Jake is another new constructor and his puzzle was fun to solve. It featured proper names that spanned generations from Luke Wilson to Georgie Jessel. Wow!
Here is a note from Jake with some personal information:
Hi Gary!
I’m a writer, musician and soon-to-be tech project manager from New Haven, Connecticut. I graduated Yale College (Husker - He is an 6. New Haven alum: ELI) in 2019 with a B.A. in American Studies, and have been constructing crosswords since shortly after graduation. I got really into making themelesses during the pandemic, and this one, from June 2020, was one of my favorite early grids.
Jake added info about this particular puzzle:
Triple stacks are easier to work with than other themeless formats (at least for me), because the grid has a focal point which provides an easy place to start. I built the grid and left Crossfire alone for a few minutes so that it could find some nice combinations for the center stack, and I was happy with this particular trio (31-Across is particularly relevant for Los Angeles!). I then worked outward from there, adding cheater squares when needed. There are a few entries that aren’t ideal (I wouldn’t be in a hurry to use 32-Down in a grid nowadays), but I think there’s a pretty nice density of juicy phrases, and even some one-word entries that I like (who would have known how meaningful 37-Down would become in our lives?). I was also pleased that my original clues for 37-, 39-, and 53-Across survived the editing process - and thanks to the LA Times team for the additional great clues
-Jake
Across:
1. Original airer of "The Flintstones": ABC - The first primetime cartoon show for adults. TV Guide for September 30, 196o:
4. Frat Pack brother of Luke: OWEN - The Wilson brothers are in the top row - Owen is second from the left and Luke is on the right
8. Where a queen may be crowned: PROM - Let's not talk about the movie Carrie
12. Swedish aerospace giant: SAAB.
14. __ system: SOLAR - We learned last Sunday that a mechanical scale model is called an ORREY
16. Emmy winner Ward: SELA - She has a recurring role in crosswords
17. Metaphor for nonstop action: THRILL RIDE - My first big one was the incredible Hulk at Universal Studios Orlando.
19. Throws in: ADDS.
20. Former capital of Myanmar: RANGOON - The new capital, Naypyitaw, is a 4 1/2 hours drive north of the old capital of RANGOON (Yangon), Burma (Myanmar)
21. Beemer alternative: JAG - I would say "JAG whar" but in the U.K. they would say "JAG you whar"
23. Insurance ad woman: FLO - Haven't we seen enough of her?
24. Prayer leaders: IMAMS.
25. Coach's strategy: GAME PLAN - The great coaches change their GAME PLAN when the original isn't working
28. UFC sport: MMA - Mixed Martial Arts is part of Ultimate Fighting Championship
30. Boots, in a way: LOADS - When a computer boots up, it LOADS the operating system. More
31. Hubbard movement: SCIENTOLOGY - L. Ron Hubbard. Old Mother Hubbard moving to the cupboard leapt to my feeble mind first.
35. Reality show with auctioneers: STORAGE WARS - They bid on unclaimed storage lockers. Like many other "reality" shows, there is a debate whether this is real or staged.
36. Illustrations on some old maps: SEA MONSTERS.
37. Uses a lot?: PARKS - Badly below
38. Talk acronym: TED - The TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) Foundation is a non-profit that offers live talks and TED Talks online
39. It's behind you: PAST.
43. Emergency building section: FIRE AREA.
46. Transform: MORPH
47. Gilbert and Sullivan princess: IDA.
48. Theater pickups, on signs: TIX - Broadway tickets
49. Multitalented Jessel of vaudeville: GEORGIE - A gimme for those of us with some miles on our tires who might struggle with some contemporary names. His IMDB
GEORGIE seen here in the 40's with a girl named Norma Jean Baker
51. Italian tubes: ZITI.
53. Higher education?: BIBLE STUDY - Fun clue
55. U.K. prime minister during the Suez Crisis: EDEN - Lying about what happened cost him his job. How it was handled on BBC's The Crown
56. MIT __: business school: SLOAN.
57. Forward thinker: SEER.
58. Fishing boat tools: RODS - The oars and nets were in the other boat
59. Marine hazard: EDDY.
60. Lock-changing aid?: DYE - Locks of hair
Down:
1. Lindgren who wrote the Pippi Longstocking tales: ASTRID - It will cost you $1,200 for a 1945 first edition that is 5. Showing signs of age: WORN.
