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Constructed by: Lance Enfinger & Bob Weisz
Edited by: Patti Varol
Today’s Theme: None
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… a complete list of answers
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Bill’s time: 18m 31s
Bill’s errors: 0
Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies
Across
9 Donnybrook : BRAWL
A donnybrook is a free-for-all, a melee. It is named for a famous historic fair in Donnybrook, a district in Dublin, Ireland. Donnybrook Fair had the reputation as a place where there was lots of drinking and fighting. I used to hang out a lot in Donnybrook in my student days and didn’t see any fighting. Lots of drinking, but no fighting …
16 Harris of NPR’s “Pop Culture Happy Hour” : AISHA
Writer and podcaster Aisha Harris started co-hosting NPR’s “Pop Culture Happy Hour” in 2020. Prior to joining NPR, Harris hosted the “Represent” podcast for “Slate”.
17 Target of some orthodontic work : UNDERBITE
Orthodontics is a branch of dentistry dealing with the straightening of teeth. The name comes from the Greek “orthos” meaning “straight” and “dontia” meaning “teeth”.
22 Louganis who is the only man to sweep the diving events in consecutive Olympics : GREG
Greg Louganis is an American Olympic diver. Louganis won gold medals at the 1984 and the 1988 Summer Games. He wrote an autobiography in 1996 called “Breaking the Surface”.
23 Deux et trois : CINQ
In French, “deux et trois” (two and three) make “cinq” (five).
28 Ones on a roll : SNAKE EYES
“Snake eyes” is a slang term describing a roll of two dice in which one pip turns up on each die.
30 Part of Reno’s nickname : BIGGEST
Reno, Nevada was named in honor of Major General Jesse Lee Reno, a Union officer killed in the Civil War. The city has a famous “Reno Arch”, a structure that stands over the main street. The arch was erected in 1926 to promote an exposition planned for the following year. After the expo, the city council decided to keep the arch and held a competition to decide what wording should be displayed, and the winner was “The Biggest Little City in the World”.
31 Brew made with warm fermentation : ALE
The many, many different styles of beer can generally be sorted into two groups: ales and lagers. Ales are fermented at relatively warm temperatures for relatively short periods of time, and use top-fermenting yeasts, i.e. yeasts that float on top of the beer as it ferments. Lagers ferment at relatively low temperatures and for relatively long periods of time. Lagers use bottom-fermenting yeasts, i.e. yeasts that fall to the bottom of the beer as it ferments.
33 Letters with a link, maybe : FYI
For your information (FYI)
36 Some banners : HEADERS
The header of a website resides at the top of the page. It often includes the website name, a logo and the main navigation. Also, the header is usually displayed throughout a website, at the top of every page.
37 Satyr kin : FAUN
Fauns are regarded as the Roman mythological equivalent of the Greek satyrs, but fauns were half-man and half-goat and much more “carefree” in personality than their Hellenic cousins. In the modern age we are quite familiar with Mr. Tumnus, the faun-like character encountered by the children entering the world of Narnia in C. S. Lewis’s “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe”.
The satyrs of Greek mythology came with a very high sex drive. They are the “rude” male subjects drawn on the side of old Greek vases. The nubile maidens known as nymphs were often an object of attention for the satyrs.
41 Prepares for a break : RACKS
That might be billiards or snooker.
52 Flag : DROOP
Our verb “to flag” meaning “to tire” was originally used in the sense of something flapping about lazily in the wind. From this it came to mean “to go limp, droop”, and then “to tire”.
54 Weldon of NPR’s “Pop Culture Happy Hour” : GLEN
Writer and podcaster Glen Weldon has a couple of publications that caught my eye. His 2013 book “Superman: The Unauthorized Biography” and his 2016 book “The Caped Crusader” explore the history and relevance of Superman and Batman in American pop culture. Weldon writes for the NPR Arts Desk, and he serves as a panelist on the NPR podcast “Pop Culture Happy Hour”.
57 2021 US Open winner Raducanu : EMMA
Canadian-born, British tennis player Emma Raducanu won the singles title at the US Open, making her the first British woman to win a Grand Slam tournament since Virginia Wade back in 1977.
Down
1 Important element in lath and plaster construction : STUD
The words “lath” and “lattice” have the same root in Old French. Laths are thin strips of wood that are nailed across a frame forming a backing to which plaster can be applied to finish a wall. The term is also used for the main elements in a trellis, or the lengths of wood in a roof to which shingles are nailed.
2 “RuPaul’s Drag Race” guest judge Love : LONI
Loni Love is a comedian and TV personality from Detroit. She was the runner-up in 2003 on the relaunched “Star Search” show. In 2013, Love became one of the hosts of the daytime talk show “The Real”.
