Sunday, Oct 19th, 2025 ~ C.C. Burnikel - "EASY DOES IT"
x x TIMES Crossword Puzzle
The _os _ngles Times building
Splnyter stepping for our Sunday Bloggess C.C., who takes the honor of being today's constructor. I usually skip Sunday's puzzle and work on my Wed blog, but it was a JazzB week, so here we are. My solve had lots of "well, it fits, but it's wrong" answers ⁽⁺⁾ today. No circles, a fair number of names, a balanced spread of 3-, 4-, 5- and 6-letter words, 88 squares ( if my math is correct ) of theme fill - but - they're 'missing' the "L" and "A" from in-the-vernacular phrases, leading to some humorous, unique fill. The themers, and the reveal in the final Across;
23A. *Ensemble for finals week?: (LA)TEST FASHION
28A. *Slug made from an old can?: (LA)TIN QUARTER
58A. *Christmas tree in an atelier?: ARTISTIC F(LA)IR
83A. *Courses full of twists and turns?: (LA)MAZE CLASSES - birthing technique
110A. *Organizer for a nail tech?: MANI(LA) FOLDER
119A. *Treadmill setting for a Roman emperor?: CAESARS PA(LA)CE
32D. *Pride of a jacked security guard?: ANTI-THEFT A(LA)RM
43D. *Thanksgiving stuffing dishes that aren't up to snuff?: SA(LA)D DRESSINGS
130. Mardi Gras city nickname, and an apt description of the answers to the starred clues: NOLA - New Orleans, LouisianA, "The Big Easy" ( the 'other' theme title ) or, parsed for the theme, "No L A"
And "L A" We Go~!
ACROSS:
1. Layer outside the germ: BRAN - I do the DOWN clues first; I had B - - N to start
5. Like a perennial: HARDY - durable - they keep coming back~!
10. LAPD alerts: APBs - No LA~! #1
14. No. 1 pals: BFFs - Text-speak, Best Friends Forever
18. Sacred flower in Buddhism: LOTUS
I'll take this Lotus - the Turbo Esprit
20. In the know: AWARE - toyed with ALERT⁽⁺⁾ because this cluster was a bit messy with wrong fill
21. Helpful hint: CLUE
22. Ontario lake: ERIE
25. Purple boba tea flavor: TARO
26. Roof overhang: EAVE
27. Hit lists: TOP TENS
30. Playing surface that favors topspin: CLAY - I so wanted FELT here, as in pool tables
33. Video camera button: RECord - I am making a table for my brother for Christmas, and I am thinking about shooting a video of the process - I bought this thing for holding my phone:
34. Bro or stepbro: SIBling
36. Total score: TALLY
37. "Mulan" invader: HUN
38. Maker of off-road vehicles: TONKA - HONDA⁽⁺⁾ fit, and a good 60% correct, but Bzzzt
40. Guitar licks: RIFFS - I am very familiar with this concept - it's good to go back to songs that were once difficult for me to play and now find easier from practice and learning scales
42. Runner-up: LOSER
46. Visiting the area: IN TOWN - I had planned to drive to Cincinnati, OH at the end of the month for the 25th anniversary of "The Golem", the made-for-TV movie I worked on, but now I'm told it's just a showing in a theater - no cast or crew were invited to attend - 12hrs is a long way to drive to sit in a cinema.
