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

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Jun 13, 2025

Friday, June 13, 2025, Katherine Simonson


No. No. The Other Way! The Other Way!


Good Morning, Cruciverbalists, and welcome to Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom.  Your host for today will be Marlin Perkins.  Oh, sorry.  Your host, today, is Malodorous Manatee and the program for today is a recap of a Friday puzzle by Katherine Simonson.

Let's start with the reveal:

56 Across:  Annual mass relocation, or a movement that happened four times in this puzzle?: ANIMAL MIGRATION.

At the places where the theme is applied, Katherine takes well-known two-word combinations, each involving an animal of some sort, and reverses the order of the words.  I guess that this could be called "MIGRATION".  While MIGRATION is a form of relocation it does seem to be a little bit of a stretch.  However, because the gimmick is more readily identifiable than in many other puzzles, there is no need to belabor the point.  

Here are the four "times":

17 Across:  Meeting of monarchs?: BUTTERFLY SOCIAL.  A social butterfly is a person who is outgoing, enjoys attending social events, and often moves between different social groups without forming deep connections. They are typically charismatic and thrive on interacting with others. Flip Social Butterfly around and we have a group of Monarch butterflies enjoying each others company. Did anyone first think that kings and/or queens would somehow be involved?



23 Across:  Lingerie for a grizzly?: BEAR TEDDY.  From this:


To this:


34 Across:  Shortage of raptors? HAWK DEFICIT.   Deficit hawk is a political slang term for people who place great emphasis on keeping government budgets under control.  As the federal deficit alone is in excess of $35 trillion there is, apparently,  a shortage of this type of hawk.  Flip Deficit Hawk around and we have a dearth of flying carnivores.



51 Across:  Protest in support of the loser of a fabled race?: HARE MARCH.  The March Hare from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland morphs into:



This is how it all appears in the completed grid:



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

Across:

1. Raucous field cry: CAW.  A reference to the noise a crow makes and the first of 21 three-letter answers.

4. Workforce: STAFF.  Does the STAFF at REI or EMS sell staffs?

9. Wounded by a scorpion: STUNG.



14. Suffix with mod or nod: ULE.  ModULE or NodULE

15. Arctic: POLAR.  

16. Break down: PARSE.  Bill Clinton brought PARSE into the broader lexicon with his famous "It depends on what the meaning of is is" and  “Well, I’m just showing the American people what a verb is and what a noun is, would you like me to show them another verb and another noun?"

20. Words of the weary: I'M BEAT.

21. Box: SPAR.  Not a carton.  Pugilism.    

22. Mocking irreverence: SNARK.



28. Sea dog: MARINER.  Both GOB and Tar were too short.



30. Kicks on Route 66?: NISSANS.  Nice mash-up.  The NISSAN Kick is an automobile.  I don't think that the song anticipated that.  We'll let Ray Benson and company explain . . .


31. Moisturizer brand: OLAY.

33. Central Asia's North __ Sea: ARAL.  A place we frequently visit.

39. Half-moon tide: NEAP.


41. Lad of La Mancha: NINO.  Spanish for a young lad.

42. Divide with two cuts: TRISECT.  One might also create four pieces with two cuts (but the cuts would have to intersect each other).

46. Slices of American cheese: SINGLES.



53. Plot: TRACT.  Not the arc of a story.  A parcel of land.

54. Pedestrian: BLAH.  Meh.

55. Contort in pain: WRITHE.




61. Under the __: RADAR.  Idiomatic for intentionally not drawing attention to one's own self.  Look, the Norwegian RADAR operator has reported seeing some birds on the screen!  He's Scandinavian.

62. Entreaties: PLEAS.


63. Not gross: NET.  Not yucky.  A financial reference.

64. Acknowledge: THANK.


65. Had a restful night: SLEPT.

66. Burro: ASS.  A small one.


Down:

1. Avant-garde movement pioneered by Georges Braque: CUBISM.  Per Wikipedia, the CUBISM movement was pioneered in partnership by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque.

Still Life - Georges Braque



2. Spelman graduate: ALUMNA.  Spelman College is a private, historically black, women's liberal arts college in Atlanta, Georgia, founded in 1881.

