google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Wednesday, Dec 24th, 2025 ~ Leslie Young

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Dec 24, 2025

Wednesday, Dec 24th, 2025 ~ Leslie Young

NOT "16"

...and not "8" - she needs better math skills

Leslie Young, née (oooh, I got to use it for real~! ) Leslie Rogers, was part of this collaboration here at the LA Times, and has been published in a few other places as well.  I really liked the theme today - a solid, non-reveal type that has multiple examples of the common 4x4, "four by four" term we use day to day.  All the themers are unique, cosisting of always-hard-to-use, 12-letter fills ( or, 4x3 if you like ), in a standard grid, and none of the trite trappings - NO circles (yay), just a few names, a few abbrs, and nothing vague or "meh".  The FOUR themers;

19. Where to find a sturdy 4x4: THE HOME DEPOT - my "second" home; A 4x4 in this instance actually starts as lumber four inches by four inches square, but once dried and planed, measures 3-1/2" x 3-1/2" - and a judge upheld this "nominal" terminology.  I used a short one for the center leg of this table I made as a Christmas present for my brother.

My first try at epoxy, too

26. Where to find a caloric 4x4: IN NOUT BURGER - there are no locations of this west-coast franchise beyond TX ( TN is next ) as of 2025 - a 4x4 is this mouth-watering construction

My trainer would tell me this is my entire daily caloric intake in one sa'mich

42. Where to find an adventurous 4x4: OFF-ROAD TRAIL - the "classic" definition of a 4x4, which is a 'truck' with all four wheels powered; nowadays, there's also "all-wheel drive" - A.I. says this is the original four-wheel drive - the Wiki


Great sales pitch imagery

51. Where to find an athletic 4x4: RUNNING TRACK - I had to look this one up, as I am not "athletic", per se; it's the 4 x 400 meter dash - more from this website

An'  A w
!          a
~         y
o G  eW


ACROSS:

1. Gift wrapping need: TAPE - For all those "last minute" Christmas types, of which I was once a part, you now have less than 24hrs to minimum safe distance . . . 

5. Sound in "The Addams Family" theme song: SNAP - Twice, preceded by; Du-Du-Du DUM


9. Dramatic haircut: CHOP

13. Jazz legend Fitzgerald: ELLA - name #1

14. Award presented at the World Science Fiction Convention: HUGO - name #2 - I am a voracious reader, and I switch between Crime/Detective/Mystery & Sci-Fi to change it up, so I knew what a "Hugo Award" was; can anyone recommend an author from any of these genres~?  I am looking to read someone new...

15. Origami bird: CRANE


16. Fortnite's company: EPIC GAMES - Learned by doing crosswords; more here

18. Noodle dish: RAMEN

21. "You __ to be there": "HAD"- wouldn't be Wednesday without a Monday dupe . . . .

22. Tug-of-__: WAR

23. Endless expanse: OCEAN - wouldn't be Wednesday without a Monday dupe . . . .

30. Shadowboxes: SPARS

33. Disapproving chorus: BOOs

34. Brew that may be hazy: IPA - getting to be a cliché fill now

35. Lines that are often blue: URLs - like this

36. Out of it: LOOPY - I have been there....

38. Glitz: GLAM - Two weeks in a row with "GLAM" for me

39. Stock quote?: MOO - cattle = stock, cows 'say' moo - clever clue/answer

40. Took a tumble: FELL

41. In one's __: emotional: FEELS - never heard this phrase; the "F" was my last "eff-in" fill

46. Drummer twice inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame: STARR - Ringo, and I learned today the second induction was as a solo artist in 2015; name #3

And previously as the drummer for The Beatles

47. Subj. for an aspiring polyglot: ESL - polyglot = knowing or using several (English as Second) Language(s)

48. Faux __: PAS - Foe Paaah, Frawnche, "false step"

55. Baggage __: CLAIM - I have not been in an airport for over 20yrs, and I don't travel much anymore - two weeks ago, I had some questions from Cornerites; unclefred asked about the pipe organ job - I left in February as I felt I was not being given the chance to grow into the company - and then they changed owners in June, as well ... see also 31D.

