google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Friday, Jan 30th, 2026 ~ Zachary David Levy

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Jan 30, 2026

Friday, Jan 30th, 2026 ~ Zachary David Levy

E

N

O

R

D

STRIKE


The previous LA Times "Z-D-L" puzzle was one I blogged on Wednesday back in November - the Monty Python and the Holy Grail "just a flesh wound" masterpiece - if you happen to be a fan . . . Today Mr. Levy's construction features four themers that have a synonym for "speak" going UP the Down fills, but defined as its homonym; I was perplexed as to why I could not get the answer for 9D to gibe with the crossings, until - the V-8 can.  Not too difficult for a Friday, IMO, but we get a bit bogged down with the names again; a standard 15 x 15 grid, more than double the number of four-letter words to 3LWs, no circles, and missing only the "Q" for a pangram *.  The themers and reveal; 

4. Fast service: SSERPXE MAIL - Express is spelled "up" in the grid

9. Seize-the-day type: OG GETTER - here's where I sussed the theme, as I knew it had to be "GO"

27. Many a land-grant university: ETATS SCHOOL - State, going "up"

40. Hogwash: RETTU ROT - Utter, going "up"

25. Comment to a low talker, or what is found in 4-, 9-, 27-, and 40-Down: SPEAK UP - here's the collection of scenes from the "low talker" episode of  Seinfeld

She appeared in court for the finale, too

         's
         e
     t   r  e
t    i   e  r
u   a  h  o
B W T M

ACROSS:

1. Sticks (out): JUTS - AND it's crossing - 1D. Talked and talked: JAWED ( and a theme Easter Egg )

Now there's a juts/jawed combo

5. Site of an 1836 siege: ALAMO - starting with a geo name, #1

10. Got 100% on: ACED

14. Latin 101 word: AMAS

15. Enter again, as data: RELOG - a bit meh

16. Opera star: DIVA

17. Rouse: WAKE

18. Greg Maddux's record 18: GOLD GLOVES - I know so little about baseball, I started with NO HITTERS, but it didn't fit - name #2

20. "Self-Reliance" essayist: EMERSON - ah - Ralph Waldo; learning moment; more here - name #3

22. __ urchin: SEA

23. Sorta: "ISH" - many crossword clues/answers of late have drifted too far towards "ish"

24. Challenges, as a credit card charge: DISPUTES

26. Neutrogena product: T-GEL

It "appears" you need glasses to use the product

28. Crosses (out): X'ES - to "E" or not to "E"; that is the question - "X's" looks correct to me; but then again, "X'ed" seems OK

29. Stone fruit center: PIT - I've never eaten a stone - are they any good~?  Sounds crunchy

31. Lean: TILT

34. Department with direct marketing campaigns: SALES

37. __ noire: BETE - Frawnche, literally "black beast"; i.e., one's bane or bugbear

38. Côte d'__: AZUR - plus Frawnche; "azure ( blue ) coast" = French Riviera

39. Teen dance: PROM

40. Put on again: RE-AIR - pump in again; re-air

Now how's she gonna pedal in those shoes~?

41. Actress Garr: TERI - I liked her in "Young Frankestein" - name #4

Now listen very carefully . . . 

