Themeless Saturday by Amie Walker
Amie Walker is an attorney/current stay-at-home parent to three little girls in Chandler, Arizona. When she’s not thinking about puzzles, she loves spending time with her family and singing in her women’s choir. Here is a picture of Amie on Jeopardy on 3/28/22. The bottom of this puzzle was an tough sledding for me where gaming slang, three obscure names and my not remembering the spelling of CAESAREAN and its "AE" grouping. 😖 Sigh, I had one bad cell but let's move on and I'll give you my other 45. Ponder: MUS(E)ings.
1. Franciscan philosopher who inspired the main character in "The Name of the Rose": OCCAM -
William of Baskerville, the protagonist of Umberto Eco’s 1980 novel, The Name Of The Rose,
is a fictionalized, homespun homage to the real-life 14th-century philosopher William of OCCAM. He embodies OCCAM's "razor" principle, using logic, empiricism, and skepticism to solve mysteries, reflecting the transition from medieval dogma to modern scientific thought. You're welcome!14. "Care to explain?": WHAT IS THIS.
16. Grand: THOU - Slang for thousand
17. Squeals: NAMES NAMES - Our crossword regular Elia Kazan NAMED NAMES at the McCarthy HUAC committee and Hollywood remembered.
22. Possible start of a folktale: LEGEND HAS IT.
24. Volga __: Turkic people in western Russia: TATARS.
34. Ninny: GOOSE - I am prone to call our kitty a silly GOOSE
35. Jalopy: HEAP.
36. "Newhart" production co.: MTM and Rhoda, Lou Grant, WKRP, Hill Street Blues, St. Elsewhere, among many others.
37. Guy who made one helluva deal?: FAUST - My first thought was not of Goethe but of the musical Damn Yankees where Joe Hardy sold his soul to beat those Damn Yankees.
38. Western Australian port: PERTH.
39. Like things?: SIMILES - I was very happy to enter SIMILAR first.
41. Lofty nests: AERIES.
42. Get drinks on tap, say? MOBILE ORDER More
46. Swear off?: BLEEP - Theater critic Kenneth Tyan was on BBC and is given credit for the first person TV to get BLEEPED. He innocently used the word f*** as a synonym for intercourse.
47. Young dog: PUP.
50. Some, in Spanish: UNAS - Le regalaré UNAS rosas rojas para el DÃa de San ValentÃn. (I will give her red roses for St. Valentine's Day)
51. Challenges for some gamers: BOSS LEVELS.
53. Some flatfish: SOLE.
54. Takeout deliveries?: CAESAREANS - I am still upset with myself for not knowing the odd spelling of CAESAREAN. It would have unlocked the stack of these three female names below I did not know:
41. Writer __ Rogers St. Johns: ADELA ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
43. Actress Elizabeth: OLSEN - ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ She was in six of these movies and said it ruined her chance at other roles
44. Journalist Maria who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2021: RESSA ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ She won for her efforts in the The Philippines
1. __ up to: OWNS.
2. Masala __: CHAI.
3. Stay out for the night: CAMP.
4. Grabbed a bite: ATE.
5. Welcome patio features on a hot day: MISTERS - Awnings did fit but alas...
6. Washington, but not Jefferson: STATE - Forming a new state is largely a symbolic idea by people of northern California and southern Oregon who feel they are ignored by Sacramento and Salem.
8. Real-world experiment: FIELD TEST - Farmers are constantly FIELD TESTING new methods in their, uh, fields.
9. Burro: ASS.
10. "Took you long enough": AT LAST - After waiting 86 years for Red Sox to win the World Series.
13. "__ yourself": SUIT.
15. Smooches in a lorry, say: SNOGS - or a quick kiss in a lift on the way up to a flat to watch the Beeb on the telly
21. Animals with righting reflexes: CATS.
I also thought of our constructors stretching out TERMS for clever cluing 😀
25. "We don't have all day": ANY TIME NOW.
26. Magic spirit, say?: TEAM MORALE 😀 The NBA TEAM the Orlando Magic
28. Some on the JV squad: SOPHS.
30. Home on the water: HOUSE BOAT.
37. Move like a hummingbird: FLIT.
38. Eyes: PEEPERS - Jeepers, creepers...
40. Nile birds with curved bills: IBISES.
47. Cider choice: PEAR - This is also called Perry and is made from fermented pears



































I’m here, but haven’t
ReplyDeletefigured out what to say yet. I’ll let you know.
“NAMES NAMES” would be a fitting title for this puzzle, as there were 10 by my count, of which I knew none off the top of my head, 7 I didn’t know at all, and one that was vaguely clued as ‘actress Elizabeth’. Somehow I was able to overcome all that and FIR w/out help in 30:16. The most troublesome area was the same as HG, the three adjacent ones in the south, crossed by MOBILE ORDER, which took me some time to cipher out (clever clue for that, as was the clue for CAESAREANS). Thanks Amie for the mental workout, and to HG for the excellent review!
ReplyDeleteWay too many names for me
ReplyDeleteDnf
FIR but didn't like all the obscure names. Even for a Saturday it was a bit much
ReplyDeleteThis was a great puzzle, except there weren’t nearly enough clues referencing obscure pop figures that nobody has ever heard of. Now that I’ve gotten that snark out of my system, I can start enjoying Superbowl Weekend. Go Pats!!!
ReplyDeleteDNF, filling 52, 50 correctly. Better than my Saturday average.
ReplyDeleteTimely ACL fill, with Lindsey Vonn yesterday completing the "training run" that was required for Olympic contestants. My question is whether the US team has a better chance with her skiing with her ruptured ACL than with an uninjured alternate, if there is such in Olympic competition. Maybe it's just Lindsey, go or no go.
When I worked in Phoenix I used to have lunch on a company patio equipped with high power MISTERS. Most summer days were hot, arid, and with little or no wind, so the patio felt like it was air conditioned. It didn't work well in any kind of breeze, or in the humid conditions of the monsoon season.
I got HOUSEBOAT easily enough, but I think H.Gary's picture is of a dock house, not a HOUSEBOAT. Here's a video tour of one couple's HOUSEBOAT on lake Sidney Lanier just north of Atlanta. (It's a better lake for HOUSEBOATing than it was for my Catalina 38 sailboat Checks in the Mail, which required almost 7 feet of depth.)
Thanks to Amie for the workout, and to H.Gary for the explanation.
Took 16:17 today to luckily navigate crossing several intersections in Natickville.
ReplyDeleteI knew the Actress of the Day (Olson), despite the poor clueing my neighbor YooperPhil pointed out, but I didn't know the writer (Adela) or journalist (Ressa). YP's other point about the title of this puzzle being "names names" is spot on.
The Saturday staple of a foreign food wasn't bad today (chai), but I find the clue for a simple word, "terms," to be very annoying, even on a Saturday. Almost any clue that includes "voice actor" is a bad one, with today (Gael) being no exception. What's next, a clue involving the gaffer of a well-known movie? And yet, the worst clue of the month is currently a tie between "Volga __: Turkic people in western Russia" and " 'Newhart' production co."
I got it, but at a certain point, it required a
ReplyDelete“red letter” run.
So I wouldn’t call this a win.
FIR. Considering it's a Saturday puzzle, I didn't find this as hard as most. There were way too many proper names for my liking. How ironic that there was an answer called "names names".
ReplyDeleteLast to fall was goose for ninny as clued. The crossing with two proper names seemed a bit unfair.
So overall a so-so puzzle.