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Constructed by: Zachary David Levy
Edited by: Patti Varol
Today’s Reveal Answer: No Buts About It
Themed answers are all common phrases with a “BUT” missing:
- 53A “Without a doubt!,” and a hint to 20-, 31-, and 41-Across : NO BUTS ABOUT IT
- 20A Result of an overzealous stylist? : FLYING TRESSES (from “flying buttresses”)
- 31A Result of a “Moonstruck” actress converting to Judaism? : KOSHER CHER (from “kosher butcher”)
- 41A Indulge in many, many naps? : SNOOZE TONS (from “snooze buttons”)
Read on, or jump to …
… a complete list of answers
Want to discuss the puzzle? Then …
… leave a comment
Bill’s time: 10m 03s
Bill’s errors: 0
Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies
Across
5 One rocking a pocket protector : DWEEB
“Dweeb” is relatively recent American slang that came out of college life in the late sixties. Dweeb, squarepants, nerd; they’re all not-nice terms that mean the same thing, i.e. someone excessively studious and socially inept.
10 Cerulean kin : AQUA
Cerulean is a blue color, with the name probably coming from the Latin “caeruleus” meaning “blue”.
14 Neutral tone : ECRU
The color ecru is a grayish, yellowish brown. The word “ecru” comes from French and means “raw, unbleached”. “Ecru” has the same roots as our word “crude”.
18 Four-footed Jetson : ASTRO
“The Jetsons” is an animated show from Hanna-Barbera that had its first run in 1962-1963, and then was recreated in 1985-1987. When it debuted in 1963 on ABC, “The Jetsons” was the network’s first ever color broadcast. “The Jetsons” is like a space-age version of “The Flintstones”. The four Jetson family members are George and Jane, the parents, and children Judy and Elroy. Residing with the family in Orbit City are their household robot Rosie and pet dog Astro.
19 Marathon measure : PACE
The marathon commemorates the legendary messenger-run by Pheidippides from the site of the Battle of Marathon back to Athens, and is run over 26 miles and 385 yards. The first modern Olympic marathon races were run over a distance that approximated the length of the modern-day Marathon-Athens highway, although the actual length of the race varied from games to games. For the 1908 Olympics in London, a course starting at Windsor Castle and ending in front of the Royal Box at White City Stadium was defined. That course was 26 miles and 385 yards, the standard length now used at all Olympic Games. Organizers of subsequent games continued to vary the length of the race, until a decision was made in 1921 to adopt the distance used in London in 1908.
20 Result of an overzealous stylist? : FLYING TRESSES (from “flying buttresses”)
A buttress is a structure built beside a wall to reinforce it. A flying buttress is a specific form of buttress, one that comprises a relatively massive supporting structure positioned away from the wall, but connected to the wall with an arch. Any tendency of the wall to fall towards the buttress is countered by the arch (the “flyer”), which passes the tipping force into the base of the flying buttress, and hence into the ground.
28 Genre for the Maytals : SKA
Toots and the Maytals are a Jamaican reggae and ska band that have been active since the 1960s. Frontman Toots Hibbert passed away in 2020, at the age of 77.
29 Dispensable candy : PEZ
PEZ is an Austrian brand of candy sold in a mechanical dispenser. Famously, PEZ dispensers have molded “heads”, and have become very collectible over the years. The list of heads includes historical figures like Betsy Ross and Paul Revere, characters from “Star Wars” and “Star Trek”, and even British royalty like the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge (“William and Kate”). The name “PEZ” comes from the first, middle and last letters of “Pfefferminz”, the German word for “peppermint”.
30 CT scan kin : MRI
MRI scans can be daunting for many people as they usually involve the patient lying inside a tube with the imaging magnet surrounding the body. Additionally, the scan can take up to 40 minutes in some cases. There are some open MRI scanners available that help prevent a feeling of claustrophobia. However, the images produced by open scanners are of lower quality as they operate at lower magnetic fields.
