LA Times Crossword 20 Sep 18, Thursday

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Constructed by: Paul Coulter
Edited by: Rich Norris

Today’s Reveal Answer: Got the Hook

Themed answers are common terms with a letter J (“THE HOOK”) inserted:

  • 62A. Was yanked offstage … or what four puzzle answers did, in a way : GOT THE HOOK
  • 17A. Norwegian coastal horse? : FJORD PINTO (from “Ford Pinto”)
  • 24A. Excellent joke? : GREAT JAPE (from “great ape”)
  • 39A. Where a sensei teaches how to slalom? : SKI DOJO (from “Ski-Doo”)
  • 50A. “We sure fell for that one, Jack,” e.g.? : JILL HUMOR (from “ill humor”)

Bill’s time: 8m 54s

Bill’s errors: 0

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Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies

Across

5. Embryonic membranes : CAULS

A caul is a piece of birth membrane that covers the head and face of a newborn. A rare occurrence, the caul is easily removed after delivery of the child. The membrane is a piece of the inner lining of the amnion that breaks away during the birthing process.

14. Ancient Andean : INCA

The Inca people emerged as a tribe around the 12th century, in what today is southern Peru. The Incas developed a vast empire over the next 300 years, extending along most of the western side of South America. The Empire fell to the Spanish, finally dissolving in 1572 with the execution of Tupac Amaru, the last Incan Emperor.

16. Cries at the Home Run Derby : OOHS

Major League Baseball holds the Home Run Derby annually, on the day prior to the league’s All-Star Game. The Derby is a home run hitting competition held between four players from the National League, and four players from the American League.

17. Norwegian coastal horse? : FJORD PINTO (from “Ford Pinto”)

A drowned valley might be called a ria or a fjord, with both formed as sea level rises. A ria is a drowned valley created by river erosion, and a fjord is a drowned valley created by glaciation.

A pinto is a horse with patchy markings of white mixed with another color. “Pinto” means “painted” in American Spanish.

The Pinto is a small car that was made by the Ford company from 1971 to 1980. The Pinto was named for the type of horse. Allegations were made in 1997 that the neck of the car’s fuel tank could easily break off in a collision leading to a deadly fire. However, the allegations were never really shown to be valid.

20. Ring leader? : TORERO

The term “torero” is used to describe all bullfighters. The term “matador” is reserved for the bullfighter whose job is to make the final kill. Aptly enough, “matador” is Spanish for “killer”.

22. Dún Laoghaire’s land : EIRE

Dún Laoghaire (pronounced locally as “Dunleary”) is a major port town located south of Ireland’s capital city Dublin.

23. Largest division of Islam : SUNNI

The Islamic sects of Sunni and Shia Muslims differ in the belief of who should have taken over leadership of the Muslim faithful after the death of the Prophet Muhammad. Followers of the Sunni tradition agree with the decision that the Prophet Muhammad’s confidante Abu Bakr was the right choice to become the first Caliph of the Islamic nation. Followers of the Shia tradition believe that leadership should have stayed within the Prophet Muhammad’s own family, and favoured the Prophet’s son-in-law Ali.

24. Excellent joke? : GREAT JAPE (from “great ape”)

“To jape” means “to joke or quip”. The exact origins of “jape” are unclear, but it does seem to come from Old French. In the mid-1600s, “to jape” was a slang term meaning “to have sex with”. No joke!

The tailless primates known as apes are divided into two main branches: gibbons (lesser apes) and hominids (great apes). The hominids are the great apes, and belong to the family of primates called Hominidae. Extant genera that make up the family Hominidae are:

  • chimpanzees
  • gorillas
  • humans
  • orangutans

26. Alpine transport : T-BAR

A T-bar is a ski lift on which the skiers are pulled up the hill in pairs, with each pair standing (not sitting!) either side of a T-shaped metal bar. The bar is placed behind the thighs, pulling along the skiers as they remain standing on their skis (hopefully!). There’s also a J-bar, a similar device, but with each J-shaped bar used by one skier at a time.

28. 2010 sci-fi sequel subtitled “Legacy” : TRON

Released in 1982, Disney’s “Tron” was one of the first mainstream films to make extensive use of computer graphics. The main role in the movie is played by Jeff Bridges. The original spawned a 2010 sequel called “Tron: Legacy”, as well as a 2012 TV show called “Tron: Uprising”.

