google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Sunday October 26, 2025 Adam Landau

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Oct 26, 2025

Sunday October 26, 2025 Adam Landau

Theme: "FOUR OF A KIND" - Each theme entry contains four words that share a same ending sound. 

22. Expensive streaming ad error?: RICH TWITCH PITCH GLITCH.

36. Carrier for casino winnings?: BLACK JACK BACK PACK.

56. "Apparently, it's better not to dye your hair"?: THEY SAY STAY GRAY.

82. "Masala tea is getting so expensive," e.g.?: SKY HIGH CHAI SIGH.

96. Tie-dyed quilt?: DEAD HEAD BED SPREAD.

117. Shooting star?: QUITE BRIGHT NIGHT LIGHT.

I think this is Adam Landau's LA Times debut. Congrats, Adam! 

It's been a while since we saw this type of full-on rhyming theme. A tough feat to pull off cleanly with fun clues.

Across:

1. Palindromic address: MADAM.

6. Around: ABOUT.

11. Taylor-Joy of "The Queen's Gambit": ANYA.  She also voices Princess Peach in "The Super Mario Bros. Movie".

15. Prelude to a kiss?: I DO.

18. Classic Camaros: IROCS.

19. Beatles drummer: RINGO. Sir Richard Starkey.

20. Appearance: MIEN.

21. Ghost calls: BOOS.

26. Northern Nevada city: ELKO.

27. Carded at a club, casually: ID'ED.

28. The Emerald Isle: EIRE.

29. Dwelling for una familia: LA CASA.

30. Knitter's medium: WOOL.

32. Oft-fried vegetable: OKRA.

33. Father: SIRE.

34. Edebiri of "The Bear": AYO. It means "Joy" in Yoruba.

44. Ballet studio support: BARRE.

46. Feels bad about: RUES.

47. LAX info: ETA.

48. Actor Astin: SEAN.

49. Streetwear designer Marc: ECKO. He wanted ECHO in the first place.

50. Ingredient amt.: TBSP.

51. Change beds?: RE-PLANT. Garden beds.

55. Guatemalan gold: ORO.

59. Playground retort: AM NOT.

61. Wander: TRAIPSE. Aimlessly. 

62. Duplo maker: LEGO.

63. Rifts: SCHISMS.

65. Meadow: LEA.

66. Sault __ Marie: STE.

68. Digital art hosted on a blockchain: Abbr.: NFT. Non-Fungible Token. 

70. 84-Down edge: RIM. 84. Basketball target: HOOP.

71. Attracted by: DRAWN TO.

75. Lhasa __: APSO.

77. Albuquerque minor leaguer: ISOTOPE. Learning moment for me.

81. Like some wine barrels: OAKEN.

86. Mario Kart avatar: MII.

87. Most sore: ACHIEST. I got jabbed five times the past 3 weeks. The first was the worst, the spot got swollen immediately. The infusion nurse then took a mulligan. That spot remained purple for over 2 weeks.

89. "I heard you! Enough!": OK OK.

90. Plot measure: ACRE.

91. "¿Cómo __ usted?": ESTA.

93. Solo's son: REN.

94. One who walks the walk: DOER.

95. Slightly off: ASKEW.

102. Tagging symbols: ATS.

103. Cones' counterparts: RODS.

104. Travel option: RAIL.

105. Fall pile component: LEAF. Just had some rain. Most of the pretty leaves in our neighborhood are gone.

107. Charcuterie meat: SALAMI.

110. Bad habit: VICE.

111. Big __: Red Sox nickname: PAPI. He was just David Ortiz when he was a Twin.  

114. Corleone played by Marlon Brando: VITO.

121. Liberate: FREE.

122. Hunger (for): LONG.

123. Abated: EASED.

124. Fantasy Football domain: YAHOO. I like this new clue angle. 


125. Caribbean vacation souvenir?: TAN. Ha. 

126. Manchego sources: EWES. From Wikipedia: It's a cheese made in the La Mancha region of Spain from the milk of sheep of the Manchega breed. It is aged between 60 days and 2 years. 


