google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Wednesday, May 6, 2026 - Sita C. Palepu & David Y. Lin

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May 6, 2026

Wednesday, May 6, 2026 - Sita C. Palepu & David Y. Lin

 

Theme:  Texas "Fold'em"

Texas Holdem Cartoons and Comics ...

Puzzling thoughts:

Chairman Moe here for his monthly recap.  Unlike the April Fool's Day puzzle, the first Wednesday of May puzzle is a bit more straight-forward.  Maybe too easy as I don't recall having much difficulty solving it
 
Today's constructors appear to have had one other collaborative puzzle published (@ WSJ last August). A Google search for their names did not offer much additional information; perhaps one or both will stop by, read the blog, and offer their comments
 
The puzzle's reveal was probably unnecessary as the starts to 18-23-37-47 Across are all very common POKER terms.  Maybe using CHECK as a fifth term would have made more sense, and eliminate the reveal completely.  Also, POKER NIGHT sometimes consists of playing DRAW POKER and/or 5-card and 7-card STUD POKER - all of which do not feature an "ALL-IN" play as does TEXAS HOLD EM.  But I bet they didn't think of that ... care to wager if they did or didn't? 
 
The entries and reveal:
 
18 Across. "I say we're square now": CALL IT EVEN.  Sounds like a compromise, to me
 
23 Across. Set new, higher standards: RAISE THE BAR.  Sometimes, after reading a few of my fellow blogger's recaps, I wonder if they (or I) have raisethe bar for how clever or unique.  Today's recap will definitely "lower" the bar 😀
 
37 Across. Versatile home office device: ALL-IN-ONE PRINTER.  Good choice of entry as the term "all-in" (for Texas Hold em) is hyphenated
 
47 Across. Do a wash day chore: FOLD LAUNDRY.  As my cartoon depicts, folding a fitted sheet should be part of a contest.  Miss M and I choose to make the bed with the sheets we wash, thereby avoiding the dreaded fold of the bottom sheet
 
55 Across. Evening when one hopes to get a good deal, and when one might hear the starts of 18-, 23-, 37-, and 47-Across: POKER NIGHT.  As I said in my "puzzling thoughts", poker night is not just playing Texas Hold em.  But hey, everything fit into place and after reviewing each additional word or phrase in today's puzzle we can comment on how fun it was to solve
 
Here is the GRID: 

 

 

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:

        A DOVE flew by and
        Landed on a church steeple,
        Uttering high coo    

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:

        My new doctor is a hippie, you see;
        Hallucinates, when examining me
        For anything that's weird.
        No worries; I'm not sceered 
        Because my PCP's on PCP 

 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

41. Spool: REEL.  Regurgitating another Moe-l'ick:
 
        Going fishing, it has its appeal
        At least that's what I thought; my gut feel.
        Until seas got so rough
        I said, "That's quite enough!
        I can't handle the rod when I REEL"   

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

44. Appeared: SEEMED.  Moe-ku:
 
        Tailor was shocked! Man
        Came back to fix loose cuffs. His
        Pants SEEMED to be seamed ...
  
46. Hesitant utterance: ERM. I call "foul"!  The clue needs to suggest that this refers to a British interjection.  No one that I know on this side of the pond uses the word/term "erm"

[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)

TOP 17 QUOTES BY BESS TRUMAN | A-Z Quotes
[time for a drink and a break and to begin fixing dinner - 4/30/26, 5:30 pm MST]
 
[OK, I am back - 5/01/26 10:30 am MST - dinner last night was stuffed peppers and a nice Beaujolais] 

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

3. Brand of microwave popcorn: ACT II.  I like to make my microwave popcorn using a device similar to the one shown below:


 

4. "Gimme a break!": SHEESH
 
 
Sheesh Cartoons and Comics - funny ...
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

9. Knightley of the Netflix series "Black Doves": KEIRA.
 
 
keira knightley from www.britannica.com
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"?? 

bottom syndrome & a bloating belly

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

Game poster image

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?

28. Austin Powers player Mike: MYERS.  International Man of Mystery
 
 


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: ISSInternational Space Station

39. Fruit covering: PEEL.  RIND also fit

44. Santa's ride: SLEIGH. Moe-ku:
 
        Santa "crushed" Christmas. 
        Folks 'round the world called it a
        One-horse open slay 

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

51. Ashram leaders: YOGIS.  

Ashram (Hermitage) | Residence of ...
 

53. Unintentional giveaway: TELL.  Good use of this clue today as the theme is based upon poker

Poker Tell Cartoons and Comics - funny ...
 