35. “A Doll’s House” playwright : IBSEN

“A Doll’s House” is probably the most famous play by Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen. The play deals with the feminist awakening of the lead character, Nora Helmer. “A Doll’s House” is sometimes referred to as the “first true feminist play”.

38. “The Martian” has none : ETS

Extraterrestrial (ET)

“The Martian” is an intriguing 2015 science fiction film starring Matt Damon as an astronaut who is accidentally stranded on Mars. The movie is based on a 2011 novel of the same name by Andrew Weir. One thing that I liked about the film is that the science cited is fairly realistic. In fact, NASA collaborated with the filmmakers extensively from script development to principal casting.

39. Where a sensei teaches how to slalom? : SKI DOJO (from “Ski-Doo”)

The Japanese word “dojo” literally means “place of the way”. Originally the term applied to training halls that were found in or beside temples. The teaching in a dojo was not limited to the martial arts, but in the Western world we use the dojo as the name for a training facility for judo, karate and the like.

Ski-Doo is a brand of snowmobile produced by the Canadian company, Bombardier Recreational Products. The first Ski-Doo went on sale in 1959 and was intended to be named a “Ski-Dog” as the marketing concept was that the personal snowmobile would replace the dog sleds used by hunters and trappers. A painter misread instructions and wrote “Ski-Doo” on the side of the vehicle instead of “Ski-Dog”, and the name stuck.

41. Stat for Chris Sale : ERA

Earned run average (ERA)

Chris Sale is a pitcher who made his debut in Major League Baseball in 2010, turning out for the Chicago White Sox.

42. Pronunciation symbol : SCHWA

A schwa is an unstressed and toneless vowel found in a number of languages including English. Examples from our language are the “a” in “about”, the “e” in “taken” and the “i” in pencil.

44. PBS science series : NOVA

“Nova” is an excellent science television series on PBS. “Nova” was created back in 1974, and was inspired by a very similar BBC show called “Horizon”, a show that I grew up with. Many “Nova” episodes are actually co-productions with the BBC with an American narrator used for the PBS broadcasts and a British narrator for the BBC broadcasts.

46. Barbershop part : BASS

Barbershop music is played in the a cappella style, meaning that it is unaccompanied vocal music. Barbershop music originated in the African-American communities in the South, as gospel quartets often gathered in neighborhood barber shops to sing together.

48. McGregor who plays two roles on TV’s “Fargo” : EWAN

Ewan McGregor is a very talented Scottish actor, one who got his break in the 1996 film “Trainspotting”. McGregor’s first big Hollywood role was playing the young Obi-Wan-Kenobi in the “Star Wars” prequels. Less known is his televised marathon motorcycle journey from London to New York via central Europe, Ukraine, Siberia, Mongolia and Canada. The 2004 trip was shown as “Long Way Round” on TV. McGregor did a similar trip in 2007 called “Long Way Down”, which took him and the same travelling companion from the north of Scotland to Cape Town in South Africa.

“Fargo” is a TV series inspired by the 1996 film of the same name by the Coen brothers. The small-screen version first aired in 2014, with the credits including Joel and Ethan Coen as executive producers. Each season of the show features a new cast. The 2014 cast is led by Billy Bob Thornton, the 2015 cast by Kirsten Dunst, and the 2017 cast by Ewan McGregor. Each episode, and indeed the original film, includes the on-screen claim that “This is a true story”. However, the claim is in fact untrue.

50. “We sure fell for that one, Jack,” e.g.? : JILL HUMOR (from “ill humor”)

The “Jack and Jill” nursery rhyme dates back at least to the 1700s:

Jack and Jill went up the hill
To fetch a pail of water.
Jack fell down and broke his crown,
And Jill came tumbling after.

54. Jungle vine : LIANA

Liana (also “liane”) is the name give to a vine that generally grows in moist areas such as rain forests. Lianas grow using the trees in the forest as structural support. My bet is that Tarzan swung from tree to tree on liana vines …

59. Lincoln Ctr. site : NYC

The Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts takes its name from the neighborhood in which it is situated, i.e. Lincoln Square in the Upper West Side of the New York City borough of Manhattan.

