45. 2020 Pixar film: SOUL.


46. Act excused with crossed fingers: LIE.

47. Working stiff: PROLE.


48. Atlantic capital: ACCRA.


49. Negotiation assets: BARGAINING CHIPS - One mom's opinion


52. Free pass from a manager: INTENTIONAL WALK - The pitcher no longer has to throw four balls. The manager can just choose to put a batter on base via an INTENTIONAL WALK

53. They may get thumbed: NOSES πŸ˜€

54. Royalty figure: NET SALES - Noel Coward accumulated millions in royalties on NET SALES of his work before his death in 1973 and his foundation administers that income now.


Down:

1. Silky fabric that dates to the Middle Ages: SAMITE.


2. Characters in Anna Dewdney books: LLAMAS ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 


3. Big name in middle management?: ATKINS πŸ˜€


4. Hammer heads?: PEENS.

5. Ocean cooler: BRIG - πŸ˜€ I finally saw that cooler was another word for jail which on a boat on the ocean it is called a BRIG.

6. Colony toiler: ANT - The city name of Accra comes from Akan word Nkran meaning ant because of all the ant hills in Ghana.

7. "Ditto": SAME HERE.

8. Most like a chestnut: STALEST.


9. Home of Arizona's idea Museum: MESA.


10. Afore: ERE.

11. Work in the Louvre's Salle des Γ‰tats: MONA LISA πŸ˜€ - I loved this clue/fill once it became obvious. The MONA LISA is in the Louvre's "States Room"

12. Stoked: ECSTATIC.

13. Pesky little sucker: SKEETER - I had some on the course recently and I put on my Absorbing Jr and they were gone.

15. Shopper's "maze with meatballs": IKEA.


16. Lets off steam: VENTS.

22. Gator kin: CROC.

23. Mesh in the kitchen: SIEVE.

27. Styles with many cuts: HARRY - The old common/proper noun switch for the many coifs of singer HARRY Styles


30. Vanilla liqueur: GALLIANO.


31. Hazelnuts: FILBERTS.


32. Dull Knife's people: CHEYENNE.


33. Feels off: AILS.

34. Container for seamy material?: COAL BIN πŸ˜€ Coal is found in seams in the Earth 


35. Beach barker: SEA LION.

37. 
Mast attachment: SPRIT.


39. Phishing target, informally: SOCIAL.


40. Crayola's wild orchid, e.g.: PURPLE.

41. Glassware in labs: FLASKS.

44. "The Real" co-host Love: LONI - Second from the left


45. Either side of Alaska?: SCHWA πŸ˜€ 
Ə las kΙ™


47. Parts of a balance scale: PANS - The most famous ones are held by a lady with a blindfold.


48. Bands that may be strained on courts, briefly: ACLS.


50. [low whistle]: GEE.

51. Noir piece: GAT - The man below in this film noir scene is wielding a GAT or rod

 

7 comments:

  1. The fact that those
    grid spanning answers were not impossible to get helped me solve this challenging puzzle. Anyway, FIR, so I’m happy.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Good morning!

    I often pass on Saturdays, but I'm familiar with the work of both Doug and Samuel, so I gave it a shot. Glad I did. It took most of my allotted solving time, but it finally came together. [Whew] I thought of Harry Styles' recordings ("cuts") rather than his hairy styles. The four grid spanners were very nice. Thanx, guys. Thanx, too, to Husker for the elucidation.

    ReplyDelete
  3. A typically tough Saturday puzzle for me, both a game AND a test IMO. Google or any other form of help is a no-no for me, but I do look stuff up post solve, things I wanna learn more about from the puzzle, or mentioned in the blog or comments. I was temporarily befuddled in the NW with unknowns 1,2, and 3D, the grid spanners helped to solve those. Had to change berg to BRIG. TRES/THREE were all perps since there was no clue. The Ketanji clue made a gimme of the other Justices, “Amy” wouldn’t have. Maine became CAINE for my last fill and the FIR in 44:22. I associate GALLIANO with a Harvey Wallbanger, neither of which I’ve heard of in years. Unfamiliar with the chestnut reference. Thanks Doug and Samuel for your fine collaboration, and to HG for your informative blog!

    IM☘️ ~ I see from the synonyms of prole, pleb is there, without an E at the end. 🀷‍♂️

    ReplyDelete
  4. DNF, filling 29 answers, 24 correctly. Could have spent days on it and still not gotten it right.

    Around here, OLLIES is a chain of stores featuring distress merchandise, like toys that didn't sell last year, books that didn't hit the big time, and discontinued clothing styles. The also sell off-branded commodities such as spices, coffee, pots and pans and carpets. Motto: "Good Stuff Cheap!"

    I'm so glad I divorced Major League Baseball. First it was the DH, which took away a lot of the manager's strategy decisions. Now the automatic intentional walk is a way of excusing the pitcher and catcher from doing their jobs. It wasn't unheard of for a wild pitch or a passed ball to occur on an intentional walk. And who can forget the fake intentional walk in the 1972 World Series when Raleigh Fingers struck out Johnny Bench? To me, watching golf these days is more exciting than watching MLB.

    Thanks to Doug and Sam for the challenge, and to H.Gary for explaining it all.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Took 24:56 today.

    Lots of unknowns. Especially the lower-left (galliano, filberts, etc.).

    Short on time again. I'm sure YooperPhil will pick up my slack again.

    ReplyDelete
  6. FIR after about an hour and wanted to throw in the towel multiple times. Wow, this was the hardest puzzle I've seen in a while

    ReplyDelete
  7. DNF. The NW got me, starting with samite and, for the life of me, not being able to come up with Atkins. I knew the gist of the clue but my brain just fogged up. I knew it had to be weight related. Oh well!
    The rest of the puzzle was extremely challenging and there were times when the towel looked like it was going to be thrown in.
    But overall a decent puzzle.

    ReplyDelete

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