48. Mall pizza chain: SBARRO
50. Striped stone: AGATE
51. Egyptair hub city: CAIRO
52. David of "ABC World News Tonight": MUIR - filled via perps
54. LED component: DIODE - Light-Emitting, that is
57. Focalin target, briefly: ADHD - no clue, had ADHG via crossings
61. Greeting to a mate: G'DAY - an Aussie, mate~!
62. Genetic material: DNA
63. Application in some massages: HOT OIL - the subject of massages came up at the gym last week; they are offered in my club, but I have never actually HAD a massage - perhaps I should treat myself this Christmas
64. Creole chef Chase: LEAH - again, filled via perps; more here
66. Holds nothing back: LETS RIP
69. Course track for a future JD: PRE-LAW - "JD" being a learning moment for me - the Wiki
71. Falcons city: ATLANTA - their NFL team
74. Marathon setting: GREECE - I had AVENUE - but this is the city, not the run
75. Person who calls the shots: REFEREE - meh~?
77. Quindim ingredient: YOLK - with YOL -, I WAGed the "K"
78. Kale and cabbage: GREENS
80. Traditional mo. for a Bavarian beer festival: OCTober - happening NOW
81. Sultry growl: RAWR - I recall having this fill just recently, and not too many people cared for it
87. Make airtight: SEAL
89. Strip in the kitchen: STEAK - with - 24D. Cook wear?: APRON - cute misdirections
How's that for an apron - care for some (un)dressing with that salad~?
91. Parks of Alabama: ROSA
92. Crocheted mat: DOILY
93. "Snowfall" actor Damson __: IDRIS - my final fill; good to see an alternative to "ELBA"
95. Like most awards: ANNUAL
97. Mount __: Washington estate: VERNON - my gym is located in Vernon, CT . . .
98. Arizona State's city: TEMPE - my ex is located in Arizona . . .
99. Some choral singers: ALTOs - and my voice is located in the baritone range.
100. Harsh: ACRID
103. Classic muscle car: GTO - "Goat" - here's where the name G T O comes from
104. Doll with neon hair: TROLL
106. Dorm VIPs: RAs - Resident Assistants
108. Hack (off): LOP
109. Secondhand: USED
114. Tofu nutrient: PROTEIN - I have "plateaued" at the gym; my trainer has now dropped my calorie intake to 1900/day, with 30-35% Protein, 30-40% Carbs, and 25-35% Fat
117. 50-50: EVEN
118. Persian greeting?: MEOW - Persian, the cat, that is
123. Religious subgroup: SECT
124. Bend at a barre: PLIE
125. Minor key?: ISLET - Minor = small :: Key = island
126. Underground worker: MINER - the "other" MINOR
It's the key of "B sharp"
127. Inquires: ASKS
128. Straight people, casually: HETS - Clunky, sorta meh; Heterosexuals - don't usually hear it spoken
129. Love, in arias: AMORE
DOWN:
1. Club alternative: BLT - sa'miches
2. Eggs in ikura sushi: ROE
3. Tags on social media: ATS - more commonly "@"s
4. Like some brownies: NUTTY - I like my PB chunky, but not my brownies
5. Light a fire under: HASTEN - ah. Not IGNITE⁽⁺⁾
6. "Doggone it!": "AW HECK~!"
7. Desert rarity: RAIN
8. Smeltery waste: DROSS - SLAG was too short
9. Currency at pachinko parlors: YEN - in retrospect, this makes sense
11. Nursery nutrients: PLANT FOOD; the set of 8- & 9-letter down fills; 14D. Poses done in a taproom: BEER YOGA; 82D. "Happens to everyone": "WE ALL DO IT"; 88D. Some light cosmetics: LIP TINTS
12. Head-to-toe garments: BURQAS - I had the "K", not the "Q" at first
13. Han River capital: SEOUL
15. Campus group: FRAT - Not ROTC⁽⁺⁾
16. __-second rule: FIVE - I frequently adhere to this phenomenon, despite what Mythbusters proved
The Five-Second Rule tested
17. Oracle: SEER
19. OAK alternative: SFO - I was stumped by this - I am not West coast, so I did not recognize the airport codes of California's Bay Area tarmacs - and now there's controversy . . .
28. Classic Ford: T-BIRD - I had the less-than-classic, but still way-cool, 1986 Turbo Coupe
29. Ristorante menu preposition: ALLA - penne ALLA vodka, e.g.
30. Spanish girl: CHICA
31. Like some eclipses: LUNAR - Not TOTAL⁽⁺⁾
35. Fund that might grow for decades: IRA
38. Like some rear admirals: TWO-STAR
39. "Yeah, right!": "AS IF~!"
