Themeless Puzzle by Matthew Stock and Christina Iverson
This challenging puzzle was a collaboration with our new Florida 8th grade math teacher Matthew Stock and Patti's assistant puzzle editor from Ames, Iowa, Christina Iverson. Names and modern slang might have made this a "37. Tough going: SLOG" for some.
Across:
1. Sign of shock: GASP.
5. __ shop: MALT - Sandy, Danny and the crew at one
17. Skirt: SHIRK - Liza Doolittle's dad Alfie's philosophy in My Fair Lady
18. Dark days or long days: SOLSTICES - The day is the same length on the Winter and Summer SOLSTICES but the amount of daylight is the least around December 21 and the most around June 21 for those of us north of the equator.
22. "I feel seen": IT ME - Recent slang for "It's me".
23. "RuPaul's Drag Race Live!" regular O'Hara: ASIA - Here ya go
24. Taxing time?: MID APRIL.
28. __ bar: TAPAS - Last Saturday we had 54. Patatas bravas, por ejemplo: TAPA - "Spicy Potatoes" in a TAPA bar
31. Big finish: BANG - You certainly know the classical musical piece that uses these for its big finish
32. Go for the win, in Clue: ACCUSE - Matthew and Christina at their desks with a computer
34. "__ Luna": Allende novel: EVA - A Chilean author
35. Accutane target: ACNE.
36. Inseparable: THICK - THICK as thieves
38. "Awkward Black Girl" creator: RAE.
39. Insolent: CHEEKY - Add to the list
40. French dip?: PLIE.
41. Traditional Islamic garment: BURQA.
43. Navajo taco base: FRY BREAD.
45. Trick: DUPE.
47. __ noodle: POOL.
48. "That's what you're bragging about? You do you ... ": WEIRD FLEX BUT OK - Weird (orodd)flex but OKis a snarky, mocking internet slang response to when someone brags about something deemed unusual, bizarre, baffling, or questionable.
54. "Say what?": COME AGAIN - I would have said that if I heard the phrase above
55. Japanese mushroom: ENOKI - In many crossword dishes
56. Smudge: BLOT.
57. Emily Oster's subj.: ECON - This professor of ECONOMICS also writes books on this topic
58. Court apparel: SKORT - A portmanteau of SKirt and shORTs
59. Bonus rooms: DENS - Sometimes a byproduct of "empty nest syndrome"
60. Disallow: DENY.
61. Shutter part: SLAT.
Down:
1. "Goodness me": GOSH.
2. Heating pad target: ACHE - I prefer ice on my back ACHE
3. One guarded on a soccer pitch: SHIN - They're usually worn as a pair
4. Fabled food that's bear-ly eaten?: PORRIDGE - Fun
5. Competition series that features Mystery Box and Pressure Test challenges: MASTER CHEF - You've got 45 minutes to make a dish out of what's in this box. Go!
6. So much: A LOT.
7. "Mozart in the Jungle" star Kirke: LOLA - Based on a true story of an oboe player trying to get into the NY Philharmonic.
8. Electric company?: TESLA.
9. Keys on a piano: ALICIA.
10. "She put the Miss in misdemeanor when she stole the beans from Lima" singers: ROCKAPELLA - Another portmanteau - ROCK and A CAPELLA
11. Low digits: TOES.
12. Texting inits.: SMS - We set up Joann's mother's 100th birthday via texting (Short Messaging Service). It makes for a lot less phone tag.
14. Breed from Honshu: AKITA.
19. Work with one's buds?: TASTE - Fun cluing
21. Mantis of "Guardians of the Galaxy," for one: EMPATH - More
24. Gambling mecca near Hong Kong: MACAU.
25. Dark aspect of one's persona: INNER DEMON.
26. More aloof: ICIER.
27. Change of fortune?: LUCKY PENNY - Find a penny, pick it up...
29. Skirt: AVOID.
30. Mint family herb: SAGE - So is catnip
31. Fence-sitter's deterrent: BARB - Uh, I'm not sitting on that fence
33. Stadium suite: SKYBOX - One from which you can watch the Dallas Cowboys
37. Goes underground: SPELUNKS - No Way!
39. Three-time Best Director of the 1930s: CAPRA - Frank also got three other nominations
42. Mollifies: QUIETS - HUMORS and QUELLS at _ U _ _ _ S? Nah.
44. Court apparel: ROBES.
46. Having clear boundaries: EDGED - Sidewalk/lawn grooming
48. Soyinka who was the first Literature Nobelist from sub-Saharan Africa: WOLE.
49. Head space?: FACE.
50. Sword-wielding animal on Sri Lanka's flag: LION - Your assignment: Find it in this group of 20 Asian flags (answer at bottom of write-up)
51. A crow's twig, e.g.: TOOL.
52. Cajun staple: OKRA.
53. Catwoman player: KITT - Here are the players
54. Oil in some pet treats, for short: CBD - Cannabidiol (CBD) is an active ingredient in cannabis that is derived from the hemp plant, but it does not cause a high and is not addictive.