2. Grand __: BAHAMA.
3. Earthly: CARNAL.
4. "Hedda Gabler" setting, now: OSLO - Ibsen's 1891 play was set in Kristiania, Norway which was renamed Oslo in 1925. Learning for me but easy to fill. Talk about your Saturday cluing!
7. Title woman in an André Breton novel: NADJA - Talk about needing perp help!
8. MADD ad, e.g.: PSA - Public Service Announcement
18. Head of the LAPD?: LOS - Not ELL, but the whole word
22. Actress Sarah Michelle __: GELLAR.
25. Rap genre: GANGSTA and 46. Rapper __ Def: MOS
26. Rude losers: POOR SPORTS and 29. Nasty: MEAN.
28. Barcelona-born surrealist: MIRO - Mira el MIRO (Look at MIRO) 32. Global networking pioneer: COMSAT - Jake regretted this entry but it was right in this NASA guy's wheelhouse. One of the first COMmunication SATellites was called Telstar and inspired this funky 1962 song.
33. Parisian bean?: TETE - Two French athletes competing against one another can be said to be going TÊTE à TÊTE
34. Due: OWED.
35. Like some knives: SERRATED.
Plain vs. SERRATED
36. Got hitched: SAID I DO - Married? No, but thanks for playing!
37. Xanax maker: PFIZER - Common name for tranquilizer alprazolam
40. Contended: ARGUED.
41. __-sense: superhero asset: SPIDEY.
42. "__ here": "Poltergeist": THEY'RE.
44. Kids: RIBS - The verb not the noun
45. Kick out: EXILE - "Napoleon, pack your bags for St. Helena"
52. Helpful connections: INS - I've never had an "IN" to help me get a job but two former students who are police officers did let me off with a warning instead of a ticket.
54. Gym specimen: BOD - Jake probably didn't mean Dad BODS.
Dr. Ed is back with a letter substitution (A to E) sound-alike puzzle that plays a little easy for a Friday. The themers are all pretty funny puns. Ed is a master of entertaining no matter what day of the week. The puzzle does not have much long fill - EMPERORS and FACELIFT are the only over 6 letter non-themers, though it is sprinkled with some difficulty. Cluing is Friday vague in places and having a central gridspanner always adds a touch of class to the effort. The icing on this cake is all the changes are from EA to EE.
Yummy. Enjoy.
17A. Double vision?: TWIN PEEKS(9). TWIN PEAKS is a cult CLASSIC
23A. What EEE signifies?: NO SMALL FEET(11). No small feat is an expression that can be found in many FORMS.
39A. Cesar Millan's gift?: THE HEELING TOUCH (15). My favorite pun, as the dog whisperer substitutes for this TREATMENT.
49A. Blind date?: MYSTERY MEET(11). As someone who went to boarding school I have eaten more than my share of unidentifiable meat products.
61A. His-and-hers concert souvenir?: TEE FOR TWO (9). TEA for Two is a song composed by Vincent Youmans with lyrics by Irving Caesar and written in 1924.
The fun is done and now to work.
Across:
1. Japanese car whose name means "reward" in early German: MIATA. Don't we all hate it when 1 across is an unknown. In Japan it is called Roadster, but here it comes from the Old German 'miete' for reward.
6. Infielder in a comedy routine: WHO. He is on first!
9. Conviction: FAITH. A place for this FAITH 52D. Group's belief: TENET.
14. Joins, as a team: YOKES. Oxen anyone.
15. On fire: HOT.
En fuego!
16. Big name in foil: ALCOA. My June 18 comment was "15A. Portmanteau metal producer: ALCOA. No, no, no! AL CO A, aluminum company of america is not words mashed together!