60. PBS science series : COSMOS

“Cosmos: A Personal Journey” is a TV show co-written and presented by astronomer Carl Sagan. Originally airing in 1980, it was the most-watched series in the history of public television until Ken Burns started to produce his documentaries a decade later. Sagan’s opening words for the series are:

The Cosmos is all that is or was or ever will be. Our feeblest contemplations of the Cosmos stir us — there is a tingling in the spine, a catch in the voice, a faint sensation, as if a distant memory, of falling from a height. We know we are approaching the greatest of mysteries.

“Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey” is a 2014 science documentary TV show presented by astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson. The series is a follow-on to the famous 1980 show “Cosmos: A Personal Voyage” that was presented by Carl Sagan.

61. Brit’s floor covering : LINO

Lino (short for “linoleum”) was originally made by coating canvas with solidified linseed oil. The product’s inventor, Englishman Frederick Walton, give it the name “linoleum” from “linum” and “oleum”, the Latin for “linen” and “oil”.

62. Was yanked offstage … or what four puzzle answers did, in a way : GOT THE HOOK

To get the hook is to be pulled off a particular job or task.

65. Dvorák’s “Rusalka,” for one : OPERA

“Rusalka” is an opera by Czech composer Antonín Dvořák. In Slavic mythology, a “Rusalka” is a water sprite.

Antonín Dvořák was a composer from Czechoslovakia who spent three years working and composing in the United States. He was the director of the National Conservatory of Music of America in New York from 1892 to 1895. Certainly here in the US, Dvořák’s best known work is his Symphony No. 9, “From the New World”, which is often referred to as “The New World Symphony”. His career was very much helped along by fellow composer Johannes Brahms, who very much appreciated Dvořák’s work.

67. Scandinavian name meaning “cliff” : STEN

The Scandinavian name “Sten” translates as “stone, cliff”. It is the equivalent of the North Germanic name “Peter”, which comes from the Greek “petros” meaning “stone, rock”.

69. Sunflower edible : SEED

The common sunflower is so called because it has a flower head that looks like the Sun. Famously, young sunflowers exhibit heliotropism, tilting during the day to face the sun. As the sunflowers mature and bloom, they generally face east and no longer track the movement of the Sun across the sky.

Down

2. Pear variety : ANJOU

The Anjou pear is a cultivar of the European Pear. The Anjou is thought to have originated in Belgium or France (Anjou is a province in the Loire Valley of western France).

5. Guitarist’s gadget : CAPO

A capo is a clamp-like device that is placed around the neck of a guitar to shorten the strings, and hence raise the pitch. The full name, rarely used these days, is “capo tasto”, which is Italian for “head tie”.

6. “Aladdin” prince : ALI

In Disney’s version of the “Aladdin” story, released in 1992, the street urchin Aladdin uses one of three wishes to become a prince, so that he can get near to the Princess Jasmine, with whom he has become besotted. With the genie’s help, Aladdin takes on the persona of “Prince Ali of Ababwa”.

7. __ nerve : ULNAR

The ulnar nerve runs alongside the ulna (one of the bones in the lower arm). The ulnar nerve is the largest unprotected (not surrounded by muscle or bone) nerve in the human body. The nerve can be touched under the skin at the outside of the elbow. Striking the nerve at this point causes and an electric-type shock, known as hitting one’s “funny bone” or “crazy bone”.

8. Petrol unit : LITRE

“Petrol” is the chiefly British-English term used for gasoline. “Petrol” comes via French from the Latin “petroleum”, itself derived from “petra” meaning “rock” and “oleum” meaning “oil”.

9. Vehicle with caterpillar treads : SNO-CAT

The brand name “Sno-Cat” is owned by the Tucker company. All snowcats are tracked vehicles built to work in snow, and are famously used in expeditions to the polar regions. The modern Sno-Cat from Tucker differs from its competitors in that it has four independently-mounted tracks.

10. Often-cosmetic procedure : NOSE JOB

A nose job is more correctly called rhinoplasty. The term comes from the Greek combining form “rhino-” meaning “nose”, and “plastos” meaning “act of forming”.

11. View from Corfu : IONIAN SEA

The Ionian Sea is that part of the Mediterranean that lies between Greece and the southern part of Italy (under the sole of the “boot”). The Ionian Sea is one of the most seismically active areas on the planet.

Corfu is an island in the very northwest of Greece, and is located in the Ionian Sea. Corfu is a very, very popular vacation destination for European tourists, particularly those from the UK, Scandinavia and Germany.