I'm sure you saw the Sri Lankan flag is second from the left on the bottom row.
With our new editorial staff we are seeing a stream of new female constructors bringing their perspective to the puzzle world. Today is a classic Friday theme where rather than add letters we remove letters and then clue the result to make witty sense. Rebecca's choice is the ambitious trigram LIE, which she supplements with the uncommon Friday reveal. Since her mainstream puzzle debut on Groundhog Day 2021, she has more than 20 published efforts. She shows her skills by including a bunch of long non-theme fill ASSAILS, RAMPS UP, EGG TIMER, GOLD STAR, SLED RACE, WE'RE HOME, POPS WHEES, SHOE HORNS, SORRY CHAR and SWEATSUIT. Impressive.Let us move to the theme.
18A. *Sounds when Dad is on the roller coaster?: POPS WHEELIES. Your father screaming on the roller coaster expands to his making his bike (motor or not?) doing wheelies. I could not find a good video.
24A. *Football official who makes the absolute worst calls?: DISASTER RELIEF. An incompetent referee becomes the center of humanitarian aid.
47A. *Extremely poor student?: LORD OF THE FLIES. This is my favorite as dubbing a bad student as the Lord of the Fs and then referencing a classic book read in school was great.
56A. *Woefully inadequate crust on a steak?: SORRY CHARLIE. Another fun reference to the old Star-Kist TV commercial though what a lacking crust might be.
And the reveal:
35A. "You can't deny it," and a good question about the answers to the starred clues: WHERE IS THE LIE.Not crazy about this clue or the placing a reveal in the middle of the puzzle, but it certainly tells the story.
Now that we have done part I, lets see the rest.
Across:
1. Diamond-studded watch, e.g.: BLING. This filled immediately but I can see it might have made some unhappy.
6. Drama award: OBIE. Off Broadway equivalent of a Tony.
10. Greek peak: OSSA. Rising from a broad, steep-sided plateau to a pyramidal peak of 6,489 feet (1,978 m), the mountain is noted in mythology for the attempt of the Aloads, sons of the sea god Poseidon, to climb to heaven by placing Ossa on Olympus and the Pelion (Pílios) Mountains on Ossa. Britannica.
14. "On the Media" medium: RADIO. On the Media (OTM) is an hour-long weekly radio program hosted by Brooke Gladstone, covering journalism, technology, and First Amendment issues. Wiki.
15. Underwhelming: SO SO. So what?
16. Temple athletes: OWLS. This Philadelphia University has produced some successful graduates. A LIST. To honor Temple's beginning as a night school for ambitious young people, the nocturnal owl was adopted as its mascot.
17. Former NBA center who made only one three-point shot in his career: O'NEAL. He tried 22 times .
20. Tower of note: AAA. The company that tows cars, hardy har har.
21. "You wouldn't __!": DARE. I already did!
23. Adjective on taco truck menus: ASADA. From the Spanish for grilled I think.
28. Start to cycle?: TRI. Cute, tricycle.
29. Minute: ITSY. Bitsy teenie weenie...
30. Ingest: EAT. This makes the process seem awful.
31. Margarita condimento: SAL. Spanish for salt.
32. Span. title: SRA. Continuing the trend, Senorita, a miss.
33. Business closing?: INC. This is the last part of a business name e.g. Crossword Corner, Inc.
34. Florida NFLers: BUCS. We have three NFL teams, The Jaguars from Jacksonville, the once mighty Miami Dolphins and the Tom Brady led Tampa Bucs.
39. Old Royale 8's: REOS. A car made by that company.
Pretty classy.
40. "I hate it": UGH. Also 46A. Response from the underwhelmed: MEH. 61A. "Yeah, don't think so": UM NO. The flowery speech of modern times.
