LA Times Crossword Answers 23 Nov 13, Saturday

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CROSSWORD SETTER: John Lieb & David Quarfoot
THEME: None
BILL BUTLER’S COMPLETION TIME: 27m 56s
ANSWERS I MISSED: 0

Today’s Wiki-est, Amazonian Googlies
Across

1. Holiday portmanteau TURDUCKEN
Turducken is a dish that is sometimes served at Thanksgiving. It is a deboned chicken stuffed into a deboned duck stuffed into a deboned turkey. You can also try a goodcucken, which is a chicken stuffed into a duck stuffed into a goose.

17. Tennessee’s state reptile BOX TURTLE
The box turtle truly is a turtle, even though it lives on land. Because of its terrestrial home it is sometime wrongly referred to as the box tortoise.

18. Pointless INANE
Our word “inane” meaning silly or lacking substance comes from the Latin “inanitis” meaning “empty space”.

19. Mental health org. APA
American Psychiatric Organization (APA)

20. Longest-serving Dodger coach Manny MOTA
Manny Mota is a retired MLB outfielder who has been coaching for the Dodgers since 1980. Mota’s tenure with the Dodgers is the second longest in Major League Baseball history.

21. Puts forth POSITS
“To posit” is to put forward for consideration, to “suggest a position”.

22. Bucks GELT
“Gelt” is the Yiddish word for “money”.

24. Like some sins MORTAL
In some Christian denominations, sins can be either venial or mortal in terms of severity, with mortal sins being the more grievous.

27. Dental crown alternative ONLAY
“Inlay” is another word for a filling in dentistry. An “onlay” is similar to an inlay. An onlay not only fills a hole in the tooth but it is also built up to replace a missing cusp. It’s sort of halfway between a filling and a crown, I suppose.

29. People magazine Sexiest Man Alive of 1999 GERE
Richard Gere has played such great roles on the screen, and I find him to be a very interesting character off the screen. Gere has been studying Buddhism since 1978 and is a very visible supporter of the Dalai Lama and the people of Tibet.

“People” magazine is noted for its annual special editions with features such as “Best & Worst Dressed” and “Sexiest Man Alive”. The “Sexiest Man Alive” edition now appears at the end of November each year. The first choice for “Sexiest Man” was Mel Gibson, in 1985. This year’s choice was crossword blogger Bill Butler (just checking to see if anyone is reading this!).

30. Harmonia’s daughter, in Greek myth INO
Ino was a mortal queen of Orchomenus through her marriage to King Athamas. In Greek mythology, Ino became the goddess Leukothea after her death. As Leukothea she provided divine aid to Odysseus, according to Homer’s “Odyssey”. She provided Odysseus with a magical veil that he used to escape from Poseidon.

31. Vituperate CURSE AT
Vituperation is sustained, abusive language.

38. Chaac, to Mayans RAIN GOD
chaac was the Mayan rain god, a deity who carried a lightning axe with which he struck the clouds producing thunder and rain. The equivalent Aztec god was Tlaloc.

43. NCAA year-end games system BCS
The Bowl Championship Series (BCS) is the system that is used to match up the top ten ranked NCAA football teams for five bowl games.

50. Common hand span OCTAVE
A piano player can often span eight notes with his or her hand i.e. an octave.

53. Catch in pots EELS
An eelpot is used to catch eels. Similar to a lobster pot, and eelpot is usually box-shaped with a funnel-like entrance that an eel can swim into, but through which it cannot escape.

59. Doddering ANILE
“Anile” is another word for “senile”, especially when applied to an old woman.

63. Stud revelations HOLE CARDS
Stud poker is the name given to many variants of poker, all characterized by the dealer giving each player a mix of cards face-down and face-up. The cards facing downwards are called “hole cards”, cards only visible to the individual who holds that particular hand. This gives rise to the phrase “ace in the hole”, a valuable holding that only the player with the ace is aware of.

64. Toponymic dairy items EDAMS
Edam cheese takes its name from the Dutch town of Edam in North Holland. The cheese is famous for its coating of red paraffin wax, a layer of protection that helps Edam travel well and prevents spoiling. You might occasionally come across an Edam cheese that is coated in black wax. The black color indicates that the underlying cheese has been aged for a minimum of 17 weeks.

A “toponym” is a name that comes from a place or region. For example, New Jersey is named for the island of Jersey in the English Channel and Indianapolis is named for the state of Indiana.

65. Summer TV offering with a “Jaws of Steel Collection” DVD SHARK WEEK
“Shark Week” is an annual event on the Discovery Channel, and has been so since 1987. The week is full of TV shows and specials that are shown with the stated intent of promoting awareness and respect for sharks.

