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

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Jun 7, 2025

Saturday, June 7, 2025, Rafael Musa & Rebecca Goldstein

 Saturday Themeless by Rafael Musa & Rebecca Goldstein

I skated around with gradual success and then I wound up with one empty cell which you can see
in red at the right. I wrestled with what letter would work in that cell that began two unkown-to-me words and correctly guessed the L. I was so pleasantly surprised to get the congratulations message. I'll take a "got 'er done!"

These puzzles make me abandon my concrete ideas about language and force me to interchange nouns for verbs or vice versa.We solvers also have to access less common definitions for words. That is part of the frustration fun!!


Across:

1. Option for keeping travel plans on track?: TRAIN - Plan B leapt to my mind before "track" made the correct fill obvious

6. Band: GANG and 13. Band: POSSE.

10. Influential lobbying org.: AARP.


14. Goat rodeo: HULLABALOO A goat rodeo is a slang term for something going totally, unbelievably, disastrously wrong, and there's nothing left to do but to sit back and watch the trainwreck.


16. "See ya!": CIAO.

17. "Seems legit": I BELIEVE IT.

18. Dip targets, for short: TRIS - His TRICEPS are pretty easy to see!


19. __ ed: SEX.

20. Dens: LAIRS.

21. Stop and yield: SIGNS - Usual verbs become nouns


22. Scary stories?: HAUNTED HOUSE - This one has three stories ๐Ÿ˜€


24. Amusement park ride: GO KART.

27. Tรฉa of "Madam Secretary": LEONI.


28. __-garde: AVANT - On clearance at Kohl's ๐Ÿ˜€


29. Try something new: SHAKE IT UP.

33. Get the band back together?: WELD - If your band is broken...

34. Luxury fashion house founded in Madrid: LOEWE - The eponymous shirt below goes for $990!


35. Starchy element in some bubble tea: TARO.


36. Season openers: PREMIERES - That last E was a speed bump.

38. At a loss for words?: TERSE.

39. Wassail ingredient: CIDER.


40. First sentence of a book written with only 50 distinct words: I AM SAM.


41. Chicken: SCAREDY PANTS.

45. Features of some loyalty programs: TIERS.


46. Inapt rhyme for "first": WORST ๐Ÿ˜€ The Royals first World Series win was in 1985 after many years of being usually WORST 


47. "Hilarious": HAH and 30. Part of a giggle: HEE.

50. Further: ALSO.

51. When many abandon ship: SHORE LEAVE ๐Ÿ˜€ - In Honolulu just before heading out to fight the Japanese during WWII


53. Exclamation from someone refusing to buy something: LIAR 


54. Move that can plump accent pillows: KARATE CHOP ๐Ÿ˜€


55. Feature of some Disney headgear: EARS - Some other EARS can be found in Disney's famous Hidden Mickeys around the properties.


56. Minute: ITSY - Yeah, I put TINY first.

57. "The Goldfinch" novelist Tartt: DONNA ¯\_(ใƒ„)_/¯  


Down:

1. That isn't it: THIS ๐Ÿ˜€

2. Goldberg who won a Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning: RUBE.

 

3. "Call Her Daddy" podcaster Cooper: ALEX - She signed a contract with Spotify for $60M


4. Not 100%: ILL.

5. Some digital displays: NAIL ART - Oh, those digits!


6. First name in California politics: GAVIN.

7. At the ready: ALERT.

8. Public hearing guidelines?: NOISE LAWS - For Arlington, VA


9. "A Song of Ice and Fire" show, colloquially: GOT.


10. Meeting points?: ACTION ITEMS - AGENDA ITEMS? Not so much.

11. Imaginary instruments: AIR GUITARS ๐Ÿ˜€

12. Causes delays, perhaps: RAINS.


15. Stunner: BEAUT.

21. Something dropped in an idiom about inevitability: SHOE ๐Ÿ˜€


22. Portable self-checkout devices?: HAND MIRRORS ๐Ÿ˜€

23. Wild maneuver?: DEKE - Now this is a wild DEKE!


24. Stare stupidly, to a Brit: GAWP 



gawp
/ษกรดp/
verb
INFORMALBRITISH
  1. stare openly in a stupid or rude manner.
    "what are you gawping at ?"

