google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Thursday April 39, 2026 Joseph A. Gangi

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Apr 30, 2026

Thursday April 39, 2026 Joseph A. Gangi

We interrupt our regularly scheduled puzzle for this special coverage. Joseph Gangi has been constructing for several years now, and this time he has delivered our morning paper with headlines that become attention grabbers to hook readers.


17. "Local Couple Makes a Commitment," e.g.: EXCLUSIVE REPORTWhen a couple decides to be EXCLUSIVE, it means they won't be seeing other people. It's a stepping stone between casual dating and a committed relationship.

27. "China Falls From Top Spot," e.g.: BREAKING NEWS. My favorite themer with a fun play on words with that country being in the NEWS all the time. Here, "China" is dishware BREAKING when dropped on the floor. 

48. "Final Finalist Finally Arrives," e.g.: LATEST UPDATE. LATEST as in the last one time-wise.

63. "Photographer Embraces Traditional Darkroom Techniques," e.g.: DEVELOPING STORY. DEVELOPING pictures the old-fashioned way.


A fun outing where most of the names were very common instead of obscure, and no reveler was needed. For a Thursday, this was pretty easy...plenty of "E"s but no "Z"s - almost a pangram! At first, I thought all the"X"s would play into the theme, but that was incorrect.


Let's see what's in the rest of the paper:

Across:

1. Gimli's weapon in "The Lord of the Rings": AXE. Grimli is a dwarf warrior, and a major character in Tolkien's fantasy trilogy.


4. Mine passage: SHAFT. Some miners get the elevator, others get the SHAFT.

9. Healthy side: SALAD. Unless it's loaded with excessive toppings and high-calorie dressings.

14. __ lunch: BOX. I don't remember having a lunch BOX. I guess we were a brown bag family.

15. Peninsular Arab state: QATAR. One of the few answers with a "Q" not followed by "U". These words are usually anglicized from other languages that do not use the English alphabet.

16. Act with feeling: EMOTE.

17. [theme]

20. Nephew of Donald Duck: LOUIE. Huey, Dewey and LOUIE are the triplet nephews of Donald Duck and grand-nephews of Scrooge McDuck

Huey (red), Dewey (blue), & LOUIE (green)

21. Word with tea and toast: TEXAS. TEXAS tea always reminds me of the theme song to The Beverly Hillbillies.

22. Diner slice: PIE.

23. Meat product with a museum in Minnesota: SPAM. I keep getting unsolicited emails to go visit it.

25. July's namesake: CAESAR. Julius CAESAR. His great-nephew CAESAR Augustus got the following month.

27. [theme]

32. Civil rights leader Wilkins: ROY. ROY Wilkins led the NAACP as executive secretary and director for over 20 years (1955–1977).


33. Emotionless: STONY. Emotionless: STOIC.

34. Olympic skater Cohen: SASHA. Not to be confused with Sacha Baron Cohen. 

Skater vs. Jester

38. Lotion additive: ALOE.

40. Carriers powered by pantographs and overhead lines: TRAMSA pantograph is a roof-mounted apparatus on electric trains, TRAMS, and trolleybuses used to collect electricity from overhead wires.


42. Early operating system: UNIX. My dear RightBrain was an early UNIX programmer who developed accounting software for small businesses. The real brain in the family!

43. Drink carelessly: SLURP. Meanwhile, I just SLURP and make a mess.

45. Puts one foot in front of the other: STEPS. And pretty soon, you're walking!

47. Conduit shape: ELL. Having worked with electrical conduit most of my life, I thought it's a tube shape, not how it is bent.

48. [theme]

51. Video meeting need: CAMERA. But not pants.


54. Cozy alcove: NOOK. A good place to curl up with an e-book.

55. Prefix with meter: ODO. ODO (by itself) is probably the weakest answer in the grid. An ODOmeter measures distance traveled.

56. "The Three-Body Problem" genre: SCI-FIThe Three-Body Problem is the first book in Cixin Liu's Hugo Award-winning Remembrance of Earth's Past science fiction trilogy. Volume 1 has been made into a TV series on Netflix.

60. "Cannot __": slangy expression of mock horror: UNSEE.

63. [theme]

66. Flared dress style: A-LINEAs the name implies, it's a dress that flairs like the letter “A” -otherwise known as "a dress" to me. I'm a modemuffela German colloquial term for someone who disregards fashion, typically wearing whatever they want, focusing on comfort, or having no interest in current trends.


67. Timed perfectly: ON CUE.

68. Cone-bearing tree: FIR. Cone-wearing dog - with fur. 


69. Disreputable: SEEDY.

70. Tandem pair: SEATS. On a bicycle built for two (unless you have a toddler).


71. Start of a giant recital?: FEE. This clue was my FAVE. 

The giant from Jack and the Beanstalk

Down:

1. Genesis brother: ABEL. Funny how all these early guys have 4-letters in their names.

2. Love letters?: XOXO.


3. "Did I just hear what I think I heard?": EXCUSE YOU.

4. Rodent proof?: SQUEAKS. Fun clue. Rodent-proof (with a hyphen) is something completely different.

5. Gives birth to: HAS

6. Bumping heads: AT IT.

7. Bestest: FAVE. Words like "bestest" are my least FAVE.

8. Predatory dino: T-REX. Dino is short for dinosaur, and T-REX is short for Tyrannosaurus REX, just like its arms. That's why it has trouble playing the piano. 