3. Suite amenity: WET BAR.  Perhaps.  A hotel room that is not a suite could also have a WET BAR and a suite of multiple rooms could be without one.

Literally


4. "Last chance to object": SPEAK NOW. . .  or forever hold your peace.

5. Lawsuit basis: TORT.  A frequent cause of action in our puzzles.

6. Landon who was governor of Kansas in the 1930s: ALF.  ALF Landon was a Kansas governor and a Republican presidential candidate in 1936. He lost to Franklin D. Roosevelt and was the only Republican governor to win reelection in 1934.

7. Like some starts and returns: FALSE.  The former might result in a disqualification, the latter might result in a heavy fine and jail time.

8. Skillet: FRY PAN.  More often frying pan.

9. Hurling and curling: SPORTS.  Hurling is a contact sport played by men and women with a wooden stick and a ball. It is one of Ireland's native Gaelic games.  Alternatively, see 25 Down.  Curling is somewhat akin to  shuffleboard played on ice.




10. Middle of a winning trio: TAC.

Tic Tac Toe


11. Ocean State sch.: URI.



12. Cryptography org.: NSA.



13. Set: GEL.  Used as a verb as in how Jello firms up or GELs.

18. Polo of "Good Trouble": TERI.

19. Dress for a formal puja, perhaps: SARI.  This solver was not familiar with puja but SARIs are a form of dress frequently worn in crossword puzzles so, with a couple of perps, the answer quickly came to mind.  Once, I accidentally offended an Indian woman by using the wrong word for her clothing.  So I said "SARI."

23. Small nail: BRAD.


24. Morales of "Mission: Impossible" films: ESAI.

25. Feathered projectile: DART.  How does a dart board on the ceiling make you sick?  It causes you to throw up.

26. Forensic sample: DNA.



27. French fashion monogram: YSL.



29. Large ruminant in the Rockies: ELK.



32. Japanese dough: YEN.  Dough as in slang for money.

34. Locks: HAIR.
35. Cathedral feature: APSE.  A place frequented in our puzzles.

36. Amy Tan's "Saving __ From Drowning": FISH.  Tan is perhaps best known for The Joy Luck Club.


37. Pasta suffix: INI.  Bucatini, Ditalini, Capellini, Tagliolini, etc.

38. Distinction: CONTRAST.  As opposed to, say, horizontal hold?

39. Advanced degree?: NTH.  Not an academic reference.  Extremely/as much as possible.

40. Time capsule time: ERA.  A big 'thank you" for not heading down the Swifties road.

43. Board: EMBARK.  Do dogs ever leave?  Of course not.  They EMBARK.

44. Buzz: CALL.  As in "I'll give her a buzz".  No, not that kind of buzz.

45. Wanders (around): TRAMPS.  Like a TRAMP steamer.  ROAMS and ROVES were both too short.

47. Sandpaper measure: GRIT.



48. America Ferrera, for one: LATINA.  Clued this way, for this answer there were hundreds of millions of clues from which to choose.

49. Repeats: ECHOES.



50. Medical tubes: STENTS.  I have a friend who has been feeling really sentimental about a stent she had put in several years ago.  It still holds a special place in her heart.

52. "You need to relax": CHILL.  CHILL, man.  Gee.

55. Cloak: WRAP.  As in a riddle WRAPped up in an enigma.

56. Part of LACMA: ART.



57. Casual refusal: NAH.  Nah.

58. NAACP co-founder __ B. Wells: IDA.  A frequent visitor.

59. "Hoo boy": MAN.  Gee.  Chill, MAN.

60. Bagel center?: GEE.  GEE, man, chill.  Oops, sorry.  Force of habit.  It's actually one of those types of clues (but we're on to this trick).  B A G E L


Well, we've wrapped things up up five- three-letter words in a row so there's not much left to say except "Bye Bye For Now."  I will add, however, that the relative lack of proper nouns was refreshing, indeed.

On a further note, this recap marks the first time that this marine creature has ventured into the realm of AI generated images.  Did you spot them?