25. Completed: OVER.

26. Salad whose main ingredient may be massaged: KALE CAESAR - The massage helps break down the tougher parts of the raw KALE

 

29. "Excuse me!?": SORRY WHAT.


31. Astronomical bear: URSA.

32. Sapphic work: POEM Sappho was an influential ancient Greek poet from the island of Lesbos whose passionate, emotional lyric poetry about intimacy between women led to the term “sapphic” and the island itself becoming associated with female homoeroticism. More about this

34. Green building cert.: LEED - Leadership in Energy and Enviromental Design ¯\_(ใƒ„)_/¯ 


37. Portentous day: IDES.

38. Told a grown-up, say: TATTLED.

40. Like Alaska, often: INSET.


41. Left out overnight, maybe: STALE.

42. Fine hairs: CILIA.


43. Standard partner?: POORS.


44. Data structure in computer science: ARRAY - ¯\_(ใƒ„)_/¯ In computer science, an array is a data structure consisting of a collection of elements (values or variables), of same memory size, each identified by at least one array index or key, a collection of which may be a tuple, known as an index tuple.  Yeah, I knew that! ๐Ÿ˜€

47. "Agatha All Along" star Kathryn: HAHN - ¯\_(ใƒ„)_/¯


48. River associated with Shakespeare: AVON.

49. __ filter: HEPA.

51. Common sight at oversized baggage pickup areas: SKI.


52. Prefix with hotel or tourist: ECO - Ion Adventure Hotel, Iceland. Taking up residence in an abandoned building of the nearby geothermal power plant, the hotel was sustainable from inception and continues to be today. With sinks made from old tyres and furniture from recycled wood, it repurposes materials in an eco-friendly way.








Jun 6, 2025

Friday, June 6, 2025 - Baylor Gallagher and Katie Hale

 

 Theme:  "No, No, Nanette"

  
ZaSu Pitts played Pauline Hastings in the film "No No Nanette"

Puzzling thoughts:

In all honesty, I found coming up for a "theme" for today's puzzle quite difficult.  I certainly "get" the concept of adding and/or subtracting a letter from a more or less familiar phrase, and then cluing it to provide a pun and/or humorous outcome.  But did you find this puzzle fun and/or enjoyable to solve?  Did the entries tickle your "facy"?  The Chairman is a bit "oplussed"

In checking "Google" for any references to the co-constructor (Baylor Gallagher) I found none.  So I am guessing that this is her/their debut puzzle.  Choosing the assistant editor of the LA Times Crossword Puzzle (Katie) to collaborate with was certainly not a bad idea.  Katie has been published quite often in other venues, and here, too.  And if I had to guess, the puzzle idea was Baylor's and Katie helped create the grid and many of the connecting words and/or clues
 
Reveal:
 
I will start with the "reveal" in case some of you were scratching your head trying to figure out what happened in the entries.  64-across. Out of the ordinary, or, parsed differently, what has been applied to the phrases in 18-, 24-, 41-, and 53-Across?: NON STANDARD (NO "N" STANDARD when parsed differently).  If you remove the letter "N" from a word in the four entry phrases it supports the clue.  But no "n" standard seems forced and a bit weak, IMO
 
Entries:
 
18-across. False claim about a DIY project?: ASSEMBLY LIE.  The first entry was probably the best of the four.  As most know, a Do It Yourself project requires a lot of "assembly".  The term "assembly liNe" dates back to the automotive industry and was a feature of the FORD Model T cars to make the building of them more efficient.  Without the "N" in the word "line", it fits the clue
 
24-across. Overall condition of steel girders and beams?: METAL HEALTHMeNtal health is a known phrase but had I been editing/choosing this I might have looked for something less serious to spoof
 
41-across. "Do you know who my father is?"?: I'M KID OF A BIG DEAL"I'm kiNd of a big deal" is a bit of a stretch (again, IMO) and why clue it as "male-related"?  Couldn't this question (the clue) be asked of King Charles in referring to his mother, Queen Elizabeth?  She was kind of a big deal ... 

