google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Friday, Feb 27th, 2026 ~ Sara Muchnick & Doug Peterson

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Feb 27, 2026

Friday, Feb 27th, 2026 ~ Sara Muchnick & Doug Peterson

 CROSS [ I ] EYED

Iron Maiden's Cross-Eyed Mary cover - I grew up with these guys,
but if you prefer the Jethro Tull orignal . . .

This is the second LA Times collaboration between Sara & Doug; Moe had the other one two years ago.  Mr. Peterson is a regular, and I found this link to a crossword blog from Sara - I like the phrase she used to 'celebrate' her first published NYT puzzle.  We have a "sort-of" visual theme to the puzzle, as the sans serif font of the LA Times crossword makes a capital "I" look like a vertical line; when rotated, or "rolled", it becomes a hyphen.  Took me a bit to suss, but once "EYE" did, "EYE" smiled - a fresh, thought[ I ]provoking theme -AND - there are NO other wandering "I"s in the entire frame.  Well done, constructors~!  A standard grid, a handful of names, no circles, a balance of twenty 3LWs, and, having added in the "I"s, the 'straight definition' themers become unique;

17. *Inlay material, often: MOTHER [ I ] OF [ I ] PEARL - mother-of-pearl

28. *Not cooped up: FREE [ I ] RANGE - free-range

49. *Flexible: OPEN [ I ] ENDED - open-ended

61. *Lightheaded ones?: JACK [ I ] O' [ I ] LANTERNS - jack-o'-lanterns

37. Silent display of skepticism, or a phonetic hint for making sense of the answers to the starred clues: EYE ROLL - that is, one takes the "I"s in the themers and "rolls" them 90° ( either clockwise or counterclockwise, it works the same πŸ™„), and now they make sense~!

But Wate, There's More ~!


ACROSS:

1. After-dinner drink: DECAF - Oh, coffee; "EYE" went straight to alcohol 😜  A rolled-eye [ I ] Easter Egg in the clue, too~!

6. Players who may have to start over many times: NOOBS - short for 'Newbies', one who is unfamiliar with whatever they're involved in; here's my Revit T-shirt ( it's a drafting inside joke )

BIM = Building Information Modeling - essentially 3D CAD

11. Cannabis compound: THC - TetraHydroCannabinol - what gives the "buzz/high" of smokin' the (Cross-eyed) mary jane, weed, ganja, pot, herb, grass, dank, chronic, etc.

14. Tickle: AMUSE -  some of the slang for marijuana does tickle me

15. Home of the first jet bridgeO'HARE - EYE love clues/answers where EYE learn something new

16. Peach or plum: HUE - it was fruitless trying to fit FRUIT πŸ™„

20. Opposite of very: A TAD - Atwurd

21. "iZombie" setting: SEATTLE - no clue, but perps gave me all but the two "E"s

Never heard of this bizarre [ I ] but intriguing [ I ] concept for a show

22. Lip __: BALM

25. "The Phoenician Scheme" director Anderson: WES - name #1; more from IMDb

27. Surgical tool: LASER

32. Boris Johnson, for one: TORY - no ( British ) politics at the Corner~! Name(ish)

33. Keeps (off): FENDS

34. Treats embossed with flowers, dots, and dashes: OREOs - well, it's not just one OREO today


36. Blue: SAD - another color con clue 

40. Cash back?: COW - "Cash Cow"

Dunk your Oreos in your cash cow "output" πŸ™„

43. Leavening agent: YEAST

44. Lorna of literatureDOONE - NOT the cookies; name #2


46. Typical choice: GO-TO - e.g., when EYE get Chinese, my "go-to" choice is General Tso's Chicken

52. Totally believed: ATE UP - believe it - EYE "ate up" my egg roll, too πŸ™„ ( and a Thusday dupe )

54. Rx writer: DOC

55. Price points: TAGS

56. Moseys: STROLLS

59. "Poppycock!": "TOSH~!"

66. Short-horned bighorn: EWE - Another rolled-eye [ I ] Easter Egg in the clue, plus a change-up from the "ewe"sual πŸ™„

More from the San Diego zoo

67. Key in: ENTER

68. Acrobat's platform: ADOBE - oh so very clever; not a performing acrobat - Adobe Acrobat - the PDF managing software; EYE was stumped for a while

69. "¿QuΓ© __?": Spanish greeting: "TAL~?" - EspaΓ±ol, which filled via perps, but still doesn't look right; the literal translation is "¿~What [is] such~?"