19. Items often checked: COATS. A fun clue.
20. Flying Solo: HAN. While HARRISON FORD was killed off as Han, he has a new INDIANA JONES movie coming.
21. Brute's rebuke: ET TU.
22. "Will it play in __?": vaudeville phrase: PEORIA. Origin- (1) The phrase originated during the vaudeville era and was popularized in movies by Groucho Marx, or (2) The question derives from a theme repeated by characters in Horatio Alger Jr.'s novel Five Hundred Dollars; or, Jacob Marlowe's Secret, which was first published in 1890.
25. Birthplace of St. Francis: ASSISI. Very common fill.
29. "Who, me?": MOI? I really wanted a Miss Piggy GIF here.
30. Pound product: POEM. Ezra, not a personal hero. POUND HISTORY
31. Fabric with metallic threads: LAMÉ .The earliest historical records of lamé fabric date back to Ancient Assyria, which was a nation in the Middle East that existed between 2500 BC and 600 AD
34. Musical E equivalent: F FLAT. Ron can you explain why?
42. Doomed biblical city: SODOM. What Gomorrah can you say about this biblical city?
43. Calf-length skirt: MIDI. Midcalf.
44. See 36-Down: OAHU. The dreaded random referential set with 36D. Feast on 44-Across: LUAU.
45. Pot pie veggie: PEA. The recipes from Pillsbury, Betty Crocker and Campbell's Soup all use frozen mixed vegetables - corn, carrots, green beans and peas. Nothing fresh.
47. Holds dear: VALUES.
55. Films partly made in stages: OATERS. Another pun, this one relating to the stage coach scenes in Westerns.
56. Deal with creases: IRON.
57. Audibly grieve: SOB.
60. Texas HQ of Frito-Lay: PLANO. Frito-Lay North America is the $13 billion convenient foods business unit of PepsiCo (NYSE, PEP), which is headquartered in Plano, TX. Learn more about Frito-Lay at the corporate website, www.fritolay.com. It was created initially by a merger of Frito and Lay.
63. Articulate: UTTER. The verb.
64. Company abbr.: INC.
65. Texans' neighbors: OKIES. Seems unbalanced as Texans are not a nickname and Okies are.
66. Old times: PASTS.
67. WWII carrier: LST.
68. "Old" language that gave us "blunder": NORSE. mid-14c., "to stumble about blindly," from a Scandinavian source akin to Old Norse blundra "shut one's eyes," perhaps from Proto-Germanic *blinda- "blind."
Down:
1. Bit of fiction: MYTH. In college we debated the TOPIC myth is reality and reality is myth.
2. "The Music Man" setting: IOWA. The author Meredith Willson was inspired by his boyhood in Mason City, Iowa.
3. Related: AKIN.
4. First and __: TEN. A football concept and one of the very first HBO original series, I think. It began with JASON BEGHE and and UF graduate DELTA BURKE.
5. Quakers in Colorado?: ASPENS. Ha ha, tree humor.
6. Puts an edge on: WHETS. Sharpens with a stone, from the old days.
7. Poppycock: HOKUM. Derives from Hocus Pocus, but if you google you get all kinds of irreverent images.
8. Extra NFL periods: OTS. OverTimes.
9. Cosmetic surgery procedure: FACELIFT. I like my face right where it is, but for those with more money than sense, be careful what you wish for. mirror, mirror
10. Distant: ALOOF. Did you know loof (now spelled luff) is the windward side of a ship. Smart sailors wanting to avoid a hazard on the leeward side, who go to the other side, holding themselves aloof.
11. Comforting affirmation: I CARE. I really care cornerites about each and everyone of you.
12. Funny Fields: TOTIE. She died young.
13. Starts to fight: HAS AT. Meh.
18. Star over Paris: ÉTOILE. French lesson. 星位 Chinese lesson.
59. Big name in audio systems: BOSE. My bedtime music comes from a Bose.
61. "Open 9 __ 5": TIL. Sing it Dolly! 62. Original "King Kong" film studio: RKO. This is part of the Kennedy family Legacy. LINK.