53-across. "Just put the succulent down and go!"?: "LEAVE ME ALOE!".  "Leave me alone!" is the phrase that this is spoofing.  Meh.  We use aloe often here in the desert SW when we've been exposed to too much sun.  Not sure I would be so brazen if I requested some from a friend
 

The grid:



The rest of the answers to the clues:

Across:
1. Dashboard tech: GPSMPH and RPM were tried, unsuccessfully.  The first of 20 three-letter words and 12 abbreviations in today's puzzle

4. Queen with icy powers: ELSA. The fictional character from Disney's "Frozen"

8. Hands over: GIVESCEDES was tried, unsuccessfully

13. Daiquiri ingredient: RUM.  This clue was directed, I think, at we older solvers as I doubt that many Millennials and/or Gen Z's drink Daiquiris.  And another cocktail related clue/word was found at (30-down. Cognac cocktail with orange liqueur): SIDECAR.  This is another drink that probably escapes the younger generations

 

The sidecar became popular in Paris and London in the early 1920s


14. Purple hue: MAUVELILAC was tried, unsuccessfully

16. Put on a pedestal: ADORE.

17. Rollover subj.: IRA.  Not so fun fact:  the Chairman did this once and the institution I had the IRA with forgot to report it as a "rollover" to another retirement fund.  The IRS spotted this and sent me a tax statement for a huge amount of $.  Moe had to make a lot of phone calls and collect a lot of paperwork to prove the rollover was legit

[a theme entry]

20. Word of thanks: MERCI.  Hmm.  I suppose that the word "merci" (although French) is commonly substituted for the word "thanks".  The clue didn't lead us to knowing this

22. "Thus with a kiss __": Romeo's final line: I DIE. Seemed kind of logical as I recall that Romeo dies in the final scene of Shakespeare's play, "Romeo and Juliet"

23. Fortune: LUCK.  I'm reminded of the negative phrase: "if it weren't for bad luck I would have none at all"

[entry]

27. "Industry Baby" rapper Lil __ X: NAS.

28. Intel org.: NSA.  An anagram of 27-across, too

29. Vane point: EAST.  Had to end in st; waited for the perps to determine whether it was 90° or 270°

31. Dry mop target: DUST.

34. __ large: LOOM.

38. Reunion attendee: NIECE.  And its clecho: (54-down. Reunion attendee): AUNT. In both cases the constructors were looking at family reunions rather than school reunions

[entry]

44. Invertebrate's lack: SPINE.

45. Greek house: FRAT.  Moe-ku #1:

        When transgender pledge
        Thought they joined sorority,
        They said, "I smell a FRAT"

46. Sea eagles: ERNS.  Crossword-ese; kind of surprised to see one in this puzzle, honestly

47. Tropical tree: PALM.

49. Business letter abbr.: ENC.  I somehow prefer the letters encl to refer to an enclosure in a letter

51. Commanders org.: NFL.  Erstwhile Washington Redskins

[entry]

60. "Oh, woe!": ALAS.

62. Hearts, e.g.: SUIT.  Could've used spades, clubs, or diamonds

63. Eat away at: ERODE.

[reveal]

67. Countdown start: TEN. "Nine, eight, seven, six, five, ...

68. Large venue: ARENA.

69. Hit lightly: TAP ON.

70. Letters of urgency: SOS

71. Full of back talk: SASSY.

72. Gave temporarily: LENT.  Does this word have any particular significance when something is given temporarily during the time period from Ash Wednesday to Good Friday?

73. Indefinite amount: ANY.  Fun observation:  now that I have lived in the desert SW for almost 6 years and take many hikes, I have discovered that the number of rocks, pebbles, and boulders on this planet are not just indefinite, but they may be infinite

Down:
1. Fairy tale brother: GRIMM.  As in the brothers GRIMM

2. Step in making some soups: PUREE

3. Sharp: SMART.

4. Online letters: EMAILS.

5. Part of UNLV: LAS.  The "Running Rebels" is the sports team nickname for the University of Nevada @ Las Vegas

6. Girl in "Calvin and Hobbes": SUSIESusie Derkins is a little girl who makes her home in Calvin's neighborhood. She is his well-known neighbor and the only major character to have both a given name and a family name

Susie is an intelligent and polite 6-year-old girl, who in many ways is a foil to Calvin. She takes her studies seriously and doesn't slack off on her homework as Calvin does. She also takes piano lessons 