___________________________________________





Jun 12, 2025

Thursday, June 12, 2025, Amie Walker, Amanda Rafkin

 Theme:  Love OMLife

LOML and NaomiZ on their recent trip to Spain
checking out the Alcázar in Segovia where
Isabella I of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon once held sway.

Constructors Amie Walker and Amanda Rafkin team up today to give us a pleasant diversion with a puzzling theme.  There are no circles, but we are asked to look at the beginning of each of the starred entries to find a secret message.

17-Across. *Elixirs that stir passion: LOVE POTIONS.


27-Across. *Steinbeck novella featuring George and Lennie: OF MICE AND MEN.


48-Across. *Franchise whose characters have "cutie marks": MY LITTLE PONY.


63-Across. *"Appreciate every moment": LIFE IS SHORT.


62-Down. Romantic initialism spelled out by the starts of the answers to the starred clues: LOML.

I'm glad the ladies told us this was an initialism, because LOML did not look like an English spelling to me!  And I'm glad they said it was romantic, too.  That helped me to guess "Love Of My Life."  When I went online to confirm this solution, I found that according to Yahoo News UK, "The acronym LOML is universally believed to mean 'love of my life'. It is used in messages and comments constantly."  Not only that, but Taylor Swift released a song just last year titled "loml."  Learning new things is good mental exercise, and not a waste of precious brain cells, right?

On to the rest of the things we knew, or didn't:

Across:

1. Fire (up): REV.

4. Sound of an ungentle landing: THUD.

8. Ready to pour: ON TAP.

13. "Little Red Riding Hood" tool: AXE.

I had nightmares about this story for years.


14. Grey __ vodka: GOOSE.

15. Boatload: CARGO.

16. __ reel: GAG.

17. [Theme clue]

19. Fish sauce quality: UMAMI.  Umami is often described as a fifth taste sensation (not salty, sour, bitter, or sweet) that is savory and delicious.  Vague enough?  Oxford Languages says it corresponds to the flavor of glutamates, especially monosodium glutamate.  Yum!

21. Takes a turn?: REVOLVES.

22. "Let's kick it up a __": NOTCH.

25. Worn-down pencil: NUB.

26. Jargon suffix: ESE.  Legalese, bureaucratese, journalese, computerese ...

27. [Theme clue]

31. Not post-: PRE.

32. Hindu festival: HOLI.  Holi is a major Hindu festival celebrating the arrival of spring in India and the blossoming of love. It is colorful!



33. Gave the star treatment to: RATED.  Oh, that kind of star treatment!  



37. Morrison who said, "The function of freedom is to free someone else": TONI.  Spoken at the Barnard College commencement ceremony, 1979.

39. Like cereal sitting in milk: SOGGY.

42. Clip: PACE.  Clip is usually used when speaking of a rapid pace:  a good clip, a fast clip.

43. Compress: SMUSH.  Informal for mash or push.  

45. Warmth: HEAT.

47. Pro's opposite: CON.

48. [Theme clue]

52. Rapper __ Nas X: LIL.  By now you all know him.

Lil Nas X

55. Particle: BIT.

56. Rounds in tourneys: SEMIS.

57. "That was off topic ... ": I DIGRESS.

60. Cultured __: PEARL.

63. [Theme clue]

66. WC: LOO.  WC (water closet) and loo are British terms for toilet or lavatory.

67. Put some chips on the table: ANTED.  Not snacks!  He put some chips (gaming tokens) on the table to play a round of cards.  In other words, he anted (sounds like ANTEED) up.



68. Capitol Hill staffers: AIDES.

69. Cash dispenser: ATM.

70. Wine vessels: CASKS.

71. Some "Modern Family" figures: DADS.



72. Marina __ Rey, California: DEL.  The other end of "the 90" from our place.  Speaking of which, save the 90!  Los Angeles city planners want to repurpose this short freeway by putting apartment buildings and businesses on it.  It's not continually jammed, so it must be ripe for further development.

Down:

1. Italian meat sauce: RAGÙ.  Yes, ragù (with a grave accent, leaning left) is a meat sauce typically served with pasta.  But RAGÚ (with an acute accent, leaning right) is a trademarked brand of bottled pasta sauces.  I counted 25 varieties of RAGÚ on their website, and only one contained meat.  