42. "Casablanca" role: ILSA - name #5

43. Edmonton CFL team: ELKS - no clue; Canadian Football League - more here - geo name(ish)


44. London's neighboring county: ESSEX - geo name #6

45. Terse denial: "NOT I."

46. Letter after sigma: TAU

47. __ Technica: tech news website: ARS - filled via perps and a WAG

48. Stick together: CLOT

50. Conveyances also known as tricycle rickshaws: PEDICABS

The Deluxe Model

55. Energizer size: AAA - ooof; not AAs

57. Run smoothly: HUM

59. Magenta kin: FUCHSIA - spelling moment for me - I had FUSCHIA

60. Spaceflight company based in Kent, Washington: BLUE ORIGIN

Captain Kirk was on a flight - the story here

63. Stalwart trees: OAKS - I could argue that all trees are "stalwart", by definition

64. In case: LEST

I like this 

65. Eye-shaped windows: OCULI - most of what I find online is round, not "eye" shaped; the Wiki

When I hear 'oculus', I think of the Pantheon

66. Possessive pronoun: ONE'S - e.g. "gird one's loins"

67. Org chart topper: EXECutive

68. Fundamental principle: TENET

69. Countess's title: LADY - Here's Tom Jones, now 85yrs old, married for 59(~!) years until the passing of his wife and lifetime love Melinda in 2016; I grew up listening to his baritone voice, as my parents were born & raised in England - more on Tom from Wiki here

"Never Had A Lady Before"
from "Rescue Me", his 1979 "disco" album; so many great songs

DOWN:

2. Savory quality: UMAMI

3. Views: TAKES - Friday cluing; as in "what's your ___ on this~?" but pluralized, meh

5. Jargons: ARGOTS - the "lingo" of a (usually secret) social group - the plural is again a bit 'meh'

6. Sierra __, Africa: LEONE - geo name #7

7. "__ set": ALL - vague; Friday

8. Online admins: MODS - moderators

10. Fuss: ADO

11. Makes more sophisticated: CIVILIZES - a weapon from a more "civilized age"

Your father's lightsaber

12. Festive nights: EVES - what are festive days~?  Adams~?

13. Run without saying goodbye, perhaps: DASH

19. Gamer's woe: LAG - think online gaming ( or someone taking too long to play a word in Scrabble )

21. Goes after, in a sense: SUES

30. Terse confirmation: "IT IS."

32. Entice: LURE

33. Cereal coveted by a silly rabbit: TRIX - name(ish) . . .

. . . are for kids~!

34. Whirl: SPIN

35. Folk singer Guthrie: ARLO - name #8, crossword staple

36. Fruitless endeavor: LOST CAUSE - stone fruitless = LOST QUARTZ 😜

37. Dracula player Lugosi: BELA - Here's Bella - one of the other trainers at the gym, wearing the shirt I made for my trainer Brett - that's him on the shirt; he and some of the other members are always mocking me for calling the gym equipment "tools" - hey, I do "work"(out) with them . . . name #9


44. Writer/illustrator Carle: ERIC - Didn't recognize the name - #10 - filled via perps - but I do recognize his work; I see he passed in 2021 at age 91.  His website


47. Marketing space: AD UNIT - I tossed in AD PAGE

49. "What do we have here?": "O-HO~!"

51. IRS convenience: eFILE

52. Mat position: ASANA - yoga~! yoga~! yoga~!

Animal House announces toga party

53. Trained for part of a triathlon: BIKED - good WAG; running and swimming are the other two events

54. Not very respectful: SASSY

55. Up to the task: ABLE

56. Ken's "Jeopardy!" predecessor: ALEX - I watched Mr. Trebek growing up; have not watched any Jennings episodes - name #11

58. Maze runners: MICE - Dah~!  I put in RATS

61. Brief "Blah, blah, blah": etc.

62. Squirt __: GUN - I bought a pair that actually have a pretend, Glock-like "slide" 

You lock the slide back to expose the fill hole, thus "loading" it


Splynter

Grid Flow 43.2

* Which "Q" would you prefer~?

The "Q"s of James Bond, 007

12 comments:

  1. When something
    doesn’t make sense, I’m enough of an “old hand” at crosswords to try looking at it backwards. That led me to my “Aha!” moment with the first themer and it was off to the races from there, although I did have a little trouble spelling “fuchsia.”
    Anyway, FIR, so I’m happy.

    ReplyDelete
  2. FIR, but amat->AMAS, rekey->RELOG (ick,) and floor->ASANA. Needed the reveal to finish the theme clues, and the rest came easily (for a Friday.)

    The key to Greg Maddux's excellence as a fielder was how he finished his delivery. Most pitchers finish their follow-through with their side toward the plate. Maddux finished with his front square to the plate, much like any other infielder.

