Friday, February 23, 2024

Friday, February 23, 2024, Blake Slonecker

 


Good Morning, Cruciverbalists.  Malodorous Manatee here with today's recap of a puzzle constructed by veteran puzzle-setter Blake Slonecker.  Today's theme is straightforward so let's jump right in with the unifier which is placed smack dab in the middle of the grid:

39 Across:  Camera setting, and what shortened 18-, 24-, 47-, and 58-Across?: F - STOP.  At the four referenced places, Blake has dropped the F (not dropped the F bomb, just the letter F) in order to answer the clues, and provide us with a few chuckles here, here, here and here:

Enough, F, Stop!

18 Across:  Pollinator who can't fly?: GROUND BEE.  Where's the BEEF?

24 Across:  Parents in the Hundred Acre Wood?: RAISES THE ROO.  Parents is used as a verb in the clue.  Kanga is a single mom.  When ROO misbehaves Kanaga RAISES THE ROOF.

Roo and Kanga


47 Across:  Product of Shenandoah Valley shepherds?: 
VIRGINIA WOOL.  Who's afraid?

58 Across:  Experimental soft cheese?: TRIAL BRIE.  A TRIAL BRIEF is a legal document presented to the court.  It is intended to provide the court with the presentation of facts, evidence and legal arguments.  A TRIAL BRIE might provide an introduction for someone who has yet to develop a taste for soft cheeses.

Here is how this all looks in the grid:



...and here are the rest of the clues and answers:


Across:

1. Tries out: DEMOS.  Hand up for initially trying out TESTS.

6. Nosegay: POSY.  As in "Ring Around The Rosie".  

10. Pod whose cross sections are pentagonal: OKRA.



14. Skip a syllable or two: ELIDE.


15. Until: UP TO.

16. "Stay" singer Lisa: LOEB.  I searched for a Leopold and (Lisa) LOEB mash up but could not find one.  

17. __ Cup: PGA Tour prize: FEDEX.  A golfing reference.  Both Professional Golfers' Association  and FEDeral EXpress have been abbreviated.  Although, those abbreviations are now used far more often than are the full names.

20. Middle of dinner?: ENS.  We have seen this type of clue before.  There are two N's in the middle of dinner.  If Blake had needed DEES, here, would he have gone with "Middle of middle"?

21. Perfect: IDEAL.

23. "Island of the Blue Dolphins" novelist Scott: O'DELL.


27. Joie de vivre: ZEST.  A French phrase fully co-opted by the English language.

28. Emo: ANGSTY.  Slangy clue/answer combo.

32. Storage furniture: CHEST.

34. Prize money: PURSE.  Commonly used this way in the world of professional boxing and in professional golf.

37. Sphere in old referee whistles: PEA.  Before they developed synthetic orbs they used real PEAs.

38. A pop: EACH.

40. Otter kin: MINK.  A combination that is a bit of a crossword standard.

41. Durango day: DIA.  Today's Spanish lesson.

42. Apt rhyme for "freeze": SEIZE.  As in SEIZE-up.

43. Well-mannered blokes: GENTS.  It is easy to convince ladies not to eat Tide pods but it is more difficult to deter GENTS.

44. Goofs in proofs: ERRATA.  What do you call a list of corrections read out in a suggestive fashion?  ERRATA - CA.

46. Tromp: PLOD.

53. Bird in a bevy: QUAIL.  A group of QUAIL is called a bevy.

56. Hot spots: OVENS.  Not a WiFi reference.

57. Signal: CUE.  Both can be employed as either verbs or nouns.

60. Glossy material: SATIN.  Like most chairs?

62. 55-Down, properly: ISN'T.  See also 55 Down.  Duh, MM.

63. Like most whiskey: AGED.  This 36-year-old whisky can be yours for about five or six thousand dollars.  Let me know and I will send you a link if I can still (pun intended, See 42 Down) find it in my trash file).



64. Heart Eyes or OK Hand: EMOJI.



65. Fancy spread: PATE.  To make chicken PATE one has to first de-liver the chicken.

66. Fool (with): MESS.


67. Wrap sheet: SARAN.  The following, from the mid-60's, might be deemed NSFW:




Down:

1. Schedule for later: DEFER.

2. Two-time WNBA MVP __ Delle Donne: ELENA.




3. Many a sedan: MID-SIZE CAR.

4. Amit Majmudar's "__ to a Drone": ODE.  I was not familiar with this work.  I have now searched for it online, found it, read it a couple of times and .... well, make your own judgement:

5. People's superlative: SEXIEST.  A reference to People Magazine.  The honorific of SEXIEST Man Alive is awarded annually to a male but the magazine awards Most Beautiful Woman Alive in lieu of SEXIEST.