70. Run-down: SEEDY - rolled-eye [ I ] Easter Egg in the clue

71. Rub it in: GLOAT - EYE did not have to reach out to the other Corner bloggers for help with an explanation of the theme; EYE figured it out all by mEYEself~! 😁 πŸ™„


DOWN:

1. Reservoir creator: DAM - a dam good way to start the Down clues πŸ™„

2. Punk subculture: EMO - three-letter "music" genre~? = EMO

3. Share of the profit: CUT - members of Ocean's Eleven got an even cut of . . .

"My advice to you is this [ I ] run and hide"

4. Fearing disgrace: ASHAMED - slighly meh; feeling seems to work better

5. Stanza units: FEET - LINES and IAMBS were just inches too long . . . πŸ™„

6. "Ask someone else": "NO IDEA." - what do you call a blind Bambi~?  no "EYE" deer πŸ™„

7. Exultant cry: "O-HO~!"

8. Bumblers: OAFS

9. "The Marvels" star Larson: BRIE - the EYE in her name was my one error; EYE had BREE, ergo, did not get my "ta-DA~!".  It took a while to find my mistake; once I grasped the theme and changed the vowel - "O-HO~!" name #3

Got started in acting at six years old - her EYEMDb πŸ™„

10. Floral leaf: SEPAL - had this one two weeks ago

11. "For real?": "THAT SO~?"

12. Starter, e.g.: HURLER - baseball reference; one of the team's pitchers

13. Sticks in the refrigerator: CELERY - Ah.  Not BUTTER

18. Cutesy growl: "RAWR~!" - this is becoming acceptable, I guess

19. Divisions d'une nation: ETATS - Franwche for states ( of the nation )

22. Pair sharing halves of a heart charm, informally: BFFs - Best Friends Forever

23. Environs: AREA

24. Furnish temporarily: LEND - I had LOAN, which is {teeth-suck} close, but 50% wrong

Close, but, definitely wrong

26. Expressed contempt: SNORTED

29. "10-4": "I SEE." - eh, a bit meh, but a rolled eye [ I ] in the clue again

30. Miracle-__: GRO - another rolled-eye [ I ] Easter Egg clue; EYE ordered new house plants through Amazon; they sat on my cold February porch for a few hours - but it looks like they'll be OK . . .

They came with this packet - is it plant food~?  No labels or instructions on the thing

31. Serpentine creature: EEL - ASP would work, too

35. Ye __ Shoppe: OLDE

38. NBA legend Ming: YAO - name #4, crossword staple

39. Predict-ability?: ESP - Har-har; ExtraSensory Perception - another rolled-eye [ I ] in the clue

40. Musical conclusion: CODA - and Led Zeppelin's "last" studio album

Bonzo's Montreaux
Jimmy Page's "trick" to get the steel drum sound

41. Earth's pull, for short: ONE G - one (unit) of gravity

42. Settles down, in a way: WEDS - I used to blog WEDs

43. "Just checking in": "YOU OK~?"

45. Discreetly, in slang: ON THE DL - the "Down Low" - not a unique fill

46. Chemistry lab fixture: GAS JET - "HAL" doesn't like this; EYE kept getting GAS KET suggestions


"I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid I can't do jet"

47. National Gallery of Canada locale: OTTAWA - nailed it, but six-letters Canada~?

48. Old Toyota subcompact: TERCEL - had it, took it out; crossing 'go-to' eluded me at first

My buddy Mark in Florida called his the "turbo Tercel"

50. Public figure?: NOTARY - that person at the bank, e.g., that can attest to your signature

51. Symbol: ICON - Dah~! Not RUNE

53. Works at, as a trade: PLIES

57. Solitary: LONE

58. Venue: SITE

60. __ beetle: STAG - EYE am not posting a picture of this insect 😝

62. Took charge: LED - Zeppelin - no, wait . . . we had that already πŸ™„

63. Joey of fiction: ROO - Winnie the Pooh, and Kanga's "Roo"


64. "Space Jam" org.: NBA - Not a basketball fan, but I did know this

65. Fully taken care of: SET - win the lotto, and you're "SET" for life~!

Splynter

Spent a few minutes looking for my error
Grid Flow a very low 17.4

12 comments:

Subgenius said...

The constructors
may think their puzzle was clever, but I don’t. I think it was strained and artificial. And I missed “Brie” and “cow” (the latter’s clue which I would nominate for the worst one of the month) which means a FIW for the third day in a row. Will this misery ever end?

Lemonade 714 said...