RuPaul is a famous drag queen who has developed a diverse career beyond performing on stage. He works as an actor, model, author and a recording artist. Famously, RuPaul doesn’t mind whether one addresses him as “he” or as “she” …
You can call me he. You can call me she. You can call me Regis and Kathie Lee; I don’t care! Just as long as you call me.
He currently hosts his own reality TV show called “RuPaul’s Drag Race”, which is billed as a search for “America’s next drag superstar”.
3 Finish line? : AND … SCENE!
I read that it is a common misconception that a director says “And … scene!” meaning “ cut, end of scene”. Apparently, the correct phrasing is “end scene”.
4 Leaf __ : PEEPING
“Leaf-peeping” is the name given to the activity of viewing and photographing the change in the colors of foliage during the fall. Leaf-peepers usually head for New England and the American Midwest in order to enjoy the rich colors exhibited by deciduous trees and shrubs in the autumn months.
5 Letters of orientation : LGBTQ
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer/questioning (LGBTQ)
6 NHL great Lindros : ERIC
Eric Lindros is a retired Canadian hockey player. During his NHL career he played for the Philadelphia Flyers, the New York Rangers, the Toronto Maple Leafs and the Dallas Stars. Early in his career, Lindros was nicknamed “The Next One”, a reference to the moniker “The Great One” that was used for the great Wayne Gretzky.
8 Elementary school grads, typically : TWEENAGERS
A young person between the ages of eight and twelve, or thereabouts, is sometimes referred to as a tweenager.
9 PDA participant, possibly : BAE
“Bae” is a contemporary term of endearment. It is a pet name that is an abbreviation of “babe, baby”, although I’ve also read that it is an acronym standing for “before anyone else”.
Public display of affection (PDA)
18 Fulminate : RANT
To fulminate is to explode or detonate, perhaps in rage. It’s a lovely word derived from the Latin “fulminare” meaning “to hurl lightning”.
27 Actress Gadot : GAL
Gal Gadot is an actress and former Miss Israel. She played Gisele Yashar in the “Fast & Furious” film franchise, and then began portraying Wonder Woman in superhero movies.
28 Parlor game that produces a Bacon number : SIX DEGREES
Kevin Bacon is an actor from Philadelphia who appeared first on the big screen in the 1978 comedy “National Lampoon’s Animal House”. That wasn’t to be the big break that Bacon needed though, which came with “Footloose” in 1984. A fun fact about him is that he is the subject of a popular trivia game called “Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon” in which players have to show that a particular actor can be related to Kevin Bacon in fewer than six links, with each link being a movie in which two actors appear together.
32 Casual meeting : SESH
Session (abbreviated to “sess.” formally, and “sesh” informally)
33 “What were they thinking” gesture : FACEPALM
A facepalm is the gesture made by lowering one’s face into the palm of one’s hand or hands. It can be an expression of surprise, frustration or embarrassment. A related gesture with a similar meaning is the headdesk, the gentle striking of the forehead against a desk or a wall perhaps.
34 Guffaw : YUK
“Guffaw”, meaning “boisterous laugh”, is an imitative word that is Scottish in origin.
36 Harlem Renaissance figure : HURSTON
Zora Neale Hurston was an American author who was most famous for her 1937 novel “Their Eyes Were Watching God”.
“Harlem Renaissance” is the term used to describe a cultural movement in the 1920s that was known at the time as the “New Negro Movement”. The movement involved new cultural expression by African Americans that was centered mainly in urban areas in the northeast and midwest, and that was especially vibrant in New York City’s Harlem neighborhood.
37 Creator of Imperial Easter eggs : FABERGE
Fabergé eggs are beautiful jeweled eggs made by the House of Fabergé from 1885 to 1917. The tradition of fabricating the eggs started when Tsar Alexander III commissioned Fabergé to create a jeweled egg for his wife in 1885. After this, the House of Fabergé produced more and more elaborate designs, year after year.
38 Classic Fords : T-BIRDS
Ford manufactured the Thunderbird (T-Bird) from 1955 to 2005. Originally a two-seater sporty convertible, the T-Bird was introduced as a competitor to Chevrolet’s new sports car, the Corvette. The “Thunderbird” name is a reference to a legendary creature from the culture of several Native-American peoples. There’s also a story that the name is a direct reference to the Thunderbird Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California of which the then chairman of Ford’s board was a member.
39 Straight : HETERO
“Heterosexuality” is sexual attraction between persons of the opposite gender. The prefix “hetero-” comes from the Greek “heteros” meaning “different, other”.
46 Circuit component : FUSE
Fuses include a metal component that melts when too much current passes through it, hence breaking the circuit.