31 Result of a “Moonstruck” actress converting to Judaism? : KOSHER CHER (from “kosher butcher”)
“Moonstruck” is a 1987 movie, a romantic comedy starring Cher and Nicolas Cage. There’s a bit of a love triangle in the storyline, with Danny Aiello playing the man who loses the girl. “Moonstruck” won three Oscars and was a huge success, and somehow, I’ve never seen it …
37 Cary of “Glory” : ELWES
Cary Elwes is an English actor who is perhaps most noted for appearing in the 1987 film “The Princess Bride”. He also played the title role in 1993’s “Cary Elwes”. Cary is the son of a celebrated English portrait painter, Dominick Elwes.
“Glory” is a 1989 movie about the 54th Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, one of the first African-American units formed during the Civil War.
48 Stash of water balloons, e.g. : AMMO
The word “munitions” describes materials and equipment used in war. The term derives from the Latin “munitionem” meaning “fortification, defensive wall”. Back in the 17th century, French soldiers referred to such materials as “la munition”, a Middle French term. This was misheard as “l’ammunition”, and as a result we ended up importing the word “ammunition” (often shortened to “ammo”), a term that we now use mainly to describe the material fired from a weapon.
56 ” … or not” : … WELP
“Welp” is a slang term used at the beginning of a sentence to indicate disappointment. “Welp” is used in the same way that we use the interjection “well”.
Well, that worked out. Welp, that didn’t work out.
58 “Arrested Development” actress Portia de __ : ROSSI
Portia de Rossi is an actress from Australia who played Nelle Porter on “Ally McBeal” and Lindsay Bluth/Fünke on “Arrested Development”. Off the screen, de Rossi is famous as the wife of Ellen DeGeneres, whom she married in 2008.
“Arrested Development” is a sitcom that originally aired on Fox from 2003 to 2006. Ron Howard was heavily involved in the show behind the camera, serving as executive producer and also as the show’s narrator. Fifteen new episodes of “Arrested Development” were filmed specifically for release on Netflix in 2013, and there may even be a movie on the way.
59 Title for Helen Mirren : DAME
Helen Mirren, one of my favorite English actresses, has played three different queens on film and television. She played Queen Elizabeth II on the 2006 film “The Queen”, the title role in the TV drama “Elizabeth I”, and Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, the wife of the title character in the 1994 film “The Madness of King George”. Mirren won the “Triple Crown of Acting” for playing:
- Queen Elizabeth II in “The Queen” (winning Best Actress Oscar)
- Queen Elizabeth II in “The Audience” (winning Best Actress in a Play Tony)
- Detective Jane Tennison in “Prime Suspect” (winning Outstanding Lead Actress Emmy)
Down
1 Feudal laborers : SERFS
A serf was a member of the lowest feudal class, someone attached to land owned by a lord. “Serf” comes from the Latin “servus”, meaning “slave”.
2 Common source of food poisoning : E COLI
Escherichia coli (E. coli) are usually harmless bacteria found in the human gut, working away quite happily. However, there are some strains that can produce lethal toxins. These strains can make their way into the food chain from animal fecal matter that comes into contact with food designated for human consumption.
3 Shots at a doctor’s office : X-RAYS
X-rays were first studied comprehensively by the German physicist Wilhelm Röntgen (also “Roentgen”), and it was he who gave the name “X-rays” to this particular type of radiation. Paradoxically, in Röntgen’s native language of German, X-rays are routinely referred to as “Röntgen rays”. In 1901, Röntgen’s work on X-rays won him the first Nobel Prize in Physics that was ever awarded.
4 Gagarin who was the first human in outer space : YURI
Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first man in space when his spacecraft Vostok I made a single orbit of the Earth in 1961. Sadly, Gagarin died only seven years later in a plane crash.
5 Street racer : DRAG CAR
Back in the 18th century, “drag” was slang for a wagon or buggy, as it was “dragged” along by a horse or horses. In the 1930s, the underworld adopted “drag” as slang for an automobile. This sense of the word was imported into automobile racing in the 1940s, giving the name to “drag racing”. A drag race is basically a competition between two cars to determine which can accelerate faster from a standstill.
