LA Times Crossword 10 Oct 23, Tuesday

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Constructed by: Brian Callahan
Edited by: Patti Varol

Today’s Reveal Answer: Prime Time

Themed answers are common phrases, with each including an ordinal PRIME number:

  • 58A Popular television programming block, and an apt title for this puzzle : PRIME TIME
  • 16A Junior : THIRD YEAR
  • 22A Age of Attila’s reign : FIFTH CENTURY
  • 34A Like some Adventist Protestants : SEVENTH DAY
  • 48A Almost too late : ELEVENTH HOUR

Read on, or jump to …
… a complete list of answers

Bill’s time: 6m 21s

Bill’s errors: 0

Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies

Across

1 Chess piece that’s often the first to be played : PAWN

In the game of chess, the pawns are the weakest pieces on the board. A pawn that can make it to the opposite side of the board can be promoted to a piece of choice, usually a queen. Using promotion of pawns, it is possible for a player to have two or more queens on the board at one time. However, standard chess sets come with only one queen per side, so a captured rook is often used as the second queen by placing it on the board upside down.

9 “I’m Every Woman” singer Chaka __ : KHAN

Chaka Khan is the stage name of singer Yvette Stevens from Chicago. She was the front woman for the band Rufus before she launched her very successful solo career.

13 Gobi locale : ASIA

The Gobi, the large desert in Asia, lies in northern China and southern Mongolia. It is growing at an alarming rate, particularly towards the south. This “desertification” is caused by increased human activity. The Chinese government is trying to halt the desert’s forward progress by planting great swaths of new forest, the so-called “Green Wall of China”. The name “Gobi” is Mongolian for “waterless place, semidesert”.

15 Sweet sandwich : S’MORE

S’mores are treats peculiar to North America that are usually eaten around a campfire. A s’more consists of a roasted marshmallow and a layer of chocolate sandwiched between two graham crackers. The earliest written reference to the recipe is in a 1927 publication called “Tramping and Trailing with the Girl Scouts”. Girl Scouts always did corner the market on cookies and the like!

22 Age of Attila’s reign : FIFTH CENTURY

In his day, Attila the Hun was the most feared enemy of the Roman Empire, until he died in 453 AD. Attila was the leader of the Hunnic Empire of central Europe and was famous for invading much of the continent. However, he never directly attacked Rome.

28 Writers McEwan and Fleming : IANS

Ian McEwan is an English novelist with a track record of writing well-received novels. His most famous work of recent years I would say is “Atonement” which has benefited from the success of a fabulous movie adaptation released in 2007.

The character James Bond was the creation of writer Ian Fleming. Fleming “stole” the James Bond name from an American ornithologist. The number “007” was “stolen” from the real-life, 16th-century English spy named John Dee. Dee would sign his reports to Queen Elizabeth I with a stylized “007” to indicate that the reports were for “her eyes only”. There’s an entertaining miniseries that aired on BBC America called “Fleming: The Man Who Would Be Bond” that details Ian Fleming’s military career, and draws some nice parallels between Fleming’s experiences and aspirations and those of his hero James Bond. Recommended …

29 Pollen gatherer : BEE

The fine powder known as pollen is basically a flower’s sperm. Pollen carries a seed plant’s male reproductive cells.

30 Bagless vacuum pioneer : DYSON

Dyson vacuum cleaners do not use a bag to collect dust. James Dyson invented the first vacuum cleaner to use cyclonic separation in 1979, frustrated at the poor performance of his regular vacuum cleaner. As Dyson cleaners do not use bags, they don’t have to deal with collection bags that are blocked with fine dust particles, even after emptying. Cyclonic separation uses high speed spinning of the dust-containing air so that the dust particles are thrown out of the airflow into a collection bin. We have a Dyson now, and should have bought it years ago …

31 Japanese box lunch : BENTO

A bento is a single-person meal that is eaten quite commonly in Japan. A bento can be purchased as a take-out meal, or it may be packed at home. A bento is usually sold as a “bento box”.

33 Warning with a URL : NSFW

The abbreviation “NSFW” stands for “not safe/suitable for work”. It’s Internet slang used to describe online content that is best not viewed at work.

34 Like some Adventist Protestants : SEVENTH DAY

Seventh-day Adventists are so called because of the observance of the Sabbath on Saturday, the seventh day of the week. More generally, Adventists believe that Jesus Christ will soon return to Earth.

37 Ticklish Muppet : ELMO

The Tickle Me Elmo toy was a sensational fad in the late nineties, with stores raising prices dramatically above the recommended retail price to take advantage of demand. Reportedly, prices as high as $1500 were paid at the height of the craze. The toy’s manufacturer, Tyco, originally planned to market the “tickle” toy as Tickle Me Tasmanian Devil (after the “Looney Tunes” character), but then went with “Elmo” after they bought the rights to use “Sesame Street” names.

