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

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Showing posts with label Jamey Smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jamey Smith. Show all posts

Mar 18, 2022

Friday, March 18, 2022, Jamey Smith

Theme: A real work of art

Puzzling Thoughts:

Or maybe the theme should be: "A real piece of work" - as in weird, complex, different, and interesting! Jamey Smith - a U of Texas Longhorn - was last seen here at the Crossword Corner a couple of Saturday's ago. He's had a few themeless puzzles at the LA Times, and has been published in both Universal Crossword and the Wall Street Journel

Today's puzzle - while not themeless - did not need a reveal. As you complete the puzzle you notice the use of proper names (specifically, artists) as homonyms in the longest "across" entries. Using 5 of these entries (total of 55 letter spaces) forced Jamey to use a plethora of 3, 4, and 5-letter words in the grid. Typical Friday puzzles earn their "toughness" from longer words/phrases, but Jamey's earned toughness from the unusual puns. Would you like to see how he arrived there?

17-Across. Spanish artist's portrait of an American president?: DALI MADISON. The pun is for first lady Dolley Madison, wife of President James Madison. (See the image above) Had Jamey chosen a different tactic, could he have tried:

Clue: Spanish artist's favorite device to move furniture? SALVADOR DOLLY

31-Across. Swiss artist's painting of a bird?: KLEE PIGEON. A clay pigeon is a mechanically thrown target used in shooting skeet or trap - as the imbedded image describes. I wish Jamey had tried this, though:

Clue: Who carried Dutch artist to his grave? PAUL BEARERS. Moving right along ...

37-Across. American artist's condiment rendering?: SARGENT PEPPER.

Any Beatles fan out here?

But if Jamey really wanted a laugh, I would've suggested this:

Clue: What would you call an American artist who covers Beatles songs on the loo? JOHN SINGER

45-Across. American pop artist's drawing of an ulna?: HARING BONE

These just keep getting cheesier, don't they??!! I wasn't aware of Mr. Haring, but I do know a herringbone pattern. In an alternate universe perhaps Jamey might try:

Clue: American pop artist's family reunion? KEITH AND KIN. (they can't ALL be winners!!)

61-Across. Mexican artist's poinsettia painting?: KAHLO FLOWER. Ha, ha!! Cauliflower - which some pronounce "kaa·luh·flau·ur" - was Jamey's ploy for this entry, by using the similarly pronounced artist, Kahlo. But I would've thought that this "dad joke" about her might've made the cut:

Clue: Amazon Prime's offer to Mexican artist who ordered servant's clothes? FRIDA LIVERY

OK, enough already Moe!! Please just the facts for the remainder?!

I'll try ...

Across:
1. Westernmost African capital: DAKAR.

6. Ballroom dance: RUMBA.

This also inspired a Moe-ku:

What makes perfect sense
At a vacuum convention?
Dancing the ROOMBA

11. World's oldest natl. channel: BBC. I occasionally watch the BBC; my favorite is the Graham Norton show. His signature finale is to have audience members tell a story from the Big Red Chair ...

14. Historical 1960 John Wayne film, with "The": ALAMO. I didn't know that "The Duke" made a movie about rental cars

15. Ewoks' forest moon: ENDOR. All perps for this one. The only thing close to "ENDOR" that I recall is Samantha's mother, ENDORa:

16. Notable period: ERA. One of Jamey's twenty 3-letter words/abbr's in today's puzzle

19. What Marcie calls Peppermint Patty: SIR. #3 of 20. Peanuts comic strip characters:

20. Tokyo beer brand: ASAHI. How do you say "beer me" in Japanese? Bīru watashi You can't spell watashi without ASAHI

21. Up and about: MOBILE. [left blank on purpose for one of y'all to offer a pun]

23. "Just like that!": BAM. #4 of the 20 3-letter words, and Emiril Legasse's favorite comment