55. Rank below cpl.: PFC.  Private First Class

56. Steve Carell voice role: GRUGru is a grouchy, quick-witted, and cynical supervillain and the boss of the Minions, who also serves as a secret agent in order to fight other supervillains [Wikipedia]
 




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

20 comments:

  1. 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.

    ReplyDelete
  2. 1A was unfamiliar to me, which was a big reason why I was much slower than usual.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Agreed. Lots is a better fit. Also, erm? Is that a combination of um and er?

      Delete
  3. Good morning!

    Didn't notice the poker terms until the reveal -- well hidden. Those stacked 9s in the NE and SW were nice. Longest solve so far this week, which is what it should be. Thanx, Sita, David, and C-Moe.

    ReplyDelete
  4. FIR. This was definitely crunchy. With answers like erm and play maker, there wasn't much to like. Add some obscure proper names, and it hits the skids.
    I didn't see the theme and needed the reveal to get it. Frankly it was the only thing I liked about the whole puzzle.
    Overall not an enjoyable puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
  5. FIW, missing with CLEAnS OUT x EnM, which was as known to me as ERM. (I'm not fluent in British, but I know enough to order lunch in an English pub without pointing to the menu.)

    Today is Bob Seger's 81st birthday. Accordingly, I'm thinking about a parody of his megahit Night Moves:
    Can't drive at night blues
    Sometimes I get so dazed and confused
    Everything I get I seem to lose
    Can't drive at night blues

    When I was a kid, we had a tongue twister that went "A skunk sat on a stump. The stump THUNK the skunk stunk, and the skunk THUNK the stump stunk."

    "Blah, blah, blah Knightley" is gonna be KEIRA. She first came to my attention in the thriller The Hole some 25 years ago.

    Thanks to Sita and Palepu for the mostly-fun puzzle. And thanks to our Chairman for the fun review. My favorite was the "high coo." But are you sure about "all-in" being just in Texas Hold Em? I remember the term from long before I'd heard of Texas Hold Em. One of my fellow engineering supervisors kept trying to get me to go with her to play poker in a card room in one of the inland LA County cities, maybe Bell. She told me that if I wanted to stay in a hand (of five-card draw IIRC) but didn't have enough money to call, I could declare "all in" and if I won, the other players got back their wagers that exceeded mine. (She was married a musician who was a cousin of Jerry Lee Lewis. Her husband didn't like poker, but loved to wager on horse racing.)

    ReplyDelete
  6. Enjoyed the puzzle and the recap, especially the question on 14 across which sent me to the internet to a fun Three Stooges routine I had never seen (AI says Lucy and Sid Caesar also performed it).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And Abbott and Costello. All comedy royals. How had I not seen this before?!

      Delete
    2. I remember the "inch by inch" routine, but not who did it. Surprised it was the Three Stooges.

      Delete

  7. I got the theme easily enough based on the action words.* I don't play poker so I did not know that ALL IN only applies to Texas Hold 'em.

    The constructors set a speed solver's trap at 64A. Either THUNK or THUMP fit the clue, AND, the two downs at 57 and 58 down resulted in common crossword fill with either answer. I read that competition solvers don't always read the clues. (I believe it was either Dan Feyer or Tyler Hinman that said that.)

    With THUmp, 57D would be HEM and 58D would be TSP. Both valid answers. I don't consider myself a speed solver, but I entered THUMP, saw the two legitimate down answers, and didn't read the down clues. (Make the TSK TSK judgy sounds if you must).

    I got off to a bad start with Opted In, Rind and Salsa in the places where ENTERED, PEEL and CREMA belonged. Kinda like that cartoon I read 6 or so weeks ago. The first panel captioned Week 1 was "We Won!" The second panel captioned Week 2 was "We're Winning!" The third panel captioned Week 3 was "Send Help!"

    In contrast, I quickly recovered from my errors. Well most them. Except from thump THUNK.

    Timing is everything. Yesterday morning I watched an interview with Dr Bernard A. Harris Jr. and he spoke of the the G-Force to get to outer space, then weightlessness, followed by donning a 350lb spacesuit (that weighs next to nothing in outer space). His description of his spacewalk, with an unobstructed view of Earth while traveling over 17,000 MPH and seeing a sunrise and sunset every 45 minutes was enthralling. Can you imagine? 45 minutes of day followed by 45 minutes of night? He was on the Space Shuttle rather than the ISS, but since the answer was only 3 letters...

    Thank you, Sita and David.

    Chairman Moe, I also liked ALL IN ONE PRINTER, but my first thought there was multifunction printer. Perhaps in a Sunday sized grid...

    Not sure of your nit about ERM. The British expats in my golf league (Nigel and Marc) both use ERM. One from Liverpool and the other from Manchester. I enjoy talking with them, but I really have to listen closely when they get going.