13. Competitor of Helena : ESTEE

Estée Lauder was a very successful businesswoman, and someone with a great reputation as a salesperson. Lauder introduced her own line of fragrances in 1953, a bath oil called “Youth Dew”. “Youth Dew” was marketed as a perfume, but it was added to bathwater. All of a sudden women were pouring whole bottles of Ms. Lauder’s “perfume” into their baths while using only a drop or two of French perfumes behind their ears. That’s quite a difference in sales volume …

Helena Rubinstein was an American businesswoman born in Poland. She arrived in New York City just after the outbreak of WWI, and there opened up her first cosmetics salon. Within a decade she had built a huge chain of salons, and sold off the business to Lehman Brothers in 1928 for over $7 million. A couple of years later during the Great Depression, Rubinstein bought back her business, for less than one million dollars.

18. Small amount : DRIB

A drib is a negligible amount, as in “dribs and drabs”. The term “drib” arose in Scotland in the 18th century, and might possibly come from the verb “to dribble”.

25. Chamber music group : TRIO

In the world of chamber music, a trio often includes a piano. Common forms are:

  • Clarinet-cello-piano
  • Clarinet-viola-piano
  • Clarinet-violin-piano

27. Storied craft : ARK

The term “ark”, when used with reference to Noah, is a translation of the Hebrew word “tebah”. The word “tebah” is also used in the Bible for the basket in which Moses was placed by his mother when she floated him down the Nile. It seems that the word “tebah” doesn’t mean “boat” and nor does it mean “basket”. Rather, a more appropriate translation is “life-preserver” or “life-saver”. So, Noah’s ark was Noah’s life-preserver during the flood.

29. “__ Miz” : LES

The 1980 musical “Les Misérables” is an adaptation of the 1862 novel of the same name by Victor Hugo. The show opened in London in 1985, and is the longest running musical in the history of London’s West End. My wife and I saw “Les Miz” in the Queen’s Theatre in London many years ago, but were only able to get tickets in the very back row. The theater seating is very steep, so the back row of the balcony is extremely high over the stage. One of the big events in the storyline is the building of a street barricade over which the rebels fight. At the height we were seated we could see the stagehands behind the barricade, sitting drinking Coke, even smoking cigarettes. On cue, the stagehands would get up and catch a dropped rifle, or an actor who had been shot. It was pretty comical. I didn’t really enjoy the show that much, to be honest. Some great songs, but the musical version of the storyline just didn’t seem to hang together for me.

30. “You get the idea” letters : ETC

The Latin phrase “et cetera” translates as “and other things”. The term is usually abbreviated to “etc.”

33. Brouhaha : ADO

“Brouhaha”, meaning “ado, stir”, was a French word that back in the 1550s meant “the cry of the devil disguised as clergy” . Wow!

34. Matthew Arnold’s “__ Beach” : DOVER

“Dover Beach” is 1867 poem by English poet Matthew Arnold.

The sea is calm tonight.
The tide is full, the moon lies fair
Upon the straits; —on the French coast the light
Gleams and is gone; the cliffs of England stand,
Glimmering and vast, out in the tranquil bay.
Come to the window, sweet is the night-air!

37. Bryce Harper, for now : NAT

Bryce Harper is a MLB right-fielder who was chosen by the Washington Nationals as the first overall pick in the 2010 draft.

43. Belgian language related to French : WALLOON

The Walloons are an ethnic group living in Belgium, mainly in the region known as Wallonia. The Walloons are French-speaking today, although there is also a related Walloon language.

45. Deli snacks : KNISHES

A knish is a snack food from Germany and Eastern Europe that was made popular in the US by Jewish immigrants. A knish has a filling, often made of mashed potato and ground meat, covered by a dough that is baked or fried.

47. Ra, in ancient Egypt : SUN GOD

Ra (sometimes “Re”) was the ancient Egyptian sun god. Ra was associated with the falcon, and was often depicted as a man with a falcon’s head.

50. Rejects suddenly : JILTS

To jilt someone with whom you have a relationship is to drop them suddenly or callously. “Jilt” is an obsolete noun that used to mean “harlot, loose woman”.

52. Mr. Magoo, for one : MYOPE

A myope is someone suffering from myopia, short-sightedness. Far-sightedness or long-sightedness is known as hypermetropia or hyperopia .