Wayne's World
41. Heebie-jeebies: FRIGHT - not CREEPS⁽⁺⁾
44. Sharing a cultural identity: ETHNIC
45. Orangutan: RED APE - I tried BIG APE⁽⁺⁾
47. Warbler lookalike: ORIOLE
49. Scouring brand: BRILLO
52. Wii Sports avatar: Mii - how you appear in the game; this is my Facebook Avatar
53. Golden State sch.: UCLA - No LA~! #2
55. Lentil dish: DAL
56. Product that may reduce dark circles: EYE GEL
59. Castle structures: TOWERS - I loves me a castle, especially with towers
60. Domain: REALM - Not ARENA⁽⁺⁾
65. Capital city in Anatolia: ANKARA
67. Like new tires: TREADED - But what about F1 racing~?
68. Motion detector, e.g.: SENSOR
69. Toast at a Bavarian beer festival: PROSIT - ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ - crossing IDRIS, a bit of a Natick
70. Go back: RECEDE - Not RETURN⁽⁺⁾
72. Ruthless ruler: TYRANT - Not DESPOT⁽⁺⁾
73. Forever and a day: AGES - Not EONS⁽⁺⁾
76. Put away: EAT
79. TV pioneer: RCA
84. French novelist Émile: ZOLA - seen this name in Crosswords before
85. Cotija-covered corn: ELOTE - ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
86. Council of clerics: SYNOD
90. Bouillon brand: KNORR - they make sides dishes in bags, too
94. Feudal laborer: SERF
96. Miss. home: USA - I was not fooled by this, but I did hesitate - Mississippi is in the US of A
97. Deadly snake: VIPER - not ADDER⁽⁺⁾
99. Gene arising from mutation: ALLELE
101. End-of-game pitcher: CLOSER - Not RELIEF⁽⁺⁾
102. Revolve: ROTATE
105. Extra pep: OOMPH
107. Twitch: SPASM - I had a SPASM in my last puzzle blog
109. Let fall, as hair: UNPIN
That's a BIG PIN
110. Steep-sided plateau: MESA
111. Urban rtes.: AVEs
112. Giraffe feature: NECK
They're "necking"
113. Fleecy mamas: EWES
"Youse" got to check out this mama in fleece-lined tights~!
After a little thought, I was able to see where the “La” fit in all the answers (hint: it’s not always at the beginning!) and I enjoyed C.C.’s fun puzzle. FIR, so I’m happy.
About halfway through, I figured out that LA was missing from the themers, but had no idea what that had to do with "Easy Does It". Had I read the full 130a clue, it would've made sense. But some of us never seem to read the full clue. [Sigh] I needed Splynter to 'splain it. I can never remember which L is doubled in ALLELE. KNORR makes an excellent Hollandaise sauce mix, appreciated by this eggs-ben lover. Enjoyed your clever effort, C.C., and your expo, Splynter. (Your video for Magnetism didn't make the trip.)
This is not one of my favorite types of themes but CC gets credit for tackling a minus two letter treatment and not just the easier path of only one missing letter. In addition, I think the difficulty level and the cluing and fill were a notch or two above the normal Sunday grid. As Splynter pointed out, there were many entries that required second-guessing, e.g., Bacon/Steak and Amiga/Chica, to name a couple. Hets and Rawr were nose wrinklers but Persian Greeting?=Meow brought a knowing grin. I wasn’t fooled but I was delighted.
Thanks, CC, nice job and thanks, Splynter, nice job, also, in explaining and dissecting the salient points.
