The Following Program Is Brought To You In Living Color On CCTV
After being afforded a break last Thursday, thanks to the efforts of Chairman Moe, it is now back to work for this malingering manatee. It has already been more than a month since I started working on my first blog post. That bit of perspective is far easier to face than the fact that it is 2020 - and nearing the end of 2020 at that. Do you remember that Tommy Chong line? "I'm not into time, man." That seemed pretty funny fifty years ago. Far less amusing now. Regardless, let's now share a bit of our precious time looking at this week's Thursday puzzle.
THEME: MAKE MINE A DOUBLE (NOT A BAD IDEA AT THAT)
First off, a hearty Crossword Corner hello to John Michael Currie. This is his Los Angeles Times debut puzzle. Welcome, John!
The reveal comes at 64. ACROSS: Pass coverage tactic ... and a hint to the answers to starred clues: DOUBLE TEAM.
In football (and basketball) jargon, DOUBLE TEAM means to block or guard an opponent with two players at the same time. Our constructor, John Michael Currie, has placed the names of two sports teams next to each other so that the result is an adjective modifying a noun. The results are, themselves, things with which most people are, at least, somewhat familiar.
While most team names are pluralized, today the constructor has chosen to go with answers in the singular.
* 17. ACROSS Striped marine predator: TIGER SHARK TIGER SHARKs are found in temperate and tropical waters. They can grow to a length of between sixteen and seventeen feet
* 10. DOWN Navy Stunt Pilot: BLUE ANGEL Originally formed in 1946, The BLUE ANGELS are the U.S. Navy's precision flying team. They are thrilling to to watch perform. They should be. The annual operating budget for the team is approximately $40 million and each plane, as specially equipped for their use, runs between $50 and $60 million.
* 24. DOWN Boeing 737, for one: TWIN JET. The most current version of the Boeing 737 airplane, the 737 MAX, has certainly had safety issues. More than 10,500 Boeing 737's (all versions) have been built.
* 35. DOWN Pollux, for one: GIANT STAR. Castor and Pollux were twin half-brothers in Greek and Roman mythology. Their names were assigned to two stars in what we call the constellation Gemini (the twins) . It turns out, however, that Castor is actually comprised of three binary stars. Perhaps the stars should be renamed for the McCaugheye septuplets.
Across:
1. Whale newborn: CALF. When they were little kids, my children enjoyed listening to "Baby Beluga".
5. Mallorcan seaport: PALMA. PALMA is the capital and largest city of the autonomous community of The Balearic Islands in Spain. It is situated on the south coast of Mallorca on the Bay of Palma.
10. "Jazz Samba" guitarist Charlie: BYRD. Jazz Samba is the name of a record album released in 1962. Stan Getz and Charlie BYRD were the featured musicians. Here is the track titled "Samba Dees Days" :
14. Stench: ODOR. Alternative clue: An aroma often emanating from crossword puzzles.
15. Neptune's realm: OCEAN. Originally, Neptune was the god of fresh water but by 399 BCE he became identified with the Greek god Poseidon and thus became the deity of the OCEAN. The female counterpart is Salacia. Salacia is unrelated to the word "salacious" but is part of the derivation of "salient".
NEPTUNE
16. Show the way: LEAD.
20. Adjoining, in hotel lingo: ENSUITE. A master bedroom bedroom with a private bathroom = EN SUITE.
21. Portal: GATEWAY. A rabbit hole was Alice's GATEWAY to Wonderland.
23. Words after boy or so: DOI. "Boy DO I." "So DO I."
24. "Rooted in real" chip brand: TERRA. Not a computer chip but a snack chip. TERRA boasts that their chips are made "from real root" vegetables.
25. Landlocked Afr. land: ETH. ETH is the International Olympic Committee's abbreviation for Ethiopia. Somalia and Eritrea block ETHiopia's access to the sea.
28. Put in the cargo hold: STOW.
STOW IT !
30. Epic featuring the Trojan Horse: AENEID. The AENEID is an epic poem written by Virgil sometime between 29 BCE and 19 BCE. It tells the story of Aeneas who traveled to Italy and became the ancestor of the Romans. The word is constructor's friend with four vowels out of six letters.