41. "Trust your __": GUT. This has become an accepted way to live, why?
42. Exist: ARE. To be or not to be.
43. For: PRO. Against: Anti.
44. Pen pals?: HOGS. Cute, in their pigpen.
52. Prefix meaning "light": PHOTO. word-forming element meaning "light" or "photographic" or "photoelectric," from Greek photo-, combining form of phōs (genitive phōtos) "light."
54. Bread served with saag paneer: ROTI. We must first learn that saag paneer is a spinach based dish popular in Indian culture, then the fill is easy.
55. Maracanã Stadium city: RIO. Maracanã Stadium, officially named Estádio Jornalista Mário Filho, is an association football stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
59. Single-sex group of experts: MANEL. An appropriate feminist portmanteau for Man (only Pan) el.
62. The Hawkeye State: IOWA. Most sources say that Iowa's Hawkeye State nickname was inspired by a Native American warrior named Black Hawk and/or the character of Hawkeye in James Fenimore Cooper's novel The Last of the Mohicans. Though the exact history of the name is debated, most Iowans proudly refer to themselves as Hawkeyes.
63. Banish: EXILE.
64. Younger sibling, stereotypically: PEST. I was the youngest so I guess I was the pest.
65. Study __: SESH. Dictionary says / (sɛʃ) / noun. slang short for session.
66. Pond plants: REEDS. Reeds and rushes are pond plants that will attract wildlife such as hummingbirds, dragonflies and butterflies to you water feature.
Down:
1. Far-reaching: BROAD. I think this is very insulting and unfair as women deserve respect even if they are ... oh, sorry.
2. Poipu patio: LANAI. A very pretty area in Hawaii.
3. Notes app entries: IDEAS. I guess that is the idea but I imagine most just put in reminders.
5. "Well done, you!": GOLD STAR. Did you get these in school?
6. Hawk in a duet: OSPREY. This sounds so familiar but refuses to come to the surface. Help musicians, please.
7. Bronx cheer leader: BOOER. The term Bronx cheer is named for a borough of New York, the Bronx, and presumably the inhabitants' propensity to employ their tongues to express derisive feelings when a sports team does not perform up to par. See Yankees.
8. Co. for surfers: ISP. Internet Service Provider.
9. Maker of The Hero and The Fixer lip care products: EOS. Two of their lip balm products.
10. Sounds of awe: OOHS. And aahs?
11. Work-from-home attire, for many: SWEAT SUIT. I no longer own any, but in Florida it is shorts and flip flops.
12. The Iditarod, e.g.: SLED RACE. The Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, more commonly known as The Iditarod, is an annual long-distance sled dog race run in early March. It travels from Anchorage to Nome, entirely within the US state of Alaska. WIKI.
13. Goes after: ASSAILS. A fancy word for attacking someone. Etymology "attack violently," c. 1200, from Old French assalir "attack, assault, assail."
19. Drift, as an aroma: WAFT. I love the smell of coffee brewing when I am getting up. Sadly for Oo she does not.
22. @ signs: ATS. a gimme.
25. Buenos __: AIRES. We are back in South America.
26. Flat bread?: RENT. Another classic misdirection with flat = apartment and bread = money.
27. A throw: EACH. A piece.
32. Makes fit, in a way: SHOE HORNS. A picture clue.
33. "Thereabouts": ISH. I will see you 7ish.
34. Rosé: BLUSH. Don't whine, this is wine. I defer to C Moe to discuss this blend. My d-i-l use WHINE as her WORDLE word every day; last two days the answers were WHILE and TWANG = two 2s.
35. "Did you miss us?": WE'RE HOME. We are the 'us' here so we don't get to say this often.
36. 100 cents: EURO. Did you know the EURO used cents?
37. Rangers goalie Shesterkin: IGOR. Goodbye Igor, Eyegor here is a very New York clue/fill. In the 2021–22 NHL season he won the Vezina Trophy as the league's best goaltender.
38. Kitchen counter?: EGG TIMER. Another nice pun.
39. Increases quickly: RAMPS UP.
43. Ruse: PLOY. In the top 5.
44. "Yippee!": HOORAH. Very marine...
45. O'er and o'er: OFT.
48. Doodles: DRAWS.
49. "Rubber Duckie" singer: ERNIE. Not Bert, but...