127. Takes in a text: READS.

128. __ nous: ENTRE.

Down:

1. Bog down: MIRE.

2. Pomegranate seed: ARIL. I always love arils on all the Thanksgiving dishes.

3. Waterfront laborer: DOCKWORKER.

4. "Gesundheit" prompt: ACHOO.

5. Colorado hrs.: MST.

6. Lacking precipitation: ARID.

7. More than a nibble: BITE.

8. Like most recorded music from the 1990s: ON CD.

9. "Hate it!": UGH.

10. Midwest capital: TOPEKA.

11. California Zephyr operator: AMTRAK. Scenic.

12. "Love it!": NICE.

13. Slangy assent: YEH.

14. Like St. Paul's Cathedral: ANGLICAN.

15. Itty-bitty bit: IOTA.

16. Ob-gyns and ENTs: DOCS.

17. Org. concerned with employee well-being: OSHA.

21. Curl targets: BICEPS. Someday Splynter will show his. 

23. Estate document: WILL.

24. Texter's qualifier: IIRC.

25. Morning songbird: LARK.

31. U.K. honor for Naomie Harris: OBE. Order of the British Empire. She's been in a few Bond movies.


32. 60-Down, minus the champagne, for short: OJS. 60. Bottomless brunch drinks: MIMOSAS.

33. Skewered Thai dishes: SATAYS.

34. Help a bad actor: ABET.

35. Luxury boat: YACHT.

37. "We have the meats" chain: ARBY'S.

38. Swears: CUSSES.

39. Didn't throw away: KEPT.

40. Lugosi of "Dracula": BELA.

41. Forever and a day: AEONS.

42. Ricochet, in billiards: CAROM.

43. Nautical speed units: KNOTS.

45. Majestic pronoun: ROYAL WE.

50. Knock softly on: TAP AT.

51. Deli bread: RYE.

52. Festive beverage: EGGNOG.

53. Undergrad lecturer: PROF. 113. 53-Down degs.: PHDS.

54. Surfing site for the 2024 Olympics: TAHITI.  It's part of France. French Polynesia.

57. Toyota minivan: SIENNA.

58. First Hebrew letters: ALEPHS.

64. [I'm a frog]: CROAK.

67. "Ariel" voice actor Diggs: TAYE. He made his debut in "How Stella Got Her Groove Back".

69. Heart: TICKER.

71. Like the Capitol building: DOMED.

72. Confident poker action: RAISE.

73. Curly-tailed guard dog: AKITA.

74. Irish-themed casino on the Vegas Strip: O'SHEA'S.

76. Heed the theater warning bell: SIT.

78. "Jersey __": MTV reality show: SHORE.

79. Stir up conflict: PICK A FIGHT. Great fill.

80. Everglades wader: EGRET.

83. Granola bar brand: KIND.

85. Chops down: HEWS.

88. Trustworthy: CREDIBLE.

92. Around $8 million, for the Super Bowl: AD RATE. Imagine the money Budweiser has spent on Super Bowl ads.

94. ISP option: DSL.

95. Gator follower: ADE.

97. Where the heart is, proverbially: HOME. Our home is the only home I've lived in the US.

98. Myers-__ personality tests: BRIGGS.

99. A pop: EACH.

100. Keto adherent, perhaps: DIETER. Both Bill and Margaret were on Keto for a while. Then Margaret's blood sugar dropped too low. 

101. Landed: ALIT.

106. For the birds?: AVIAN.

107. Room meas.: SQ FT.

108. Vibe: AURA.

109. Bank claim: LIEN.

110. Bygone video app: VINE.

111. Leaning tower locale: PISA.

112. Like good balsamic vinegar: AGED.

115. Asgardian Avenger: THOR.

116. Plains people: OTOE.

118. Excel line: ROW.

119. Scot's "I'd rather not": NAE.

120. Soap-making chemical: LYE.

C.C. 


21 comments:

Subgenius said...

Besides the weird clue
for “kind” I didn’t have too much trouble with this fun puzzle.
FIR, so I’m happy.

desper-otto said...

Good morning!