    I did not know that quote, but looked it up.

    Thanks for the Moe-kus and Moe-l'icks.

    * I hope that UncleFred doesn't start counting and asking constructors to quit using verbs. We all know how he feels about nouns. :>)

    ReplyDelete
  8. Took 6:29 today to get to the river.

    Nearly flopped with "cleansout".

    I knew this turn of the Actress of the Day (Kiera).

    ReplyDelete
  9. Wednesdays are usually easy but it was a FIW for this cross-abbreviaton puzzle today. MMA, ACL, GEN, ERM, SRS, PCP, SEC, D-LINE, ISS, PFC, CTRL, TSK.

    The cross of two unknowns got me today. PCP is the abbr. for phencyclidine, aka angel dust on the streets. I've heard the new term 'health care provider', but not what PCP stands for. A physician of some type. PAYNE was unknown. I filled HCP and HAYNE

    ERM- agree with Moe on that sucky fill.
    Who'd 'thunk' that THUNK was a sound? Not me but the fill was easy.

    I never noticed the poker theme and POKER NIGHT was almost filled by perps before the clue was read. LING, GRU, KEIRA, ENOLA Holmes, and the previously mentioned PCP and PAYNE made for the unknowns today.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Good Morning:

    Thanks for the concern about my recent absence. I can only blame a few unusually busy days and getting sidetracked. Other than a few unknowns and the heretofore usage of Seas as a quantity, the solve was a typical Wednesday level of difficulty. I liked the theme and its execution, even though I needed the reveal to discern it.

    Thanks, Sita and David, and thanks, Moe, for the informative review and the numerous Moe-kus and other poetic offerings.

    Have a great day.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Not a fan of this one, too much of the cluing was clumsy, and the fill itself was uninspired.
    Also, "erm" should join "oho" on the trash heap of rare utterances that constructors seem to love.

    ReplyDelete
  12. I enjoyed today’s puzzle! Was slow at first to pick up the themers but got the cleverly clued reveal quickly and then it was easy to go back and fill in the rest. I thought that the theme was fun and tightly presented.

    The northwest was last to fall. But persistence paid off and it finally came together.

    I had only heard of ENOLA Holmes from previous crossword puzzles. I believe that editors choose that representation instead of the perhaps more familiar ENOLA Gay to keep things positive. That’s understandable.

    Thanks to Sita and David for a delightful outing, and to Moe for the entertaining recap. Loved the “Texas Fold ‘Em” cartoon!!

    ReplyDelete
  13. I didn’t notice the theme until the reveal. ENOLA as clued, KEIRA, LING, and GRU were unknown entities. TRIOS was a WAG.

    DNF. ERM, PLAY MAKER, NAYS and PAYNE got me.

    Thank you C-Moe for the fun review. I enjoyed the Coo Haiku and I can relate to the fitted sheet cartoon. You and Miss M have a good idea.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Musings
    -My solve was a little more difficult than the Chairman’s but was enjoyable
    -CALL is a word that could cause a player who was bluffing some angst
    -Back when I solved in the newspaper, I chose Paper Mate SharpWriters because of their good ERASER
    -Our search for herons
    Was fun but futile
    So alas, no EGRETS

    -IDEATE was replaced by much more palatable CREATE
    -In this movie Ms. Knightly’s character had to solve a crossword puzzle (00:45)
    -Yeah, I’m the only one who first put SALSA for a Mexican condiment at _ _ _ _ A
    -Great poker players can CLEAN OUT a rookie with a TELL rather quickly
    -Alexander PAYNE is an Omaha native and some of the scenes in his films were shot there.

    ReplyDelete
  15. I faltered a bit in the SE because of a personal Natick (where 54A and 59A cross 51D). But overall I found Sita and David's puzzle enjoyable and instructive--as well as satisfying in the solve.

    And thanks, C-Moe, for another robust and instructive recap. Son Jim (the poker professional) is visiting, and perhaps he can weiigh in on the "All-in"/"Texas Hold-em" issue.

    ReplyDelete
  16. I found this a bit crunchy for a Wed. Probably just sour grapes because I FIW with an "L" at 31A&D. I came up with an LCP (Life Care Planner?) and Layne instead of PCP (Primary Care Physician) and Payne. Good workout from Sita & David.

    A HORN is not a sound, but a device that produces one like a honk or beep.

    Millie Bobby Brown was popular as Eleven in Stanger Things, so they quickly put her in movies to cash in. But based on what I've seen, she's a lightweight.

    I'm not a poker player, so Moe's nuances were lost on me. But I found everything to be spot on.

    ReplyDelete

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