48 “Peacemaker” star John : CENA
John Cena is a professional wrestler turned rapper and actor. Although wrestling, rapping and “Cena-style” movies wouldn’t be my cup of tea, I have to admire Cena’s philanthropic record. He holds the title for the most wishes granted by a single individual for the Make-A-Wish Foundation that benefits children with life-threatening medical conditions.
“Peacemaker” is a TV show based on the DC Comics superhero Peacemaker. It is a spinoff from the 2021 movie “The Suicide Squad”. John Cena plays the title character, both in the series and in the film.
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Complete List of Clues/Answers
Across
1 Duel invitation : SLAP
5 Advanced : LENT
9 Donnybrook : BRAWL
14 Bring (down) : TONE
15 Farm : GROW
16 Harris of NPR’s “Pop Culture Happy Hour” : AISHA
17 Target of some orthodontic work : UNDERBITE
19 Keypad key : ENTER
20 Taxi driver? : DISPATCHER
22 Louganis who is the only man to sweep the diving events in consecutive Olympics : GREG
23 Deux et trois : CINQ
24 Burning : IN A BLAZE
26 Operative : AGENT
28 Ones on a roll : SNAKE EYES
29 “__ in there” : HANG
30 Part of Reno’s nickname : BIGGEST
31 Brew made with warm fermentation : ALE
32 Authority on acts of congress : SEXPERT
33 Letters with a link, maybe : FYI
36 Some banners : HEADERS
37 Satyr kin : FAUN
38 Propulsion devices : THRUSTERS
41 Prepares for a break : RACKS
42 Tight squeezes : BEAR HUGS
43 __ sock : TUBE
44 Terse confirmation : IT IS
45 Public image : PROFILE PIC
49 Lets : RENTS
51 Tick off : ENUMERATE
52 Flag : DROOP
53 Edge (into) : EASE
54 Weldon of NPR’s “Pop Culture Happy Hour” : GLEN
55 Boyo : SONNY
56 Really go downhill : SLED
57 2021 US Open winner Raducanu : EMMA
Down
1 Important element in lath and plaster construction : STUD
2 “RuPaul’s Drag Race” guest judge Love : LONI
3 Finish line? : AND … SCENE!
4 Leaf __ : PEEPING
5 Letters of orientation : LGBTQ
6 NHL great Lindros : ERIC
7 “This isn’t about you” : NOTHING PERSONAL
8 Elementary school grads, typically : TWEENAGERS
9 PDA participant, possibly : BAE
10 Curl : RINGLET
11 Off the mark : ASTRAY
12 Allergy sound : WHEEZE
13 Cup sizes : LARGES
18 Fulminate : RANT
21 Ones using yard sticks? : RAKERS
25 Top : BEST
26 Clicking sound? : AHA!
27 Actress Gadot : GAL
28 Parlor game that produces a Bacon number : SIX DEGREES
30 Pummel : BEAT UP
32 Casual meeting : SESH
33 “What were they thinking” gesture : FACEPALM
34 Guffaw : YUK
35 Connections : INS
36 Harlem Renaissance figure : HURSTON
37 Creator of Imperial Easter eggs : FABERGE
38 Classic Fords : T-BIRDS
39 Straight : HETERO
40 Spoil, perhaps : RAIN ON
41 Rock, in a way : RULE
43 On the clock : TIMED
46 Circuit component : FUSE
47 Article : ITEM
48 “Peacemaker” star John : CENA
50 Notice : SPY
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24 thoughts on “LA Times Crossword 1 Jun 24, Saturday”
Comments are closed.
One hour, DNF.
did a lookup for 28D SIX DEGREES and I was off to the races. Top half was tough enough for me.
But the SE corner was a mess. Still messed up on (R)U(E) for YUK and RAC(E)S for RACKS.
Did another lookup for PROFILE PIC.
LEAF PEEPING?
Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon? I mean, really…
Dumb puzzle
Agreed
Completely unsolvable as “clued”. Utter waste of time.
www awww wwwww we we
This puzzle is enough to make me stick to the NYT puzzles. Those are tough, but smartly edited. Besides everything INK Man Mike stated, we have “Profile Pic” for 45A and my favorite, “Spy” for 50D. When I notice something, I “see” it. Of course, DNF and one of the few times I could care less. Nauseating experience.
“And scene” makes no sense as its clue answer. “End scene” should be the “finish line.” I did a brief amount of online research for “and scene,” and I conclude that it is an idiomatic, amateurish attempt at humor. It is not proper English (not that crossword puzzles are necessarily bound to proper English). Because of that oddball A, I had a difficult time with the top left corner. Everything else was challenging, but doable. I appreciate the free, daily puzzles. Every once in a while, the clues and/or answers go fairly far afield.