[this from the calvin and hobbes fandom page]

The three characters

7. Eco-friendly spa brand: AVEDA.

8. Lass: GAL.

9. Pastoral poem: IDYL.

10. Tennessee athlete: VOLUNTEER.  Or when written as the plural, VOLUNTEERS, a Jefferson Airplane song back in the Vietnam War era.  I could've chosen "Rocky Top" but I didn't

 




11. "I Luh God" gospel singer Campbell: ERICA. Sounds more like rap, to me

 




12. Is after: SEEKS.

15. Wakim of "SNL": EMIL.  This video violates politics and religion, but it was the only SNL video I could find on YouTube.  FTR, I haven't watched SNL since it first aired 50 years ago

 




19. __ noire: BETE.  From [Merriam-Webster]: "Bรชte noire is a French phrase meaning "black beast" or "bugbear". It refers to a person or thing strongly detested or avoided"

21. Saloon: CANTINA.  From [Merriam-Webster]: "Cantina is a noun that can mean a pouch or bag at the pommel of a saddle, or a small barroom or saloon"

25. Angelic glow: HALO.  AURA fit unsuccessfully

26. Suspend: HANG

[listed in across]

31. Insult: DISIs it DIS or DISS??

32. Cricket official: UMP.  Similar to baseball I've heard

33. Some transports in the Arctic tundra: SKI PLANES.  They are real!

 



35. On vacation: OFF.  I suppose if they allowed 2-letter words in xword puzzles, the opposite clue would fit: OFF vacation = ON

36. Regatta tool: OAR.  When I think of a regatta I picture this:



But when you sort through enough images, you will find the picture of what today's clue describes: 




37. Exec's degree: MBA.

39. "__ it wait?": CAN.

40. High trains: ELS.  Also a transport for golfer Ernie?

42. Wooded valley: DELL.  GLEN fits too

43. Thing: ITEM.

48. Colorado's __ Verde National Park: MESA.  This is one of several dozen National Park sites that Ms Margaret and I have visited.  Well worth seeing

50. "You __ worry": NEEDN'T. I may have incorrectly counted this as one of the abbreviations ... technically it's a contraction

51. Mamas' mamas: NANAS.  Meemaws didn't fit but GRANS did

52. Vegetation: FLORA.  Place where many fauna hang out

[added in the across section]

55. "1876" novelist Gore: VIDALSome info about the novel

56. Tour de France stage: ETAPEDefinition

57. Many, casually: LOTSA.  Speaking of "casually", remember when Casual Fridays first appeared?

 


58. Classic Greek theater: ODEON.  Does anybody who is a senior citizen remember the name(s) of their town's movie theater as a child?  The two in our south-central Pennsylvania town were called the Strand and the Capitol

59. Minuscule: EENSY.

61. Hyphenated IDs: SSNS.  Have I ever mentioned before that certain pluralized abbreviations are not my cup of tea?

65. Swift nickname, when doubled: TAY.  As in TAYlor Swift.  I wonder if today's constructor follows her?  Moe-ku #2:

        Heard Ms. Gallagher
        Is a huge fan of Ms. Swift
        BAY BAY loves TAY TAY  

66. Emmy winner __ Cephas Jones: RON. Ron appeared on one of my favorite made for TV dramas This is Us

 
Summary:
 
Coming up with new and fresh puzzle ideas is getting more and more difficult.  I get it.  And while my sense of humor was not stimulated by today's puzzle I'm sure that others may like it.  But as the blogger/critic of each puzzle I solve and describe here, I don't want to sugar-coat something if I don't find it overly creative and/or enjoyable.  We can agree to disagree

Jun 5, 2025

Thursday, June 5, 2025, Roland Huget

 Theme:  There and back.

NaomiZ here with many thanks to the great Anonymous T for blogging the last three Thursdays.  I made a ROUND TRIP and have come back to work the crossword puzzle with you all.  Today, constructor Roland Huget clues us in on the theme with a big reveal:

61-Across. There and back, or a progression found in 17-, 25-, 35-, 51-, and 61-Across: ROUND TRIP.

The word TRIP appears in each theme entry.  The first time, TRIP is spelled normally.  In each subsequent appearance, the last letter from the previous appearance moves to the front of the word.  In the final appearance, TRIP has come back to the beginning.