34. Bit of sediment: DREG. DREGS is a nickname for what are called "lees" during wine making and "sediment" when in the bottle. DREGs are composed of dead yeast cells and bits of seeds, grape skins and other solids. Sometimes, winemakers choose to extend the time that wine stays in contact with the lees to impart added flavor.
36. Hits the slopes: SKIS.
38. Wide open: AGAPE.
39. Like some bonds: IONIC. A chemistry reference. "The name is Bond, IONIC Bond. Taken not shared." We saw James Bond's iconic line "Shaken, not stirred" in a recent puzzle.
41. Platform-promoting org.: RNC. This one was a head scratcher for a moment until it dawned on me that RNC stood for the Republican National Committee.
42. Grand __ National Park: TETON. GRAND TETONS is a clue/answer not to be taken too literally in a family friendly puzzle. Check this out with any French/English translation app. "Hey, Jacques, take a look at those GRAND TETONs!" "Pierre, you have been in zees mountains for far too long, n'est-ce pas?"
43. Bat mitzvah scroll: TORAH. The TORAH is a hand written copy of the first five books of the Old Testament of the Bible. It is written with a quill on parchment made from the skin of a Kosher animal. At a Bat Mitzvah ceremony, a girl of at least twelve years and one day (regarded as the age of religious maturity) reads from the Torah in front of the assembled congregation.
When is a door not a door?
When it's ajar.
46. Chaps: LADS. A LAD is a boy or a young man. The Four LADS, on the other hand, is a Canadian singing quartet. In the 50's, 60's and 70's they recorded several hit songs. The members of the group are no longer LADS.....
Istanbul Is Not Constantinople
47. Kind of column or cord: SPINAL. (....and neither are these folks).
51. Mao __-tung: TSE. Mao TSE-tung, often called Chairman Mao, was the founding father of The People's Republic of China. He led the Chinese Communist Part from 1949 until his death in 1976.
MM Daughter Doing Her Best Chairman Mao
52. Avocado __: TOAST. I had never heard of Avocado TOAST until a few years ago and now it seems to be quite the ....
54. Fleeting trend: FAD. Memorable FADs have included Davy Crockett hats, Pet Rocks, Streaking, Chia Pets, Live Strong Braclets, Pogs, Lava Lamps and the list goes on and on and on and on. The etymology of the word FAD might be from the English "fiddle-faddle" - morphing into Fidfad and then, simply, FAD. Alternatively, it came from the French "fadaise" meaning trifle or nonsense. Fadaise, in turn, comes from the Latin "fatuus" meaning stupid. Hmmm.
56. Modern Library title, e.g.: CLASSIC. Founded in 1917, The Modern Library is a publisher of books many of which are considered to be CLASSICs.
59. Players with possession: OFFENSE. In football, soccer, and basketball the OFFENSE has possession of the ball. Baseball is the only sport where the Defense has possession of the ball.
66. Song often sung in Italian: ARIA. Alternative clue: Song often sung in crossword puzzles.
68. Send forth: EMIT. Volcanoes, for example, EMIT Carbon Dioxide and Sulfur Dioxide along with ash, smoke and water vapor.
69. King with three daughters: LEAR. Shakespeare's tragedy, King LEAR tells the tale of a king who bequeaths his power and land to two of his three daughters. Things do not end well.
1. République de __ d'Ivoire: COTE. French is the official language of the country that we, in English, call the Ivory Coast Republic. En francais, c'est le Republique de COTE d' Ivoire.
2. Deuce follower: ADIN. Is it going to be a card game reference? A trey? No, this time it's a tennis term for Advantage In. AD IN means that if the person serving wins the next point then the server will win the game.
3. Enters in a record book: LOGS.
4. Anna who was an early pioneer of psychoanalytic child psychology: FREUD. Anna FREUD was the sixth, and youngest, child of the better known Sigmund Freud.
5. Colorful reminders: POSTITS. Post It Notes. POST ITS were invented accidentally by a scientist working at 3M Company (Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing). He was trying to develop a very strong adhesive but instead invented a "low tack, pressure sensitive, reusable" adhesive. The rest is, as they say, history - including the competing claims and law suits.
6. Feel yesterday's workout, say: ACHE.7. Grassy ground: LEA. Alternative clue: Fields often seen in crossword puzzles. This is getting redundant.