We have wended our way through another fabulous, fun, Friday Frolic and since Moe is out and about you have me again next, same Bat Time, same Bat Station. Lemonade out!
Today's outing is by frequent contributor David Poole, a mathematician
who last appeared on the Corner on July 1 of this year. Here he was
interviewed by C.C. just
last September.
I have to admit that I was initially very perplexed by this puzzle's theme:
there is a reveal clue,
butno actual theme clues for it to reveal (probably
old hat for veteran solvers, but not for this relative newbie). Here
it is:
37A. Place to find a date ... and any one of four in this
puzzle (circled letters are hints):
CORNER STONE.
Obviously you often "find a date" on
CORNERSTONES and they're usually
expressed in Roman numerals. So Bill was off and running, looking
for Roman numerals in the corners, and of course found what he was looking
for, as letters like M, L, I, and V are very common in
Crosswords. But pretty soon I was down in the weeds, then began to have
the sinking feeling that they were actually "seaweeds". So I issued a
distress call to the blogging team, and before you could say "splash", who
bobbed to the surface but my Thursday alter-ego, and our favorite Marine
Mammal, Malodorous Manatee. He gently explained that (1) my
parsing of CORNERSTONES was
incorrect (the fill comes from the factory unparsed and bloggers first have to
put spaces between any multi-word entries), and (2) that the reveal answer was
really two words: CORNER STONES. With a resounding "DOH", I saw that for the want of a SPACE,
our devious constructor David had thrown me off the scent. Each
circle was the start of the given name of an entertainer, wrapped around a
CORNER and the surname of each was
STONE. The grid should make sense of all the above:
Just to round things off, you can find Roman numeral dates in each
corner, but they are really misdirections - I'll leave them for you to locate
if you wish. And here are the
STONES in each
CORNER, clockwise from the Northwest:
EMMA STONE.
Emily Jean "Emma" Stone (born November 6, 1988) is an
American actress. Stone appeared in my last blog on the cover of ELLE. This
coverage had been part of the hype in the run up to the 2017
OSCARS. LA LA Land, the 2016 film favored to win
Best Picture, didn't get the nod, but Stone landed the
Oscar for Best Actress, the first of what are sure to be many
more. Here are capsule reviews, of
all of her movies
and here is the "Audition (the fools who dream)" scene from LA LA Land:
OLIVER STONE. William Oliver Stone (born September 15, 1946) is an American film
director, producer, and screenwriter.
I don't think that Stone makes uncontroversial films. I'm absolutely certain that most of us, of a certain age, remember
these events:
SLY STONE.Sylvester Stewart (born March 15, 1943), better known by his stage
name
Sly Stone. He is an American musician, songwriter, and record producer who is
most famous for his role as frontman for Sly and the Family Stone and
played a critical role in the development of
Funk Music, with his pioneering fusion of soul, rock,
psychedelia and gospel in the 1960s and 1970s. And now for
a little change of pace ...
SHARON STONE. Sharon Vonne Stone (born March 10, 1958) is an American
actress, producer, and former fashion model.
Noted for playing femme fatales and women of mystery on film and
television, she became a popular sex symbol throughout the 1990s. She is the recipient
of a Primetime Emmy Award and a Golden Globe Award, as well as having received
nominations for an Academy Award and a Screen Actors Guild Award. And to
top it off, she's pretty funny. Here she is opening up for
SNL:
Oh yes, and there were other clues:
Across:
1. Sprayed in defense: MACED. Or whacked with one of these.
Ouch!
6. "Your point being?": AND.
9. With 65-Down, toon sister of Castor: OLIVE. Here are the
OYL sibs:
14. Biscayne Bay city: MIAMI. A bit of misdirection for me,
as the Bay of Biscay between France and Spain immediately came to mind.
This is the bay David wanted:
15. Zen garden swimmer: KOI. Double-click this pic to enlarge
it. I feel more relaxed already ...