Working top to bottom I got about half the grid filled and remembered to look at the title, which was still no help to me sussing the theme. And like d-o, when I got to 130A I saw “Mardi Gras city nickname…” I just keyed in NOLA and didn’t read the rest of the clue, duh by me. I FIR in 33:36 but never did see the missing LA in any of the fill. BEER YOGA is really a thing? DNK LEAH or PROSIT which crossed the learning moment of the day for me, that there is another person by the name of IDRIS. RED APE was also unfamiliar. I’m a HET, but didn’t know I was referred to that way. A nice way to start the day though, a not too tough puzzle from Zhouqin, and a detailed write-up from Splynter, thank you both.
I didn't know the French writer, the Bavarian toast (prosit), the Creole cook (Leah), "Hets", that burkas were spelled with a "Q", the lentil dish (dal), or Today's Actor (Damson Idris) and/or his show/movie. Also, I associated "Washington estate" with the state of Washington.
FIR. For me this was quite a workout. I was so focused on solving that I completely missed the theme. Even filling the reveal didn't help since I failed to read the entire clue for Mardi Gras city. Silly me. There were several unknowns for me, such as allele and elote, but the perps saw me through. Overall, although somewhat hard, an enjoyable puzzle.
Duh! I FIR but had no clue about the NO-LA until Splynter's explanation. I didn't need to read the entire clue for 130A to get NOLA, and if you solved the puzzle from the newspaper like I did, "Mardi Gras city nickname" was at the very bottom of the page and the rest of the clue was at the top. Speaking of NOLA, how would anybody from out of town know LEAH Chase. The family's restaurant, Dooky Chase's, is not known for its food. It is a hangout for black politicians and hanger-ons. Like the original Chris Steak House was for white politicians. Ruth Fertel bought it and became Ruth's Chris Steak House. The politicians would hang around and let somebody else pick up the check.
TARO flavor. Never knew that ADHD-Focalin sounded like Ritalin, so I guessed ADHD. RAWR- sounds made up and I had to change PURR to RAWR My original "Strip in the kitchen" was BACON, not STEAK "Snowfall" and Damson IDRIS are both unknowns. And Idris crossed the unkinown PROSIT. HETS- I'm really getting tired of the alphabet-pronoun descriptions ATS-no idea about that one; I don't use X, Instagram, TikTok, or any of those timewasters. TWO STAR Rear Admiral. Didn't know that. My late next-door neighbor was a ONE star admiral. Five houses the other direction, Rob was a ONE star general. ELOTE and Cotija- perps for that one.
Mt. VERNON- We visited it this past Monday on our visit to D.C. because all the other museums were not open, thanks to our wonderful Congressmen. But just before we pulled up close to our hotel, which is two blocks from the Air & Space Museum, the police closed off the street. Two gangbangers decided to shoot at each other, with one receiving 4 bullets in the arm and leg. Another bullet went through the window of a tourist van at the hotel (Holiday Inn Capitol Hill) and hit the building. We were less than 100 feet from the garage entrance to park the car and couldn't go in until the police cleared the street. I drove around the block and parked on the street between FEMA and Dept. of Ed. Got in the garage a few hours later.
A bit of a workout for me, I got the theme because I know NOLA from many previous crosswords. And I knew it was called The Big Easy. But I never made the connection with "Easy Does it." thank you for splainin Splynter!