6. Sound of the Northwest: PUGET.



7. O icon: OPRAH.  OPRAH Winfrey of, among many other things, O Magazine.

8. Took second, say: STOLE.  A baseball reference.

9. Second person: YOU.  Not an Adam and Eve reference.  A grammar reference.

10. One whose trick-learning years are behind them: OLD DOG.



11. "The Mamba Mentality: How I Play" writer Bryant: KOBE.

12. Rod and __: REEL.

13. Cain's brother: ABEL.  A reference to The Book of Genesis.

19. Nary a soul: NO ONE.

Sir Paul McCartney

22. "Spring forward" letters: DSTDaylight Savings Time.

25. Quick meeting?: SESH.  Quick as in a shortened version of SESSION.

26. Tough talk?: RASP.  

29. Damage control pro: SPIN DOCTOR.


30. High-stakes shelter: TENT.  I don't know about the High bit, but many TENTs certainly do employ stakes.

31. Shaggy beasts: YAKS.  See also 33-Down.

32. Relinquish: CEDE.

33. 31-Down abundance: HAIR.



34. Pump letters: PSIPounds per Square Inch

35. Lays aisle-mate: UTZ.  A snack food (pretzels, potato chips, etc.) reference.


36. Bass output: ROE.  Not a bass guitar.  Not Bass Ale.  Not the Mayor of Los Angeles.  Fish ROE.

39. "__ the Turtle": University of Maryland catchphrase: FEAR.



40. "I would like some more catnip, please": MEOW.

42. Bootlegger's vessel: STILL.



43. Visual aids: GLASSES.  Not, e.g., pie charts, flashcards, flip charts, or the like.  Aids to help us see.

45. Really take off: AVIATE.  Really.  No, really take off.



46. Blame (on): PIN.  As in "Y0u won't PIN that murder on me!"

Eydie Gorme (and friends)


48. Canyon: GORGE.

49. Campus climbers: IVIES.

Tom Lehrer - "Bright College Days"


50. Focus of Maslow's hierarchy: NEEDS.


51. Message board?:
OUIJA.  Messages from the great beyond.  Supposedly.  OUIJA Board.



52. Red Square honoree: LENIN.

All Hail Marx and Lennon !


53. Sample collector, maybe: Q-TIP.  For the DNA lab.

54. __ Major: URSA.



55. 62-Across, improperly:
AIN'T.  See also 62 Across.  Duh, MM.

59. "Bang!": BAM.

61. Org. for OBs: AMA.

________________________________________




Sunday, February 11, 2024

Friday, February 9, 2024, Caroline Hand, Katie Hale

 


Good morning, Cruciverbalists.  Malodorous Manatee here with a recap of  today's puzzle which, fittingly, was constructed by not one but two puzzle setters.  If you woke up feeling poorly this morning then this puzzle may not have been for you.  However, if you woke up fooling peerly then you may have found that the solving went smeethly and agrooably.  Let's start with the reveal:

66  Across:  Tennis match with teams of men and women, or what 18- and 25-Across and 42- and 55-Across literally have: MIXED DOUBLES.

At two places (four clues/answers) Caroline and Katie intentionally mix up the double vowels (oo and ee) from two clues/answers and, thereby, create amusing responses to the carefully worded clues.  The first pair is at:

18 Across:  Plays a trick on Miami's basketball team?: FOOLS THE HEAT     and
25 Across:  Spring occasion when people get really emotional?: APRIL FEELS DAY

FEELS THE HEAT and APRIL FOOLS DAY have traded double vowels

The second pair is at:

42 Across:  Orange rinds of epic proportions?: OLYMPIC SIZE PEELS and

55 Across:  Wagers about how many ingredients are in a bottle of shampoo?: CHEMICAL POOLS

OLYMPIC SIZE POOLS and CHEMICAL PEELS have engaged in a bit of vowel swapping.


Here is how this all looks in the grid:



.... and, now that we're done with the vowels' key party, let's have a look at the rest of the clues and answers:


Across:

1. Baldelli who was AL Manager of the Year in 2019: ROCCO.  Things start off with a reference to the Minnesota Twins.



6. Leave the dishes for tomorrow, say: SOAK.  SOAKing is a great way to avoid difficult scrubbing (dibbicult sruffing?).

10. Fistful of dollars: WAD.

Clint Probably Got This Answer Quickly


13. Nook purchases: E-BOOKS.  NOOK is Barnes and Noble's electronic reading platform/device.

15. Subject: TOPIC.  Current events are a fish's favorite TOPIC of discussion.

17. Spa brand: OPI.  Usually clued with a reference to nail polish.

20. Molecular messenger: RNA.

21. Dump, as stock: SELL.

22. Breakdown helpers: AAA.



23. Monarch: RULER.



30. Cuban dance: MAMBO.  O, possibilmente, italiano



33. Comforts: SOLACES.  


34. Rita on Avicii's "Lonely Together":
ORA.

35. UFC fighting style: MMAMixed Martial Arts

38. Prefix with gender: CIS.

"Mongo CIS" Just Does Not Seem Right

39. Some UPenn degs.: MBAS.  Many schools offer MBA degrees.  The UPenn bit was not very helpful.

46. Hands together time: NOON.  Analog, not digital.



47. Not awesome: MEH.

48. Big fuss: ADO.

49. Writer Joe Hill, to Stephen King: SON.  This solver did not know that.  This Joe Hill, I know:



50. Amends last year's tax return, say: RE-FILES.

53. The Chi-__: R&B quartet: LITES.



59. Titan, once: OILER.  The Tennessee Titans football team started out in 1960 as the Houston Oilers before relocating to Nashville in 1997.

60. Prefix in some genre names: ALT.

61. __ Rios, Jamaica: OCHO.



65. School opening?: PRE.  Some solvers might feel that the southwest, with its PRE, SEC and EST stack, was a bit 47 Across.

71. Wall St. regulator: SEC.


72. Cutting: SNIDE.  A fairly ambiguous clue.


73. Writes to: EMAILS.  Can we read EMAILS on our EBOOKS?

74. D.C. hrs.: EST.  Anybody remember Werner Erhard?

75. African antelopes: GNUS.

76. Teaser: PROMO.  As in teaser ad.


Down:

1. Bowl game officials: REFS.  A football reference.

2. Cor anglais kin: OBOE.  Clued many ways but not as many ways as OREO



3. Awesome:
COOL.  Slang.

4. Work together briefly?: COLLAB.  A punt (or slang depending on your perspective).  COLLABoration "in brief".

5. Allows: OKS.

6. Gets home, in a way: STEALS.  Another baseball reference.



7. __ and aah: OOH.  What goes OOH OOH?  A cow with no lips.

8. Imitate: APE.  Used as a verb.  See also 36 Down.

9. Telluride maker: KIA.  An automotive reference.

10. Advertising exaggeration, perhaps: WORLD'S BEST.

11. CPAP target: APNEA. Continuous Positive Airway Pressure used to treat breathing problems.

12. Log with a lock: DIARY.


14. Guest __: STAR.

16. Copy shortcut: CTRL C.  A computer user's technique.

19. Japanese "yes": HAI.

24. "I can help!": USE ME.  We have seen this several times in our puzzles.  Has anyone actually heard a person say "USE ME" ?

26. Pageantry: POMP.

27. Areas of interest: FOCI.  Plural of FOCUS.

28. "Hamilton" role for Phillipa Soo: ELIZA.

29. Made less harsh: EASED.

30. Eclipse participant: MOON.



31. "Hope" singer Parks: ARLO.

32. City executive-to-be: MAYOR ELECT.

36. Imitate: MIMIC.  See also 8 Down.

37. Amtrak choice: ACELA.  A train ride often taken in our puzzles.

40. Healing plant: ALOE.  A constructor's friend.

41. Bank acct. application digits: SSNS.  

43. Greek muse of memory: MNEME.  Inspiration for:



44. "Where the Sidewalk Ends" poet Silverstein: SHEL.

45. Straw __: POLL.

51. Gels: FIRMS.

52. Some kings and queens: SPADES.  A playing card reference.

54. Weather map line: ISOBAR.  Where do meteorologists relax after work?

55. Grove: COPSE.

A small COPSE set among a field of dandelions.


56. Brings on: HIRES.  They could have gone with the root beer.

57. Far from current: OLD.

58. Chiwere speakers: OTOE.  OTOE visit us often.  All About These Friends of Crossword Constructors

62. Advertiser's honor: CLIO.  The CLIO awards are named for the Greek goddess CLIO, the mythological muse known as "the proclaimer, glorifier and celebrator of history, great deeds and accomplishments.

63. Big wheel at sea: HELM.  A big steering wheel.


64. __ buco: OSSO.

67. Dutch bank: ING.



68. Mark, as a box: X IN.  Punt

69. Part of a prof's address: EDU.  The ending for a university's email address.  dot EDU

70. Plate official: UMP.  Yet another baseball reference.

Y'er Out!


Okay.  If you say so.

___________________________________________________________




Friday, May 3, 2024, Jay Silverman

Watch the Birdies Good Morning, Cruciverbalists.  It's the first Friday of the merry month of May and it is time for yours truly, Malodo...