25. Charges too much: SOAKS. Another meaning of "charges too much" is: GOES INTO DEBT

28. Loaf: IDLE. Did I mention that this puzzle contains eighteen 4-letter entries?

29. Skill-measuring method: EXAM. #2 of 18

34. Do well on the test: GET A "B". That was about my average for four years at Pitt. I think I graduated with a 3.14 GPA. My personal reward was having a piece of pie

36. Press start?: PERMA. An abbreviation of PERMAnent press

42. Temple reading: TORAH. But only for the Jewish students at this Philadelphia school?

43. Vegas natural: SEVEN. A term used in the casino game, Craps. Rolling a SEVEN (or eleven) is considered a "natural". As wikipedia dot com confirms: "in craps, a natural is a roll of two dice with a score of 7 or 11 on the come out roll. This will lead to a win for the players who wagered money on the Pass or Come bet, but a loss for players betting Don't Pass or Don't Come"

50. Betray the gang: SING. As in "rat on" or "snitch"; a reference to a stool pigeon in a gang who "SINGS" when the cops interrogate

51. Dutch __: OVEN. I really wanted to use a certain definition /description for Dutch OVEN, but I'm running out of gas right now and need a brief break ...

52. Merciless: STONY. OK, I'm back. STONY for merciless? I wonder what the Thesaurusaurus has to say about this? Hmm. Not there. Guess that's why this made for a Friday clue

54. Elton's john: LOO. See my "daffy-nition" for 37-Across in the opening monologue for this recap

55. Opinion: BELIEF. Something you all should state in the comment section below this blog!

58. 66-Across arrival: GUEST. 66. 58-Across booking: INN.

60. Nectar collector: BEE. I think I lost count of the 3-letter words ...

67. Kids' refrain: EIEIO. "Old MacDonald had a farm ..." (Try to get THAT tune out of your head today!!)

68. Top-notch: PRIMO. This word would be good first guess at WORDLE. In fact, I might try using it someday

69. Kid: TOT. I'm back on track; #SEVEN of the 20 3-letter words

70. Cowgirl's ride: STEED. Merrium-Webster's defines STEED as: "a horse used or trained for riding; a spirited horse". I suppose "cowgirl" in the clue was added to make us overthink, perhaps?

71. Perceive: SENSE. I SENSE that this is the last of the "across" clues/answers for today's puzzle

Down:
1. __ joke: DAD. Pretty fitting for today's puzzle, don't you think??

2. __ mode: A LA. Pie à la Mode (literally "pie in the current fashion"/ "fashionable pie") is pie served with ice cream. The French culinary phrase à la mode used in the name of this American dessert is also encountered in other dishes such as boeuf à la mode (beef à la mode). Hmm; I've never tried beef à la mode, but since the milk in ice cream comes from cows, I imagine it would taste just fine

3. Greek olive named for its place of origin: KALAMATA. "Kalamáta is the second most populous city of the Peloponnese peninsula, after Patras, in southern Greece and the largest city of the homonymous administrative region. As the capital and chief port of the Messenia regional unit, it lies along the Nedon River at the head of the Messenian Gulf." Wikipedia

4. Côte d'Azur comrades: AMIS. Frawnch. AMI is a male friend; AMIE is a female friend. AMY is my daughter's name

5. Canning tomatoes: ROMAS. These:

6. Phone timesaver: REDIAL. For those who wondered how this could occur before cell phones:

7. Cambridge, colloquially: UNI. As in Cambridge UNIversity. Had this been clued as: "college in Cambridge", we could've used: MIT

8. Checkup pros: M.D.'S. Medical Doctors

9. Sailing spar: BOOM. Not too many puzzles ago we had the phrase: BOOM MIC. Many use the word "BOOM" in the phrase "lower the BOOM" which is a term for acting suddenly and forcefully

10. River through Florence: ARNO. Italy. Interesting that this river also goes through Pisa; it does "lean a little", doesn't it?