58. Eight-sided solids: OCTAHEDRA - Dungeons & Dragons fans know . . . .


59. Provokes: BAITS

60. Backup camera's view: REAR

61. Send out: EMIT

62. Quick and nimble: SPRY

63. Blend together: MELD

64. Dull: FADE - the verb instead of the adjective


DOWN:

1. Pearly whites: TEETH

2. Omega opposite: ALPHA - it's all Greek to me . . . .

3. Practiced, as a trade: PLIED - I am learning much as I ply(wood) my new trade as a handyman member of Home Advisor on the Angi app; just finished this bar for a client 

Home Depot 1x oak boards and 3/4" oak plywood - a learned a few "bar" things, too

4. Per person: EACH

5. Spiritual healer: SHAMAN - good WAG on my part

6. Dos, por ejemplo: NUMERO - Español, 'two', but I didn't suss the 'No.' connection

7. Like black vinegar: AGED - I have never heard of 'black' vinegar

8. Billy Porter series about 1980s ball culture: POSE - name #4, totally unknown to me; "ball" refers to ballroom culture, the Wiki on that; here's Billy Porter's Wiki

9. Result of a blast from the past?: CRATER

That'll leave a mark....

10. Cordon bleu meat: HAM

11. End of a countdown: ONE - Give it a week, and "Yule" understand this clue/answer

12. Write: PEN - I am still gathering ideas for my own Sci-Fi book/screenplay

15. Early spring bloomer: CROCUS - I found out ASTER "comes up", er, short

17. Met Gala garb: GOWNS - Dah~!  Got suckered by the lack of  'plural' in the clue

I'm down with the gown~!

20. NOLA sandwich: PO'BOY - I am reading James Lee Burke's Robicheaux series - the main character Dave is an alcoholic cop who goes to AA, set in Lousiana. ( CSO to Big Easy & Hahtoolah ), name(ish)


24. Quick and nimble: AGILE

25. Annapurna's country: NEPAL - filled via perps

In the center

26. W-2 org.: IRS - Death & Taxes, or, phonetically, the "hearse and the irse"

27. Horseshoe-shaped fastener: U-BOLT

28. Spinner: TOP

29. Merino males: RAMS - Motorized Machines, too

I worked with a guy who liked to point out "Ram in front, Dodge behind"

30. Japan's national sport: SUMO - does make sense

31. Tenured employees, for short: PROFs - ...and Prof M asked two weeks ago why the "~"~?  It started waaay back in texts - I like to see an "!" stand out from a "1", "or an "l", and it just went from there

32. Floating in the air: ALOFT

36. Get the hang of: LEARN

37. Word before some language names: OLD - Old Enlgish, Old Norse, e.g.

38. Insole option: GEL

40. Subreddits, e.g.: FORUMS - should this be forA~?  Or am I being too forMAL~?

41. Sordid matter: FILTH - "I read this disgusting filth. Twice."

43. Triple play, for one: RARITY - Did C.C. know this fact~?

44. Vacation cottage, often: RENTAL - Ah.  Not  A-FRAME - but 50% correct letter-wise

45. Realm in Norse cosmology: ASGARD - that's the "A" word I could not recall; name #5

48. "Love, Loss, and What We Ate" memoirist Lakshmi: PADMA - no clue, filled via perps, and I WAGed the last "A", since I misunderstood what "DULL" referred to at 64A.  Name #6

49. Pungent: ACRID - but I nailed this one

50. Walk on water, essentially: SKATE - har-har....

NY Rangers and the NHL's highest-paid goalie, Igor Shesterkin~!

52. Convention: NORM - here's a simply complicated explanation

53. Slushy drink: ICEE

54. "Finding Nemo" setting: REEF - A-ha; OCEAN was in the grid already, and SEA was too short

55. Network with an eye on television: CBS


56. F1 unit: LAP - Formula One racing

57. Yoga ball filler: AIR - I think the girl in this GIF gets some air . . . .


Wednesday Splynter, Signing Off . . . . see you next year~! 

Grid Flow was a low 26.0

Merry Christmas, Festivus, and Happy New Year~!

12 comments:

Subgenius said...

“Get” 4x4….repeat 4 times.
Interesting puzzle, and
not too difficult. I solved it in good time.
FIR, so I’m happy.

desper-otto said...

Good morning!

Almost got retired in Florida. Finally corrected RUNNING A RACE and things came together. [Whew] Back in my ute there was the "drive" -- Four Wheel Drive and later just FWD -- company in the next town. It was a major employer in our area. Our town's fire truck was one of their products. PADMA was a WAG. The only Lakshmi I know is Lakshmi Singh, the midday news anchor at NPR. Thanx Leslie and Splynter. (How did you finish that bar top to make it "weather-proof?")

Tonight it'll be a quandary as to which DVD to watch: It's A Wonderful Life, The Sound Of Music, The Wizard Of Oz, or Die Hard. I know what my vote'll be.

Jinx in Norfolk said...

DNF, doomed in Florida. I had OCTAHEDRi and ACerb, which caused me to erase EMIT, pretty much sealing my fate.

DNK IN N OUT 4x4. Don't think it was on the menu in my SoCal days.