50. Sally of "Brothers & Sisters": FIELD. Even multiple Academy Award winners must work.
51. Red parts of Louboutin shoes: SOLES.
53. Moderate pace: TROT. Don't rush.
57. Prefix with gender: CIS. Cisgender, or simply cis, is an adjective that describes a person whose gender identity aligns with the sex they were assigned at birth.
58. Gardener's tool: HOE. Ho, ho, that is a trap to which I will not go. I think Erle wrote about Perry Mason, among others.
Axes are for wimps, but they are cute and my personal favorite band.
Handicapped by a hand that was assailed by my grand puppy, Remus the Jack Russell, I did not get to start until tonight and I hope we had a good time and I made enough sense as I ploughed through. This was a fun puzzle from an impossibly busy new constructor. I look forward to your comments and thank you Rebecca, all who read, all who write, C.C. and Boomer and keep good wishes flowing for them and the whole
Today Chase's theme schools us in a bit of "circular reasoning", something
he apparently learned as a math major in college. So we don't get
too lost, we'll start with the reveal and the grid.
37A. Places with guards, and what can be found six times in this puzzle:
SCHOOL CROSSINGS. Does your
school district have formal training for its
crossing guards? The splash video above will give you some tips about how they operate.
The
"six times" Chase refers to are the 6 circles in the grid where the
answers to 10 theme clues intersect. The answer to each of the themers
has a double-meaning with the second being a type of school. Thus we have 10SCHOOL CROSSINGS:
Here are the themers:
1D. Captivate: CHARM. To entice. Or a CHARM SCHOOL, aka a
finishing school
for teaching "social graces" to young women. I think young men might
need them more.
23A. T-shirt size: Abbr.: MED. Baltimore has 2 top flight MEDSCHOOLS: at
Johns Hopkins University and the University of MD.
I use to work as a lab tech at both and in IT at the latter.
7D.
Sous-chef's work: PREP. The character Everton in the"Chef"clip at 1A below is a sous-chef. Or an abbreviation for an academic finishing school, i.e. a
college PREParatory SCHOOL.
10D. Not
permanent: ACTING. Someone filling a position temporarily or until they are officially confirmed. OTOH, if you're
interested in getting your name in lights,
here are the 25 top
ACTING SCHOOLS in the world.
55D. Swap: TRADE. Barter. OTOH a TRADE SCHOOL, (also known as a technical or vocational school) is
a post-secondary educational institution designed to train students for
a specific job in a skilled trade career. They are generally far less
costly than 4 year college programs and depending on the specialty can
pay very well (had any plumbing work done lately?). Here are some programs in the Maryland area.
53A. "How Great Thou
__": ART. "How Great Thou Art" is a Christian hymn based on an original Swedish hymn. It is often sung at
funerals. For those who'd like to hear it, here's a powerful performance by CW singer Carrie Underwood
(make sure you get out your hankies!). OTOH an
ART SCHOOL is a place to hone the skills needed for fine arts professions such as painting,
sculpting, graphic design or teaching art. The
Maryland Institute College of Art, aka "MICA" (see also 62A ) is the Baltimore school where
some of my ceramics teachers studied.
46D. Dead Sea Scrolls
language: HEBREW.
The Israel Museum in Jerusalem
has an exhibit of the scrolls and their relationship to the Hebrew
Bible. A HEBREWSCHOOL, also called a
Yeshiva is a Jewish parochial school that does much more than just teach the Hebrew
language.
58A. Air conditioner setting:
HIGH. AC setting these days in many parts of the country, or a HIGH SCHOOL for grades 9-12, unless your district has Middle
schools for grades 7-9.
60. "Literature in a hurry," per Matthew
Arnold: JOURNALISM.
Matthew Arnold
(24 December 1822 – 15 April 1888) was an English poet and cultural critic
who worked as an inspector of schools. I think that Arnold expected
journalism to be something that it was never intended to be. But according
to this author,
that is no reason why journalism can't be well written. Here's a review of 12 US JOURNALISM SCHOOLS
that can improve the odds of that happening. The rise of the Internet
has seen the advent of a lot of amateur journalists, not always to good
effect.
IMHO, sussing the theme from just the reveal would have been tricky
without the circles, especially the 4 schools above and beyond the 6
implied
in the reveal (a red herring if I ever saw one). That said I think
this puzzle was very clever and its construction, with or without
circles,
must have been a real bear.
Here are the rest of the clues:
Across:
1. Stylish eatery word: CHEZ. A pretentious way of saying "at the
house of" and today's premier
leçon français.