Wait a sec, did I miss something? Did Patti change someth8ng? (Ref: left her mark, above)
Musings -As I moved steadily through the puzzle, I didn’t really pay much attention to the gimmick but CAESARS PA(LA)CE slapped upside against my head. What fun! I even enjoyed going back through to see what C.C. had done to generate this idea. -I went right by the reveal and needed Splynter to tie it into the title. -Perennial NCAA FB powers have been joined by perennial LOSER Indiana in the ratings this year -My fav guitar LICK is this intro being faked by Marty McFly -I had Focalin’s? target being ACNE and ACHE before ADHD -Tom Brady and the Patriots broke Atlanta Falcons’ fan's hearts in Super Bowl LI by scoring 19 pts in the 4th quarter -David Karp had MWAHAHA crossing RAWR in his Saturday 8/9/25 puzzle. It was not well received but he apologized for it in a note to me. :-) -Our ex-neighbors now live in TEMPE where it is only going to be 88F today -USED: My DW has now given Goodwill a lot of her Christmas and Halloween stuff as she continues paring -My neighbor’s dad in his classic car -CHIQUITITA is Spanish for “little girl”. Here is a great Swedish group singing a song in English with that Spanish title -Me too, Splynter, on IDRIS crossing PROSIT -Splynter, you’ve got the guitar backwards. Don’t tell me you’re a left-handed organ technician too! :-)
C.C. serves up a fun Sunday that was not quite as easy as the title suggested. I thought the answers would have "EZ" either added or deleted. But she cleverly kept me in suspense until the last clue, when it all fell into place. Good one!
Fav clue was for TONKA; least fav answer was TREADED, which aside from racing slicks, describes all tires. Even bald ones have some tread.
Great job, Splynter, starting with The _os _ngles Times building and all the way down (and across). Lotsa good stuff on an extra large review!
I like your lefty SG. I once saw a photo of Elliot Easton's (lead guitar from the Cars) lefthanded collection, the largest in the world. Except the magazine printed it backwards and it looked like a bunch of "normal" guitars.
Easy does it? Pretty tough for a Sunday! I needed the last entry to understand that there was NO LA in the starred answers, and did not get the Big Easy reference until Splynter 'splained it. I agree with Splynter about the crossing Naticks of PROSiT and iDRIS; I left a blank space there. C.C., your puzzle was clever and defeated me today. Splynter, I enjoyed the review, and appreciated the Mythbusters test of the Five-Second Rule. The upshot: keep the floor squeaky clean, or don't eat anything you've dropped on it!
How absolutely wonderful to get a C.C. puzzle on a Sunday! I was just absolutely thrilled to see this, and although I've had to struggle a bit to get myself through it, I found it delightful and just loved it. So thank you, C.C. And thank you for your helpful and delightful commentary and pictures, Splynter.
Well, C.C. gave us so many interesting CLUES in this puzzle, that she made me aware of our month when I finally sensed that that Bavarian beer festival might be taking place in October, and that the taproom pose might be a BEER YOGA. There were other interesting food references to things like TARO, and that YOLK in Quindim (whatever that is?), and the PROTEIN in Tofu. Lots of interesting geography too--I wish I had time to track them all down. But it's time for me to put on my APRON and prepare some lunch.
Definitely a plus to get a CC puzzle on Sunday. Very well constructed. One gripe, I didn't like "allele" crossing "het". I'd never heard of either one. My guess is that Patti did it. I guessed the E. Took awhile due to incorrect entries. When things don't fit right you know something is screwed up. Thanks for subbing Splynter. Always a nice recap.
Hola Whew! This was a tad crunchier than the usual Sunday puzzle. Thank you for the workout, C.C. No, Splynter, there is no other substitute for IDRIS ELBA! CHICA used to be slang but I believe it is now accepted as standard for "girl". Nina is a small child. Time to go. I hope your Sunday has been wonderful. Outstanding weather here!
I think this was one of C.C.’s best constructs ever! Really clever hook, and clues just misleading enough to give one more than a few “DOH!” moments. I’m also kind of wondering, is BEERYOGA real or just a gimmick? Is it like, if you lose your balance, y’gotta chug a mug? (Sounds self-defeating, if ya ask me…). And I always thought cartoons were on paper and thus had panels, not cels like animation; maybe I’m just being too pedantic…
Loved the content in your recap, Splynter! Did you actually find the photo of the _os _ngeles Times building like that, or did you do a PhotoShop job? Either way, it was brilliant for C.C.’s theme.
Since you’re obviously a player (and lefty, no less!) here’s a question for you: isn’t B# actually C? I’ve been playing guitar since I was 10, but know absolutely zilch about music theory (I can barely read a lead line) and always wondered. When I blow my nose, I comment that it’s in C flat 🤣.