11. Not relevant to: BESIDE. Moe-ku #2:

M.D.s who practice
Non-relevant cases have
Good BESIDE manner

12. S.O.S alternative: BRILLO. As in the scouring pad

13. Turn recklessly: CAREEN. Does the ARNO river CAREEN, or is that the wrong definition?

18. "I see now": AH OK. I've heard of AOK and AH YES, but AH OK seems a bit "forced"

22. King Kong and Lady Kong: BIG APES. Yes they are

23. Beseech: BEG. My old mantra: "it is far better to BEG for forgiveness, than it is to ask for permission"

24. Plot lines: AXES. I couldn't find any images to post that weren't too graphic

26. Served in a chafing dish, say: KEPT HOT. Chafing dishes are usually found at all-you-can-eat buffets; but with the pandemic a lot of buffets in restaurants were shut down

27. Trickle: SEEP. But you never hear the term "SEEP-down economics", do you?

30. Bond holding?: MARTINI. Shaken, not stirred

32. TSA __Check: PRE. Explained here. A big time-saver for frequent fliers

33. Little devils: IMPS. I qualify for this definition. I'm barely 5'6" tall, and quite the little devil!!

35. Commercial letters after Bug or Weed: B-GON. Shouldn't we Round Up all weed killers and eliminate them?! ;^)

38. Small amount of work: ERG. Another 3-letter crossword staple

39. Slaps the cuffs on: NABS. NABS is also the term used to identify packaged snack crackers. But I noticed that these are made by Lance. Wouldn't you think they were made by NABisco??

40. Villain in Stephen King's "The Dark Half," e.g.: EVIL TWIN. I always think of EVIL TWIN as a "Doctor Jekyll and Mister Hyde" sort of thing

41. Silver State city: RENO. Nevada is known as "The Silver State". RENO is a casino town located near Lake Tahoe

44. Park __: airport facility: 'N GO. A popular alternative for frequent fliers. I wonder if there's a PRECheck for these facilities, too?

45. Halfling of Middle-earth: HOBBIT. I've worn out my HOBBIT limerick; I'm sure that many of you can recite it from memory ...

46. Olay rival: AVEENO. A must have for those of us who live in the desert. Great for adding moisture to the skin

47. Let up: RELENT. Hey Moe! Are you going to RELENT with your DAD jokes today? Not now. Moe-ku #3:

A lot of Christians
Let up before Easter. It's
Known, as to RE-LENT

48. Errant, as a field goal: NO GOOD. Don't ask Buffalo Bills' fans about errant field goals in their Super Bowl appearances

49. Sufficient, in texts: ENUF. Meh

53. Sounds from pounds: YELPS. Or, the name of an on-line restaurant rating app that shows dog-friendly venues

56. Barely makes, with "out": EKES. Eek!!

57. __ accompli: FAIT. FAIT accompli: "a thing that has already happened or been decided before those affected hear about it, leaving them with no option but to accept it." Like my blogs?

59. Ticked: SORE. IRED fits, too, but I like SORE better

62. Texter's chuckle: HEE. ENUF!!

63. Rest: LIE. Or in golf terms; play the ball as it LIEs. Right, Husker Gary?

64. Half a mammal?: EMS. There are 3 "EMS" in the word mammal. One half of six = three. Your mathematics lesson du jour

65. Sushi garnish: ROE. Last DAD joke: What do sushi fishermen sing as they troll for the catch? ROE, ROE, ROE your boat ...

The grid:

What are YOUR puzzling thoughts??

Feb 26, 2022

Saturday, February 26, 2022, Jamey Smith

 Saturday Themeless by Jamey Smith

Jamey is our Longhorn constructor who worked at the University of Texas for 25 years as a 
writer/editor in the university’s development communications office. As always he gives us a very nice challenge today.

Thanks for checking in, Gary, and a big hello to Saturday solvers far and wide.

This puzzle was something of a departure for me in that I began with no particular seed entries in mind. Instead I set myself the challenge of designing an interesting-looking grid and then seeing where it might take me fill-wise. This resulted in, well, a little something for everyone — at least that’s my hope. My favorite juxtaposition is the pair of eight-letter entries in the NE corner. The lower one pretty much sums up my reaction to the “conquest” above!  