Mr. Quincy Magoo is a wonderful cartoon character voiced by Jim Backus. Backus is probably equally well-known for playing Mr. Magoo as well as Thurston Howell, III on “Gilligan’s Island”. Mr. Magoo first appeared on the screen in a short called “The Ragtime Bear” in 1949. His persona was at least in part based on the antics of W. C. Fields. Backus originally used a fake rubber nose that pinched his nostrils in order to create the distinctive voice, although in time he learned to do the voice without the prop. My absolute favorite appearance by Mr. Magoo is in “Mr Magoo’s Christmas Carol”, a true classic from the sixties. There was a movie adaptation of “Mr Magoo” released in 1997, with Leslie Nielsen playing the title role.

53. Santa’s reindeer, e.g. : OCTET

We get the names for Santa’s reindeer from the famous 1823 poem called “A Visit from St. Nicholas”, although we’ve modified a couple of the names over the years. The full list is:

  • Dasher
  • Dancer
  • Prancer
  • Vixen
  • Comet
  • Cupid
  • Donder (originally “Dunder”, and now often “Donner”)
  • Blitzen (originally “Blixem”)

Rudolph was added to the list by retailer Montgomery Ward, would you believe? The store commissioned Robert L. May to create a booklet that could be handed out to children around Christmas in 1939, and May introduced us to a new friend for Santa, namely Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.

55. Whac-__ : A-MOLE

The Whac-A-Mole arcade game was invented in 1976. Players use a mallet to force five plastic moles back into their holes. Whacking the moles can be so frustrating that we sometimes use the term “Whac-a-mole” to describe a repetitive and futile task.

57. FAQ part : ASKED

Most websites have a page listing answers to Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs). Even this blog has one!

63. Amount past due? : TRE

“One, two, three” in Italian is “uno, due, tre”.

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Complete List of Clues/Answers

Across

1. Have a sudden inspiration? : GASP
5. Embryonic membranes : CAULS
10. “Good going!” : NICE!
14. Ancient Andean : INCA
15. Fully committed : ALL IN
16. Cries at the Home Run Derby : OOHS
17. Norwegian coastal horse? : FJORD PINTO (from “Ford Pinto”)
19. Agitated state : SNIT
20. Ring leader? : TORERO
21. Parenthesis, e.g. : ARC
22. Dún Laoghaire’s land : EIRE
23. Largest division of Islam : SUNNI
24. Excellent joke? : GREAT JAPE (from “great ape”)
26. Alpine transport : T-BAR
28. 2010 sci-fi sequel subtitled “Legacy” : TRON
29. Grassy stretches : LEAS
32. Map line : ROAD
35. “A Doll’s House” playwright : IBSEN
38. “The Martian” has none : ETS
39. Where a sensei teaches how to slalom? : SKI DOJO (from “Ski-Doo”)
41. Stat for Chris Sale : ERA
42. Pronunciation symbol : SCHWA
44. PBS science series : NOVA
45. Small racer : KART
46. Barbershop part : BASS
48. McGregor who plays two roles on TV’s “Fargo” : EWAN
50. “We sure fell for that one, Jack,” e.g.? : JILL HUMOR (from “ill humor”)
54. Jungle vine : LIANA
58. Big star : IDOL
59. Lincoln Ctr. site : NYC
60. PBS science series : COSMOS
61. Brit’s floor covering : LINO
62. Was yanked offstage … or what four puzzle answers did, in a way : GOT THE HOOK
64. Fuss : TO-DO
65. Dvorák’s “Rusalka,” for one : OPERA
66. Instead : ELSE
67. Scandinavian name meaning “cliff” : STEN
68. Block : DETER
69. Sunflower edible : SEED

Down

1. They’re kept under wraps : GIFTS
2. Pear variety : ANJOU
3. Contempt : SCORN
4. Raises : PARENTS
5. Guitarist’s gadget : CAPO
6. “Aladdin” prince : ALI
7. __ nerve : ULNAR
8. Petrol unit : LITRE
9. Vehicle with caterpillar treads : SNO-CAT
10. Often-cosmetic procedure : NOSE JOB
11. View from Corfu : IONIAN SEA
12. Sound from a tree : CHIRP
13. Competitor of Helena : ESTEE
18. Small amount : DRIB
24. Abdomen neighbor : GROIN
25. Chamber music group : TRIO
27. Storied craft : ARK
29. “__ Miz” : LES
30. “You get the idea” letters : ETC
31. Light hair color : ASH BLONDE
33. Brouhaha : ADO
34. Matthew Arnold’s “__ Beach” : DOVER
36. Be off : ERR
37. Bryce Harper, for now : NAT
39. Ornamental band : SASH
40. Talk : JAW
43. Belgian language related to French : WALLOON
45. Deli snacks : KNISHES
47. Ra, in ancient Egypt : SUN GOD
49. Cosmetic additive : ALOE
50. Rejects suddenly : JILTS
51. Jerk : IDIOT
52. Mr. Magoo, for one : MYOPE
53. Santa’s reindeer, e.g. : OCTET
55. Whac-__ : A-MOLE
56. Rope loop : NOOSE
57. FAQ part : ASKED
60. Scorch : CHAR
63. Amount past due? : TRE