Cool SG, btw 🎸
SFO is to OAK like LAX is to BUR; avoid the formers like the plague! When I flew for my gigs, I’d refuse to be booked out of LAX; Burbank is 12 minutes from my hacienda, and TSA there takes half that most days. I hear that Oakland is a similar experience.
Ahhh, felt — it works for any spin on the ball!
Had a chance to drive a Lotus Espirit at Road Atlanta years ago…but at 6’4” I didn’t fit in the bloody thing! Bummer.
Anyway, great fun today from both of youse — thanks!
After a little thought,
ReplyDeleteI was able to see where the “La” fit in all the answers (hint: it’s not always at the beginning!) and I enjoyed C.C.’s fun puzzle. FIR, so I’m happy.
Good morning!
ReplyDeleteAbout halfway through, I figured out that LA was missing from the themers, but had no idea what that had to do with "Easy Does It". Had I read the full 130a clue, it would've made sense. But some of us never seem to read the full clue. [Sigh] I needed Splynter to 'splain it. I can never remember which L is doubled in ALLELE. KNORR makes an excellent Hollandaise sauce mix, appreciated by this eggs-ben lover. Enjoyed your clever effort, C.C., and your expo, Splynter. (Your video for Magnetism didn't make the trip.)
Good Morning:
ReplyDeleteThis is not one of my favorite types of themes but CC gets credit for tackling a minus two letter treatment and not just the easier path of only one missing letter. In addition, I think the difficulty level and the cluing and fill were a notch or two above the normal Sunday grid. As Splynter pointed out, there were many entries that required second-guessing, e.g., Bacon/Steak and Amiga/Chica, to name a couple. Hets and Rawr were nose wrinklers but Persian Greeting?=Meow brought a knowing grin. I wasn’t fooled but I was delighted.
Thanks, CC, nice job and thanks, Splynter, nice job, also, in explaining and dissecting the salient points.
Have a great day.
Working top to bottom I got about half the grid filled and remembered to look at the title, which was still no help to me sussing the theme. And like d-o, when I got to 130A I saw “Mardi Gras city nickname…” I just keyed in NOLA and didn’t read the rest of the clue, duh by me. I FIR in 33:36 but never did see the missing LA in any of the fill. BEER YOGA is really a thing? DNK LEAH or PROSIT which crossed the learning moment of the day for me, that there is another person by the name of IDRIS. RED APE was also unfamiliar. I’m a HET, but didn’t know I was referred to that way. A nice way to start the day though, a not too tough puzzle from Zhouqin, and a detailed write-up from Splynter, thank you both.
ReplyDeleteTook 18:51 today to fill in the __st square.
ReplyDeleteI didn't know the French writer, the Bavarian toast (prosit), the Creole cook (Leah), "Hets", that burkas were spelled with a "Q", the lentil dish (dal), or Today's Actor (Damson Idris) and/or his show/movie. Also, I associated "Washington estate" with the state of Washington.
FIR. For me this was quite a workout. I was so focused on solving that I completely missed the theme. Even filling the reveal didn't help since I failed to read the entire clue for Mardi Gras city. Silly me.
ReplyDeleteThere were several unknowns for me, such as allele and elote, but the perps saw me through.
Overall, although somewhat hard, an enjoyable puzzle.
" I failed to read the entire clue for Mardi Gras city. Silly me."
DeleteNeither did I.
Is "Patti lifting her leg to leave her mark on the puzzle" an acceptable slur for this blog?
ReplyDeleteDuh! I FIR but had no clue about the NO-LA until Splynter's explanation. I didn't need to read the entire clue for 130A to get NOLA, and if you solved the puzzle from the newspaper like I did, "Mardi Gras city nickname" was at the very bottom of the page and the rest of the clue was at the top. Speaking of NOLA, how would anybody from out of town know LEAH Chase. The family's restaurant, Dooky Chase's, is not known for its food. It is a hangout for black politicians and hanger-ons. Like the original Chris Steak House was for white politicians. Ruth Fertel bought it and became Ruth's Chris Steak House. The politicians would hang around and let somebody else pick up the check.
