Theme: Texas "Fold'em"
Puzzling thoughts:
Across:
1. Copious quantity: SEAS. Not an often used clue for this word; I have seen the clue used to describe the word "OCEANS", though
5. Kiss or slap: SMACK. Sometimes one follows the other ...
10. Fashion designer Cassini: OLEG. [Wikipedia] "Oleg Cassini was a fashion designer born to an aristocratic
Russian family with maternal Italian ancestry. He came to the United
States as a young man after launching his career as a designer in Rome,
and quickly secured a position with Paramount Pictures. Cassini
established his reputation by designing for films"
14. Crawl (along): INCH. "Slowly I turned ... step by step ... INCH by INCH ..." Anyone care to guess who said this, and to what response?
15. Host: EMCEE.
16. Bird symbolizing peace: DOVE. An old Moe-ku, but appropriate:
17. Canvas bag: TOTE.
[entry]
20. Uncomfortably unfamiliar: ALIEN. Adjective form; not a noun in this context
22. Handy tool for the error-prone: ERASER. Back when I solved my crossword puzzles on paper, I used an ink pen; never used an ERASER
[entry]
27. Pianist in "Casablanca": SAM. "Play it, Sam. Play 'As Time Goes By'" [Ilsa Lund]
29. Egrets, e.g.: HERONS. Eries: HURONS
30. Flout openly: DEFY. At first glance I thought this clue read: "Flour openly" - for which I almost entered COAT
31. Family doctor, for short: PCP. Moe-l'ick:
34. Juicy gossip: DIRT.
35. Conjure up: CREATE. See my comments to 16 and 31 Across ... (ps: there'll be a few more ... )
[entry]
40. Leavening agents: YEASTS. Also, agents that trigger the start of fermentation in wine, as these little buggers convert sugar to alcohol
42. Grads-to-be: SRS. I'm one of many SRS I know who ain't graduating from anything - been there, done that
43. Floor oppositions: NAYS. CEILINGS was too big of a word to fit
[entry]
52. "The Daily Show" genre: SATIRE. Can't comment; no use of politics or religion allowed on this blog site
54. Throwback diet: PALEO. I had to hunt (via Google) why the term PALEO would be a "throwback" diet. And after gathering the information, I immediately knew ...
[reveal]
59. Journalist Lisa: LING. It took a while before there was a
last/proper name in this puzzle. Kudos! (I don't count "SAM" as the
clue was rather easy to suss)
60. Power source: FUEL. Speaking of which, I feel myself "running out of energy", so I am going to finish the Across words and take a break. Might fuel myself with an adult beverage and see if that helps
61. Big bullies: OGRES. Crossword-ese
62. Against: ANTI. Crossword-ese
63. __-Alt-Del: CTRL. The old "three-finger salute"!
64. Heavy landing sound: THUNK. Really? I thought this word was the conjugation of "think and thank" - you know, like "drink, drank, drunk"
65. First lady between Eleanor and Mamie: BESS. This first lady was known for her privacy and had a few classic quotes (at least that's what AI said)
Down:
1. Instrument that may have 21 strings: SITAR. So, after a quick Google check, sitars can have between 18 and 21 strings - found this YouTube video that will explain
2. "__ Holmes": Millie Bobby Brown film: ENOLA. Enola Gay, I've heard of; Enola Holmes? Nope
| Ha! |
5. "Gimme a __!": SEC.
6. UFC sport: MMA. Ultimate Fighting Contest = Mixed Martial Arts
7. Oft-torn knee pt.: ACL. Anterior Cruciate Ligament
8. A-listers: CELEBS. Lots of abbreviated words in the "Down" section
| Best known for "Pirates of the Caribbean" movies |
10. Lyrical tributes: ODES. This is how you clue a mid-week level use of the word "ode". When I solved today's puzzle (May 1st - Friday) the clue was a title ("An ODE We Own")
11. Small sofas: LOVE SEATS. I wonder if the term love seat came
from the shape of one's butt? Keeping this "clean" here, the person in
the middle definitely has a heart-shaped tush; could you say that it's a
"love seat"??
12. Until the end of time: EVER AFTER. Sounds like a fairy tale, to me
13. __ X: GEN. "SPACE" had too many letters to fit
19. Road goo: TAR. I'm guessing now that winter has finally passed, the road crews will be filling in some potholes with road goo
21. "You __ worry": NEEDN'T. Ok, I won't
24. Charlie's Angels and the Powerpuff Girls: TRIOS. I'm guessing that this clue was trying to appeal to both Boomer's and GEN Y's
25. Traffic jam sound: HORN. I suppose you could use HONK or TOOT, too
26. Joined: ENTERED. As in a Zoom meeting or Chat room?
30. Study: DEN. Study (noun), as in a room; not study (verb), as for an exam
31. Writer/director Alexander with two Oscars for Best Adapted Screenplay: PAYNE. This clue really got my knickers in a twist; "Golfer Stewart:" would've been a far easier clue for this solver
32. Empties completely: CLEARS OUT. ERASES was too short
33. Team leader on offense: PLAY-MAKER. Usually a wide receiver or running back
35. Mexican condiment: CREMA. CSO to Lucina - perhaps she could elucidate this for us?!
36. Agitate: RILE UP. Never the intention of my blogs
38. Facility that may see 16 sunrises a day, familiarly: ISS. International Space Station
39. Fruit covering: PEEL. RIND also fit
45. Paternity testing site: DNA LAB. When I did the math, there are 12 abbreviations in today's puzzle. That seems to be a bit on the high side
47. Aromatic tree: FIR. Aromatic hair: FUR
48. "... never mind, then": OR NOT. Hmm
49. NFL tackling gp.: D-LINE. They are ones trying to restrict 33 Down from making a big play (Defensive LINE)
50. Monopoly income: RENTS. Really? Rent can be pluralized?
IMHO, this would have been a perfect spot to use a clue that yielded an
abbreviated word ... 'rents - as in the slang for one's mom and dad
55. Rank below cpl.: PFC. Private First Class
57. Coop resident: HEN. I prefer my hens to be "free range"
58. Judgy sound: TSK. [sigh]
Epilogue:
First off, you might have noticed that I used zero hyperlinks today. I figure you all need a while to get over last month's recap
Second, my score for today's puzzle is ⭐⭐and 1/2⭐'s. I would like to give it a higher mark but the nicks are for assuming that POKER NIGHT consists only of Texas Hold Em, and the over-use of abbreviations. Positives for the entries; my favorite was ALL-IN-ONE PRINTER
2 comments:
This is one time when
I didn’t figure out the reveal in advance of solving it, and it was quite satisfying when it all came together.
FIR, so I’m happy.
1A was unfamiliar to me, which was a big reason why I was much slower than usual.
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