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15 thoughts on “LA Times Crossword 20 Sep 18, Thursday”

  1. 18 flat, no errors. Guessed right with a “C” for 5A/5D, but didn’t know either word until reading Bill’s explainer.

  2. LAT: 25:17, 1 error on a guess that didn’t work out among MANY guesses on this one. WSJ: 28:30, 2 errors. Another guess fest. BEQ: 17:47, no errors. Not so much, but still.

  3. Now I’m in “ill humor”. Knew that the “J” was the trick thing, but I never connected to the theme. So even though I finished, I didn’t get the “humor” of this one. Jokes on me, as they say.

  4. LAT: 8:14, no errors; cute gimmick (and nothing I had to guess at once I understood it). Newsday: 9:37, no errors. WSJ: 16:54, no errors; again, a bit slow until I finally understood the gimmick (and, at the end, no guesses).

    BEQ: 36:30, no errors, but, as sometimes happens, BEQ’s ‘tude got under my skin a little. I am not one to take offense at an occasional four-letter word, but going out of one’s way to clumsily shoe-horn a completely unnecessary F-bomb into a clue (28D) strikes me as a bit childish. I also didn’t understand how “Cuban man?” (1D) gives one “MAV” and how “So much ___” (17A) gives one “THIS”, but that’s my problem. (Oh, and several guesses.)

    1. Hey Dave!! Re: MAV — that refers to Mark Cuban, the billionaire owner of NBA team the Dallas Mavericks. They call them “Mavs” for short.
      And… I can’t believe BEQ published that word! I’m no prude, but fitting in a gratuitous F bomb — and in print! — is pretty bad.

  5. 14 minutes 38 secs, escaped without a blemish. Lots of interesting stuff going on in here. Repeats of clues with synonym fills (ADO and TODO), arcane words (LIANA, STEN, SCHWA). But the theme actually helps solve the puzzle, knowing there’s gotta be a J in there somewheres!!!

  6. Way too cute, in my estimation. We only got 11 words out of the whole thing,
    so a very poor performance. Hope for Monday.

  7. 20:52. Clever theme. I vaguely remember the NYT having something similar, but all J’s were in one column or something. Regardless, it was enough to see the theme after FJORD PINTO (good one) and the reveal.

    Just remembered the NYT had all “I”s in one column and a J at the bottom. It was supposed to resemble a fishing line. The J was the hook…

    Love the tv series Fargo. I was disappointed that they’re taking this year off, but I’m hoping the series returns next year. Carrie – did you ever finish all 3 seasons?

    Best –

  8. Too clever by half. Had to Google 6, and not even the ones my friends here were fooled by.

  9. Forgot to bring the part of the paper with the LA puzzle in it to my market, so had to wait until I got home when I was bushed… Took an hour, but I managed to escape with no errors…whew! Still, I was worried about SCHWA, CAULS and STEN, which were new to me.

    Had a lot of trouble with the NE and SW corners, where, for a while, I was going to put A BARK in for “Sound from a tree” 🙂

  10. Hello folks!!🙃
    No errors, but a few terms I didn’t know. I did know CAPO, since I play guitar. The theme was helpful on this one.

    Jeff! Yes, I thought Fargo was great, and I watched all 3 seasons. IMO, season 1 was the best. I’ll bet it returns.

    Be well ~~🥂

  11. @Carrie … Thank you for explaining “MAV”! I did think of the team, but I couldn’t get past wanting some kind of connection to the island of Cuba and the name Mark Cuban never floated into my thick head (even though, now that I hear it, I realize that I’ve heard it before).

  12. And “So much this” appears to be some kind of internet phrase. Google gives me a couple of hits on sites containing “reaction gifs”. Still don’t quite understand it, though … 😳

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