2. Test: EXAM.

3. List that may include black bean chili and mushroom pot pie: VEGAN MENU.  Traveling in Europe can be challenging for us.  We were happy to find places like Roots & Rolls in Barcelona, Mad Mad Vegan in Madrid, and Wild Food in Granada, where the menus are entirely vegan.

4. All __ well: TOO.  I know all TOO well that vegetarian options are limited in some places!

5. __ lane: HOV.  We can use the High Occupancy Vehicle lane in California if there are two or more people in the car -- or if it's a Clean Air Vehicle with a required decal.  To qualify for a decal, the vehicle must be: 1) 100% electric or hydrogen fuel cell powered, or 2) plug-in hybrid-electric meeting certain standards, or 3) compressed natural gas meeting state and federal emission standards.

6. Tech support caller: USER.

7. Rely (on): DEPEND.

8. National Black Cat Day month: OCTOBER.  Sure, but:

National Black Cat Appreciation Day is August 17th.
National Black Cat Day is October 27th.
October is Black Cat Awareness Month.
All of these events are meant to raise support for black cat adoptions and to dispel superstitions.



9. Get just right: NAIL.

10. Treasure stash: TROVE.

11. Nosy neighbor in "WandaVision": AGNES.  WandaVision is a TV miniseries created for Disney+, based on Marvel Comics, featuring the characters Wanda Maximoff (whose alter ego is Scarlet Witch) and Vision.  Nosy neighbor Agnes is secretly a witch herself, and an antagonist.  If we are going to get into complex fictional worlds, I'd rather listen to my granddaughter describe the tribes of dragons in the Wings of Fire books:  SkyWings, IceWings, NightWings, SeaWings, MudWings, SandWings, RainWings, HiveWings, LeafWings, SilkWings ....

12. Entourage: POSSE.

14. Bug: GLITCH.

18. Reproductive cell: OVUM.

20. Pronoun used in mock outrage: MOI.  Made famous by Miss Piggy, it's Frawnche for "Who, ME?"



23. Co. leaders: CEOs.  Company leaders are Chief Executive Officers.

24. Angel hair topper: HALO.  You were thinking ragù, right?  Not that kind of angel hair.

27. Elects (to): OPTS.

28. Gift tag word: FROM.

29. "See ya in the morning!": 'NIGHT.

30. __ trapped: stuck at home because of a tot's sleep schedule: NAP.  The clue defines this very well.  I'm not sure this phrase existed when I had little children, but I may experience the situation with the upcoming grandson.

34. Tex-Mex dish with an edible bowl: TACO SALAD.  I always called the salad in a fried tortilla bowl a tostada, though I'm aware that some skimpy tostadas are built on flat, fried tortillas.  Extremely brief research suggests that the meal in the yummy bowl is actually a TACO SALAD. 

El Pollo Loco calls this a Classic Tostada.  They're on my side!


35. Nobel Prize subj.: ECON.  Also phys., chem., med., lit., and peace.

36. Say no to: DENY.

38. Belief system: ISM.

40. Obtains: GETS.

41. Home of Grace Hopper College: YALE.  Grace Hopper College is a residential college of Yale University, opened in 1933 as one of the original eight undergraduate residential colleges.  It was originally named Calhoun College after US Vice President John C. Calhoun, but renamed in 2017 in honor of computer scientist Grace Murray Hopper.  If you knew this, you just might be a Yalie, AKA Eli.

44. Some Subarus: HYBRIDS.

46. Lures: TEMPTS.

49. "Completely false!": LIES.

50. "Such a shame": IT'S SAD.

51. Food in "Sweeney Todd" and "Waitress": PIE.  In the penny dreadful stories about Sweeney Todd (1846/47), the villainous barber of Fleet Street, Todd kills his customers, and his neighbor bakes their flesh into meat pies, which she sells.  Waitress was a 2015 stage musical and 2023 musical comedy movie, in which a waitress who bakes pies eventually finds a way to leave her abusive husband and run her own business.