Some of the themers were real stretches, but the multi-rhymes were impressive. Enjoyed your debut, Adam. Thanx for recapping it all, C.C.

Jinx in Norfolk said...

FIR, but circa->ABOUT, oh ok->OK OK, han->REN, cups->RODS, deed->WILL, and imho->IIRC.

Eastern Kentucky is very proud of its own Jean Thomas, AKA The TRAIPSin' Woman. Here's a PBS tribute to her.

With AMTRAK and RAIL, I think we have a new-new choo-choo YAHOO doing the clueing today.

DOCKWORKER, because longshoreman was too long and stevedore was too short.

I traded up from DSL to cable internet many years ago. This month I fired cable and hired fiber (fibre for C-Eh!) Much better performance at 2/3 the cost.

I don't remember the VINE app, but I do remember Banyon Vines. IT loved it, users hated it.

Myers-BRIGGS received undeserved credibility back in the day. It was a fun exercise, based on the human instinct to pigeonhole people. (The old joke goes "there are two types of people: those who categorize people, and those who do not.") But the inventors were not educated in the field, and the process has been panned by many experts.

Thanks to Adam for the fun Sunday workout. Congratulations on your debut. Hope you come back often. And thanks to CC for the interesting review. Sorry to read about the difficulties you had with your infusions, especially the first one.

YooperPhil said...

After faltering on yesterday’s puzzle it was nice to get back in the win column with today’s very enjoyable solve. Not much floundering on this one, a pretty much top to bottom FIR in 32:16. The top spanner gave away the theme and that definitely helped fill some unknowns, AYO, ECKO, TAYE, BRIGGS, ISOTOPE (odd name for a team, and I haven’t LIU yet to see how that originated), VINE, and of course the ever popular digital art, NFT. I knew OBE but not the honoree. Last fill was a WAG at EWES and I wrongly thought Manchego must be WOOL. Thanks Adam for your puzzle, congrats on your LAT debut, impressive that it’s on a Sunday! C.C. thanks for explaining it all, hope they are all done with the jabs!

John M27 said...

FIW. Way too many proper names, many of them obscure. More than one social media/internet abbreviation is more than one too many. Not a fan of “referential” clues (traipsing off to another part of the puzzle to find a related clue---maybe tolerable for a printed puzzle, no fun on-line).

And maybe a future constructor/editor pair can strive to have ELKO and NATICK cross. And did I mention the obscure proper names? OKOK already.

KS said...

FIR. Except for the plethora of proper names, this was a fun Sunday challenge. There were a few clues that I thought were a bit of a stretch, but nothing too severe.
I got the gist of the theme very early on and that helped a lot.
So overall a quite enjoyable puzzle.

Anonymous said...

Took 16:11 today to say g'day.

I didn't know today's actress (OBE winner Naomie Harris) or the streetwear designer (Ecko), but I knew today's Spanish (la casa). I had "curses" before "cusses."

Husker Gary said...

Musings
-A fun, helpful gimmick where I pretty easily earned a “got ‘er done”
-Unknown, but no matter: NFT, MII
-The Omaha Storm Chasers (Royals) play the Albuquerque Isotopes (Rockies) during the summer
-DOER: Candidates bill themselves as one of these and then bureaucracies hit them
-Every LEAF from my neighbor’s dying ash tree has fallen and none of ours have started
-A old George Carling line: “Hundreds of longshoremen walked off the docks today. Rescue operations continue around the clock.”
-MST covers about 25% of America’s land mass but has less than 7% of its population
-NICE as fill is pretty straightforward but not necessarily when Nice is in the clue…
-Joann is on a “clean out the basement” binge. She is now RUING how much stuff she has KEPT
-Somehow my daughter got the idea I like EGGNOG which I do not. She still brings it every Christmas to surprise me.
-My house is worth about $1.77/SQ. IN.
-Granddaughter’s new job involves research into the prospect of expanding the use of nuclear energy. The company is flying her out to Alamogordo, NM where the ISOTOPE U235 was put to destructive use in WWII

Anonymous said...