Warm wishes,
Jamey  


Across:

1. Be temporarily: ACT AS.

6. Pulitzer-winning journalist for her Clinton-Lewinsky columns: DOWD The ten columns she wrote

10. Part of an ear: COB.

13. Heckle: TAUNT - Tit for tat

Works both ways












14. 2018 documentary about Alex Honnold's conquest of El Capitan: FREE SOLO17. "Are you serious!?": WAIT! WHAT? - "You want me to climb El Capitan with no equipment?"


16. Like a classic Reuben: ON RYE.

18. Key of Chopin's Ballade No. 1: G MINOR - Oh...

















19. Mariner's worry: REEFS.

20. Minute quality: TININESS - Yeah, I suppose that would be the noun from the adjective tiny

23. Pastoral sounds: BAAS - Jamey included sheepishly.

24. Return address for guilty sorts?: SCENE OF THE CRIME - Fun clue!

28. Written in the stars: MEANT TO BE - In a recent q/a with Neil de Grasse Tyson, I heard him say that karma and such. is just a bunch of bunk.

29. 6-Down info: ETAS - That is sometimes a moot point















33. "My Fair Lady" composer: LOEWE 





















34. Law school newbie: ONE-L 

This great movie's 
main characters

35. Postgame celebrations: FIST PUMPS - Matt Stafford didn't get many during his dismal years with the Detroit Lions. After being traded to the LA Rams, his 37. Elusive result: FAIRY TALE ENDING is being a Super Bowl Champion. 


44. Enervate: TIRE - A word I use about as often as last Sunday's ROISTERED

45. Well-thought-of: ESTEEMED.

46. John of Scotch fame: DEWAR - This 32-year-old version will run you about $150 
56. Mellow, in some cases: AGE - Can be an expensive process

48. Showrunner Shonda: RHIMES.

Three of Shonda's Shows












49. Colorful quartz variety: AMETHYST.




















53. Victim of Hermes: ARGUS If you're interested

54. Trepidatious query starter: DARE I ASK.

55. [Shrug]: DUNNO 


57. What one often wears out?: COAT - I've been wearing this one for 22 years old and it's still going strong!


58. City near Düsseldorf: ESSEN.


Down:

1. __ Fireball: hot candy: ATOMIC












2. Boxer, for instance: CANINE - Woof!

3. Call it a night: TURN IN - If it's bed time, Joann has our kitty staring at her.

4. Fishing line?: ANYONE - Fun clue! Of course you thought of this scene:


5. Sound choice: STEREO.

6. Tex. airport that's bigger than Manhattan: DFW.


7. 1/24 of un giorno: ORA - 24 means hours, giorno means Italian and 1/24 means one ORA (hour)

8. One of China's Northern Dynasties: WEI.

386 A.D to 535 A.D.

9. Take away: DETRACT.

10. Unity: COHESION - In the zero-g of the ISS, water's cohesion pulls itself into a sphere


11. "Frozen" snowman who sings "In Summer": OLAF.

12. Some spammers: BOTS - There's this Nigerian Prince...

15. Certify: SWEAR TO.

18. Sporty rides: GT'S - Gran Turismo - Italian for Grand Touring 

21. Calif. home of works by Matisse and Warhol: S.F. MOMA - The San Francisco Museum Of Modern Art


22. Skyline feature: STEEPLE - The soaring STEEPLES of Cologne were used as landmarks on WWII bombing runs and were left untouched while the rest of the city was leveled


23. Prefix with diction: BENE - Gluey, Jamey?

25. Mooring cable openings: HAWSES.















26. U.K. honor: MBE - These lads are Members Order Of The British Empire


27. Sushi bar fare: EEL.

29. False start?: EFF False

30. __ Maria: TIA - Aunt Maria 



31. So to speak: AS IT WERE - Hall of fame QB Dan Marino is also famous, AS IT WERE, for never having won a Super Bowl. 


32. Mark with bands: STRIATE.



















33. Ukulele forebear: LUTE What is a LUTE?

36. Like a costly victory: PYRRHIC - The Confederate victory at Chancellorsville was PYRRHIC because Lee's "right arm" Stonewall Jackson was killed by friendly fire


38. Schwab rival: E-TRADE 

39. '60s-chic jackets: NEHRUS - Yeah, I had a green one

40. Stoops: DEIGNS - Many thought she was so snobbish she would not DEIGN to even acknowledge others


41. Protected, in a way: IMMUNE - I've had three Covid shots, a flu shot and a shingles shot this past year

42. "Taken" trilogy surname: NEESON - Rotten Tomatoes critics gave it a 59%.


