google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Sunday December 21, 2025 Scott Hogan

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Dec 21, 2025

Sunday December 21, 2025 Scott Hogan

Theme: "BIG SHOTS" - Each common phrase that ends with a synonym for "big shot" is humorously rephrased so that the phrase now describes a literal standout in the industry named in the clue.

22. Big shot in the bulb industry?: LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT.

35. Big shot in the sci-fi awards industry?: HUGO BOSS.

42. Big shot in the paver industry?: BRICK CHEESE.

61. Big shot in the podiatry industry?: FOOTBALLER.

67. Big shot in the treasure-hunting industry?: FINDING GOD.

89. Big shot in the champagne glass industry?: FLUTE PLAYER.

95. Big shot in the cab industry?: RED BARON.

109. Big shot in the refrigeration industry?: COOLING SENSATION.

Hard to believe, but this is Scott's solo LAT debut. All of his previous puzzles have been collaborations. As Naomi noted in her last blog, "Hogan is a patent attorney in Michigan who has frequently teamed up with other constructors, most often Katie Hale."

67-Across is the only verb phrase in the set, but the clue fits it perfectly.


Scott Hogan


Across:

1. Béla Fleck's instrument: BANJO.

6. Pricey German imports: BMWS. We call BMW "Precious Horse" in Chinese.



10. Italian wine: VINO.

14. Chaps: LADS.

18. Not very approachable: ALOOF.

19. Source of a scoop: LEAK. Reporter's "scoop".

20. Overly caffeinated, perhaps: MANIC.

21. Social sci. major: ECON.

25. K: THOU

26. Henry VI's school: ETON. He founded Eton.

27. __ of Man: ISLE.

28. Luv: HON.

29. Take in: ABSORB.

31. Cards: WITS.

33. Squandered: BLEW.

37. Put on a pedestal: ADMIRE.

40. Fort __, Florida: MYERS. Spring training place for the Twins.

41. Wash and wear?: ERODE.  No laundry involved, Just good old-fashioned erosion.

44. Shrewd: CANNY.

45. Stocky antelope: GNU.

48. Green house?: BANK.  Also 39. Money makers: MINTS.

49. Trending: HOT.

50. Fabled messages: MORALS.

52. "If I were in your __ ... ": SHOES.

54. Withdraw, with "out": OPT.

55. Salty one: MARINER. And 57. Salty five: OCEANS.

58. Skills assessment: TEST.

60. Spots: SITES.

64. "Daaaaang!": OH SNAP.

66. Drawing (in): LURING.

71. Make fast again: RE-TIE. Not "quick" fast, but "secure".

72. Concert gear: AMPS.

76. Old sub titles?: U BOATS. German submarines.

77. Positively reinforces: REWARDS.

79. Shrill bark: YAP.

80. Home of the world's largest irrigation project: LIBYA. The Great Man-Made River Project. Learning moment for me.


81. Source of some travel reservations?: JET LAG. The doubt/reluctance meaning of "reservation".

83. Put away: ATE.

85. Arequipa's land: PERU.

86. Baton Rouge sch.: LSU.

87. Drywall supports: STUDS.

92. Battery terminal: ANODE.

93. Blah: STALE.

94. Edmonton NHL team: OILERS.

98. Folk-rock supergroup, familiarly: CSNYCrosby, Stills, Nash & Young.

99. Soapy residue in a sink: SCUM.

100. Come out: EMERGE.

101. Sanskrit honorific: SRI.

102. Ruler who commissioned the Taj Mahal, for one: SHAH. , Shah Jahan, the fifth Mughal emperor,


104. Slight advantage: EDGE.
 
108. Game that can only be played right-handed: POLO. Google AI: a rule implemented for safety to prevent dangerous head-on collisions between players using opposite hands on their strong sides, ensuring everyone stays on the same "side of the road," much like driving.

114. "Tell Mama" singer James: ETTA.