ReplyDeleteTARO flavor. Never knew that
ADHD-Focalin sounded like Ritalin, so I guessed ADHD.
RAWR- sounds made up and I had to change PURR to RAWR
My original "Strip in the kitchen" was BACON, not STEAK
"Snowfall" and Damson IDRIS are both unknowns. And Idris crossed the unkinown PROSIT.
HETS- I'm really getting tired of the alphabet-pronoun descriptions
ATS-no idea about that one; I don't use X, Instagram, TikTok, or any of those timewasters.
TWO STAR Rear Admiral. Didn't know that. My late next-door neighbor was a ONE star admiral. Five houses the other direction, Rob was a ONE star general.
ELOTE and Cotija- perps for that one.
Mt. VERNON- We visited it this past Monday on our visit to D.C. because all the other museums were not open, thanks to our wonderful Congressmen. But just before we pulled up close to our hotel, which is two blocks from the Air & Space Museum, the police closed off the street. Two gangbangers decided to shoot at each other, with one receiving 4 bullets in the arm and leg. Another bullet went through the window of a tourist van at the hotel (Holiday Inn Capitol Hill) and hit the building. We were less than 100 feet from the garage entrance to park the car and couldn't go in until the police cleared the street. I drove around the block and parked on the street between FEMA and Dept. of Ed. Got in the garage a few hours later.
A bit of a workout for me, I got the theme because I know NOLA from many previous crosswords. And I knew it was called The Big Easy. But I never made the connection with "Easy Does it." thank you for splainin Splynter!
ReplyDeleteWait a sec, did I miss something? Did Patti change someth8ng? (Ref: left her mark, above)
Anywho, I did the puzzle because:
Also, parsing it crosseyed, here's my interpretation of NO (in) LA...
Musings
ReplyDelete-As I moved steadily through the puzzle, I didn’t really pay much attention to the gimmick but CAESARS PA(LA)CE slapped upside against my head. What fun! I even enjoyed going back through to see what C.C. had done to generate this idea.
-I went right by the reveal and needed Splynter to tie it into the title.
-Perennial NCAA FB powers have been joined by perennial LOSER Indiana in the ratings this year
-My fav guitar LICK is this intro being faked by Marty McFly
-I had Focalin’s? target being ACNE and ACHE before ADHD
-Tom Brady and the Patriots broke Atlanta Falcons’ fan's hearts in Super Bowl LI by scoring 19 pts in the 4th quarter
-David Karp had MWAHAHA crossing RAWR in his Saturday 8/9/25 puzzle. It was not well received but he apologized for it in a note to me. :-)
-Our ex-neighbors now live in TEMPE where it is only going to be 88F today
-USED: My DW has now given Goodwill a lot of her Christmas and Halloween stuff as she continues paring
-My neighbor’s dad in his classic car
-CHIQUITITA is Spanish for “little girl”. Here is a great Swedish group singing a song in English with that Spanish title
-Me too, Splynter, on IDRIS crossing PROSIT
-Splynter, you’ve got the guitar backwards. Don’t tell me you’re a left-handed organ technician too! :-)
C.C. serves up a fun Sunday that was not quite as easy as the title suggested. I thought the answers would have "EZ" either added or deleted. But she cleverly kept me in suspense until the last clue, when it all fell into place. Good one!
ReplyDeleteFav clue was for TONKA; least fav answer was TREADED, which aside from racing slicks, describes all tires. Even bald ones have some tread.
Great job, Splynter, starting with The _os _ngles Times building and all the way down (and across). Lotsa good stuff on an extra large review!
