Theme Metallic Mystery - the word "golden" has gone missing from five theme entries
The reveal hints at the word we're missing:
59A. His touch will complete five puzzle answers: KING MIDAS. It didn't work out quite the way Midas had planned, he didn't really think it through, did he?
and so we find:
17A. Generous severance package: [Golden] PARACHUTE
32A. Chance of a lifetime: [Golden] OPPORTUNITY
41A. Marriage milestone: [Golden] ANNIVERSARY
10D. McDonald's trademark: [Golden] ARCHES
45D. Automatic promotion on "America's Got Talent": [Golden] BUZZER
A slick theme from Ed. I actually saw the theme right away when I got to 17A, but it was only the symmetry with ARCHES that led me to BUZZER - I don't watch America's Got Talent and so I had no idea there was such a device as a "golden buzzer" which I discover immediately puts a contestant through to the final rounds.
Let's take a tour:
Across:
1. Title critter in Blake's "Songs of Innocence": LAMB. Blake was apparently quite fond of lambs, if you look at his "Songs of Innocence" (strictly speaking, "Songs of Innocence and of Experience") there's not only "The Lamb" referenced by this clue, but a whole bunch of lamb-y lines in other poems. If you've ever seen the movie "Chariots of Fire" you'll be familiar with my school hymn "Jerusalem" which plays at the end. And references a lamb. Talented chap, lamb-centric.
5. Almost dry: DAMP
9. Football's "Papa Bear": HALAS. George Halas, founder, owner and head coach of the Chicago Bears. He was also known as "Mr. Everything" in consequence.
14. __ vera: ALOE
15. __ Eats: delivery service: UBER. Their drivers are busy at the moment. Note that there's no umlaut in the company name.
16. Hold the floor: ORATE
19. Bobby in a 1971 #1 hit: MCGEE. Janis Joplin classic which still sounds great today. The recording was released posthumously and reached number 1 on the Billboard chart. It was written by Kris Kristofferson.
20. Toss aside: DITCH
21. Bad loser: SOREHEAD. I've never heard this expression. Sore loser, of course, but not sorehead.
23. Locks: HAIR
26. Stage of adolescence: PUBERTY. All angst and acne.
27. Frito-Lay brand: TOSTITOS. Chips and salsas.
31. Sudoku fill: Abbr.: NOS.
34. Web spots: ADS
37. Ethically uncertain: GRAY. American spelling. Wouldn't it be more accurately be a "gray area"?
38. Ring bearer: EAR
39. Came down to earth: ALIT
40. "Atlas Shrugged" writer Rand: AYN. I read this a number of years ago and I can't remember a single thing about it.
45. Lily of France garment: BRA. I had to validate, of course, that this clue/answer combination was in fact correct. After much long and painful research I can confirm that it is. You're welcome!
46. Citrus grove sight: LIME TREE
47. Covered, in a way: INSURED
51. NYC area above Houston Street: NOHO. There's a NoHo in LA too, the trendy name for North Hollywood. It's a bit of an oddity, to be honest. It's so far north of Hollywood that it's across the Cahuenga Pass in the San Fernando Valley, and you have to struggle through Studio City and Toluca Lake before you actually get there.
52. Suddenly stops working, as an engine: SEIZES UP. Not a good thing to happen. My motorbike sprung an oil leak while I was riding back in 1976 and I didn't notice. Suddenly the engine went from a two-cylinder four-stroke to a single, and useless, lump of metal.
54. __ Gay: ENOLA. Not so fast, it could be sprinter Tyson Gay. And he is fast.
58. TV host Gibbons: LEEZA
62. Garden tool: EDGER
63. Biblical twin: ESAU
64. California's __ Valley: SIMI. It's the safest city with a population of more than 100,000 in the USA, primarily because police officers from the LAPD were given incentives to move there by the City Council.
65. Stadium levels: TIERS
66. Droops: SAGS. What "Lily of France" hopes to have us avoid.
67. Air filter acronym: HEPA, our old friend the High Efficiency Particulate Absorbing filter.
Down:
1. W. Coast force: LAPD. Nice clue, it took me a which to see this one. In fact this corner of the puzzle was my last fill.
2. Court game word: ALAI
3. Cartoonist Drucker: MORT. "Master of the Mad Caricature".
4. Bucket shaped like a sandcastle, for one: BEACH TOY. I find this clue a little odd. Would you call a bucket that's designed to make sandcastles "shaped" like one?
5. "Thank you, Captain Obvious": DUH! I love Billie Eilish's song "Bad Guy" which is so catchy and features a few "DUH"s.
6. __ Dhabi: ABU
7. Team that retired Mike Piazza's #31: METS. It's odd, I associate him more with the Dodgers than the Mets, but the Dodgers didn't retire his number. I remember him hitting a home run clean out of Dodger Stadium and into the parking lot, a wallop estimated to be 440 feet.