17. Hair removal option: WAX STRIPS.  Ouch.


25. Underhanded move: CHEAP TRICK.  And for the rockers among us ...


35. Growth also known as yellow poplar: TULIP TREE.  Liriodendron tulipifera -- known as the tulip tree or yellow poplar -- is native to eastern North America.


51. Noncommissioned screenplay: SPEC SCRIPT.  A spec script is a screenplay written on speculation, meaning without a guaranteed payment. It may be written with the goal of selling it to a production company or studio.


61. There and back, or a progression found in 17-, 25-, 35-, 51-, and 61-Across: ROUND TRIP.

Across:

1. Former "Doctor Who" star Capaldi: PETER.  Peter Capaldi is a Scottish actor, director, singer and guitarist, who portrayed the twelfth incarnation of the Doctor in the science fiction series Doctor Who from 2013 to 2017.



6. "Quit crying, ya big baby!": WAH.  



9. Latches (on to): GLOMS.

14. Breakout publisher: ATARI.  Breakout is an arcade video game developed and published by Atari, Inc. and released in 1976. Eight rows of bricks line the top portion of the screen, and the player's goal is to destroy the bricks by repeatedly bouncing a ball off a paddle into them. 

Breakout starting screen

15. Punk offshoot: EMO.  Thank goodness for frequent fill EMO to get me started on this puzzle.

16. Make merry: REVEL.

17. [Theme clue]

19. Get around: EVADE.

20. Shot: PIC.  We took many shots on our three week adventure, and need to sort through them.

21. Apex predator with feathers: EAGLE.  

22. 21-Across nest: AERIE.

23. Homecoming attendee: ALUM.

25. [Theme clue]

27. Blotter target: WET INK.  An ink blotter is either a handheld rocking device or simple blotting paper, both used to absorb excess ink when writing with a fountain pen. 



29. Emblem on a dol.: US SEAL.  Abbreviated "dollar" in the clue lets US know there will be an abbreviation in the answer.



30. "4 real?": SRSLY.  Text speak:  seriously?

31. So-so poker hand: PAIR.

One pair ranks just above I got nuthin'.

34. Conniving: SLY.

35. [Theme clue]

39. Stand __: PAT.  "If you stand pat in draw poker you're betting on the cards in your hand being better than any you're likely to draw. It didn't take long for stand pat to move from the poker table, where it first appeared in the late 1800s, to the realm of politics; by the early 20th century, to stand pat was to oppose any change in U.S. tariff policy. The term continues to be used mainly in U.S. English, where it's applied to everything from a coach's decision not to change out players during a game to a homeowner's decision not to refinance." -- www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/standpat

42. Really liking: INTO.

43. Brings up: REARS.  As in brings up, or rears, children.

47. Fireplace receptacle: ASH PAN.

fireplace grate and ash pan


50. __ Sea: saline lake in California's Sonoran Desert: SALTON.  Although there were salt lakes in the area millions of years ago, the current lake was formed by accident in 1905 when an irrigation canal broke, and water flowed into the Salton Basin for two years.  Over the course of the 20th century, the lake became an important resting stop for migrating birds, but as the lake shrank and agricultural runoff poisoned the fish, it became an ecological disaster.



51. [Theme clue]

55. Dreamcast maker: SEGA.  Sega introduced its Dreamcast video game console in 1998/99, replacing the Saturn, and the earlier Genesis.  The Dreamcast was discontinued in 2001, ending Sega's 18 years as a console maker.



56. "Bosch" star Welliver: TITUS.  Titus Welliver is an American actor, best known for his portrayals of the Man in Black in Lost, Silas Adams in Deadwood, Jimmy O'Phelan in Sons of Anarchy, and the title role in the television series Bosch and Bosch: Legacy. He is also known for his collaborations with Ben Affleck, starring in his films Gone Baby GoneThe TownArgo, and Live by Night.  I clearly need to watch more television.  I did watch Sons of Anarchy, though!