7 __ nous : ENTRE
In French, something might perhaps be discussed “entre deux” (between two) or “entre nous” (between us).
8 Basic French verb : ETRE
The French for “to be” is “être”.
11 Victor Hugo character : QUASIMODO
The title character in Victor Hugo’s novel “The Hunchback of Notre-Dame” is Quasimodo, the hunch-backed bell-ringer . Quasimodo falls for the beautiful Roma girl Esmeralda, and eventually rescues her just before she is due to be hanged. He carries Esmeralda into Notre-Dame crying out “Sanctuary!” There is some recent evidence that a hunchbacked stone carver, working at Notre-Dame at the same time Hugo was alive, may have been the inspiration for Quasimodo the bell-ringer.
12 Sch. near Hollywood : USC
The University of Southern California (USC) is a private school in Los Angeles. Apart from its excellent academic record, USC is known for the success of its athletic program. USC Trojans have won more Olympic medals than the students of any other university in the world. The USC marching band is very famous as well, and is known as the “Spirit of Troy”. The band has performed with many celebrities, and is the only college band to have two platinum records.
21 Air Force 1s, e.g. : NIKES
Nike makes a range of athletic shoes that use the brand name “Air Force”. The first design in the line was produced in 1982, and given the name “Air Force 1”, an overt reference to the plane that carries the US president. Air Force 2 followed in 1987, and Air Force 3 in 1988.
28 Spike Lee’s “__ Gotta Have It” : SHE’S
Film director Spike Lee was born in Atlanta, Georgia but has very much made New York City his home and place of work. Most of Lee’s films are set in New York City, including his first feature film, 1986’s “She’s Gotta Have It”. That film was shot over two weeks with a budget of $175,000. “She’s Gotta Have It” grossed over $7 million at the US box office.
29 Chihuahua change : PESO
The peso is used in many Spanish-speaking countries around the world. The coin originated in Spain where the word “peso” means “weight”. The original peso was what we know in English as a “piece of eight”, a silver coin of a specific weight that had a nominal value of eight “reales”.
Chihuahua is a state in northern Mexico that shares a border with Texas and New Mexico. It is the largest state in the country, earning it the nickname “El Estado Grande”. Chihuahua takes its name from the Chihuahuan Desert which lies largely within its borders. The Chihuahua breed of dog takes its name from the state.
31 “Hyperion” poet : KEATS
“Hyperion” is an 1818/1819 epic poem penned by John Keats, one that he abandoned and never actually finished. Here are some lines:
O tender spouse of gold Hyperion,
Thea, I feel thee ere I see thy face;
Look up, and let me see our doom in it;
Look up, and tell me if this feeble shape
Is Saturn’s; tell me, if thou hear’st the voice
Of Saturn; tell me, if this wrinkling brow,
Naked and bare of its great diadem,
Peers like the front of Saturn.
32 Stan’s partner in slapstick : OLLIE
Oliver Hardy was born Norvell Hardy in 1892 in Harlem, Georgia. Hardy used the stage name “Oliver” as a tribute to his father Oliver Hardy. His early performances were credited as “Oliver Norvell Hardy”, and off camera his nickname was “Babe Hardy”. Hardy appeared in several films that also featured the young British actor Stan Laurel, but it wasn’t until 1927 that they teamed up to make perhaps the most famous double act in the history of movies. The Laurel and Hardy act came to an end in 1955. That year, Laurel suffered a stroke, and then later the same year Hardy had a heart attack and stroke from which he never really recovered.
Stan Laurel was an English comic actor (born Arthur Stanley Jefferson), who made a great career for himself in Hollywood. Laurel ended up at the Hal Roach studio directing films, intent on pursuing a career in writing and directing. However, he was a sometime actor and was asked to step in when another comic actor, Oliver Hardy, was injured and couldn’t perform. Laurel and Hardy started to share a stage together during that time and when it was clear they worked so well together, their partnership was born. Oh, and the oft-quoted story that Clint Eastwood is the son of Stan Laurel … that’s just an urban myth.