8. Hosp. area: PRE-OP
9. __ Industries: L.A. youth program: HOMEBOY. I like the salsas produced by Homeboy Grocery which are sold in my local Kroger market.
11. Ale alternative: LAGER. I bought a couple of bottles yesterday of "limited edition" Midnight Lager produced by Stella Artois. It's almost black in color. I'll report back when I've tried it.
12. Bugged a lot: ATE AT
13. Like some bagels: SEEDY. Did you know that restauranteur Joe Bastianich is credited with inventing the "everything" bagel? He was working in a bagel bakery and was tasked with putting the poppy seeds, sesame seeds and what-not on each type of bagel. At the end of his shift he decided to dip the last few bagels in the spillover of all the toppings, and bingo, the Everything Bagel was born.
18. Department head: CHAIR
22. Litter lightweight: RUNT
24. Addams cousin: ITT
25. Monet's "Cathedral Series" city: ROUEN. I once stayed in a hotel opposite the cathedral in the main square in Rouen. The bellringers started on Sunday morning 6AM, and that was the end of my night's sleep.
27. Forum robe: TOGA
28. "Live at the __": Patsy Cline album: OPRY
29. Spread across: SPAN
30. __ mail: SNAIL.
33. "The Empire Strikes Back" director Kershner: IRVIN. Thank you, crosses
34. Old apple spray: ALAR. Daminozide was banned in 1989 as a "probable carcinogen".
35. Desperate: DIRE
36. Eye woe: STYE
39. Blow away: ASTONISH
41. Unpaid balance: ARREARS
42. Highland refusals: NAES
43. Punk subgenre: EMO. I never really got into Emo music; it seemed a little too naval-gazing for my taste.
44. Shorten, as a pants leg: RE-HEM
47. Spot of land: ISLET
48. "__ say more?": NEED I
49. Onslaught: SIEGE
50. They're put up in fights: DUKES
Did you know that Notre Dame were called, variously, The Terriers, the Horrible Hibernians, The Catholics and the Ramblers before settling on the Fighting Irish moniker? I quite like the Hibernians one.
53. City in Tuscany: PISA
55. Comic strip canine: ODIE. From the "Garfield" strip by Jim Davis.
56. Light source: LAMP
57. Sri Lanka locale: ASIA. Because "Laccadive Sea" doesn't fit.
60. Old horse: NAG
61. "Better Call Saul" drug lord Fring: GUS. Another "thank you" to the crosses today.
Which just leaves the grid to wrap things up:
Steve
The reveal hints at the word we're missing:
59A. His touch will complete five puzzle answers: KING MIDAS. It didn't work out quite the way Midas had planned, he didn't really think it through, did he?
and so we find:
17A. Generous severance package: [Golden] PARACHUTE
32A. Chance of a lifetime: [Golden] OPPORTUNITY
41A. Marriage milestone: [Golden] ANNIVERSARY
10D. McDonald's trademark: [Golden] ARCHES
45D. Automatic promotion on "America's Got Talent": [Golden] BUZZER
A slick theme from Ed. I actually saw the theme right away when I got to 17A, but it was only the symmetry with ARCHES that led me to BUZZER - I don't watch America's Got Talent and so I had no idea there was such a device as a "golden buzzer" which I discover immediately puts a contestant through to the final rounds.
Let's take a tour:
Across:
1. Title critter in Blake's "Songs of Innocence": LAMB. Blake was apparently quite fond of lambs, if you look at his "Songs of Innocence" (strictly speaking, "Songs of Innocence and of Experience") there's not only "The Lamb" referenced by this clue, but a whole bunch of lamb-y lines in other poems. If you've ever seen the movie "Chariots of Fire" you'll be familiar with my school hymn "Jerusalem" which plays at the end. And references a lamb. Talented chap, lamb-centric.
5. Almost dry: DAMP
9. Football's "Papa Bear": HALAS. George Halas, founder, owner and head coach of the Chicago Bears. He was also known as "Mr. Everything" in consequence.
14. __ vera: ALOE
15. __ Eats: delivery service: UBER. Their drivers are busy at the moment. Note that there's no umlaut in the company name.
16. Hold the floor: ORATE
19. Bobby in a 1971 #1 hit: MCGEE. Janis Joplin classic which still sounds great today. The recording was released posthumously and reached number 1 on the Billboard chart. It was written by Kris Kristofferson.
20. Toss aside: DITCH
21. Bad loser: SOREHEAD. I've never heard this expression. Sore loser, of course, but not sorehead.
23. Locks: HAIR
26. Stage of adolescence: PUBERTY. All angst and acne.
27. Frito-Lay brand: TOSTITOS. Chips and salsas.
31. Sudoku fill: Abbr.: NOS.
34. Web spots: ADS
37. Ethically uncertain: GRAY. American spelling. Wouldn't it be more accurately be a "gray area"?
38. Ring bearer: EAR
39. Came down to earth: ALIT
40. "Atlas Shrugged" writer Rand: AYN. I read this a number of years ago and I can't remember a single thing about it.