This reminds me of the hilarious BBC series "Chef!" about Le Chateau Anglais,
a French restaurant in the English countryside. The Chef is
Gareth Blackstock, played by comedian Lenny Henry, as a talented,
arrogant, tyrannical obsessive who has endlessly inventive insults for his
staff, unknowing customers, and almost anyone else he encounters. Here
he locks horns with his wife Janice over the price of turkeys (2:18
min):
5. Irish icon, informally: ST PAT.
A storied saint, who seems to be the patron of crossword puzzle constructors.
His feast day is March 17th, a good day to plant peas, or so the story
goes.
14. "Buenos días": HOLA. Today's Spanish lesson, and a
double CSO to Lucina!
15. Google __: EARTH. Brought to you by the creators of Blogger,
Google Earth
is a computer program that renders a 3D representation of Earth based
primarily on satellite imagery (see also 9D). The program maps the Earth by superimposing
satellite images, aerial photography, and GIS data onto a 3D globe, allowing
users to see cities and landscapes from various angles. Here's a snippet
from a Google Earth view of the LA Times roof (if you look closely you can just
make out Patti's office on the top floor right Corner):
LA Times Offices 11th Street NW
16. Bit of thunder: CLAP. Please hold your applause (or raspberries) until
I'm finished.
17. Roguish: ARCH. I don't think our Archbishop is. He
seems like a nice person to me.
20. Shower unit?: RAINDROP. Technically speaking it would be an
H2O molecule.
22. Litmus reddeners: ACIDS. And BASES make litmus paper
bluer. Litmus papers indicate whether a solution is ACIDIC (e.g.
Hydrochloric acid) or BASIC (e.g. Lye):
But these are "either/or" tests. If you need to determine the
specific degree of ACIDITY or BASICITY (aka
alkalinity), then you need to determine
its pH, a scale with a range of 1 (most acidic) to 14 (most
alkaline). Rather than a simple binary
RED/BLUE response, pH paperssuch as the product shown below, give you a reading of
the specific pH. This is very useful, e.g. for testing the soil of a vegetable garden.
Most garden vegetables like a pH of about 7, but some have specific
preferences. pH can also be tested electronically. Here's some
information on
pH testers for gardens.
25. Before thou know'st: ANON Also a famous and very
prolific author.
26. Unexpected blessing: GODSEND. A
Deus ex Machina, or one of these ...?
28. Places to get in shape: GYMS.
32. Corp. shuffle: REORG. This happened to me a couple of
times. One minute you're IN THE LOOP, the next you're not.
35. Half of deux: UNE. Two divided by two = one and today'sdeuxième leçon français.
36. Small battery: AAA.
42. Old tape type: VHS.
43. "Shine a Little Love" band, familiarly: ELO. The
Electric Light Orchestra
(or at least their acronym) is a favorite of puzzle constructors. Here's
the song and
lyrics
(4:12 min):
44. Joplin's "Me and Bobby __": MCGEE.
Janis Lyn Joplin
(January 19, 1943 – October 4, 1970 - sadly
a member of the 27 club) was an American singer and musician. One of the most successful and widely
known female rock stars of her era, she was noted for her powerful
mezzo-soprano vocals and "electric" stage presence. She started out as
lead singer for Big Brother and the Holding Company and rose to fame
after playing at the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967. Here's my favorite
(3:31 min),
lyrics:
45. "Hunny" bear: POOH. One of the great things about being
a grandparent is getting to watch all of those old shows over again (and over,
and over ...!)
Pooh and his hunny
47. Flub, as an easy grounder: MISPLAY.
50. Kitchen initialism popularized by Rachael Ray: EVOO. A
frequent ingredient in crossword puzzles because of its high vowel
content.
Here's everything you'd want to know about extra virgin olive oil . The freshly pressed olive oil we once bought at an olive grove in the
Texas hill country actually had a peppery taste, unlike any we've had
since.
52. West Coast NFL team, on scoreboards: LAR. Los Angeles
Rams.
56. Plane area: CABIN.
58. Big blow: HAYMAKER.
62. Layered mineral: MICA. When I was about 12 I found a very large piece of MICA
in a gully. It appeared very exotic and extraordinarily different
from anything I'd ever seen before (12 year olds are easily impressed).