45 Campground inits. : KOA

Kampgrounds of America (KOA) was founded in 1962 by Montana businessman Dave Drum, who opened up his first property along the Yellowstone River. His strategy was to offer a rich package of services including hot showers, restrooms and a store, which he hoped would attract people used to camping in the rough. The original campground was an immediate hit and Drum took on two partners and sold franchises all over the country. There are about 500 KOA sites today.

46 Mashed avocado, for short : GUAC

Guacamole is one of my favorite dishes. It is prepared by mashing avocados and perhaps adding the likes of tomato, onion and lime juice. The guacamole recipe dates back as early as the 16th century, to the time of the Aztecs. “Guacamole” translates as “avocado sauce”.

52 Lucy of “Charlie’s Angels” : LIU

Lucy Liu is an actress from Queens, New York. Liu’s big break came when she was chosen to play the Ling Woo character in “Ally McBeal”. I liked her in the 2000 film “Charlie’s Angels” but as I am no fan of Quentin Tarantino, I did not enjoy the movie “Kill Bill”. I do enjoy one of Liu’s more recent projects in which she plays Joan Watson, one of the two lead characters in the TV crime drama “Elementary”.

“Charlie’s Angels” is a fun action movie from 2000 that is a spin-off from the iconic TV show of the same name from the seventies. The “Angels” in the movie version are Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore and Lucy Liu, with Bill Murray as John Bosley. John Forsythe provides the voice of the unseen “Charlie”, just as he did in the original television show.

58 Popular television programming block, and an apt title for this puzzle : PRIME TIME

In the world of television, prime time is that part of the day when networks and advertisers maximize revenues due to the high number of viewers. Prime time is often defined as 7-10 p.m. Mountain and Central Time, and 8-11 p.m. Pacific and Eastern Time.

60 Mojave landforms : MESAS

The Mojave Desert in the southwest is named after the Native-American Mojave tribe. Famous locations within the boundaries of the desert are Death Valley, Las Vegas, Nevada and the ghost town of Calico, California.

62 North __ Sea: lake fed by the Syr Darya river : ARAL

The former Soviet Union decided to divert the two rivers feeding the Aral Sea in order to irrigate food and cotton crops. Once the fourth largest lake in the world, the Aral Sea began to shrink dramatically in the 1960s due to the loss of water. Today, the Aral Sea is no more. Instead, there are two relatively small bodies of water labeled as the North Aral Sea and the South Aral Sea.

The Syr Darya is a major river in Central Asia that rises in Kyrgyzstan, and flows over 1,400 miles through Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan before emptying into what is left of the Aral Sea.

Down

2 San Francisco street crossing Haight : ASHBURY

Haight-Ashbury is a neighborhood in San Francisco that is centered on the intersection of Haight Street and Ashbury Street. The district was one of the epicenters of hippie life in the sixties, and was home to psychedelic rock performers of the day including Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead and Janis Joplin.

3 Arm pain from playing too much Nintendo : WIIITIS

Wiiitis is a “sports” injury caused by spending too much time playing certain games on the Nintendo Wii game system. Back in my day, the big risk was Space Invaders wrist …

4 DEA agent : NARC

“Narc” and “narco” are slang terms describing a law enforcement officer who tracks down criminals associated with illegal drugs. Both words are short for “narcotics officer”. Narcs might work for the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA).

5 Bookstore section with Jeanette Winterson and Andrew Sean Greer : GAY LIT

Jeanette Winterson is an author from England. Her acclaimed first novel “Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit” (1985) is semi-autobiographical, and is about a lesbian girl growing up in the Pentecostal Church.

Novelist and short story writer Andrew Sean Greer won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for his 2017 satirical novel “Less”. The title character in Less is a writer traveling around the world, trying to numb the pain caused by the loss of the man he loved.

9 Target rival : KMART

Kmart was once the third-largest discount store chain in the world, behind Wal-Mart and Target. The company was founded by S. S. Kresge in 1899, with the first outlets known as S. S. Kresge stores. The first “Kmart” stores opened in 1962, with the “K” standing for “Kresge”. Kmart was famous for its promotions known as “blue light specials”, a program first introduced in 1965 and discontinued in 1991. I remember being in a Kmart store soon after coming to live in the US. That evening an employee installed a light stand an aisle away from me, switched on a flashing blue light and there was some unintelligible announcement over the loudspeaker system. I had no idea what was going on …

10 Jacuzzis : HOT TUBS

“Jacuzzi” is one of those brand names that has become so much associated with the product that it is often assumed to be a generic term. The Jacuzzi company was founded in 1915 by the seven(!) Jacuzzi brothers in Berkeley California. The brothers, who were Italian immigrants, pronounced their name “ja-coot-si”, as one might suspect when one realizes the name is of Italian origin. The company started off by making aircraft propellers and then small aircraft, but suspended aircraft production in 1925, when one of the brothers was killed in one of their planes. The family then started making hydraulic pumps, and in 1948 developed a submersible bathtub pump so that a son of one of the brothers could enjoy hydrotherapy for his rheumatoid arthritis. The “hydrotherapy product” took off in the fifties with some astute marketing towards “worn-out housewives” and the use of celebrity spokesman Jack Benny.