45. Lily of France garment: BRA. I had to validate, of course, that this clue/answer combination was in fact correct. After much long and painful research I can confirm that it is. You're welcome!
46. Citrus grove sight: LIME TREE
47. Covered, in a way: INSURED
51. NYC area above Houston Street: NOHO. There's a NoHo in LA too, the trendy name for North Hollywood. It's a bit of an oddity, to be honest. It's so far north of Hollywood that it's across the Cahuenga Pass in the San Fernando Valley, and you have to struggle through Studio City and Toluca Lake before you actually get there.
52. Suddenly stops working, as an engine: SEIZES UP. Not a good thing to happen. My motorbike sprung an oil leak while I was riding back in 1976 and I didn't notice. Suddenly the engine went from a two-cylinder four-stroke to a single, and useless, lump of metal.
54. __ Gay: ENOLA. Not so fast, it could be sprinter Tyson Gay. And he is fast.
58. TV host Gibbons: LEEZA
62. Garden tool: EDGER
63. Biblical twin: ESAU
64. California's __ Valley: SIMI. It's the safest city with a population of more than 100,000 in the USA, primarily because police officers from the LAPD were given incentives to move there by the City Council.
65. Stadium levels: TIERS
66. Droops: SAGS. What "Lily of France" hopes to have us avoid.
67. Air filter acronym: HEPA, our old friend the High Efficiency Particulate Absorbing filter.
Down:
1. W. Coast force: LAPD. Nice clue, it took me a which to see this one. In fact this corner of the puzzle was my last fill.
2. Court game word: ALAI
3. Cartoonist Drucker: MORT. "Master of the Mad Caricature".
4. Bucket shaped like a sandcastle, for one: BEACH TOY. I find this clue a little odd. Would you call a bucket that's designed to make sandcastles "shaped" like one?
5. "Thank you, Captain Obvious": DUH! I love Billie Eilish's song "Bad Guy" which is so catchy and features a few "DUH"s.
6. __ Dhabi: ABU
7. Team that retired Mike Piazza's #31: METS. It's odd, I associate him more with the Dodgers than the Mets, but the Dodgers didn't retire his number. I remember him hitting a home run clean out of Dodger Stadium and into the parking lot, a wallop estimated to be 440 feet.
8. Hosp. area: PRE-OP
9. __ Industries: L.A. youth program: HOMEBOY. I like the salsas produced by Homeboy Grocery which are sold in my local Kroger market.
11. Ale alternative: LAGER. I bought a couple of bottles yesterday of "limited edition" Midnight Lager produced by Stella Artois. It's almost black in color. I'll report back when I've tried it.
12. Bugged a lot: ATE AT
13. Like some bagels: SEEDY. Did you know that restauranteur Joe Bastianich is credited with inventing the "everything" bagel? He was working in a bagel bakery and was tasked with putting the poppy seeds, sesame seeds and what-not on each type of bagel. At the end of his shift he decided to dip the last few bagels in the spillover of all the toppings, and bingo, the Everything Bagel was born.
18. Department head: CHAIR
22. Litter lightweight: RUNT
24. Addams cousin: ITT
25. Monet's "Cathedral Series" city: ROUEN. I once stayed in a hotel opposite the cathedral in the main square in Rouen. The bellringers started on Sunday morning 6AM, and that was the end of my night's sleep.
27. Forum robe: TOGA
28. "Live at the __": Patsy Cline album: OPRY
29. Spread across: SPAN
30. __ mail: SNAIL.
33. "The Empire Strikes Back" director Kershner: IRVIN. Thank you, crosses
34. Old apple spray: ALAR. Daminozide was banned in 1989 as a "probable carcinogen".
35. Desperate: DIRE
36. Eye woe: STYE
39. Blow away: ASTONISH
41. Unpaid balance: ARREARS
42. Highland refusals: NAES
43. Punk subgenre: EMO. I never really got into Emo music; it seemed a little too naval-gazing for my taste.
44. Shorten, as a pants leg: RE-HEM
47. Spot of land: ISLET
48. "__ say more?": NEED I
49. Onslaught: SIEGE
50. They're put up in fights: DUKES
Did you know that Notre Dame were called, variously, The Terriers, the Horrible Hibernians, The Catholics and the Ramblers before settling on the Fighting Irish moniker? I quite like the Hibernians one.
53. City in Tuscany: PISA
55. Comic strip canine: ODIE. From the "Garfield" strip by Jim Davis.
56. Light source: LAMP
57. Sri Lanka locale: ASIA. Because "Laccadive Sea" doesn't fit.
60. Old horse: NAG
61. "Better Call Saul" drug lord Fring: GUS. Another "thank you" to the crosses today.
Which just leaves the grid to wrap things up:
Steve