Here is the transparent variety
of the mineral (known as Muscovite), large sheets of which were used in
the past as windows in furnaces and horse drawn carriages:
68. Levelheaded: SANE. From the Latin
sanus "sound, healthy".
More etymology.
Down:
2. Goddesses of the seasons: HORAE. As the Greeks recognized only
three seasons: spring, summer, and autumn, there were only three main HORAE,
but there were others who represented the "natural positions of time".
Their naming and genealogy seems a bit complicated.
3. Iberian folk hero: EL CID.
Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar
(c. 1043 – 10 July 1099) was a Castilian knight and warlord in medieval Spain.
Fighting with both Christian and Muslim armies during his lifetime, he earned
the Arabic honorific al-sīd, which would evolve into
El Cid ("the lord"), and the Spanish moniker El Campeador ("the
champion"). By all accounts he was a remarkable warrior and a master
strategist and tactician.
El Cid
4. Journalist Paula: ZAHN.
Paula Ann Zahn
(/zɑːn/; born February 24, 1956) is an American journalist and newscaster who has
been an anchor at ABC News, CBS News, Fox News, and CNN. She currently
produces and hosts the true crime documentary series
On the Case with Paula Zahn
on the Investigation Discovery channel. And a CSO to Husker.
Paula Zahn
5. Get sore: SEERED. SEETHED wouldn't fit, but
"Singed" would have fit as a clue.
6. Claws: TALONS. The weapon of choice of
birds of prey. Here's everyone's favorite raptor on this side of the pond:
American Bald Eagle
8. NCR device: ATM.
NCR Corporation, previously known as National Cash Register, is an American software,
consulting and technology company providing several professional services and
electronic products. It manufactures self-service kiosks, point-of-sale
terminals, automated teller machines, cheque processing systems, and
barcode scanners.
9. Highest mountain range outside of Asia: THE ANDES. They may
not be the highest in the world, but they are the longest. You can display them from Google Earth by clicking on this link (if you're prompted for which app to use, click on Earth) Zoom in and rotate the globe with your mouse if you like. Don't forget to take along some oxygen! [NOTE: running this on a smartphone requires the Google Earth app].
The Andes Mountain Range
11. Pleased: GLAD.
12. Hearing things: EARS.
13. View: SPY.
19. Sgt. or cpl.: NCO.
Non Commissioned Officer.
21. Khal __ of "Game of Thrones": DROGO. This is all about
Jason Momoa, who played Drogo. This is all about
Drogo.
Khal Drogo
25. Dating profile word?: ANNO. Swipe right if you thought
this was a Kinder reference?
26. Miracle-__: GRO. My father swore by it. We like the
kinder, gentler organic fertilizer Epoma Garden Tone:
27. Continental capital: EUROS. Dollar wouldn't fit, so it
couldn't have been Australia.
30. World of Warcraft class: MAGE.
World of Warcraft (WoW) is a massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG)
released in 2004 by Blizzard Entertainment. A mage (also called
magus, magician or wizard) is a
damage-dealing spell-caster. Scary looking!
Mage Crest
31. Enc. for a 32-Down: SASE. Self-Addressed Stamped Envelope.
32. Invitation letters: RSVP. Répondez š'il Vous Plaît.
"Please respond". The troisième leçon français.
33. Zoom meeting annoyance: ECHO. LAG was too short.
34. Extremely: OH SO.
38. Beyoncé album and film of 2016: LEMONADE. A CSO to our
Corner Historian. Also
the sixth studio album by American singer Beyoncé. It was released on April 23, 2016 and was accompanied by a 65-minute film
of the same title. It's her second "visual album" and also a concept album with
a song cycle that relates her emotional journey after her husband's
infidelity. I was not familiar with her work and found it
impressive. Here's the first track, Pray You Catch Me (3:16 min);
lyrics:
39. Award named for a Muse: CLIO. The Clio Awards (also
simply known as the Clios) is
an annual award program
that recognizes innovation and creative excellence in advertising, design, and
communication. The program was named for Clio,
the Greek Muse of history. I'm not sure what the connection is, but I think they could put a
little more "creative excellence" into their logo:
40. Insincere flattery: SMARM. I suspect we'd see a lot of
this at the 39D awards ceremonies.
41. Less than friendly: ICY. The 39D losers would probably
be ICY.
48. Red Cross supply: PLASMA.
PLASMA is one of 4 major components of the blood. IIRC you can donate plasma only and get your
RED CELLS back, if you don't mind waiting for them to spin the whole blood down and
transfuse the cells back into your system.
