google.com, pub-2774194725043577, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 L.A.Times Crossword Corner: Friday

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Showing posts with label Friday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Friday. Show all posts

Mar 1, 2024

Friday March 1, 2024 - Ryan Patrick Smith

Theme: Friday night at the movies

Check out the link in the theme title to see movie trailers and short video movie clips. I may want to bookmark this for finding future links for my blog ...

Friday night "date night"

Puzzling thoughts:

I don't know about you, but Friday night has become sort of  a "date night" at the Chairman's house ... dinner is almost always pizza and salad, and afterward we watch a movie; either on DVD or on one of the streaming sites. It's quite fitting that Ryan Patrick Smith chose this play-on-words clued movie theme for today's puzzle; five entries and no reveal, with the themers being placed in a pinwheel display. Lots to digest so let's get started, OK?

20-across. Movie with lots of pan shots?: RATATOUILLE. First thing to digest with these entries is that all of the parodied clues "focus" on an element of filming a movie. For example, in the entry RATATOUILLE the clue "... pan shots" refer to the scenes shot in a kitchen (pots and pans) as opposed to a filming technique that involves horizontally moving the camera from a fixed position. The camera pivots either to the left or right, capturing a panoramic view (see image and video below)


There's got to be a pan in there, somewhere



41-across. Movie with an iconic long shot?: ROCKY.  Lots to like here, too.  In this case, the clue refers to ROCKY being a "long shot" (underdog) to win the bout, as opposed to the movie filming technique of a long shot (see examples below)

The Chairman ran up these same steps many moons ago

58-across. Movie with lots of reaction shots?: OPPENHEIMER. How cool to find a current movie title that allows for this play-on-words clue?! In film production, cinematography and video production, a reaction shot is a shot which cuts away from the main scene in order to show the reaction of a character to it.  The reaction shot is a basic unit of film grammar.  The "reaction shots" in OPPENHEIMER are featured below, as well as another type of reaction shot that this clue/answer ISN'T about ...

A literal reaction to a shot






 







11-down. Movie with lots of zoom shots?: SPEED RACER. So, by now, I hope y'all have figured out the connection between the clues, the movie references, et al. The video below shows an old commercial (Zoom, Zoom) with a zoom shot or two ... 

BTW, didn't we have "SPEED RACER" in a puzzle earlier this week?


Last, but not least, 29-down. Movie with lots of dolly shots?: CHILD'S PLAY. See images below:

Chucky doll

A film dolly












A mid-blog recap:

    1) "Pan shot", as in a photo of a pan used by a chef or a film-making term that shows lateral                     movement of the camera (RATATOUILLE)

    2) "Long shot", as in an underdog or a film-making term that shows multi-layers of detail in a scene        (ROCKY)

    3) "Reaction shot", as in picture of a nuclear reaction or a film-making term that show a character's          expression about an off-camera event (OPPENHEIMER)

    4) "Zoom shot", as in a sound made by a racecar or a film-making term that shows a closeup of an          image or character (SPEED RACER)

    5) "Dolly shot", as in a picture of a doll (child's toy) or a film-making term that is taken from a                "vehicle" known as a "dolly" (CHILD'S PLAY)


The grid (sorry, forgot to highlight "ROCKY")

On to the rest of the clues/words/phrases ...

Across:
1. Curly's replacement in the Three Stooges: SHEMP.  This one caught Chairman Moe's attention 😀

6. Canal spot: EAR.  Panama / Erie / Suez did not fit

9. Files that can't be opened: RASPS.  Cute Friday clue; a RASP is a type of file

14. Bar mitzvah scroll: TORAH.  Ryan could've clued it as "Bat mitzvah scroll" and had the same answer

15. Name of the T. rex at Chicago's Field Museum: SUE.  Sue, the T. rex

16. Short exile?: EXPAT.  As in "EXPATriate".  "An expatriate 

is a person who resides outside his or her country of citizenship. The term often refers to a professional or skilled worker who intends to return to their country of origin

 ..." [Wikipedia]