DNF. Many blanks. A 1st for us, I think.
And Scene? I’ve worked Hollywood for fifty years and never heard that from a director.
DNF. And rare for me, didn’t care.
I found the Natick at 16A especially
annoying. Oh well….
Every time I comment ( and often …) it gets deleted … why bother.
50:08 – another Saturday head-scratcher for sure. Lookups for LONI Love, ERIC Lindros, and FAUN. I know of fauns, but couldn’t recall it here.
False starts: SLAT>STUD, PLOW>GROW, VENT>RANT, URL>FYI, IDID>ITIS, REDOS>RENTS, HIRED>TIMED, SEE>SPY.
New or forgotten: AISHA Harris, “Pop Culture Happy Hour,” GLEN Weldon, LONI Love, ERIC Lindros, TWEENAGER (tweens yes, but not with “ager”), “Peacemaker.”
Took a while to clue in to the meaning of many of the clues (e.g., advanced, lets, acts of congress, flag, boyo, clicking sound, kind of circuit).
Seems like 45A should have indicated an abbreviation in some way for PIC.
Long ago, I used to not even attempt Saturday puzzles, or gave up on them. However, they are usually doable now, even if it takes a lookup or two (or three). 🙂
Just managed a handful of answers. Way beyond the usual difficult Saturday puzzle. It’s been while since I so utterly failed.
Ya know, I can just see Patti with her hand over her face snickering …
Great puzzle, clever, challenging and several ‘ahas’. I had to use my Wordplays app a few times but I don’t really consider it cheating if I learned a new word or phrase like Leaf Peeper or Sesh.
Part of Reno’s nick name. Been there and have seen the arch many times. Reno over Vegas any day because of the mountains and cooler weather.
Prepared for a break? How do you prepare for a break? Brew coffee, serve snacks? Ahh, billiards.
Flag. I kept trying drape, but that didn’t seem right either. 🤷🏼♂️
Element in plaster. I kept thinking of gypsum but that’s drywall.
Finish line…racing? Nothing. Maybe a finish like paint? I had to cheat.
Leaf Peeping? Never heard of this even having been through New England several times. It popped up on Wordplays and I Googled it out of curiosity. Apparently it’s really a thing.
Elementary school grads. I was thinking there was a twelve in there. I’ve heard of tween but never tweenager. I guess that works. Clever.
Parlor game. The word parlor made me think of something old fashioned like charades or games before my time. I know about the six degrees of Kevin Bacon. For some reason I was thinking it was seven degrees.
Casual meeting. Sesh. I kept thinking it was something casual friends would say like ‘sup’ (what’s up) or ‘Yo’. Nice having a Gen Z clue. Are we on Gen Z? Millennials?
Straight. Hetero. That’s two LGBTQ clues today. There’s a lot of diversity in today’s puzzle.
This was pretty poor. Far, far too many names, some of which were totally obscure. Not to mention some sloppy cluing — GROW for “farm,” really? I appreciate that the LAT doesn’t charge for their puzzles, but it’s clear that they’re getting the NYT rejects.
?
Longo’s puzzles have taken the fun out of doing the Sunday crossword
Loved the puzzle. Took all day and then some (1 lookup). I’m always amazed at how many times I put the puzzle down for a bit, only to come back and have answers pop into my head. I swear the brain must work subconsciously on clues only to spit out long lost memories later. Pretty cool actually
It’s true, happens to me all the time. Sometimes it’s best to just set it down for 10-15 minutes or “sleep on it“. It also worked for me writing correspondence for work before I retired. I’d write it, come back the next day and managed to shorten it by at least a third and find and correct numerous errors. It is amazing how the brain kicks in and really goes to work while the body is resting.
Way too tough for me today, a day late; took 1:00:34 with 22 errors on my first check-grid at about 20-25% fill. Numerous errors and check-grids followed.
Mostly here to look at the answers and see if I can learn something.
Usually I can parse the Saturday puzzle, even taking a couple of days with breaks, if necessary. This puzzle? Far too many “cute” clues, if you can call them that. Also some inaccuracies. “Tweenager”? Totally made up by the author, not a thing. It’s tweener. So hard enough to solve actually intelligent clues, but pretty difficult to read the mind the author when they decide to “create” words. BTW, flag means to tire, not to droop. That would be sag, not flag. Didn’t finish w/o numerous lookups, and don’t feel bad about it. Dumb puzzle today. What’s next? All in Chinese? Goodness.
I very rarely have a dnf. I almost had this one done, but could not get a few squares in the northwest. I highly doubt anybody completed the northwest. Just saying.
This was a horrible puzzle.