9. Turkish metropolis: ANKARA. ANKARA, the capital city of Turkey, is also (at the risk of being redundant) neither Istanbul nor Constantinople nor Byzantium.
11. "That smarts!": YEOW. Synonyms for YEOW include "Ouch", "That smarts", and "Hell's bells!"
YEOW !
12. Tennis nickname: RAFA. RAFAel Nadal is a Spanish professional tennis player. He wore a $725,000 Richard Mille watch during the French Open. Tennis has been very, very good to him.
13. WWII turning point: DDAY. June 6, 1944. D-DAY is, repetitiously, Day-Day. The day before was Day Minus One (D-1) . The day after was called D Plus One (D +1), and the day after that was D+2. D-Day was the Day.
18. Kia subcompacts: RIOS. Kia is a Korean automotive company. Their model line up includes the Sedona, the Telluride, the Sportage, the Optima and the RIO. The RIO is a sub-compact model.
A Kia Rio
22. Pup's reward: TREAT.
The Eyes Have It
25. Prepares to publish: EDITS.
26. Scout group: TROOP. The ultimate classic song about a Boy Scout TROOP has got to be Tom Lehrer's "Be Prepared". Remember, as you listen, that this was 1953!
BE PREPARED !
27. Artist Matisse: HENRI. HENRI Matisse, the painter, provides a wonderful excuse to add a bit of culture to this endeavor.
29. Fried side: OKRA. A nice rhyming clue. OKRA is a staple of Southern cooking that is too often seen in crossword puzzles.
31. Bother greatly: EATAT. The overuse of EAT AT in crossword puzzles is beginning to eat at me.
32. Devices with earbuds: IPODS. IPODS have been almost completely replaced by the music playing capabilities of those electronic devices that we, somewhat quaintly, persist in referring to as phones.
33. Thick: DENSE. The element Osmium is twice as DENSE as lead. Under "normal" conditions it packs 22 grams into each cubic centimeter. A teaspoon of it would weight roughly 3.5 ounces.
37. Con: SCAM. In the immortal words of Carmine Sabatini, "This is an ugly word, this, scam."
Carmine Sabatini On the Equities Markets
40. Disorderly state: CHAOS.
45. Ridged chips: RUFFLES. In this case, RUFFLES is a reference to the brand of potato chips and their advertising slogan.
48. Under the weather: LAIDUP. Both the answer, LAID UP, and the clue, Under the Weather, are colloquialisms for being ill or injured.
50. Call at home: SAFE. A baseball reference with a bit of misdirection. The constructor might have wanted us to think about calling, or calling on, someone at home. Below, the runner never touches the plate but is called SAFE because the catcher is blocking the plate but he does not have the baseball. See Rule 7.13.
53. Quick bread that may have raisins: SCONE. We've all eaten them but what, exactly, makes a SCONE a SCONE? It's an "unsweetened or lightly sweetened biscuit-like cake made from flour, fat and milk sometimes having added fruit."
Did you hear the joke about the guy who hated coal?
Never mined.
57. It may be at the end of the line: LURE. The expression "end of the line" refers to a conclusion or a final outcome. But here, that path is a dead end. This time it turns out to be a fishing reference. Cleverly clued.
58. The Bosporus borders it: ASIA. One of the least-cliched clues for ASIA that we have seen in a while. The Bosporus is a narrow, internationally important strait.
59. Parting words?: OBIT. No, the answer is not Good Bye, Au Revoir or Zai Jian. It is OBIT, short for OBITuary.
60. Missing fish in a Pixar film: NEMO. The motion picture Finding Nemo grossed about One Billion USD at the box office. The sequel, Finding Dory, grossed another billion. This Marine creature paid to see neither.
Dory and Nemo
62. Ambulance pros: EMTS. Emergency Medical Technicians. For the final time, alternative clue: Personnel often found in crossword puzzles. Definitely over used.
65. Sporty truck, briefly: UTE. On the first pass, we often do not know if the answer is going to turn out to be UTE (a nickname for Utility Vehicle) or SUV (an abbreviation for Sports Utility Vehicle). Of course, the classic use of the word was in the motion picture My Cousin Vinny.
TWO UTES
That wraps up another Thursday exposition. Lots of animal friends stopped by to visit this week. Well, I guess that is to be expected. Two other good friends showed up, also. I would bet that many of you were you able to identify them.
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