17. State known for huckleberries: IDAHO.  Moe-ku:

    IDAHO dog breed
    Can sniff out certain fruits; they're
    Huckleberry Hounds

Huckleberry was around in my childhood days 


    

18. Canine care org.?: ADAAmerican Dog Association?? Oh, the other canine ... or in the case of the inage below, a canine's canine ... would the American Dental Association approve of these choppers? I'D BET they would

Pretty clean looking, for a dog; it must floss



19. Actress Witherspoon: REESE. Have we established that she only likes peanut butter cups?

23. Language suffix: ESE. Chinese Japanese Portuguese ...

24. Actor Chaney: LON

25. Ramble: MEANDER.  As opposed to "serpentine":

27. Missing criminal who inspired James M. Cain's "Rainbow's End": D.B. COOPER. Read all about it

32. Limburger feature: ODOR. Limburger cheese is pretty stinky

33. "Wowzers!": OOH. I think I've seen the exclamation "wowzers!" used here by another blogger, perhaps?

34. Trojan War figure: PARIS.  Learning moe-ment: "Paris (Ancient Greek: Πάρις), also known as Alexander (Ἀλέξανδρος, Aléxandros), is a mythological figure in the story of the Trojan War. He appears in numerous Greek legends and works of Ancient Greek literature such as the Iliad. In myth, he is prince of Troy, son of King Priam and Queen Hecuba, and younger brother of Prince Hector" [Wikipedia]

36. Pathway stone: SLATE.  Hand up for having "PAVER" as the first word chosen for this spot?

39. Dip: SWIM.  As in taking a dip in the pool; or as in skinny-dip ... but not as in taking a dip from a tin of Skoal

43. Antioxidant-rich sorbet base: ACAI. A 21st century example of crossword-ese

44. Measure out: ALLOT

46. Berlin's "Blue __": SKIES. The Willie Nelson version (with lyrics)

48. Goof: ERR. Something the Chairman does often when he tries to solves an xword puzzle

49. Capital on the Persian Gulf: DOHA. I've seen this clue/word before

51. Orange garnish for sushi: SMELT ROE. aka "Masago" (a type of fish egg or fish roe. Masago is a very popular ingredient throughout Asia, particularly in Japanese cuisine), or the stuff shown in the image below








53. Some Cassatt works: PASTELS. OILS and WATER COLORS didn't fit. Here's a Cassatt for you to gaze upon









56. Ryan's "La La Land" role: SEB. All by perps. Never saw "La La Land" so this did not resonate

57. Little dickens: IMP. Could TINY TIM be clued as "A little Dickens'?"

64. Not as flushed: PALER. Flushed, as in "red-in-the-face"; not flushed, as in "partially-filled commode"

66. Regret: RUE.

67. River that feeds Utah Lake: PROVO. Never knew the city name PROVO was also the name of a river. The Provo River (Ute: Timpanoquint, “Rock River) is located in Utah County and Wasatch County, Utah, in the United States. It rises in the Uinta Mountains at Wall Lake and flows about 71 miles (114 km) southwest to Utah Lake at the city of Provo, Utah [Wikipedia] (see image)







 

 

68. Stage: PHASE.

69. Spleen: IRE. ORGAN didn't fit

70. "Yeah, sounds like": "I'D BET!".

71. Affectionate letters: ILYSM.  I had not seen this text abbr. before today.  Thanks to Margaret's younger son, he correctly identified the acronym as: I Love You So Much😍

72. 30-Down, for one: GOD. (30-down. Mythical archer): EROS.

73. "It's Gonna Be Me" band: NSYNC.  Margaret's younger son helped here, too

Down:
1. Shift slightly: STIR. [crossword tracker dot com] is a very useful data site for crossword puzzle constructors as well as solvers.  When I checked, this is a first use for this clue and answer:

Results

Sorry, no matches were found. If you think this is in error, please send us an email with what you were searching for and someone will take a look.

Tip: Try changing the clue to just a keyword (for example, if the clue is "Measurement with square units" try entering just "measurement") and supplying what you know of the answer so we can look for answers that are the right length. Even if you don't know any of the letters, just knowing the length of the answer can help the search engine immensely.