57. Place for HS filmmakers: AV LAB.  High School is abbreviated; so is Audio Visual Laboratory.

59. Gown partner: CAP.

60. Wipe out: ERASE.

61. [Theme clue]

63. Compare: LIKEN.  Shall I "liken" thee to a summer's day?  Shakespeare used the word "compare," and the lady being compared came out ahead:  But thy eternal summer shall not fade!  To liken is to assert a similarity, but to compare is to examine similarities and differences.

64. Hesitant response: ERM.  Here's that British "um" again.

65. With a single voice: AS ONE.

66. Hรคgar's dog: SNERT.  Hรคgar the Horrible is the title and main character of a comic strip created by Dik Browne, which first appeared in 1973.  Following Browne's retirement in 1988, his son, Chris Browne, continued the strip until his own death in 2023.  The strip is a caricature commenting on life in the United States through a loose interpretation of Viking Age Scandinavian life.



67. Deli choice: RYE.

68. Deviated from a straight course: YAWED.  (A moving ship or aircraft) twisted or oscillated around a vertical axis.

Down:

1. Green-skinned fruits in the custard-apple family: PAWPAWS.  I only know this fruit from the old song, "Way down yonder in the pawpaw patch."  Asimina triloba is a small deciduous tree native to the eastern United States and southern Ontario, Canada, and it yields the largest native fruit of North America.



2. Always-open merchant: E-TAILER.  An internet retailer.

3. Campaign promises directed at wage earners: TAX CUTS.

4. Triage ctrs.: ERs.  Triage centers are Emergency Rooms.

5. Liturgical act: RITE.

6. Consider the pros and cons of: WEIGH.

7. Copious: AMPLE.


8. Hebrew prophet: HOSEA.

9. Hall of Famers: GREATS.

10. Simple machines: LEVERS.   A lever is a simple machine that amplifies an input force to provide a greater output force, which is said to provide leverage, which is mechanical advantage gained in the system.  Components of the machine are fulcrum (or pivot), load, and effort.


11. Egg cell producers: OVARIES.

12. Insurance category: MEDICAL.

13. In an aerodynamic way: SLEEKLY.

18. Pool triangle: RACK.  Pool as in billiards.

This carbon fiber rack will set you back $895.00 plus tax and shipping.


24. Jackson of the Modern Jazz Quartet: MILT.  Milton "Bags" Jackson (1923-1999) was an American jazz vibraphonist.  He is especially remembered for his solos as a member of the Modern Jazz Quartet.

Milt Jackson at the vibraphone.


26. Ragdoll sound: PURR.  The Ragdoll is a breed of cat whose silky coat is dark on top and light below, with blue eyes. American breeder Ann Baker developed Ragdolls in the 1960s. The name Ragdoll comes from the tendency of these cats to go limp when picked up. Ragdolls are considered  dog-like because they follow people around, are receptive to handling, and are not aggressive toward other pets.

Ragdoll cat


28. Alma mater of Spike Lee and Ang Lee: Abbr.: NYU.  Filmmakers Spike Lee and Ang Lee (no relation) earned their MFAs from New York University.  

31. Map marker: PIN.

32. Well-suited: APT.

33. Skater Midori: ITO.  Midori Ito is a Japanese figure skater. She was the 1989 World champion and the 1992 Olympic silver medalist.  She was the first woman to land a triple Axel in competition.  Midori Ito continues to compete:  in 2024, she won the International Skating Union Adult Figure Skating Competition's Masters Elite Women III + IV Artistic Free Skating category.

Midori Ito at the 1992 Olympics


36. "The Mod Squad" role: LINC.  Clarence Williams III (1939-2021) played the character of Linc Hayes in the police television series The Mod Squad from 1968 to 1973.

The Mod Squad:  Michael Cole, Peggy Lipton, Clarence Williams III


37. Bullpen stat: ERA.  In baseball, the bullpen is the area where relief pitchers warm up before entering a game. A team's roster of relief pitchers is also called the bullpen.  A statistic relevant to pitchers is their Earned Run Average -- the number of earned runs they have allowed, divided by the number of innings pitched, and multiplied by nine (the usual number of innings in a game).  Lower is better.  

38. Anago and unagi: EELS.

39. Some Degas works: PASTELS.  French artist Edgar Degas (1834-1917) did much of his work in pastels, which are powdery sticks of pigment with very little binder, resulting in beautiful works of art that are very fragile.