It's too late in life for me to read the novel, but the film is definitely on
my bucket list.
17. Critical care MD: ER DOC.
18. Tall or dark: Abbr.: ADJ. Or perhaps both, and
handsome too.
19. Composer who, as it happens, died in March (1932): SOUSA.
John Philip Sousa
(November 6, 1854 – March 6, 1932) was an American composer and conductor
of the late Romantic era, known primarily for American military marches.
This is a CSO to our Anonymous T ...
20. Browser list: SITES.
22. Luke, to Anakin: SON. Luke and Anakin (before the latter went
over to the Dark Side)
24. Drops off: NAPS.
25. Short jackets worn open in front: BOLEROS. Also
a theme and orchestral variations
by Maurice Ravel. Also used in the movie "10" starring Dudley More and Bo Derek. As this is a family blog I can
only share a clip of the former (15 min):
Bolero is one of the most frequently performed works in the repertoire,
but Ravel was not particularly fond of it: "My masterpiece? Boléro? What next? Sadly there is nothing musical in it!".
27. Oscar night VIP: NOMINEE. E.g. our three theatrical
STONES.
33. And others, in Lat.: ET AL. Short for ET ALII (plural) and
ET ALIA
(singular)
35. Broccoli rabe: RAPINI.
In case you wondered. Also the tender leaves sprouting from the sides of young broccoli
plants can be trimmed and substituted for RAPINI.
41. Co-star of Meryl in "Death Becomes Her": GOLDIE. In
this 1992 black comedy, Streep and Hawn are rivals who fight for the
affections of the same man. Kurt Russell may be Goldie's life-long
significant other, but she is still
America's sweetheart:
42. Raise, as crops: GROW. GROW is something crops do all
by themselves. RAISE is something gardeners (and farmers - Hi
PK!) do, helping the crops to grow. And this gardener is not
having a good season this year. But like I always say, I'll do things
differently next year.
45. Executor's charge: ESTATE. My Mother died last December at
age 95 and I was named the executor of her estate in her Will. But as
she left no estate, and prepaid all of her burial expenses, there was little
for me to do. Except, that is, for deciding what was correct among all
of the conflicting advice that I was getting from various experts.
48. "__ said!": NUFF.
51. Sculpture medium: ICE. We tend to think of ICE as a
short-lived medium for sculpture. But in the North of China, where my
adopted 17 year old grandson hails from, the winters are long and very
cold. His home city of Harbin, China has for many years hosted an
Ice Festival
during January and February:
52. Author Elmore __: LEONARD. Elmore Leonard (October 11,
1925 – August 20, 2013) was an American novelist, short story writer, and
screenwriter. His earliest novels, published in the 1950s, were Westerns, but
he went on to specialize in crime fiction and suspense thrillers, many of
which have been adapted into motion pictures:
Here's his official website. Leonard's works were known around the world, and his homepage starts
with an article translated from Italian, comparing him to
Honoré de Balzac.
54. Calls the shots: DIRECTS. Like my 6 year old grandson!
56. Brand at Petco: IAMS.
57. Clue suspect count: SIX.
The game's six characters are
Miss Scarlett, Professor Plum, Mrs Peacock, the Reverend Green, Colonel
Mustard and the new Dr Orchid. Memorize that list, as I'm sure one of them will show up in a
puzzle soon.
59. Saint __, one of the only two sovereign nations named for women:
LUCIA. A CSO from David to our Lucina (Spanish for Lucia I'm
sure)!
Saint Lucia is an island state in the Caribbean Sea. It is the second largest of the Windward group in the
Lesser Antilles and is located about 24 miles (39 km) south of
Martinique and some 21 miles (34 km) northeast of
Saint Vincent.
Any guesses on the second sovereign
nation named for a woman? It's IRELAND,
named after the Celtic goddess of fertility EIRE. The latter
appears often in Cwds as a clue for Ireland or vice versa.
60. Intimidating look: STARE. A gender neutral look I suppose.
62. Civil War prez: ABE.
64. "Heaven forbid!": GOD NO.