A nice walk in the park to start my Sunday. After seeing the pattern of the first themer, it was easy to drop in random letters once a small toehold was gained in the subsequent ones.
That, in turn, provided a head start on the related perps.
Overall, an enjoyable puzzle.

Monkey said...

Well, this was fun. Admirable effort getting all those rhymes in.

I’ve been to Sault Ste Marie when I visited wonderful Mackinac Island. Many years ago my sister had a Lhasa APSO that I called the mop.

I encountered many unknown names like ANYA, AYO, ECKO, ISOTOPE, PAPI, TAYE and NFT and IIRC ( I had first entered IMHO). But there were enough perps to allow me to FIR.

Thank you CC for that recap.

Sophia said...

I dunno … KIND (brand name) makes my fave of its ilk - YES❣️ to dark chocolate 😊🤩

Sophia said...

Thanks to Adam, and CC. Fun puzzle, and fun read❣️ And, I am in awe of constructors and how your minds work! Thank you for your creations! I enjoy all the blog reactions too❣️ I learned a bit, and knew a fair bit. Needed to check/finish a few by perp-ing (is that a fair neologism?). Anyway - off now to Sunday visits. TTFN

Sophia said...

reading this back - is it a bit “preachy”? I’ll post it anyway - on the off chance someone might be interested: As a psychologist AND Jungian analyst, I could go on for a good while about the Myers Briggs tool. Mostly grumpy and negative -for misreading and misrepresenting (and over-valuing) Jung’s early theory of typology. And - I have to say - there is a way in which - once terms are defined and measured (!ad infinitum!) - such a “test” does become “true” - if only - within its own defined reality. The test company has now such a vast store of responses of folks self-defining according to the terms’ defining that it has become its own “real”-ity. And it does seems to help some folks some times - especially for finding ways for different “types” to understand and appreciate each other, when forced to work together
😉😊 happy Sunday!

Big Easy said...

The most difficult 'four of a kind' was the first one, with TWITCH & PITCH. I've heard of Twitch, but that's about it.

AYO & The Bear, ANYA, ECKO, TAYE, O'SHEAS ( but easy to guess), Myers-BRIGGS, VINE, LEGO - Did I know those? Not really, but the perps took care of them.
MII and REN I learned from crosswords.

CrossEyedDave said...

Well, the theme kinda filled in a lot automatically. But there was still lots of little stuff around to cause much sussing. I.E.: the "T" in NFT crossing "t"icker for heart, took esp...

disclaimer, this is not my opinion of the puzzle

P.s. it also took me a half hour to find a copy of this picture that was not copy protected...

Lastly, Wander: traipse. In Australia this is called Waltzing Matilda...
and with that, I'm outta here...

Anonymous said...

Isotopes from Los Alamos, as in U-232 or another Uranium isotope.

Jinx in Norfolk said...

Sophia, I will say that the social use may be beneficial, and a fun way to break the ice at a social gathering of strangers. But I've seen it used to train managers as a shortcut to dealing with their employees. And I've seen it used in project management textbooks for similar purpose. I have two objections for managerial use. First, people change. They may give different answers on test day than they would have a week previously, or a year later. Second, due to its widespread distribution, folks may select their answers based on the profile they want to reflect. (I know I'm an ENFP from looking at the test previously, so how do I answer this question to reflect that?) I'll also add that the only shortcut I've ever found to effectively managing people is to get to know them.

NaomiZ said...

Adam's puzzle was a delight. Congratulations on the debut! The rhyming phrases were fun, and I'm glad they weren't all as hard as the first one.

I went wrong where Anonymous at 9:17 AM did, with CUrSES before CUSSES at 38-Down. Drat!

C.C., I'm sorry for the pokes and prods. Feel better.

Jinx in Norfolk said...

My favorite MiLB team name was the Savannah Sand Gnats, but there are plenty of other fun names.

Anonymous said...

The ELKO/ARIL/IROCS cluster in the NW is just absurd.

Acesaroundagain said...

The theme give away at the top helped the solve a lot. I enjoyed this one. Sorry about all the jabbing CC. Definitely no fun over and over. And thanks for the enjoyable recap.