google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Saturday, July 18, 2026, Ricky Sirois

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Jul 18, 2026

Saturday, July 18, 2026, Ricky Sirois

 Saturday Themeless by Ricky Sirois

Ricky provided me with a very pleasant 29-minute solve that evolved from the bottom up with long fills emerging and becoming the seeds from which the rest of the fill emerged.

When this picture was taken in 2022, Ricky was the Assistant Director of the Concord, MA Public Library and a participant in The National Scrabble Players Championships.


Across:

1. Doctrines: DOGMATA - Dogma leapt to my mind and so its plural filled the bill.

8. Incomplete Wikipedia article: STUB - ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ A stub is an article that is deemed too short and incomplete to provide in-depth encyclopedic coverage of a subject.

12. 1990s sketch comedy show: IN LIVING COLOR - This show ran on the then-new Fox Network and launched some very famous careers such as Jim Carrey, Jamie Foxx and Jennifer Lopez.


15. PBS series hosted by librarian Mychal Threets: READING RAINBOW - I fondly remember when this show first appeared in 1983 with LeVar Burton as the host.

LeVar                         Mychal

17. Lemon juice?: GAS πŸ˜€

 

18. Javelin: SPEAR.

19. Strong suit: ASSET.

21. Conditional word: ELSE - If you issue a threat that ends in "OR ELSE", you'd better have an idea what that ELSE might be.

23. Senior: OLDER.

25. Mother of Apollo and Artemis: LETO.


26. Shaping tool: LATHE.

28. Tillamook's state: OREGON - Where you can find the home of great cheese and ice cream 





30. Blast: BALL.

32. "Am I free to go?": ARE WE DONE - AREWE _ O _ _ first gave me ARE WE GOOD?

34. Complex trap: WEB.

35. Nail salon brand: OPI - A frequent cwd polish brand

37. Gen __: XER - We two Boomers raised two Gen-XERS, born 1967 and 1971

38. __ Γ‰tats-Unis: LES 
lez-ay-taz-yoo-nee


39. Recklessly: HEAD FIRST.

42. Has a summer job?: ADDS - πŸ˜€ We crossword peeps always suspect that a flower might be a river and a summer might be someone finds sums by adding. 

44. Recently: OF LATE.

45. Birds paraded on Saint Stephen's Day in Ireland: WRENS - No, they don't get those little birds to line up πŸ˜€ More


47. Pressing need: IRON.

48. Hardship: TRIAL - PP&M sing that TRIALS don't last forever.


50. Grow friendlier: THAW.

54. Squeals: SINGS - Or rats or tells or narcs 

56. __ nerve: OPTIC.

58. Like: ALA.

59. "Regardless of what you think ... ": BELIEVE IT OR NOT - A vintage 1930 version


62. "I deserved that": SERVES ME RIGHT.


63. "Do-Re-Mi" figure: DEER a female deer...

64. Spanish wives: ESPOSAS - Hmmm...


Down:

1. Expression of grief: DIRGE.

2. Youngest Oscar winner: O'NEAL.

1974 Candidates

3. Part of a frame job?: GLASS πŸ˜€ - Could be used for art or eyesore

4. Just OK: MID.😐 Meh...

5. Dollar alternative: AVIS.

6. Second-rate: TINPOT - This TINPOT leaped to my mind


7. Capellini: ANGEL HAIR.


8. Alarm: SCARE.

9. French pronoun: TOI.
10. Pinkie-side bone: ULNA.


11. Gravity-powered racer: BOBSLED - SOAPBOX fit so nicely but...

13. Equipment that may level the playing field: GRADER.


14. Copper alloy popularized by its use in FabergΓ© eggs: ROSE GOLD.

 

16. Wipes brand: WET ONES.
20. Vocal qualities: TONES.

22. Lens opening?: ELL - A meta clue we see often here

24. Sports reporter Holly: ROWE - Holly is a proud cancer survivor and sometimes works with no or very little hair.


27. Up in the air: ALOFT.

29. Played over: RERAN.

30. Barbecue option: BEEF RIB.


31. Snacks for sea otters: ABALONES.


33. Leeway for a test-taker: EXTRA TIME - Standardized tests forbid this

34. Start of some "Jeopardy!" responses: WHO IS - The correct question is at the bottom of this write-up. 

36. Neoplasticism pioneer Mondrian: PIET  - 
Composition with Red, Yellow, and Blue' (1939-41). Experts say the original would sell for $20M or more today.