I like your lefty SG. I once saw a photo of Elliot Easton's (lead guitar from the Cars) lefthanded collection, the largest in the world. Except the magazine printed it backwards and it looked like a bunch of "normal" guitars.
Easy does it? Pretty tough for a Sunday! I needed the last entry to understand that there was NO LA in the starred answers, and did not get the Big Easy reference until Splynter 'splained it. I agree with Splynter about the crossing Naticks of PROSiT and iDRIS; I left a blank space there. C.C., your puzzle was clever and defeated me today. Splynter, I enjoyed the review, and appreciated the Mythbusters test of the Five-Second Rule. The upshot: keep the floor squeaky clean, or don't eat anything you've dropped on it!
ReplyDelete69A is a CSO to moi (at age 22). I was a “3L” when the Beatles landed in NYC.
ReplyDeleteHand up PROS?T/?DRIS cross was evil and spoiled an otherwise enjoyable puzzle. Was that Patti or CC?
ReplyDeleteHow absolutely wonderful to get a C.C. puzzle on a Sunday! I was just absolutely thrilled to see this, and although I've had to struggle a bit to get myself through it, I found it delightful and just loved it. So thank you, C.C. And thank you for your helpful and delightful commentary and pictures, Splynter.
ReplyDeleteWell, C.C. gave us so many interesting CLUES in this puzzle, that she made me aware of our month when I finally sensed that that Bavarian beer festival might be taking place in October, and that the taproom pose might be a BEER YOGA. There were other interesting food references to things like TARO, and that YOLK in Quindim (whatever that is?), and the PROTEIN in Tofu. Lots of interesting geography too--I wish I had time to track them all down. But it's time for me to put on my APRON and prepare some lunch.
Have a lovely Sunday, everyone.
Definitely a plus to get a CC puzzle on Sunday. Very well constructed. One gripe, I didn't like "allele" crossing "het". I'd never heard of either one. My guess is that Patti did it. I guessed the E. Took awhile due to incorrect entries. When things don't fit right you know something is screwed up. Thanks for subbing Splynter. Always a nice recap.
ReplyDeleteHola Whew! This was a tad crunchier than the usual Sunday puzzle. Thank you for the workout, C.C. No, Splynter, there is no other substitute for IDRIS ELBA!
ReplyDeleteCHICA used to be slang but I believe it is now accepted as standard for "girl". Nina is a small child. Time to go. I hope your Sunday has been wonderful. Outstanding weather here!
I think this was one of C.C.’s best constructs ever! Really clever hook, and clues just misleading enough to give one more than a few “DOH!” moments. I’m also kind of wondering, is BEERYOGA real or just a gimmick? Is it like, if you lose your balance, y’gotta chug a mug? (Sounds self-defeating, if ya ask me…). And I always thought cartoons were on paper and thus had panels, not cels like animation; maybe I’m just being too pedantic…
ReplyDeleteLoved the content in your recap, Splynter! Did you actually find the photo of the _os _ngeles Times building like that, or did you do a PhotoShop job? Either way, it was brilliant for C.C.’s theme.
Since you’re obviously a player (and lefty, no less!) here’s a question for you: isn’t B# actually C? I’ve been playing guitar since I was 10, but know absolutely zilch about music theory (I can barely read a lead line) and always wondered. When I blow my nose, I comment that it’s in C flat 🤣.
Cool SG, btw 🎸
SFO is to OAK like LAX is to BUR; avoid the formers like the plague! When I flew for my gigs, I’d refuse to be booked out of LAX; Burbank is 12 minutes from my hacienda, and TSA there takes half that most days. I hear that Oakland is a similar experience.
Ahhh, felt — it works for any spin on the ball!
Had a chance to drive a Lotus Espirit at Road Atlanta years ago…but at 6’4” I didn’t fit in the bloody thing! Bummer.
Anyway, great fun today from both of youse — thanks!
====> Darren / L.A.
Oktoberfest is mostly in September, no?
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