115. Per __: ANNUM.

116. Serpentine: EELY.

117. Place for a cross: STAND.

118. Show the way: LEAD.

119. Actor Postlethwaite: PETE. Don't know him.


120. Scandinavian capital: OSLO.

121. Plot inconsistencies: HOLES.

Down:

1. Hay bundle: BALE.

2. Came down to earth: ALIT.

3. Off-limits: NO GO.

4. Antihero played by Keanu Reeves: JOHN WICK.

5. Many times o'er: OFT.

6. Sprinkle with holy water, e.g.: BLESS. You can bless yourself when you enter or exit the church. 

7. Combo, say: MEAL.

8. Make a parting gesture: WAVE BYE.

9. Chicago WNBA team: SKY.

10. Like the subject of a Carly Simon classic: VAIN. "You're So Vain".

11. Gerund maker: ING.

12. Medical research org.: NIH.

13. Umbrella shape, typically: OCTAGON.

14. Does not disturb: LETS BE.

15. Sneeze sound: ACHOO.

16. Closers: DOORS.

17. Gives the cold shoulder to: SNUBS.

20. Asks for more catnip, perhaps: MEOWS.

23. Advanced, as gadgets: HI-TECH.

24. "Infected be the air __ they ride": Macbeth: WHEREON. Not many ways to clue this archaic word. 

30. Part of some security checkpoints: BODY SCAN.

32. Vex: IRK.

34. Jean Valjean's story, familiarly: LES MIS.

35. Get well: HEAL.

36. Large garden planters: URNS.

37. Head monk: ABBOT.

38. Fall in folds: DRAPE.

40. Descriptive piece of HTML code: META TAG. Working behind the scenes. 

43. Zeroing (in on): HOMING.

44. Holiday singer: CAROLER.

45. Tender prelude?: GOAL. Preceding "tender": goaltender.

46. State bird of Hawaii: NENE.

47. Space race initials: USSR.

51. Third in a ring: REF. The referee is the third man in the boxing ring. 

53. Wife of Hägar the Horrible: HELGA.

56. Shows up for duty: REPORTS.

57. Four Tops singer Benson: OBIE. Just learned this from doing another puzzle.


59. Until midnight: TODAY.

60. IRS tracking info: SSNS.

62. Render obsolete: OUTDATE.

63. Blue, in Burgundy: TRISTE. Sad "blue". .

65. Had to pivot to plan B, say: HIT A SNAG. Keep pivoting!

67. Out of room: FULL.

68. Wading bird in Egyptian art: IBIS.

69. Japanese-Peruvian fusion chain: NOBU. Signature dish: miso-marinated black cod.


70. Third key in a reboot sequence: DEL. Ctrl+Alt+Del.

71. Sleeve style: RAGLAN.

73. "Poppycock!": MY EYE.

74. Prep chef's knife: PARER.

75. San Antonio team: SPURS.

78. Enters the room airily: WAFTS IN.

81. Grand Slam Tokyo discipline: JUDO.


82. Paradise: EDEN.

84. Multiple ages: EPOCHS.

85. Tree on South Carolina's flag: PALMETTO.

88. "In summary ... ": TO RECAP.

90. Government Grant?: ULYSSES. Capitalized Grant.

91. Simu of "Barbie": LIU.

92. Overseas: ABROAD.

93. Hanging in the theater: SCRIM. For curtains.

95. Put off: REPEL.

96. Really get into a role: EMOTE.

97. Airline that grew from a crop-dusting operation founded in 1925: DELTA

99. Panasonic subsidiary: SANYO. Literally "three oceans".  San = Three in both Chinese and Japanese. 

101. Swivel around: SLUE.

103. "Inferno" setting: HELL.

105. Tuning knob: DIAL.

106. Out of the park: GONE.

107. Pulls the plug on: ENDS.

110. Individual: ONE.

111. Province between Man. and Que.: ONT.

112. Prefix with cache: GEO.

113. Bat wood: ASH.

C.C. 



14 comments:

Subgenius said...

Some of the clues
were fun. I liked “salty one” for “mariner” for example. However, I did not care for the answer of “foot baller” and the “B” was a lucky WAG.
In general, even though I neglected to read the caption of this puzzle, I didn’t have too much trouble with it.
FIR, so I’m happy.

desper-otto said...