9. Goes back and forth: SEESAWS.

10. Psych (up): AMP.

11. Cereal shapes: LOOPS. They also make other shapes.


12. Open-air rooms: ATRIA.

13. Try to stop: DETER.

18. "Radical Optimism" singer Dua: LIPADua LIPA is an English singer and songwriter who describes her style as "dark pop."

Best New Artist Grammy in 2019

19. 5K, for one: RACE. A five kilometer RACE is just over three miles.

24. Baker's protection: MITT.

26. Genesis twin: ESAU. Almost a Biblical clecho.

27. Some undergarments: BRAS.  Some other undergarments: BVDS.

28. $2 worth of nickels, e.g.: ROLL. It costs the U.S. Mint 13.78 cents to produce and distribute a single nickel, thus this roll of 40 is worth $5.54. A penny for your thoughts?


29. Like Vikings: NORSE.

30. Swarming pests: GNATS

31. Citi Field MLBer: NY MET. From Major League Baseball's New York Metropolitan Baseball Club.


35. Leaves unnoticed: SNEAKS OFF.

36. Dagger handle: HILT.

37. Wheelbarrow part: AXLE.

39. Dashiell contemporary: ERLE. Dashiell Hammett and ERLE Stanley Gardner both wrote hard-boiled crime novels. They were egg-cellent.


41. Twirled: SPUN.

44. Pesto option: PARSLEY.

46. Marriage partners: SPOUSES.

49. Folded fare: TACO.

50. Word of warning: DON'T.

51. Musical endings: CODAS.

52. One-named singer whose surname is Adkins: ADELE

Who's your Grammy?

53. Theater showing: MOVIE.

57. NYSE investment opportunities: IPOS. An Initial Public Offering from the New York Stock Exchange.

58. "Whatever": FINE.

59. Highlander of ancient Peru: INCA. Highlander of ancient Loch: NESS.


61. Cleveland's lake: ERIE. Speaking of lakes, they never ask about the other Cleveland area lakes, like Wallace, Coe or Shaker Lakes. 

62. Brontë governess: EYREJane EYRE from the novel by Charlotte Brontë.

64. Frame : bowling :: __ : curling: END. And a split END may result from curling.


65. Tear down to the studs: GUT.

Be good. RB

8 comments:

Subgenius said...

Surprisingly,
not that difficult for a late in the week
puzzle.
The simplicity of this puzzle is evidenced by the fact that it needed no reveal.
FIR, so I’m happy.

desper-otto said...

Good morning!

Stumbled here and there with SNEAKS OUT/OFF, EXCUSE MOI/YOU, BVDS/BRAS. (Hi, Rusty.) Still, this came together in typical Tuesday time. Congrats, Joseph, and thanx to my fellow modemuffel, Rusty. (My comfort "uniform" of choice is jeans, polo, and sneakers.)

Jinx in Norfolk said...

FIR, but stoic->STONY, walks->STEPS, and (tandem) axels->SEATS.

I'm no chef, but I can't imagine pesto being enhanced by the addition of PARSLEY.

I also thought about all those four-letter names in the Bible. But there weren't all that many people back then. I'll bet they had two-digit phone numbers and three-digit social security numbers.

Thanks to Joseph for the fun Thursday exercise. I was (crossword favorite) at sea in the Northwest until I guessed AXE, then that corner fell into place. (Yes, I'm that lone Cornerite who hasn't read any of the LOTR stuff.) And thanks to Rusty Brain for another fun tour, except that I missed seeing the cactus saying "ALOE." (I linked Jerry Reed's She Got the Goldmine (I Got the Shaft) just a few days ago, so I'll spare you from doing so again.

KS said...

FIR. This was pretty easy for a Thursday puzzle. The cluing was straightforward and quite fair.
I got the theme almost immediately with "exclusive report".
So overall a very enjoyable puzzle.

Monkey said...

FIR. Simple enough gimmick. I got it at BREAKING NEWS. The NW took a while to fill. Fun clue for SQUEAKS. SASHA was my only unknown name but easy to guess. FEE and END were all perps. I needed RB’s explanation to understand those two.

Thank you RB for another fine review.

Irish Miss said...

Good Morning:

Neither the theme nor cluing/fill were Thursday-level difficulty, but the solve was enjoyable, so no complaints. I went astray at Stoic/Stony, Sarah/Sasha, Squeals/Squeaks, and Haft/Hilt, all of which were corrected by perps. Props to the author for strong, solid themers and a clean grid with no obscurities.

Thanks, Joseph, and thanks, RB, for the fun and factual review. That cone-head canine is cuter than cute!

Have a great day.

Irish Miss said...

Jinx, Parsley is used as a substitute for the more traditional Basil, not as an added ingredient.

CanadianEh! said...

Terrific Thursday. Thanks for the fun, Joseph and RustyBrain.
I FIRed in good time and saw the headline theme.

Hand up for STOic before STONY.
I waited for perps to decide that Genesis brother- (Cain, ABEL, Esau, Seth), but only ESAU was the 4-letter twin for 26D.

Some Canadian disadvantage- perps changed RaY to ROY, SASHA required perps, same for NY MET.
But I did know ERIE! (Patti should clue that as “Port Colborne’s lake” to stump you all!)
I didn’t know Dashiell but ERLE perped.

That clue for FEE was my FAVE today too.

Wishing you all a great day.