49. Nonprofessional: LAYMAN.
51. "The Voice of the Dodgers" Scully: VIN.
Vincent Edward Scully
(November 29, 1927 – August 2, 2022), the announcer for the Dodgers for
67 (!!!) series. And not just their voice, but "The voice of
baseball". We lost him just a little over two weeks ago.
Vin Scully 1985
Listen to him narrate some of the openings of some classic World Series
...
53. Director Kurosawa: AKIRA.
Akira Kurosawa
(March 23, 1910 – September 6, 1998)
was a Japanese filmmaker and painter who directed thirty films in a career
spanning over five decades. He is regarded as one of the most important and
influential filmmakers in film history.
Rashomon, which premiered in Tokyo, became the surprise winner of the Golden Lion at
the 1951 Venice Film Festival. Kurosawa, is probably best known as the creator
of the
Seven Samurai, which was later adapted in the American western The Magnificent Seven.
Akira Kurosawa on the set of the Seven Samurai 1953
54. Intel mission: RECON.
56. Last name of both "The Ballad of Buster Scruggs" filmmakers:
COEN. Favorite directors of crossword constructors.
The Ballad of Buster Scruggs is a 2018 American Western
anthology film written, directed, and produced by the Coen brothers. It had a
limited theatrical release, being primarily intended for Netflix television (this one flew under my radar scope)
and features six vignettes that take place on the American frontier.
Here's the trailer:
57. Wheels: AUTO. Components of a noun used as its synonym.
And thanks as always to Teri for proof reading and for her constructive
suggestions.
Cheers,
Bill
Chase Dittrich, you are invited to post anything you'd like to share about this puzzle,
its evolution, the theme, or whatever, in the Comments section below. We'd love to hear from you.
41. *Knowledge based on empirical evidence: GROUND TRUTH.
35. *Spoke indirectly: MINCED WORDS.
52. Something to chew on, and a hint to the answers to the starred clues: FOOD FOR THOUGHT.
I like it. CANNED, GROUND, and MINCED are all food terms, and here they each pair with a second word to form a phrase about thoughts.
Melissa here. We've seen Katherine Baicker before on May 19th(when Malodorous Manatee linked to her Wiki page), and most recently on July 7th. This appears to be the first collaboration with Scott Earl, who we haven't seen before. Welcome, Scott, and welcome back, Katherine.
Across:
1. Young amiga: CHICA. In Spanish (and also Portuguese), amiga is female friend. Chica is young girl.
6. Austen heroine played by Anya Taylor-Joy: EMMA.
10. Turner in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: TINA. Ageless, along with 50A.
14. Spanish "That's enough!": NO MAS. The expression no más in Spanish means “no more.” Its specific sense can vary depending on context, however, and it can also translate to “enough,” “no longer,” or “just.” In Italian, "that's enough" is basta. I often heard my Italian former FIL say that to his wife.
15. Competed (for): VIED.
16. Willing to talk: OPEN.
17. Brolly carriers: BRITS. The origin of brolly is an alteration of (um)brell(a) dating back to around 1870-1875. Although the term stems from the extracted 'brell,' this is thought to have changed over time as language developed.
34. Omega, to an electrician: OHM. The ohm (Ω) is the SI derived unit of electrical resistance, named after German physicist Georg Ohm. (SI = International System of Units.)
37. Unlikely esports champions: NOOBS. Noob is a slang term that is used to refer to inexperienced players in a multiplayer gaming environment. Noob is derived from “newbie” and is considered to be a derogatory term. A low-level character may also be referred to as a noob regardless of the skill of the player controlling it. Noob may also be spelled as newb or n00b. Certain behavior may also be called noobish.
46. Soprano Fleming: RENEE. One of the most highly-acclaimed singers of our time, performing on the stages of the world's greatest opera houses and concert halls. Renée's new single, Before the Deluge with Alison Krauss, Rhiannon Giddens, and Yannick Nézet-Séguin.
47. Less than some: NONE.
48. Island ring: LEI.
50. "Believe" diva: CHER. Known as "The Goddess of Pop," now 76 years old, she's been performing since 1963, and still selling out shows.
59. "Go figure!": FANCY THAT.