Good morning!

There were plenty of clever, misleading clues in this one. I liked it. Needed my Wite-Out to change CAGEY to CANNY and the Z to S in LES MIS. Excellent Sunday debut, Scott. Thanx for the explication, C.C.

Jinx in Norfolk said...

FIR, but asti->VINO, wags->WITS, elk->GNU, praises->REWARDS, eat->ATE, CDC->NIH, nono->NO GO, john wilk->JOHN WICK, cdc->NIH, and leaves->LETS BE. Phew!

I also struggled with FOOT BALLER. The rest of the muckity-mucks are generic, but I don't remember hearing BALLER in any context other that sports. I don't think you would want to call your CEO a BALLER, but you could call him/her a HESAVYWEIGHT (maybe,) a BOSS, a CHEESE, a PLAYER, a BARON, or a SENSATION.

I've always seen the play abbreviated LES MIz, but LES MIS seems more correcter.

From today's clue it seems to me that OBIE should be an award for "best Motown artist" rather than a theater award.

As CC wrote, SANYO means "three rivers." In this case, the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian. But Panasonic ceased using the name 14 years ago, only two years after it bought the company. Kinda reminds me of these lyrics of that wildly popular, but critically panned (even by the band members) Starship hit We Built This City:

Someone's always playing corporation games
Who cares, they're always changing corporation names
(Rolling Stone declared it to be the worst song of the 1980s, but I've always liked it. The song, not Rolling Stone.)

Thanks to Scott for the fun Sunday workout, and to CC for 'splainin' it all.



Irish Miss said...

Good Morning:

I agree that much of the cluing was clever and fairly misleading and I also thought the theme was fresh and, with a couple of exceptions, executed well. I think Baller is an outlier, as is Sensation because, IMO, neither one connotes being a Big Shot in the same vein as the other themers do. In retrospect, Baron doesn’t fit either, being simply a noble title. Despite these quibbles, this was a fun and enjiyable solve, with none of the obscure or questionable fill that Sunday grids usually rely on.

Nice solo debut, Scott, congrats, and thanks, CC, for the concise and well-explained theme and grid.

Have a great day.

Irish Miss said...

Sorry, Enjoyable.

Jinx in Norfolk said...

I forgot to mention this! The days are now getting longer! I know that next month is the statistically coldest month, but at least there'll be more daylight. I'm moderately influenced by SAD.

Anonymous said...

Took 16:50 today.

Gotta run. Those Costco items aren't going to magically appear at my house.

Nidehululi said...

Had trouble getting started on this one. Favorite misleading clue was 81 across: Source of some travel reservations

billocohoes said...

IM, BARON applies as the 1890’s robber baron era of American industry. More recently August Busch, owner of the STL Cardinals and Budweiser, was often described as a “beer baron”

KS said...

FIR. For me this was quite a workout. The cluing was tricky and yet very clever.
I got the theme early on with light heavyweight and that helped a great deal with the solve.
However I'm not really fond of footballer as one of the theme answers. It seemed a bit off to me.
But overall an enjoyable puzzle.

John M27 said...

Quite a workout, but FIR and no major complaints. Favorite entry---BIG CHEESE. Least favorite---RED BARON (don’t care for word stubs in clues).

Random comments: Wow, Canadian provinces are big; OH SNAP, I must have accidentally wandered into a British crossword puzzle; MY EYE, more commonly used three letter word didn’t fit; SCRIM?, RAGLAN?; and finally (with a hat tip to old Vaudeville)---When Bruce Jenner went to his travel agent to plan a trip, the agent asked “What is your preference,” since he didn't suffer from JET LAG he replied "I’d like to be ABROAD.”

John M27 said...

Oops, that should be BRICK CHEESE.

desper-otto said...

I think of the robber barons of the late 19th century. They were definitely bosses.

desper-otto said...

Oops. I hadn't read this far down when I replied to I-M.