    Never heard of AD UNIT. Looks like it has to do with the annoying crap that gets in the way of the web page we actually want to see. Maybe if I had heard of ARS Technica I would have known that.

    Thanks to ZDL for another fun puzzle. And thanks to Splynter for another fine review. Yeah, I don't think that comely lass will be pedaling her, er, bike all over town in those shoes. Or that skirt, for that matter.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Good morning!

    My WAGs were not golden today. I was right there with Jinx on AMAT and REKEY. And I'm such a sports fan I thought GOLD GLOVES were awarded for boxing. We do watch Jeopardy! nightly at 5:20 so we can watch the 5:30 news via DVR without commercials. Speaking of Jeopardy!, here's a moment that Ken will never live down. I enjoyed ZDL's uplifting puzzle and Splynter's expo.

    ReplyDelete
  4. FIR. I first entered amat because the sequence of 4D starting with "ss" seemed unlikely at that moment. Confusion set in and I needed the reveal to have it make sense. But it took a while for me to see that the second part of the long answers was the opposite, going down not up. Very tricky, but very clever.
    Overall an enjoyable puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  5. K ept going for 13:05 today until I got the "Congratulations".

    L ooked wrong for a while, until the gimmick revealed itself.

    A ctress of the Day was a familiar one (Teri).

    T GIF!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Good Morning:

    Sorry, folks, but I’ll defer to my good friend Thumper this morning.

    Splynter, you did a fine job explaining the theme and pointing out the pluses and minuses. Thanks for your time and effort.

    Have a great day.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I thought, “Oh, this is easy for a Friday”, until I started stumbling all over the up and down tricks making my head SPIN. I finally figured out the gimmick, but 9D didn’t make any sense even thought the perps said so.

    I thought someone had forgotten the -en on GOLD. I’m only familiar with the boxing term.

    My one error was leaving MeaL for MAIL because I entered ILSe not ILSA. Bummer. Yes, FUCHSIA is not easy to spell.

    Thank you Splynter for your fine review and keeping track of the various proper names.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Nice job, ZDL, on today's puzzle--I thought it was clever and well-constructed.

    The Atlanta Braves had perhaps the most fearsome starting pitching rotation in history: 18-Across's Greg Maddux, plus John Smoltz and Tom Glavine. All three are now in the Hall of Fame. A generation earlier, when the team was the Boston Braves, for a time their starting pitching staff was mediocre, with the exception of two outstanding pitchers, Warren Spahn and Johnny Sain. So wags came up with what the pitching rotation should be for a particular series: "Spahn and Sain, and then pray for rain."

    Thanks, ZDL, for a pleasant Friday diversion, and Splynter for your usual entertaining and helpful guidance.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies

    1. The way they play ball now, I doubt you will see any pitcher approach the number of wins that Warren Spahn, Maddux, or Clemens recorded. There probably won't be another 300 game winner either.

      Delete
  9. 99% a really fun puzzle with a couple challenging sections, but it has to be said: "Utter Rot" is the stretch of all stretches, just a complete gibberish answer. I liked the puzzle but that's a rough one for a themer. Like my general rule of thumb is that if you google an adage like that and 3 of the top 5 responses are "crossword clue" then you might need to go back to the lab haha. In any case it was a 12 minute FIR so maybe I should just stop complaining and enjoy an enjoyable solve ^_^

    ReplyDelete
  10. After trying to fill 4D, starting with either STERPX or even SSERPX, I thought it was a LOST CAUSE today. I knew the cross perps, except AMAS or AMAT, were solid.

    9D, OG GETTER, was my last fill. I knew ALAMO and GOLD GLOVES were solid but REKEY and SOAP wouldn't allow it, and T-GEL opened it up. MODS? I thought those guys were in the 60's.
    ERIC was an unknown proper name today. No other problems.

    AD UNIT- an unknown term but an easy after ALL the perps were done.
    BLUE ORIGIN- I remember them from my Kennedy Space Center visit last year.

    ReplyDelete
  11. The fill on this one was horrible.

    ReplyDelete

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