2. TV host Kotb: HODA.  She shows up every now and again

3. Proof word: ERAT.  If ACAI is 21st Century Crossword-ese, ERAT is a 20th Century example

4. Island "thank you": MAHALO.

5. Camera setting?: PHOTO OP.  Not an F-STOP - wouldn't fit and wasn't punny 

6. Genesis twin: ESAU.  Like OREO, ERIE, EIRE, and scores of other words that have 3 vowels and 1 consonant ... very useful to xword constructors

7. Bavaria-based automaker: AUDI.  I owned two of these in my lifetime; great cars.  Another 4-letter word with three vowels and one consonant

8. Sphere: REALM.

9. Enjoys a favorite novel, say: RE-READS.  I am happy when I read a novel, let alone RE-read it

10. Felling tool: AXE

12. So five minutes ago: PASSE.  RETRO also fits, but I don't think anything five minutes old should be considered passe
 
13. Use a wheelchair's joystick, say: STEER.  In the assisted living care community where my mom lives they refer to these vehicles as "scooters"

21. Commensurate (with): ON PAR.  A slight CSO to HuskerGary who more often scores a PAR when playing golf ... though the phrase ON PAR has nothing to do with golf

22. Zodiac lion: LEO.  Folks born under the sign "LEO", and who want to know their 2024 "forecast", it is described here

26. Home of the NBA's Pels: NOLA.  CSO to all those from the Pelican State, and specifically New Orleans

27. Pancake served with chutney: DOSA.  I checked the word out @ [crossword tracker dot com] to see its usage.  This is an "archaic" word (crossword-wise) that's making a big comeback, post-pandemic:

Recent usage in crossword puzzles:

  • Universal Crossword - Dec. 24, 2023
  • Universal Crossword - Sept. 14, 2023
  • USA Today - March 14, 2023
  • LA Times - Aug. 16, 2022
  • USA Today - May 2, 2022
  • USA Today - March 14, 2022
  • USA Today - April 6, 2021
  • USA Today - Jan. 26, 2021
  • USA Today - Jan. 19, 2021
  • USA Today - Sept. 7, 2020
  • New York Times - April 1, 1987
  • New York Times - Feb. 14, 1970


28. Cereal dish: BOWL.

31. "Casablanca" cafe: RICK'S.

35. Hardly pore over: SKIM.  As in "read briefly"

37. Staple in African cuisine: TARO.  

38. Country led by the Taoiseach: EIRE.  As a lover of whiskies (Irish and Scotch) the ending "ach" is often used on the labels. I'm guessing it's Gaelic. The word EIRE filled in after I got the E, I, and R

40. Academic: MOOT Moot as in "boot"; not moot as in "mute" (although I do sometimes hear it pronounced this way)

42. "Gimme a break!": YEESH.  Earlier in the week a few of you were discussing the proper spelling of "tush" ... "YEESH" and "Yees" are sometimes used interchangeably, and are just a letter off of each other: Yeesh versus Yees 

45. Math proposition: THEOREM. We haven't seen this word @ an LA Times puzzle since 2018
 
47. Wake up late: SLEEP IN.  Something Margaret and I do often ... retirement is fun ... we try to schedule no appointment(s) before 10:30 am

50. Swiss peak: ALP.

52. Sporty Fords: T-BIRDS.  "... and we'll have fun, fun, fun 'til my daddy took the T-Bird away"

53. Longstocking of chapter books: PIPPI.

54. "__ and the Night Visitors": AMAHL.  An old joke:

A woman gave birth to twins and gave them up for adoption. One of them went to a family in Egypt and was named “AMAHL” 

The other son went to a family in Spain; they named him “Juan.”

Years later Juan tracks down his birth mother and sent a picture of himself to his Mom.

Upon receiving the picture, she tells her husband she wishes she also had a picture of Amahl.