Slapstick is a physical form of comedy or horseplay. Back in the late 19th century, the term “slapstick” described a device made from two sticks loosely fastened together, which could be “slapped” together to create a sound effect offstage. The sound effect augmented the audience reaction when a clown or actor was given a slap on stage.
33 Product in pink packets : SWEET’N LOW
Sweet’n Low is an artificial sweetener with saccharin as the main ingredient. At least that’s in the US. In Canada the main ingredient is sodium cyclamate. Saccharin was banned in Canada in 1977 due to fears that the sweetener causes cancer. The original studies showing the incidence of cancer in lab rats were eventually shown to be faulty, and so the ban was lifted in 2014.
35 Subsidiary of Warner Bros. Discovery : HBO
The Warner Bros. film studio was founded by four Warner brothers, although their original family name was Wonskolaser. The brothers Harry, Albert, Sam and Jack emigrated from Poland as children with their parents, and changed their name when they landed in Baltimore, Maryland in 1889.
36 Heaters : GATS
“Gat” is a slang term for a gun that is derived from “Gatling gun”, the precursor to the modern machine gun. The Gatling gun was invented by Dr. Richard J. Gatling in 1861. Apparently he was inspired to invent it so that one man could do as much damage as a hundred, thereby reducing the size of armies and diminishing the suffering caused by war. Go figure …
39 Empowerment hashtag since 2017 : METOO
The use of the #MeToo hashtag initially was encouraged by actress Alyssa Milano in 2017 to draw attention to sexual assault and sexual harassment. Milano was acting in response to the growing number of allegations against film producer Harvey Weinstein. The use of the phrase “Me Too” in the context of sexual misconduct dates back to 2006. Social activist Tarana Burke started to use the phrase on the Myspace social network after a 13-year-old girl told her that she had been sexually assaulted. Apparently, Burke had no response at the time the girl confided in her, but later wished she had responded, “Me too”.
41 Stitched together : SUTURED
A suture is used to close an open wound. The term “suture” comes from the Latin word “suere” meaning “to sew”, the past participle of which is “sutus”.
42 “Shaun of the Dead” figures : ZOMBIES
A zombie is a corpse that has been brought back to life by some mystical means. Our modern use of the term largely stems from the undead creatures featured in the 1968 horror movie called “Night of the Living Dead”. Now that film I haven’t seen, and probably never will …
“Shaun of the Dead” is 2004 horror comedy movie starring English comic actors Simon Pegg and Nick Frost. Written by Pegg and director Edgar Wright, “Shaun of the Dead” is the first in what’s known as their “Three Flavours Cornetto” trilogy of films, along with “Hot Fuzz” (2007) and “The World’s End” (2013).
48 Tea region of India : ASSAM
Assam, located in northeastern India, is the largest tea-producing state in the country. It is also famous for its silk production, particularly the golden muga silk.
49 Pool stroke that may damage the felt : MASSE
In billiards, a massé shot is one in which the cue ball makes an extreme curve due to the player imparting heavy spin on the ball with his or her cue held relatively vertically. Some pool halls don’t allow massé shots as there’s a risk of ripping the cloth covering the table.
50 Tour de France section : ETAPE
“Étape” is the French word for stage, as in a “stage” in the Tour de France. The term is used in English military circles to describe where troops halt overnight, but can also describe the section of the march itself. So, a march can be divided into stages, into étapes.
51 Corporation that began as the Waterbury Clock Company : TIMEX
The Timex Group, a manufacturer of watches, evolved from the Waterbury Clock Company that was founded in 1854 in Waterbury, Connecticut. The company achieved tremendous success in the early sixties largely due to an innovative marketing campaign. Advertisements featured the memorable tagline “Timex – Takes a licking and keeps on ticking”. In 1962, one out of every three watches sold in the US was a Timex.