52. Lavender kin: LILAC.

53. Tony winner Menzel: IDINA.  Idina Menzel is an American actress and singer. She has been nicknamed the "Queen of Broadway" for her commanding stage presence and powerful mezzo-soprano voice.  Having achieved mainstream success across stage, screen, and music, her accolades include a Tony Award and a Daytime Emmy Award.

Idina Menzel


54. Elevates: LIFTS.

58. __ chic: GEEK. According to Collins English Dictionary, geek chic is a fashion style believed to be characteristic of geeks, including the wearing of heavy-rimmed glasses and T-shirts with humorous slogans.



59. Branch of Islam: SHIA.

61. Repetitive learning method: ROTE.

62. [Theme clue]

64. Out of the ordinary: ODD.

65. Hi-__ graphics: RES.


Here's the grid:



One of the Loves OMLife is solving the crossword puzzle with all of you here in the Corner ... the bloggers, the commenters, and those who read along.  

So ... was this puzzle a rare PEARL?  Or did it land with a THUD?

NaomiZ

Jun 11, 2025

Wednesday, Jun 11th, 2025 ~ Dylan Schiff

 Once Upon a Time....Happily Everafter

The End...

Continues~!??

I am unsure how to call this crossword puzzle; on the one hand, it was a solid mid-week challenge for me; on the other, it took a cheat peek to find out why I did not get the "ta-DA~!".  Then, after staring at the theme answers for longer than I care to admit, I finally figured out the common thread ( only due to the fact that I recognized the first two as titles ) and it left me feeling less than pleased / satisfied; sorta disappointed it was not "more", I guess.  YMMV.  I did a count; 191 letters, and with the three spanners, a whopping 65 dedicated to the theme; that's 34%.  Impressive, but - too many names again, even if they are fairly familair - I am not even going to bother linking to them this week; no circles,  a balance of 21/22 3LW& 4LWs, and two unique fills (*); 

17. Australia's unofficial national anthem: WALTZING MATILDA - Matilda, the book

23. Bite-sized treats: DONUT HOLES* - Holes, the book

37. Wide-eyed awe: CHILDLIKE WONDER - Wonder, the book

52. Cares: GIVES A HOOT* - Hoot, the book

61. Perfect resolution, or a feature of 17-, 23-, 37-, and 52-Across: STORYBOOK ENDING - the four theme fills END with the title of a story/book - yet the fill itself was in a crossword 30yrs ago.  BTW, I "wrote" the "book" that is the title of this blog post, so don't make me enforce ©opywright infringement 😁

And Away We Go~!


ACROSS:

1. Play mates?: CAST - I do the Down clues first, and I never saw my errors here in the NW . . . .Sigh

5. "31 Days of Oscar" cable network: TCM - Turner Classic Movies

8. Electric current unit: AMPERE

The "naughty" version on my blog page

14. "The Traitors" host Cumming: ALAN- name #1

15. __ Speedwagon: REO - name #2, getting tired of this clue/answer - don't like the band, either....

16. Folk medicine figure: HEALER - I had _ E A _ _R, pondered "REAPER" - hey, technically, death is a "medical" thing 

20. Punk subgenre: EMO - seems like every week now we get this fill

21. Debate topic: ISSUE

22. Obi-Wan portrayer Guinness: ALEC - name #3

26. Took a dip: SWAM

28. Former Russian ruler: TSAR - music interlude; here's an instrumental from Black Sabbath

They would open their show with "Supertzar" playing in the background

29. Bout ruling, briefly: TKO - Technical Knock-Out

31. Dug-out material?: ORE - yeah, I figured this was the common O-R-E fill, trying a different approach  on the cluing - I'll admit, it's not bad

32. Overture follower: ACT I

35. Sign of things to come: OMEN

36. Go (for): OPT

42. Protein in a Monte Cristo: HAM

Now I'm in the mood for a sa'mich

43. Sisters in habits: NUNS

44. Analogy phrase: IS TO

45. Afore: ERE

46. "Your point?": "AND....~?"