Sub-g sorry you did not like this puzzle but enjoyed immensely. I also think this was an ideal creation for Splynter to explain, great job Richard. We have a second Doug P. offering this time a collaboration with a relative noob who is in the creative business.
It took me much longer to finally accept the Is which had to be correct based on the perps. BRIE LARSON has been in the news a lot lately and I would think appreciating her legs would mandate know her name.
Lots of music which also is perfect for Splynter. ROSE MCIVER the actress from New Zealand who starred in iZombie a cute bizarre show before became one of the leads in the US version of GHOSTS. A quick question for all, do you stir your coffee clockwise or counterclockwise?
Happy Friday and March is almost here. Have fun all.

desper-otto said...

Good morning!

D-o noticed the stray i's in the themers, but didn't try to roll 'em. Maybe I should'a read the full reveal clue. Interesting theme concept, but a little to cerebral for me. It took an alphabet run to get that W in COW. The division where I worked was a CASH COW for the mother corporation. Until it wasn't. Hand up for BUTTER before CELERY stalked in. Thanx for the amusement, Sara and Doug, and for the eye-filling expo, Splynter.

desper-otto said...

Lemonade, black -- no stirring required.

Subgenius said...

Basically, I don’t follow
“popular entertainment” at all.
In fact, I barely watch television, except to see the local news for the weather report first thing in the morning.
If that puts me at a disadvantage in doing “current” crossword puzzles, so be it!

Anonymous said...

Amen

Jinx in Norfolk said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Jinx in Norfolk said...

FIR, but miami->OHARE (miami has too hot and too rainy, OHARE has too hot, too cold, too rainy and too snowy I FOR THE WIN!) Also pie->HUE, rowr->RAWR, and sneered->SNORTED.

Large businesses evaluate their lines of business in two dimensions - market size and market growth. There are GO-TO strategies for each of the four possible results:
- High Market Share, High Growth - Stars. Aggressively maintain competitive advantage.
- Low Market Share, High Growth - Question marks. Invest to increase competitiveness. If it works, these become stars. If not, they eventually become dogs.
- High Market Share, Low Growth – Cash COWS. Provides cash to develop Question Marks.
- Low Market Share, Low Growth – DOGS. If profitable or part of larger strategic plan, keep. Otherwise, consider divesting or closing.

My inability to spel came in handy today, not knowing that the woman’s name isn’t usually speld the same as BRIE cheese.

Like D-O, I like my (yesterday’s) JAVA just as it comes out of the Keurig.

Thanks to Sara and Doug for the challenging Friday grid. My favorite was “Acrobat’s platform” for ADOBE. And thanks to Splynter for the fun review, especially no eye deer. My kind of awful humor.

TTP said...

Thank you, Sara, Doug and Splynter

D'oh!

I got the solve easily enough, but did not understand that the stray Is were supposed to be rolled to become a hyphen. Not that I didn't try. I just didn't see that. Splynter, thanks for figuring that out for me.

It would have been really neat - for online solvers - if upon correctly completing the grid, that those letter Is would have momentarily emboldened and rotated to make the hyphen, and then rotated back. I know the HTML can be coded to do it, but it is beyond me.

Of course, the down answers wouldn't make sense when they appeared as hyphens. Pen and paper solvers wouldn't see it.

In Spanish I in high school, we learned "como esta usted?" (formal) and "que tal?" (informal) for How are you? "Que pasa?" for what's happening. Thank you Miss Morris.

Splynter, yes that looks like an organic fertlizer. Probably fish emulsion and chicken manure, which is common. After that, you can get get 10-10-10 fertilzer. That's normally your best bet for new yard plantings and for reestablishing plants that you've divided or relocated. Get them in the ground in early spring.

My big SPR project is to dig up, divide and relocate 11 large hostas from the front of the house (where they are getting too much direct sun and reflected heat) to the back and side of the house. At the same time, I'll be digging, dividing and transplanting about the same number of tall sedum to where the hostas were. They love sunlight and also do well in poor soil (but not wet) conditions. Like hostas, tall sedum is extremely low maintenance, but more "showy" than hostas.

My back is already hurting as I think about the amount of work involved.

KS said...

FIR, but a giant ugh for this puzzle. There were so many things not to like. Several proper names that were somewhat obscure. And when I took chemistry we called that a bunsen burner. I've never heard it referred to as a gas jet.
And the theme (eye roll here) was quite contrived. In fact I had to come here to have it fully explained.
Overall not an enjoyable puzzle.

Anonymous said...

This puzzle---->Eye roll.

Anonymous said...

Awful.