Edgar Degas, "Waiting" (c. 1882), pastel on paper


40. Medicine cabinet staple: ASPIRIN.

41. Bad thing for an official to be on: THE TAKE.  To be "on the take" is to accept bribes or other illegal income.

44. Was humiliated: ATE CROW.

45. Hair growth option: ROGAINE.  According to the manufacturer, "ROGAINE® minoxidil products are the first FDA-approved topical treatment that is clinically proven to help regrow hair."  Rip it out with WAX STRIPS, grow it with chemical treatments ... or maybe just get comfortable with your hair.

46. Replied sharply: SNAPPED.

48. One who may download Microsoft software: PC USER.

49. Green light: ASSENT.  Since a green traffic light gives permission to proceed, by extension, to "green light" a project is to give permission to go ahead with it.  To assent is to express approval.

50. Diehard fan, in slang: STAN.  A "stan" is an obsessed fan.  The term comes from the song Stan by Eminem, which describes a fan who is excessively fixated on the rapper.

52. Harder to come by: RARER.

53. Creamy white: IVORY.

54. Decorative feather: PLUME.

58. Annual celebration, briefly: BDAY.  Easier to write in the tiny spaces of my pocket calendar.

62. Passenger-screening org.: TSA.  Transportation Security Administration.  

Here's the grid:


While I was away, I was able to briefly scan most of the blog posts here and many of the comments as well.  What struck me was how very difficult the puzzles seemed to be, and how very clever all of you were to solve them.  I hoped I would be able to keep up with you upon my return!  I managed to complete today's puzzle on paper, no cheating, but it took a moment to get started, and there were quite a few entries solved by perps.  Anyone who made it through the grid deserves AMPLE praise.  I hope you all got to REVEL in your success, and that no one ATE CROW.

Jun 4, 2025

Wednesday, Jun 4th, 2025 ~ Joe Marangell

SHHH~!

TurkiSHHH Delight

My first time covering a crossword from Mr. Marangell.  His first LA Times was here, back in November 2024.  Yes, circles, two days in a row, but very few names, and chunky triple sevens in all four of the Down corners; I think that's why my solve time was higher than usual - I got slowed up because I start with the Down clues.  Overall, a tight group of four unspoken ways to express joy, anger, approval and indifference, "quietly" hiding in the circles;  

17. Credit card promotion for frequent fliers: BONUS MILES - SMILE  ๐Ÿ˜ - I don't have any credit card with frequent flyer bonus miles - travel for me was always covered by the company; the pipe organ company did not take full advantage of this perk, go figure ๐Ÿค”

Smile - it looks like it might a good trip; I should become a frequent flyer

24. Etsy purchase, perhaps: CUSTOM PRINT - STOMP ๐Ÿ˜ก - I don't make prints, but I do build wood furniture - I can see myself selling some pieces through etsy

This one is SOLD already, but I could make one just like it

34. Key partnership?: PIANO DUET - NOD ๐Ÿ˜‰ - The internet says a piano duet is TWO pianos, not just two piano players, this "duet" is hysterical...and then there's this one;

Heart & Soul - "chopsticks"

50. Handwoven products at Istanbul's Grand Bazaar: TURKISH RUGS - SHRUG ¯\_(ใƒ„)_/¯

Colorful; I have an abstract-patterned one waiting for a place in my home

58. "Is that so?," or a hint to the communication methods found in this puzzle's circled letters: YOU DON'T SAY - tacit, non-verbal means of expressing one's response

And Away We Go~!

Across:
1. Tree with papery bark: BIRCH


6. Opera set in Memphis: 
AIDA - crossword staple

10. Part of a Cape Cod, familiarly: CRAN - "A" Cape Cod is a vodka cocktail with cranberry and a slice of lime; I noted that if one is not careful, when buying the Ocean Spray cranberry "cocktail", the amount of  "added" sugar is insane; I buy the "diet" version ( ironic ) that has 1g of 'natural' sugar


14. Japanese lager brand: ASAHI - AND - 47D. Japanese dogs: AKITAS - our constructor must have an affinity for things "A" Japan, as AKIRA was in his first LA Times

15. Ignore: SNUB

16. Main character: HERO

19. Simplicity: EASE

20. Explosive sound: BLAM - I usually wait on perps, as there are dozens of "sounds" this could be

21. Blackjack card: ACE

22. Elizabeth __ cosmetics: ARDEN - the website

23. Hor. map line: LATitude


27. Latin catchall: Et Alii - and others, typically seen as "et al."

29. Annually: PER YEAR

30. Checkout option: DEBIT - I get 5% cash back/points with my Discover & Amazon credit cards - I use my debit card at the gas pump because credit is usually higher priced.