47. Tried to buzz: RANG - a bit Meh.

50. Onetime Volvo rival: SAAB - two Swedish automakers


57. Highlands family unit: CLAN

59. "Barbie" director Gerwig: GRETA - name #4

60. Lucy of "Elementary": LIU - name #5

64. Sore: TENDER - my feet are sore - I have walked my neighborhood every day but one since I joined the gym; I need to get me some comfortable hiking footwear - suggestions~?

65. "__ the fields we go ... ": "O'ER"

66. "Diana" singer Paul: ANKA - name #6

67. "Voilà!": "PRESTO~!"

68. Hosp. workers: MDs

69. Outperform: BEST


DOWN:

1. Imitated a crow: CAWED - bleery-eyed, I read this as "imitated a COW", so I put in MOOED; that didn't work with "Waltzing...", so I switched to LOWED, and never checked my Across; hence my black marks in the grid below....

2. San Antonio field trip destination: ALAMO - name(ish)

3. Place to find high rollers?: SALON - high on one's head kind of rollers


4. Red block in Minecraft: TNT - good WAG on my part, but then again, three letters . . . .

5. "How Do I Live" singer Yearwood: TRISHA - I did recall this was spelled "SHA", not "CIA" - still, name #7

6. One who may remove a curse?: CENSOR - Think bloopers

7. Tycoon: MOGUL

8. "Now I've got it!": "A-HA~!"

9. Social media parent company: META - 'they' own Facebook and other social media outlets, I think, and the company is going with "Social Technology" for a title, promoting "virtual reality" goggles - I have tried a set with a model I built in Revit of a church pipe organ; I was impressed, but it made my modeling skills look lame by comparison.  The webpage

10. Equipment for building sand castles: PAILS - what about the shovels~?

Methinks this is called "cheating"

11. "Legally Blonde" protagonist: ELLE WOODS - full name #8

12. Place to see stars: RED CARPET - the kind of stars whose NAMES appear too often in crosswords these days...

13. Historical span: ERA - the most over-used crossword fill

18. Comic strip about a teenager: ZITS - name(ish)


19. "I'd like to see you": "MEET ME."

24. Gas or elec.: UTILity - there's no gas lines in my area; I have to buy oil this week; my water heater is on the furnace

25. Distort, as data: SKEW

Don McMillan, Technically funny

27. Paris subway: METRO - another WAG on my part

30. Creative mind behind the Imagine Peace Tower: ONO - name #9

32. Feels yesterday's workout: ACHES - just in my legs

33. Thespian's role: CHARACTER - ah, good fill

34. Chance for an introvert to recharge: TIME ALONE - I am all for time alone - my ex-wife once called me "anti-social", which was a bonus - it meant I was diagnosed with a disability, and didn't have to participate - 😜

35. Says "Go ahead," say: OKs

38. Genetic material in Rosalind Franklin's "Photo 51": DNA - a "pivotal diffraction X-ray image" of the strand in 1952 - the story here


39. Source of inspiration?: LUNG - Breathe in~!

40. Rainbow band: INDIGO - I toyed with "ROY G BIV", but once I had some crossings, I see it was just ONE band of color


41. Nearby: NIGH - Ah, that kind of nearby, like the end is NIGH~!

( the second guy's sign has the definition of nigh )

47. Made a big stink?: REEKED - I once managed a nightclub that had live bands on the weekends, and one of the groups was called "REEKING HAVOC" - I tried to explain that it's WREAKING, but they're heavy metal, so their name was "better" 🤘

48. Daisylike blooms: ASTERS

49. Side with tandoori chicken: NAAN

51. Medieval poets: BARDS

53. Revved engine sound: VROOM

54. QB protectors, in football lingo: O-LINE - The offensive group of  five (~) guys in front of the quarterback in the NFL

55. Pen sounds: OINKS - That kind of pen


56. Gently pull on: TUG AT

58. Opposite of da: NYET - Tsar-speak for yes and no

61. Valvoline rival: STP - another common crossword fill

62. "Dude ... ": "BRO..."

63. Smidgen: DAB - hey, at least it was not 'A DAB'

Splynter

Here's a picture of me with Picard at the UCONN sign, a mere five mins from my home in CT.

Here's the link to Ginger Roots to see some more pictures