52 Vessel opener : STENT
In the world of surgical medicine, a stent is an artificial tube inserted inside a vessel in the body, say an artery, in order to reduce the effects of a local restriction in the body’s conduit.
54 Big name in lawn mowers : TORO
Toro is a manufacturer of lawn mowers and snow removal equipment that is based in Bloomington, Minnesota. The company was founded in 1914 to build tractor engines.
55 Soup noodle : UDON
Udon noodles are made from wheat-flour and are very popular in Japanese cuisines such as tempura.
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Complete List of Clues/Answers
Across
1 Alluring : SEXY
5 One rocking a pocket protector : DWEEB
10 Cerulean kin : AQUA
14 Neutral tone : ECRU
15 Cost : RAN TO
16 Has to : MUST
17 Crowd sound : ROAR
18 Four-footed Jetson : ASTRO
19 Marathon measure : PACE
20 Result of an overzealous stylist? : FLYING TRESSES (from “flying buttresses”)
23 Member of the fam : SIS
24 Drink that may elicit brain freeze : ICEE
25 Drudgery : TEDIUM
28 Genre for the Maytals : SKA
29 Dispensable candy : PEZ
30 CT scan kin : MRI
31 Result of a “Moonstruck” actress converting to Judaism? : KOSHER CHER (from “kosher butcher”)
36 A whole lot (of) : GOBS
37 Cary of “Glory” : ELWES
38 Crunch targets : ABS
39 Angry with : MAD AT
40 Some draft picks : ALES
41 Indulge in many, many naps? : SNOOZE TONS (from “snooze buttons”)
43 Connect : TIE
44 Sever : CUT
45 Extra periods, briefly : OTS
46 Got going : SET OUT
48 Stash of water balloons, e.g. : AMMO
50 Sci-fi beings : ETS
53 “Without a doubt!,” and a hint to 20-, 31-, and 41-Across : NO BUTS ABOUT IT
56 ” … or not” : … WELP
58 “Arrested Development” actress Portia de __ : ROSSI
59 Title for Helen Mirren : DAME
60 Love god : EROS
61 Wipe out : ERASE
62 Ready to do business : OPEN
63 Like the lawn at dawn : DEWY
64 Stadium toppers : DOMES
65 Coming up : NEXT
Down
1 Feudal laborers : SERFS
2 Common source of food poisoning : E COLI
3 Shots at a doctor’s office : X-RAYS
4 Gagarin who was the first human in outer space : YURI
5 Street racer : DRAG CAR
6 Refuse : WASTE
7 __ nous : ENTRE
8 Basic French verb : ETRE
9 Rocket stage : BOOSTER
10 Full of energy : AMPED
11 Victor Hugo character : QUASIMODO
12 Sch. near Hollywood : USC
13 Devoured : ATE
21 Air Force 1s, e.g. : NIKES
22 “__ me!” : SEZ
26 __ sprawl : URBAN
27 Humid phenomena : MISTS
28 Spike Lee’s “__ Gotta Have It” : SHE’S
29 Chihuahua change : PESO
31 “Hyperion” poet : KEATS
32 Stan’s partner in slapstick : OLLIE
33 Product in pink packets : SWEET’N LOW
34 Isn’t able to : CAN’T
35 Subsidiary of Warner Bros. Discovery : HBO
36 Heaters : GATS
39 Empowerment hashtag since 2017 : METOO
41 Stitched together : SUTURED
42 “Shaun of the Dead” figures : ZOMBIES
44 Den youngster : CUB
47 “__-daisy!” : OOPSY
48 Tea region of India : ASSAM
49 Pool stroke that may damage the felt : MASSE
50 Tour de France section : ETAPE
51 Corporation that began as the Waterbury Clock Company : TIMEX
52 Vessel opener : STENT
54 Big name in lawn mowers : TORO
55 Soup noodle : UDON
56 Married : WED
57 Bard’s before : ERE
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