Her husband responded, "if you’ve seen Juan, you’ve seen Amahl"


55. Thyme piece: SPRIG.  Ya know, if this word was spelled "SBRIG" it would be pronounced the same.  Try it ...

59. Vision prefix: EURO.  This:  Eurovision Song Contest

60. Shortage: NEED.  Good clue

61. Stage name of electronic musician Richard Melville Hall: MOBY.  Another clue/answer that Margaret's son offered when I asked.  I guess "___ -Dick" would've been too easy ... but it's interesting that Richard MELVILLE Hall shares his middle name with the author (HERMAN Melville) of the book, "MOBY-Dick"

62. Not odd: EVEN.  Anyone care to guess at the smallest EVEN number that is also a prime number?

63. VMI program: ROTCVirginia Military Institute is the school (VMI); naturally they have a ROTC program

65. Self starter?: ESS. The letter "S" (pronounced "ESS") starts the word "self" ... it also starts the word "starter"

And once again we reach the end of the blog.  Thanks to Ryan for the fun solve.  Please feel free to comment below ... 


Feb 23, 2024

Friday, February 23, 2024, Blake Slonecker

  


Good Morning, Cruciverbalists.  Malodorous Manatee here with today's recap of a puzzle constructed by veteran puzzle-setter Blake Slonecker.  Today's theme is straightforward so let's jump right in with the unifier which has been conveniently placed in the middle of the grid:

39 Across:  Camera setting, and what shortened 18-, 24-, 47-, and 58-Across?: F - STOP.  At the four referenced places, Blake has dropped the F (not dropped the F bomb, just the letter F) in order to answer the clues, and provide us with a few chuckles here, here, here and here:

Enough, F, Stop!

18 Across:  Pollinator who can't fly?: GROUND BEE.  Where's the BEEF?

24 Across:  Parents in the Hundred Acre Wood?: RAISES THE ROO.  Parents is used as a verb in the clue.  Kanga is a single mom.  When ROO misbehaves Kanaga idiomatically RAISES THE ROOF.

Roo and Kanga


47 Across:  Product of Shenandoah Valley shepherds?: 
VIRGINIA WOOL.  Who's afraid?

58 Across:  Experimental soft cheese?: TRIAL BRIE.  A TRIAL BRIEF is a legal document presented to the court.  It is intended to provide the court with the presentation of facts, evidence and legal arguments.  A TRIAL BRIE might provide an introduction for someone who has yet to develop a taste for soft cheeses.

Here is how this all looks in the grid:



...and here are the rest of the clues and answers:


Across:

1. Tries out: DEMOS.  Hand up for initially trying out TESTS.

6. Nosegay: POSY.  As in "Ring Around The Rosie".  

10. Pod whose cross sections are pentagonal: OKRA.



14. Skip a syllable or two: ELIDE.


15. Until: UP TO.

16. "Stay" singer Lisa: LOEB.  I searched for a Leopold and (Lisa) LOEB mash up but could not find one.  

17. __ Cup: PGA Tour prize: FEDEX.  A golfing reference.  Both Professional Golfers' Association  and FEDeral EXpress have been abbreviated.  Although, those abbreviations are now used far more often than are the full names.

20. Middle of dinner?: ENS.  We have seen this type of clue before.  There are two N's in the middle of dinner.  If Blake had needed DEES, here, would he have gone with "Middle of middle"?

21. Perfect: IDEAL.

23. "Island of the Blue Dolphins" novelist Scott: O'DELL.


27. Joie de vivre: ZEST.  A French phrase (in English, Joy of Living) fully co-opted by English speakers.

28. Emo: ANGSTY.  Slangy clue/answer combo.

32. Storage furniture: CHEST.

34. Prize money: PURSE.  Commonly used this way in the world of professional boxing and in professional golf.

37. Sphere in old referee whistles: PEA.  Before they developed synthetic orbs they used real PEAs.

38. A pop: EACH.

40. Otter kin: MINK.  A relationship that is a bit of a crossword standard.

41. Durango day: DIA.  Today's Spanish lesson.

42. Apt rhyme for "freeze": SEIZE.  As in SEIZE-up.

43. Well-mannered blokes: GENTS.  It is relatively easy to convince ladies not to eat Tide pods but it is more difficult to deter GENTS.