40. Offered as an inducement: DANGLED.


41. App gestures: SWIPES.


43. Setting not observed by most of Arizona: Abbr.: DST.


46. Ruling classes: ELITES.

49. Opportunity on Mars, e.g.: ROVER πŸ˜€


51. Chills: HANGS - Derived from "hang out"

52. Word in many Polynesian languages: ALOHA.

53. Los Angeles neighborhood where many Walter Mosley novels are set: WATTS 
¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 


55. Royal address: SIRE.

57. Business org.: CORP.

60. Anticipatory period: EVE.

61. Duran Duran album with the hit "Hungry Like the Wolf": RIO - Some serious Saturday cluing for RIO


Correct Jeopardy question is: WHO IS Celine Dion?


11 comments:

  1. I got it!
    It helped that a lot of the longer answers were well known, either from television or simply in-the-language phrases.
    It took me less than half an hour, and I enjoyed it.
    FIR, so I’m happy.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sleepless in TucsonJuly 18, 2026 at 4:29 AM

    Took me a long time, but I got it. FIR.
    Favorite clue: “Has a summer job?”
    (I’m missing Misty.)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thank you, Ricky and Husker Gary

    Answers flowed quickly, and I was done in just under 15, but I didn't get the expected TA DA. It took another 4 minutes of reading the clues and checking answers to find the error. It was DANGLEs / sEER rather than DANGLED / DEER.

    That SERVES ME RIGHT, for not reading every clue, and for not paying attention to the tense of the verb in the clue. D'OH!

    BELIEVE IT OR NOT, despite that error, I enjoyed the solve. The shortest answer, GAS for Lemon juice? may have been my favorite.

    The DST image HG embedded at 43D is good example of illustrating the difference between an enclave and an exclave. Hopi is in enclave within the Navajo Nation, and Hopi (Again) is an exclave. Navajo Nation (Again) is also an exclave within the Hopi nation. And for HG, the Hopi tribe also has a unicameral government system.

    Time to get back to The Open.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Good morning!

    I often pass on the Saturday offerings, but I gave it a shot today, and it turned out quicker than last Monday's. Zip, zip, done. Wite-Out need not apply. PP&M sang All My Trials. The Kingston Trio sang it four years earlier as All My Sorrows. Thanx, Ricky and Husker.

    No river flooding and no forest fire smoke around here. Yay. But we can look forward to ten days of 98° temps -- real temps, the "feels like" will be even higher. Boo. We'll have to pedal or walk early in the mornings to avoid the heat of the day.

    Lost my "blue" again this morning. I hope I can figure out what went south.

    ReplyDelete
  5. In my 17 years posting here at the Corner I think I may have 2 or 3 Saturdays done in 15 minutes. Well done TTP. I enjoyed the puzzle but need coffee STAT

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Lemonade, thanks! It actually became 18:54 total with the EXTRA TIME needed to find my error. It would have been a FIW on paper. I've taken to solving much harder puzzle than the LAT typically offers. I especially like the Friday and Saturday NYT puzzles now.

      As you know, The New Yorker can serve up some real beauts. To wit, it took me 47:18 to solve a puzzle they published last Monday. It's by Paolo Pasco, back to back ACPT champ in 2024 and 2025. Here's the link if you want to take a shot:

      https://www.newyorker.com/puzzles-and-games-dept/crossword/2026/07/13

      Delete
  6. FIW, missing with eLDER x TIN PeT. A little careless, since I shrugged at TIN PeT but didn't analyze it. SERVES ME RIGHT. Only three erasures: ledo->LETO, hurl->BALL, and slr->ELL.

    I noticed THAW crossing the fill for "chills" (HANGS.)

    I can never hear folk music without thinking of this classic bit from Animal House.

    Thanks to Ricky for allowing me to achieve a participation trophy for today's puzzle. And thanks to H.Gary for another fine review.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Took a palindromic 13:31 today.

    "Gas" was my last fill, as I was thrown by the "lemon" and I struggle to remember the spelling of the Actress of the Day (Oneal, not Oneil).

    It helped that I knew "Rio" and "In Living Color" from my youth, and Piet Mondrian. It didn't help that I don't speak French (toi and les) or Spanish (esposas). "Tinpot" was a guess, which the perps seemed to like.

    ReplyDelete
  8. FIR. There were a lot of questionable clues in today's presentation, like "just OK" being "mid" or "conditional word" being "else". But in most cases there were perps there to help.
    Fortunately most of the long answers were easily sussed out and that helped a lot.
    Overall a so-so puzzle.


    ReplyDelete
  9. Did anyone else go with ARMOR for [Strong suit] off the A?

    ReplyDelete

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