Never heard "in one's FEELS." Please don't let it catch on.

A sexist would say "I love it when girls try to talk boxing" - I'm glad I'm not one. When one shadowboxes, it is a solo practice. When one SPARS, one must have a partner. Good clues abound for SPARS, no need to drag out a clunker.

You HAD to be THERE is a great compilation of concert music by the late Jimmy Buffett. He would have turned 79 tomorrow. A Christmas baby.

Thanks to Leslie for the mostly-fun puzzle, and to Splynter for another fine review. I heard outgoing Cardinal Dolan say that the organ at St. Patrick's needs a $20 million makeover. Maybe time to get back into that business for one last project.

Anonymous said...

Jinx, even though I think you’re a different political “bent” than I am,
I must say that I always love your commentary! Always so thorough, witty and personally engaging!
Kudos!
- SubG

Bob Lee said...

If you're looking for something SciFi to read, try "Project Hail Mary" by Andy Weir (Author of "The Martian"). Movie adaptation coming in March.

KS said...

FIR. For me this puzzle was easy at the start and I had no trouble filling in the top, but as I went down the difficulty increased. The SE was the last to fall as I didn't know Padma. When skate appeared I was able to get the win.
So overall a so-so puzzle.

YooperPhil said...

I thought this was a little more difficult than an average Wednesday. Needed perps to fill about half the themers before I could figure them out, and had to work around the unknowns EPIC GAMES, ASGARD, and the never heard of OCTAHEDRA. Somehow PADMA came to mind from previous rare appearances in CWs. I liked the clue for CRATER. NUMERO would have come quicker if the reference was ‘uno’ and not ‘dos’. DW and I spend a lot of time on OFF ROAD TRAILs in our 4X4 Can-am side-by-side. Thanks Leslie for the nicely done puzzle and to Splynter for your detailed write-up. And also for putting this in my head “they’re creepy and they’re kooky……da da da dum 🫰🫰

Merry Christmas Eve to all who celebrate! 🎄

Ed M in Ohio said...

FIW, got stuck on "running a race" in SE. Grrr.

Irish Miss said...

GoodvMorning:

There was some crunch this morning, e.g., Epic Games, Asgard, Octahedra, but fair perps solved those challenges. Padma was a given considering my interest in the cooking shows. She was once married to the author, Salmon Rushdie. Talk about opposites attracting. I always enjoy this type of theme because there is a certain amount of creativity necessary to define the same word four different ways, all correctly but all diversely.

Thanks, Leslie, and thanks, Splynter, for the entertaining and informative review. Thanks for sharing your woodworking talents and craftsmanship.

Hope Santa treats everyone well!🎅

Anonymous said...

Re: mystery/crime authors etc. if you haven’t read anything by Michael Connolly, highly recommend. And there’s a wonderful author - an ex-pat living in Venice Italy- Donna Leon - who has written nearly 30 novels featuring Commissario Guido Brunetti that take place there. Also Jane Harper, Australian author.

Big Easy said...

Unknowns in the NE and SE made it a little crunchier than the usual Wed. puzzle. I really didn't know the Cordon bleu meat or the hair cut and RAM and CROP filled it until the Merino males, aka RAMS filled 29D.
Just about any blooming plant blooms in the spring, so CROCUS took a few perps. My camellias and azaleas bloom in December.

In the SE, I still don't see the connection between "Dull" and FADE; never heard of dull used as a verb. Not knowing much Latin, I was torn between OCTAHEDR-"A" or "i" before SKATE took over. PADMA took perps.

The 4X4 on a RUNNING TRACK is basically the MILE RELAY, where each runner runs a 400 meter (quarter-mile) LAP. At least horse racing hasn't gone metric. It's the only place you'll ever hear the word FURLONG.
I've been to an IN N OUT BURGER once and was told to order the "Double-Double" by a friend.

AGED and POSE only came by perps and guesses. Black vinegar and Billy Porter were unknowns.
"In one's FEELS"- never heard of that either.

I really don't get the Formula-1 racing. It's almost like fixed wrestling matches. They race on city streets where it is almost impossible to pass unless there is a wreck or a car ahead has engine trouble. The pole position car usually wins. But I don't watch INDY or NASCAR either, only the idiot street racers who pass me on the expressways.
Yoga Ball filler-AIR. What a dumb clue. What else would it be filled with, marbles?

Big Easy said...

If an organ needs a $20 million makeover, it's time to go electric. Pipe organs are like expensive mechanical adding machines or Rolex or Piaget watches. Huge prices for toys that require constant maintenance to keep running.
Timex's "takes a licking and keeps on ticking" is not a accurate as a $5.00 dollar-store watch. Neither is a Rolex.