44. Goofs in proofs: ERRATA.  What do you call a list of corrections read out in a suggestive fashion?  ERRATA - CA.

46. Tromp: PLOD.

53. Bird in a bevy: QUAIL.  A group of QUAIL is called a bevy.

56. Hot spots: OVENS.  Not a WiFi reference.

57. Signal: CUE.  Both can be employed as either verbs or nouns.

60. Glossy material: SATIN.  Like most chairs?

62. 55-Down, properly: ISN'T.  See also 55 Down.  Duh, MM.

63. Like most whiskey: AGED.  This 36-year-old whisky can be yours for about five or six thousand dollars.  Let me know and I will send you a link if I can still (pun intended, See 42 Down) find it in my trash file).



64. Heart Eyes or OK Hand: EMOJI.



65. Fancy spread: PATE.  To make chicken PATE one has to first de-liver the chicken.

66. Fool (with): MESS.


67. Wrap sheet: SARAN.  The following, from the mid-60's, might be deemed NSFW:




Down:

1. Schedule for later: DEFER.

2. Two-time WNBA MVP __ Delle Donne: ELENA.




3. Many a sedan: MID-SIZE CAR.

4. Amit Majmudar's "__ to a Drone": ODE.  I was not familiar with this work.  I have now searched for it online, found it, read it a couple of times and .... well, make your own judgement:

5. People's superlative: SEXIEST.  A reference to People Magazine.  The honorific of SEXIEST Man Alive is awarded annually to a male but the magazine awards Most Beautiful Woman Alive in lieu of SEXIEST.

6. Sound of the Northwest: PUGET.



7. O icon: OPRAH.  OPRAH Winfrey of, among many other things, O Magazine.

8. Took second, say: STOLE.  A baseball reference.

9. Second person: YOU.  Not an Adam and Eve reference.  A grammar reference.

10. One whose trick-learning years are behind them: OLD DOG.



11. "The Mamba Mentality: How I Play" writer Bryant: KOBE.

12. Rod and __: REEL.  A fishing reference.

13. Cain's brother: ABEL.  A reference to The Book of Genesis.

19. Nary a soul: NO ONE.

Sir Paul McCartney

22. "Spring forward" letters: DST.  Daylight Savings Time.

25. Quick meeting?: SESH.  "Quick" as in a shortened version of SESSION.

26. Tough talk?: RASP.  

29. Damage control pro: SPIN DOCTOR.


30. High-stakes shelter: TENT.  I don't know about the High bit, but many TENTs certainly do employ stakes.

31. Shaggy beasts: YAKS.  See also 33-Down.

32. Relinquish: CEDE.

33. 31-Down abundance: HAIR.



34. Pump letters: PSI.  Pounds per Square Inch

35. Lays aisle-mate: UTZ.  A snack food (pretzels, potato chips, etc.) reference.


36. Bass output: ROE.  Not a bass guitar.  Not Bass Ale.  Not the Mayor of Los Angeles.  Fish ROE.

39. "__ the Turtle": University of Maryland catchphrase: FEAR.



40. "I would like some more catnip, please": MEOW.

42. Bootlegger's vessel: STILL.



43. Visual aids: GLASSES.  Not, e.g., pie charts, flashcards, flip charts, or the like.  Aids to help us see.

45. Really take off: AVIATE.  Really.  No, really take off.



46. Blame (on): PIN.  As in "Y0u won't PIN that murder on me!"

Eydie Gorme (and friends)


48. Canyon: GORGE.

49. Campus climbers: IVIES.

Tom Lehrer - "Bright College Days"


50. Focus of Maslow's hierarchy: NEEDS.


51. Message board?: 
OUIJA.  Messages from the great beyond.  Supposedly.  OUIJA Board.



52. Red Square honoree: LENIN.

All Hail Marx and Lennon !


53. Sample collector, maybe: Q-TIP.  For the DNA lab.

54. __ Major: URSA.