43. Dept. store stock: GDS - GooDS or MERCHandise

46. Post-WWI art movement: DADA Dada was an art movement formed during the First World War in Zurich in negative reaction to the horrors and folly of the war.


47. Kindle read: E-MAG.

50. Former hoopster __ Ming: YAO.

7'6" Yao and his 6'3" wife Ye Li



















51. Org. funded by FICA: SSA - Social Security Administration helps fund me!

52. Box office buy: Abbr.: TKT.

On Broadway





Oct 23, 2021

Saturday, October 23, 2021, Jamey Smith

 Saturday Themeless by Jamey Smith

I had a good time on this puzzle from our Lone Star State constructor, Jamey Smith: Here is what he had to say about this puzzle: 

Hi again everyone,

With so many possibilities to choose from, it’s no surprise themeless constructors tend to gravitate toward things they find pleasing and worthy to feature as marquee entries. And indeed many of today’s selections give me the warm fuzzies. 

CLEAN ENERGY, of course, and TONY BENNETT — who doesn’t love Tony? — as well as MOVIE PALACE and ORIGIN STORY. (The latter two bring to mind a fun visit to Santa Barbara, a highlight of which was seeing the exploits of young Han in "Solo: A Star Wars Story” at the gorgeous Arlington Theatre.)

Also glad to include a smattering of other faves from the entertainment world. Hope the proper names didn’t give anyone too much trouble. My thanks to Gary for his enlightening recaps, and to Rich for smoothing up my rough edges.

Until next time,

Jamey

I told Jamey I was still baffled by ECGTESTS even after I had filled in all the cells and then suddenly ECG and beating made sense and I had it. Jamey replied, "Ha! Forgive and forget, okay? I was just riffing on “heartbeats” with that one and thought it was a fun little misdirect. Luckily it looks like Rich agreed…"


Across:

1. Yellow __: LAB.


4. Keen: AVID - Describes our crossword interest here

8. Best Actress Oscar winner before Hepburn's last such award: SPACEK - We saw both of these movies, enjoyed them and wonder where such films are now

14. Wong of "American Housewife": ALI.


15. Elaborate theater: MOVIE PALACE - The Orpheum in Omaha is one but like most of these PALACES, it does not show MOVIES any more. We Just paid $315 to watch Omaha's Mannheim Steamroller perform there on December 22.


17. Yank: TUG.

18. Green juice source: CLEAN ENERGY.

19. Aptly nicknamed section of D.C.'s Massachusetts Avenue: EMBASSY ROW.


21. Campus cadet org.: ROTC.

22. Sniffish sort: SNOB - David Ogden Stiers played one perfectly in this cast


23. Research outpost co-developed by NASA: ISS Click on this site, give it ten seconds to load and you'll see where the International Space Station is right now.

24. Rural expanse: LEA.

25. Hoaxes perpetrated by IRS impostors: TAX SCAMS - Jamey told me his cluing was, "25-A: Evasive maneuvers"

29. Not right: AMISS.

31. Sedimentary rock, from the Greek for "egg": OOLITE.


33. French toast part: SANTE - "To your health!" Great cluing!

34. Exposes: TELLS ON - A grade schooler's delight

37. Olds until 1999: CUTLASS.

39. Deep animosity: ODIUM.


40. Show deference, in a way: GROVEL.

42. "Law & Order" actor Jeremy: SISTO.