60. Black-and-white dunkers: OREOS.
61. Black-and-white swimmer: ORCA.
62. "Veep" award: EMMY. Veep won 17 Emmys total, including: 2012 (Lead Actress), 2013 (Lead Actress and Supporting Actor), 2014 (Lead Actress), 2015 (Outstanding Comedy Series, Writing, Lead Actress, and Supporting Actor), 2016 (Lead Actress, and Outstanding Comedy Series), (Lead Actress, and Outstanding Comedy Series), 2017 (Lead Actress, and Outstanding Comedy Series), and 2019 (Lead Actress, Supporting Actress, and Outstanding Comedy Series). Wow. I feel like I should watch it now, since I never did.
63. Cosmic comeuppance: KARMA.
64. Spa treatment: PEEL. Chemical resurfacing procedure that removes the top layer of skin, reduces wrinkles and leaves softer, smoother skin.
65. Sincere: REAL.
66. Sneakier: SLYER.
Down:
1. "American Greed" channel: CNBC.
2. Wedding ring?: HORA. Nice clue. Hora is a Romanian or Israeli dance in which the performers form a circle, or ring.
3. "Do not push me right now": I'M IN NO MOOD. Well ... a bad one.
4. Revitalizing snooze: CATNAP.
5. Interview talking point: ASSET.
6. "Best. Day. __!": EVER. Great song, although the name of the band is actually Sly and the Family Stone (not Stallone, as youtube decription shows 🤣).
7. "Dibs!": MINE.
8. Rx orders: MEDS. The shortened Rx in the clue indicates the shortened answer meds.
9. Enlarged one's family, in a way: ADOPTED.
10. Storms that may be chased: TORNADOS. I lived through a few tornadoes in Oklahoma as a teen, and chasing one would not be on my agenda.
11. Some "hazy" brews, for short: IPAS. From The Guardian: The initials stand for India pale ale. It was the answer to the problem of providing beer for the British Empire in the east. It was too hot to brew in India, so what was needed was a beer that could survive the grueling six-month journey from Britain intact.
12. State bird that sometimes nests on lava fields: NENE. The Hawaiian name “nene” comes from the bird's soft, almost gentle call. The literal translation of the word in olelo Hawaii (Hawaiian language) means “to chirp, as a cricket; to croak … whimpering, as a sleeping infant.” The look similar to Canadian Geese, and are, in fact, descended from them. 7 Fun Facts About the Nene, or Hawaiian Goose.
13. Tiny toiler: ANT. E. O. Wilson, the famous entomologist and world's foremost expert on ants, passed away in December of 2021. He inspired many young people to learn about ants (including my son, when he was about six). PBS has a documentary about him and his studies, Of Ants and Men, and his memoir Naturalist is wonderful.
19. Adversary: FOE.
21. "The Daily Show" correspondent Lydic: DESI. Trevor Noah's show.
24. Fiji neighbor: TONGA.
25. Side issue?: THORN. The worst! Also called a "stitch," doctors sometimes call them exercise-related transient abdominal pain (ETAP).
27. Come together: UNITE.
28. Oak of the future: ACORN. Mighty oaks, from little acorns grow.
36. Sound that may wake sleeping parents: WAH. Grandparents, too.
38. Patronize neighborhood shops, say: BUY LOCAL.
42. Vagabond: DRIFTER.
43. Georgia __: TECH.
47. Like some biological networks: NEURAL.
49. Dreyer's partner in ice cream: EDY. Learning moment, ice cream maker William Dreyer, and candy maker Joseph Edy together created Dreyer's and EDY's® Ice Cream. Fromo their FAQ: "Dreyer's and Edy's® proudly market our products under Dreyer's Ice Cream west of the Rocky Mountains and in Texas. On the other side of the nation, we proudly market our products under Edy's® Ice Cream in the East."
51. Catchy parts of pop songs: HOOKS.
52. Uber charge: FARE.
53. "Fool me __ ... ": ONCE.
54. Woeful cry: OH ME.
55. Hindu epic hero: RAMA.
56. Short "Chat again soon": TTYL. Talk to you later.
57. Second novel in Marilynne Robinson's "Gilead" series: HOME. Very popular.
58. Winter Palace monarch: TSAR.
59. Snappy dresser: FOP.
Notes from C.C.:
Melissa's
sweet granddaughter Harper turned 3 years old! Her bigger sister Jaelyn
are in the last three pictures. I had to smile at Melissa's note:
Jaelyn with her karaoke and unique fashion sense