55. 62-Across, improperly: 
AIN'T.  See also 62 Across.  Duh, MM.

59. "Bang!": BAM.  Onomatopoeia

61. Org. for OBs: AMA.

________________________________________


Notes from C.C.:
 
Voting is now open until March 1 for the 12th ORCA Awards – the annual celebration of creativity in crosswords! Winners will be announced on March 6 during a livestream filled with games and prizes. Five long-time solvers will receive special awards. For each day of their streak, solvers can receive a chance to win crossword memorabilia inscribed to them and signed by Will Shortz. Need not be present to win. Details and voting info can be found at Diary of a Crossword Fiend.

Feb 16, 2024

Friday, February 16, 2024 - Robin C. Stears

Theme: Expletives Un-Deleted

Puzzling thoughts:

FIR with a few corrections (see the grid for the little black triangles in the squares where I flubbed)

This one was a bit of a "slog", as it took me nearly twice as long as usual to solve

I was excited when I saw Robin C. Stears on the by-line, as I've had the pleasure to re-cap a couple of hers before

True to her love of Merl Reagle-type puzzles, Robin delights us with - gosh darn it all - a series of mild, homophonic expletives in her playful entries. No reveal; just a bit of frivolity mixed in with some elegant "fill". Certainly "FRY-day" worthy! 😉

The first of the five entries (17-across. Rather impressive exclamation of relief?): QUITE A PHEW! plays off the more familiar "quite a few", with a different parsing of the adverb "QUITE"

#2 of the entries also used a slightly different meaning of the adjective, BORDER (24-across. Astonished exclamation at the Four Corners Monument?): BORDER, GOLLY!. If I am understanding this one correctly, Robin is playing off of the animal, Border collie. As one who has ventured out to the spot where the Four Corners Monument resides, I might have uttered a slightly different "expletive"

#3 of the quintet is (35-across. Exasperated exclamation over a breath mint?): TIC TAC, D'OH!. When I discussed these entries with Robin (we are Facebook friends) she volunteered that the original entry for this one was something like, "cough up the d'oh".  I think I like the one that made the puzzle, better, and of course it led me to finding a video of the Simpsons and the eponymous breath mint ...

The fourth entry is (51-across. Quiet exclamation of dismissal from way back when?): OLD SOFT SHOO. [Idioms @ The Free Dictionary dot com] defines "OLD SOFT SHOE" as: "Something, such as a speech or explanation, delivered especially carefully and skillfully in order to convince or persuade; e.g., 'This salesperson keeps trying to give me the old soft-shoe, despite the fact that I already told him I don't want a new TV!'"

And speaking of Shoe (and shoo) and today's homophones, here is an old Shoe comic that fits the bill:

And finally, the fifth entry parodies the origin of words with (60-across. Etymological story about an equestrian's exclamation?): TALE OF WHOA. Ha! Ha! Get it? A TALE (as in the story of) that reins us in to the meaning of "whoa" ...

The flip side of this might be: (Clue - The letter "e"?) TAIL OF WOE

Here is the grid, and then off to the races!

Across:
1. Cravat kin: ASCOT. This one is for Irish Miss: 😘


To my admirer Agnes:  Love, Cary


6. "Masters of Illusion" host Dean: CAIN.  How about this for a homophonic play-on-words, and mild expletive? Clue: Causing trouble in the sugar fields? "RAISING CANE"

10. Swedish pop group: ABBA.  Or perhaps, a common poetic rhyme scheme?  

Three un-rhyming poetic lines (by yours, truly) is called a "Moe-ku"; 5 lines in an AABBA rhyme scheme is a "Moe-l'ick, but what should I call a 4-liner with an ABBA rhyme scheme? Maybe a "Moe-em??" Look for one later on... in the meantime, here is a little something to formulate today's earworm:



14. Fabric: CLOTH.  No one ever has referred to a priest or pastor as "a man of the fabric" ...

15. Land unit: ACRE.  Alternate entry for today? Clue - Angry expanse above one's waistline? BELLY ACRE ... sorry Robin for stepping on your homophones 😂

16. Subatomic particle with greater mass than an electron: MUON. One dictionary definition calls a MUON: "an unstable lepton that is common in the cosmic radiation near the earth's surface, has a mass about 207 times the mass of the electron, and exists in negative and positive forms" ...