43. Lawless: ANARCHIC.

47. Wile E. Coyote's supply: TNT - That Acme Company had everything

48. "The Dutch House" author Patchett: ANN - The audio version read by some Hanks guy


50. Actress Chaplin: OONA - Mother: Geraldine Chaplin, Grandfather: Charlie Chaplin, Great Grandfather: Eugene O'Neill


51. "Ri-i-i-ght": I BET 

53. Test subjects: GUINEA PIGS.

57. Frank Sinatra School of the Arts co-founder: TONY BENNETT.


59. Tennis unit: SET.

60. Many a superhero adaptation: ORIGIN STORY - The most famous one


61. Sully: TAR.

62. Voiced: SONANT.


63. First-class seat, often: ONE A.

64. "It's a hit" letters: SRO - Standing Room Only. Not allowed on airplane above.


Down:

1. Cutting-edge: LATEST.

2. Barnard grad, e.g.: ALUMNA - The word for a female graduate. Since Barnard College in NYC is all women...


3. Walmart adjective: BIG BOX store

4. Hornets of the '70s: AMCS - The Pawn Stars bought the original AMC Pacer from the movie Wayne's World and then paid big money to have it restored


5. Knoxville-based SEC athletes: VOLS - Fans arriving for a Tennessee VOLunteer FB game do not "tailgate", the "sailgate" on the Tennessee River just below the stadium


6. "Hurlyburly" Tony winner Judith: IVEY - Here's a scene from that play 


7. Anne Frank, say: DIARIST - Nin gets the day off

8. Gushes: SPEWS.

9. Rave's opposite: PAN Hilarious PANS of famous movies

10. Tiger or Twin, briefly: ALER - Jazzbumpa's Tigers, my Royals and Boomer's Twins all fared poorly in this year's AL Central



11. State name in a James Taylor classic: CAROLINA - Sweet Baby James singing this lovely ballad 52 years ago.


12. Beat reporters?: ECG TESTS  - JAMEY, I'm throwing a flag on this play! 😁 I put his response at the top of this write-up.

13. Accessories that preserve your access: KEY CASES.

16. 1961 space chimp: ENOS - Ham was put into a suborbital flight and then ENOS was put into orbit and then Allen Shepard's suborbital flight made him the first human American in space


20. Popular vodka brand: ABSOLUT  and 26. Vodka drink, briefly: COSMO. Here is a COSMOPOLITAN made with ABSOLUT Vodka


27. Teléfono greeting: ALO - Hello in many Spanish speaking countries

28. Artistic dynasty: MING.


29. Late bloomer: ASTER.

30. Shoplifter's concern: MALL COP.

32. B-school course: ECON - Students in Business Schools would certainly take ECONOMICS

34. Snack that comes in Rounds and Triangles: TOSTITOS  and...


35. Pennsylvania's __ University, home of the Fighting Scots: EDINBORO - EDINBORO and its university is a 1 hr and 49 min drive SW from Buffalo, NY along Lake Erie


36. Work with taps, maybe: LISTEN IN - During the Civil War, Lincoln ordered wire taps on telegraph lines


38. Where RFK got his LLB: UVA - Bobby Kennedy got his Bachelor of Law degree at the University of Virginia

41. Met unexpectedly: RAN INTO.

44. Lifting things: HOIST - Here a crane is shown HOISTING the first stage of a Saturn V rocket in the Vehicle Assembly Building at KSC    


45. Engaged: IN GEAR - My mother's motivating phrase was "Get it IN GEAR!"

46. Julián __, HUD secretary under Obama: CASTRO.


48. Broker: AGENT.

49. Meryl Streep and Amy Adams played them in "Doubt" (2008): NUNS - 73% on Rotten Tomatoes


52. "Rack City" rapper: TYGA - Google his lyrics if violence and profanity will improve your day.

54. Noble gas: NEON.

55. To be, in Toulouse: ETRE - When doing Hamlet on a stage in Toulouse, France you might say "ÊTRE ne pas
ÊTRE"

56. "Back __!": ATYA - Saying "Back AT YA!" when someone says "I love you" seems tacky

58. Storage unit: BIN - I love shopping here!