11 Talk Like a Pirate Day sounds : ARS

International Talk Like a Pirate Day is September 19th every year, a “holiday” that was created in 1995. The event started out as an inside joke between John Baur and Mark Summers of Albany, Oregon, but when they shared the notion with columnist Dave Barry, he promoted the idea and it took off.

21 Mars, for one : GOD

Mars was the god of war in ancient Rome. He was also viewed as the father of the Roman people and the father of Romulus and Remus, the twin brothers who founded Rome according to Roman mythology.

24 One who makes sure fighting between the Sharks and the Jets doesn’t get out of hand? : REF

The San Jose Sharks hockey team play their home games at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, a venue that we locals call “the Shark Tank”.

Winnipeg’s professional hockey team is the Winnipeg Jets. The team was founded as the Atlanta Thrashers in 1999 and relocated to Winnipeg in 2011. The new team name was chosen in honor of the Manitoba city’s former professional hockey team called the Jets, a franchise that was founded in 1972 but relocated to become the Phoenix Coyotes in 1996.

25 Archery wood : YEW

Yew is the wood of choice for the longbow, a valued weapon in the history of England. The longbow is constructed with a core of yew heartwood (as the heartwood resists compression) that has a sheath of yew sapwood (as the sapwood resists stretching). The yew was in such demand for longbows that for centuries yew trees were in short supply in Britain and the wood had to be imported from all over Europe.

32 Cain’s oldest son : ENOCH

According to the Bible’s Book of Genesis, Enoch was the son of Cain, and therefore the grandson of Adam and Eve. According to some religious traditions, Enoch’s mother was Awan, who was also Enoch’s aunt (Cain’s sister).

39 “I’m No Angel” star : MAE WEST

“I’m No Angel” is a 1933 film starring Mae West and a very young Cary Grant, who was just making a name for himself in Hollywood. “I’m No Angel” gives us some iconic Mae West quotations:

  • Come up and see me sometime.
  • Beulah, peel me a grape.
  • It’s not the men in your life that counts, it’s the life in your men.
  • When I’m good I’m very good. But when I’m bad I’m better.

42 Oblong pastries : ECLAIRS

The name for the pastry known as an “éclair” is clearly French in origin. The French word for lightning is “éclair”, but no one seems to be too sure how it came to be used for the rather delicious bakery item.

43 1988 Best Picture : RAIN MAN

“Rain Man” is an entertaining and thought-provoking film released in 1988 starring Tom Cruise and Dustin Hoffman. It’s all about a self-possessed yuppie (Cruise, appropriate casting!) who discovers he has a brother who is an autistic savant (Hoffman). Hoffman won the Best Actor Oscar for his performance, and “Rain Man” won the Best Picture award.

44 “The Simpsons” disco guy : STU

On “The Simpsons”, the character Disco Stu is voiced by Hank Azaria, although the original intent was for him to be voiced by Phil Hartman. Disco Stu is described as “a black, wrinkly John Travolta”.

46 Knight’s tales : GESTS

Our word “gest”, describing a great deed or exploit, has been around since about 1300. The term comes from the Old French word “geste” meaning the same thing. These days “geste” can also mean “gesture”.

50 Silent Marx brother : HARPO

Harpo Marx was the second-oldest of the Marx brothers. Harpo’s real name was Adolph, and he earned his nickname because he played the harp. Famously, Harpe didn’t speak on screen, a routine that he developed after reading a review that he performed really well when he just didn’t speak! He would usually whistle or toot a hand-held horn instead of speaking.

51 Bay window : ORIEL

An oriel window is a bay window that projects from a wall, but does not reach all the way to the ground.