19. Peruvian people who made rope bridges: INCA. Read all about them, here

20. Server with a spigot: URN.  I tried TAP first, to no avail

21. Unoccupied: FREE.  Not a welcome sign during an airplane flight when you gotta go ...

Hurry up in there / Ándale


22. Perfect little darling: ANGEL. What many dads call their daughters ... along with princess, sweetie, et al

23. "Science Friday" host Flatow: IRA. Glass, Gershwin, and Levin? Not happy ... but to the clue's credit, this website lists IRA Flatow as the most popular IRA

27. Get back: REGAIN.  Moe-ku:

First advertisement
For famous hair growth product:
"REGAIN with Rogaine"

29. __ de Janeiro: RIO.

30. Volleyball quartet?: ELS. Golfer "Ernie" is getting a little long-in-the-tooth ... the word "Volleyball" has four "L's"

31. Biblical garden: EDEN. Where "raising CAIN" occurred

32. Brian Setzer genre: SWING. [Wikipedia]: "Brian Robert Setzer (born April 10, 1959) is an American guitarist, singer, and songwriter. He found widespread success in the early 1980s with the 1950s-style rockabilly group Stray Cats, and returned to the music scene in the early 1990s with his swing revival band, the Brian Setzer Orchestra. In 1987, he made a cameo appearance as Eddie Cochran in the film La Bamba". Here is another ditty for you to hum all day ...

34. "Park it!": SIT.  Have any dog owners ever been tempted to tell "Fido" to "park it"??!!

39. "The Gilded __": Julian Fellowes series: AGE. Filled by perps, IIRC

42. Splash: SLOSH. The thesaurussaurus confirms it:

43. Once, quaintly: ERST. I've been known to throw the word "erstwhile" into my blogs, every now and again

47. Photographer Goldin: NAN. More perps to the rescue ... an example of her work:

From "Joy and Fury"


48. Exhibition funding agcy. since 1965: NEA. National Educational Association

49. Moves furtively: SNEAKS.  Or, what I called my gym shoes back in the day ... 

Jack Purcell's were my SNEAKerS of choice


55. Future louse: NIT.  Where the figurative term literally got its meaning ... having a NIT to pick

56. "Correctamundo!": RIGHT.  Anyone remember "The Fonz"?? Fast forward to about the 3:00 mark to here his famous phrase ...



57. Station under the Garden: PENN. I knew this. Why? Madison Square Garden (arena home of the New York Knicks and New York Rangers) is the venue above PENN Station ... don't believe me? Google it!!

58. Training course for an EMT: CPR. CPR should be taught to people other than EMT's; you'll never know when you'll need to perform it

59. Jai __: ALAI. Moe-ku:

Jai ALAI arena
Serves Chinese food at snack bar.
Features fronton soup

63. Governor of Georgia: KEMP.  [Wikipedia] "Brian Porter Kemp is an American politician serving since January 2019 as the 83rd governor of Georgia. A member of the Republican Party, Kemp served as the 27th secretary of state of Georgia from 2010 to 2018, and as a member of the Georgia State Senate from 2003 to 2007"


64. Paper clip shape: OVAL. So it is ... 





65. Devoured: ATE UP.

66. Dates: SEES.

67. Caresses: PETS.

68. Small pastries: TARTS. Moe-em:
For making desserts, I had lots of smarts
At Johnson and Wales, I practiced my arts.
My special sweet treats were pies shaped like hearts;
My degree, of course, was Bachelor of TARTS

Not exactly "ABBA", but as today's blogger, I make the rules around here!!! 😁😁

Down:

1. Get: ACQUIRE. Fun 1-down word; it doesn't appear nearly as often in major crossword puzzles as it should.  Nice way to get to a pan-gram

2. Spoke indistinctly: SLURRED.  For me, it's not an indistinct slur of my words ... when I have had too much to drink my slurring is QUITE noticeable

3. Neologism: COINAGE.  The word "COINAGE" has two distinct meanings:

    a) the "making" of COINS from various metals

    b) neologism - the forming of a new word (or phrase)

4. Hall of Famer Mel: OTT.  ERST and OTT in the same puzzle???  This is a nice "throwback" to old time crossword answers! 😀

5. Law org. led by Christopher A. Wray since 2017: THE FBI.  Question:  who would've gotten this answer immediately if the clue had a reference to J. Edgar Hoover?