31. Sharp-witted: KEEN

33. Wily: SLY

38. HS exams for coll. credit: APs - Meh.  I don't care for the plural abbrs in crosswords 

41. Hit or __: MISS

42. Athlete who may run four laps: MILER - Ah- I was just a week too early with this fill . . . . 

46. Takes a turn: ROTATES - Literally - not 'your move', during a game

49. Second-most-populated city in Oregon: EUGENE - behind Portland, I am guessing

53. Contribute: ADD

54. Amazon biz: eTAIL

55. U.K. constituent: ENGland - Nottingham was the place both my parents grew up

This image can be purchased on etsy

56. Upper hand: EDGE

57. Prime condition: MINT - I tried BEST

61. Actress Swenson: INGA - I knew her from "Soap" and "Benson" - her IMDb.  My buddy's ex-wife chose this name for their second daughter, so that she could be nicknamed "Iggy"

62. "How __ can I put this ... ": ELSE

63. "Dragon Ball" genre: ANIME

64. Goes out with: SEES

65. Counterpart: PEER - KEEN, SEES and PEER today

66. Subsides: WANES


DOWN:

1. Talked excitedly: BABBLED

2. Keep away from others: ISOLATE - I prefer "solitude" to crowds; I am an introvert

3. Accumulated charges: RAN A TAB

4. Buddy: CHUM

5. That fella's: HIS

6. Nike competitor: ASICS

7. Shore recess: INLET - yeah, but meh; I grew up on Long Island, and the "inlets" were channels to the Great South Bay

8. Expected: DUE

9. Situp muscles: ABs - I do not work on the ABdominals at the gym yet - my trainer "Brett" says my "keg" is in the way - har-har....that's WHY I am going to the gym ๐Ÿ˜œ

10. Manhattan garnish: CHERRY - Manhattan, the rye/vermouth cocktail


11. Prepares: READIES

12. Premier League club known as the Gunners: ARSENAL - oh, my dad would be so disappointed I did not know this immediately - he ate, breathed and slept "European" football - soccer


13. "Stay out": NO ENTRY - we had this identical entry also in the Down in his debut LA Times puzzle

18. Home of Haleakala National Park: MAUI - figured it was Hawai'i, I tried OAHU

22. Start of Q2: APR - The second quarter of the year is April, May, June

24. __ Field: home of the Mets: CITI - Knew this because I grew up on Long Island - but it was Shea back then

25. Sides of a paper?: OP-EDS

26. Restaurant offering: MENU - I WAGed this

28. Body part used in kissing and telling: LIP - cute

31. Kosher deli snack: KNISH - pronounced "Kuh - nish"

Looks tasty
32. Greek goddess of the dawn: EOS

35. City near the geographic center of Iowa: AMES

36. Big birds: EMUS

37. Comedian Notaro: TIG - more here

38. NASA moon exploration program since 2017: ARTEMIS


39. Dish with fries and gravy: POUTINE  - Fries topped with cheese curds and hot gravy

I made my own hash browns in the air-fryer this weekend

40. Offbeat: STRANGE

43. Shows through the door: LEADS IN

44. Checkmate phase: END GAME - Not "YOU LOSE"

45. Flights that may serve dinner and breakfast: RED-EYES

48. Shorthand for sharing a new realization: TIL - I was thinking in terms of text messages, like "FYI".  Meh.  I found this, so it's legit

49. Waffle choice: EGGO

51. Second word in an ecological mantra: REUSE - Reduce, - - -, Recycle

52. Working for: UNDER

56. Italian volcano: ETNA - Had this Monday.  Etsy plus Etna today

58. "Uh-huh": YEP - AND - 60D. "Uh-uh": NAW - Slangy verbal communications 

59. Flamenco cheer: OLร‰

Splynter