59 High trains : ELS

Elevated railroad (El)

/p>

Complete List of Clues/Answers

Across

1 Chess piece that’s often the first to be played : PAWN
5 [I’m shocked!] : [GASP!]
9 “I’m Every Woman” singer Chaka __ : KHAN
13 Gobi locale : ASIA
14 “__ girl!” : ATTA
15 Sweet sandwich : S’MORE
16 Junior : THIRD YEAR
18 “No kidding!” : THAT SO?!
19 Black and blue, say : BICOLOR
20 Top : SHIRT
21 Stomach : GUT
22 Age of Attila’s reign : FIFTH CENTURY
26 Question that introduces doubt : … OR IS IT?
28 Writers McEwan and Fleming : IANS
29 Pollen gatherer : BEE
30 Bagless vacuum pioneer : DYSON
31 Japanese box lunch : BENTO
33 Warning with a URL : NSFW
34 Like some Adventist Protestants : SEVENTH DAY
37 Ticklish Muppet : ELMO
40 Came to light : AROSE
41 Changes direction : VEERS
45 Campground inits. : KOA
46 Mashed avocado, for short : GUAC
47 Litter box user : PET CAT
48 Almost too late : ELEVENTH HOUR
52 Lucy of “Charlie’s Angels” : LIU
53 Squander : WASTE
54 Fingertip-to-fingertip measurement : ARM SPAN
56 Chooses : ELECTS
58 Popular television programming block, and an apt title for this puzzle : PRIME TIME
60 Mojave landforms : MESAS
61 Fencing sword : EPEE
62 North __ Sea: lake fed by the Syr Darya river : ARAL
63 Like a cereal bar : OATY
64 Opinion sampling : POLL
65 Govt.-issued IDs : SSNS

Down

1 Gentle touch : PAT
2 San Francisco street crossing Haight : ASHBURY
3 Arm pain from playing too much Nintendo : WIIITIS
4 DEA agent : NARC
5 Bookstore section with Jeanette Winterson and Andrew Sean Greer : GAY LIT
6 Tasted, quaintly : ATE OF
7 Get-go : START
8 Average : PAR
9 Target rival : KMART
10 Jacuzzis : HOT TUBS
11 Talk Like a Pirate Day sounds : ARS
12 New prefix : NEO-
15 Lower legs : SHINS
17 Get by : DO FINE
18 Official approval : THE NOD
20 Rip into : SCATHE
21 Mars, for one : GOD
23 Clues : HINTS
24 One who makes sure fighting between the Sharks and the Jets doesn’t get out of hand? : REF
25 Archery wood : YEW
27 Average : SO-SO
31 Rip into : BERATE
32 Cain’s oldest son : ENOCH
33 Russian “no” : NYET
35 Crows about : VAUNTS
36 Disinclined (to) : AVERSE
37 __ out a living : EKE
38 “ur soooo funny!” : LOL!
39 “I’m No Angel” star : MAE WEST
42 Oblong pastries : ECLAIRS
43 1988 Best Picture : RAIN MAN
44 “The Simpsons” disco guy : STU
46 Knight’s tales : GESTS
47 Wallop : PUMMEL
49 Brief holiday? : VACAY
50 Silent Marx brother : HARPO
51 Bay window : ORIEL
55 Education advocacy gps. : PTAS
56 Punk subgenre : EMO
57 Grassy expanse : LEA
58 High spirits : PEP
59 High trains : ELS

14 thoughts on “LA Times Crossword 10 Oct 23, Tuesday”

  1. Odd cluing for some of the crosses.

    Stared at NW corner for awhile.

    Got it all okay eventually.

    When did “THE NOD” become an official approval?

      1. The clue “Target rival” works even if Kmart is no longer a rival of Target. (Consider, for example, “Lone Ranger companion” for “Tonto”.)

  2. Agree on KMarts but we’re into obscure land here. Had trouble in that corner as well as with a couple of other crosses. Saw the theme but unable to figure it’s use in a few places.
    On to Wednesday

  3. 8 minutes, 26 seconds, and no errors or issues. Glad to be back to a single-constructor grid.

  4. La times has the most ridiculous puzzles. Not funny, not interesting just pathetic.
    Get some NYT education.

  5. 12:47 – no errors or lookups. False starts: DYSAN>DYSON, BOASTS>VAUNTS. For some reason, a little more of a challenge for a Tuesday.

    New or forgotten: “I’m Every Woman,” “Attila’s reign,” “Syr Darya river,” WIIITIS (what a way to get a bunch of vowels!), “Jeanette Winterson and Andrew Sean Greer.”

    Saw early that the theme answers were numbers, but didn’t get the prime aspect until finished.

    Duplicate cluing with “Rip into.”

  6. A little tricky but doable for a Tuesday; took 11:01 with no peeks or errors, done a day late. Had to fix KahN and didn’t know GAY LIT and FIFTH… right off the bat, but got them soon enough on crosses. I also had ARg before ARS. And got RAINMAN and ENOCH on crosses.

    Liked it, cuz there was a BEE!! 🙂

Comments are closed.