66. Hopping mad: HET UP. Let's see if our hopping Thesaurus has
any synonyms ...
67. "ASAP!": NOW. Over at 17A they say STAT!
68. Strike zone?: ALLEY. Whoops! David really dropped the
ball on this one. He's going to have some 'splainin to do to
Boomer about this answer.
69. Pasta product suffix: ARONI.
70. Pink-slip: AXE.
CAMI
was too long.
71. Eldest von Trapp child, in the musical: LIESL.
LIESL is presumably the young lady top-center in this number:
3. Detroit founder: CADILLAC. That is
Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac.
Cadillac Mountain
in Acadia National Park in Maine is named for him. Gee, I wonder
if those expensive luxury cars from Detroit are named for him?
4. Ham it up: EMOTE. Moi? I would never do
that!
5. Chefs, at times: DICERS. But I do have a great recipe for
DICEDHAM, noodles, peas and cream.
6. Alias letters: AKA. Also Known
As.
7. Auction actions: NODS. I never go to auctions, as I am liable
to NOD off during the bidding and end up in debt for a lot of stuff I'd
have to haul home.
12. "Casino Royale" Bond girl __ Lynd: VESPER. Played by French
actress
Eva Green, not your garden variety Bond babe:
13. Undid: ERASED.
21. Costa del __: SOL.
23. Like seven Nolan Ryan games: NO HIT. He still holds the
record for NO HIT games:
25. Tournament edge: BYE.
In sports, BYE refers to a team automatically advancing to the
next round of tournament play without competing, and "bye week"
refers to a scheduled off week for a given team.
31. Bay Area county: MARIN. Also the name of the departing
conductor of the Baltimore Symphony,
Marin Alsop. Here's the county:
34. 1976 Michael York/Jenny Agutter sci-fi film: LOGANS RUN.
American Cinematographer described Logan's Run
as "one of the most technically intricate films ever made. Here are York
and Agutter:
Here is Michael York's
website where he
discusses his affliction with Amyloidosis, a blood plasma
disorder. Jenny Agutter currently plays Sister Julienne in the
popular Brit series "Call the Midwife". My genealogist sister tells me that I have a distant cousin who
writes for the series, but I've never met him.
36. Ersatz
intellectual: PSEUD.
38. Membership list: ROTA.
An early 17th century term: from Latin, literally ‘wheel’.
Did they have Rolodex's back then?
39. Phils and Nats: NLERS.
40. "Spamalot" co-creator: ERIC IDLE. Here's an ear worm for you
...
43. Pump numbers: OCTANES. A
rating of scale
for gasoline. OCTANE is also a chain of 8 carbon atoms, classed
as a hydrocarbon:
44. Jazz guitarist Montgomery: WES. (March 6, 1923 – June 15,
1968) was an American jazz guitarist.
One of the most influential guitarists of the twentieth century, Montgomery was known for an unusual technique of plucking the strings with
the side of his thumb and his extensive use of octaves, which gave him a
distinctive sound. Here's his riff on Eleanor Rigby:
55. Food recall trigger: ECOLI. However certain strains of ECOLI
reside in our stomachs and are essential for digestion.
Here's the difference.
58. Console with a "360" second generation: XBOX.
61. Prefix with gram or graph: EPI.
An EPIGRAM is a short, pithy saying, usually in verse, often with
a quick, satirical twist at the end. A CSO to OwenKL for an
example!
An EPIGRAPH is a short statement (a sentence, a
paragraph, a poem) that comes at the beginning of a literary text, but the
words belong to a different author. Example of an Epigraph: ... At
the beginning of The Sun Also Rises, Ernest Hemingway quotes
Gertrude Stein: "You are all a lost generation."
The prefix can also connote "above", "on", or "beyond", et alii,
as in Epidermis, Epitaph, Epigenetics or
Epiousios. Here's a cross section of the skin showing the
Epidermis:
63. Flock female: EWE.
65. See 9-Across: OYL.
waseeley with special thanks to Malodorous Manatee