6. Escapade: CAPER.  As our resident wit, Ray-O-Sunshine might ask:  What should you do to Supergirl if she were feeling a bit cold? ... CAPER

A different clue could've referred to the object pictured above 



7. Felt sore: ACHED. A never-ending "feeling" for the Chairman these days ... today, my neck and shoulders ACHED

8. Sore feeling: IRE.  A semi-clecho to the above answer - OR - the abbr. for the Emerald Isle

9. Still in the box: NEW. This could've been a fill-in-the-blank clue (Still ___ in the box).  Collectors know all about this condition for getting full value at auction ... what do you think the object below would be worth, "still NEW in the box"? 


This eBay listing has it for $5,800!!



10. __ acid: AMINO.  Ok, there is a fill-in-the-blank entry today ...

11. Botches: BUNGLES.  For TTP and waseeley (who I believe are fans of teams from the AFC North) - the nickname of the Cincinnati NFL football team who've now "BUNGLED" three Super Bowls

12. "Romanza" tenor Andrea: BOCELLI. Another video/audio clip (long):

 


13. Equity expert: ANALYST. And a "specific" ANALYST: (25-down. Psychoanalyst Fromm): ERICH.

18. "Between a Rock and a Hard Place" memoirist Ralston: ARON. And here I thought the only ARON in crosswords was the middle name of Elvis Presley! [Wikipedia] "Aron Lee Ralston (born October 27, 1975) is an American mountaineer, mechanical engineer, and motivational speaker, known for surviving a canyoneering"

22. Whisky __: Hollywood disco: A GOGO. Their website

26. Peel: RIND. A "zesty" word, if I do say so myself ...

28. Echidna snack: ANT. [Wikipedia] "Echidnas, sometimes known as spiny anteaters, are quill-covered monotremes (egg-laying mammals) belonging to the family Tachyglossidae, living in Australia and New Guinea"

32. Brown ermine: STOAT.



33. Is in the past?: WAS. Past tense of "is" is WAS

36. "Nuh-uh!": IS NOT. It is IS NOT, isn't it??

37. Pitch setter: CLEF. Did anyone else try OBOE here first? I did

38. Happy sound: HEE. If a golfer tried to hit a happy sound, would they "tee" HEE?

39. Hooded gear: ANORAKS.



40. Sea fed by the Jordan: GALILEE. Where Jesus grew up

41. Final Avengers film in the Infinity Saga: ENDGAME. The trailer ... Margaret got me interested in the Avengers films during COVID



44. Major stock holder?: RANCHER. Stock, as in "livestock" - not stocks and bonds

45. Take a powder: SKIP OUT. Interesting clue

46. Features of some Mary Janes: T-STRAPS. An OLD HARD SHOE - see the T-STRAP?

Didn't we see "T-STRAP" earlier this week?


49. Prefix with -gram: SONO. I tried "MONO" first

50. Like some ice cream: NONFAT. What's the point??!

52. Uses UPS: SHIPS.

53. Wet impact sound: SPLAT.


54. Parts of a loaf or loafers: HEELS. Also, a part of Mary Janes - see photo in 46-down

60. Spinner: TOP. A kid's toy

61. Wide st.: AVE. At first, I thought this meant wide STATE (abbr.), and tried TEX

62. Coco Gauff's org.: WTA. Short for, Women's Tennis Association



And once again, the blog has come to an end ... please offer any comments below ...

Thanks Robin! I know you'll pay us a visit ...