Down
1. Lesser Antilles island TOBAGO
Tobago is the smaller of the two Caribbean islands that make up the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago. One theory is that the island is named for the “tabago”, a Y-shaped pipe used by the island natives for sniffing tobacco smoke.

3. Old drugstore chain REXALL
Rexall was a chain of drugstores in North America which started out in 1902 as a retailers’ cooperative called United Drug Stores. The name “Rexall” was derived from the “Rx” abbreviation used for prescriptions. Rexall used a very interesting marketing concept in 1936. The company sent “The Million Dollar Rexall Streamlined Convention Train” on a tour all over the US. The train had 12 cars which included product displays, convention facilities and a dining car. The idea was to allow local druggists to attend a convention without having the cost of travel, and of course to promote products and the brand.

4. “Can’t Help Lovin’ __ Man” DAT
“Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man” is a famous song by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein from the 1927 musical “Show Boat”.

“Show Boat” is a musical by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein, first staged in New York in 1927. It is based on a 1926 novel of the same name by Edna Ferber. The story is about a show boat called the “Cotton Blossom”. Show boats were floating theaters which navigated the rivers of the US from the 1870s to the 1930s, moving from town to town with the performers living on board. “Show Boat” was famously adapted for the big screen in 1936, with stars Irene Dunne, Allan Jones and Paul Robeson.

5. Word on a bill UNUM
From 1776, “E pluribus unum” was the unofficial motto of the United States. “E pluribus unum” is Latin for “Out of many, one”. It was pushed aside in 1956 when an Act of Congress designated “In God We Trust” as the country’s official motto.

7. Actor Yaphet __ of “Midnight Run” KOTTO
Yaphet Kotto is an actor from New York City who is probably best known for playing Lieutenant Al Giardello on the TV show “Homicide: Life on the Street” in the nineties. I know Kotto mainly for his role as bad guy Mr. Big in the Bond movie “Live and Let Die”.

9. Formerly NEE
“Née” is the French word for “born” when referring to a female. The male equivalent is “né”.

10. Yankee foe ORIOLE
The Baltimore Orioles (sometimes “the O’s”) were one of the eight charter teams of MLB’s American League, so the franchise dates back to 1901. Prior to 1901, the team has roots in the Minor League Milwaukee Brewers, and indeed entered the American League as the Brewers. In 1902 the Brewers moved to St. Louis and became the Browns. The team didn’t fare well in St. Louis, so when it finally relocated to Baltimore in the early fifties the team changed its name completely, to the Baltimore Orioles. The owners so badly wanted a fresh start that they traded 17 old Browns players with the New York Yankees. The trade didn’t help the team’s performance on the field in those early days, but it did help distance the new team from its past.

11. Some flatbreads NANS
Naan (also “nan”) bread is very popular in Indian restaurants, as well as in other West, Central and South Asian cuisines. Indian Naan is traditionally baked in a clay oven known as a tandoor.

12. Selling using servers ETAILING
“Etail” is the term used these days for online shopping. Etail is often compared to regular shopping in the “real world” by juxtaposing it with a “brick and mortar” store.

In the world of computer science, a computer accessing a service is called a “client”. The service is provided on a computer called a “server”. These days, clients and servers often communicate via the Internet. I am typing up this blog post on my laptop (the client) and am connected via the Internet to the Google Drive service that resides on a computer somewhere (the server).

13. Kyoto-based entertainment company NINTENDO
Nintendo is a Japanese company, the largest manufacturer of video games in the world. Nintendo was founded way back in 1889 and originally made hanafuda cards, Japanese playing cards. The name “Nintendo” translates as “leave luck to heaven”.

28. Co-star of Steve in “The Magnificent Seven” YUL
Yul Brynner was a Russian-born actor. Brynner was well known for his great performances, but also for his shaved head and his deep rich voice. He first adopted the “hairstyle” while playing the King of Siam in the stage version of “The King and I”, and he stuck with it.

Apparently Steve McQueen wasn’t the easiest actor to work with, at least as far as directors were concerned. He pretty much had a free rein though, as he was so popular with the public in the seventies (he had the nickname “The King of Cool”). McQueen was the highest paid movie star in 1974.

“The Magnificent Seven” really is a very entertaining western movie (and I am no fan of westerns, quite frankly). Famously, it is a 1960 remake of the Akira Kurosawa 1954 Japanese film, “Seven Samurai”. The film is the second most shown film on television in the US. Only “The Wizard of Oz” gets more air time.

37. 1985 #1 hit for Ready for the World OH SHEILA
The R&B band Ready for the World had just one chart-topper, a single called “Oh Sheila” that was released in 1985.

39. Like Vivaldi’s “Spring” IN E
Antonio Vivaldi was one of the great composers of the Baroque period. Vivaldi achieved fame and success within in his own lifetime, notoriety that faded soon after he died. His music has reemerged in recent decades and most people are familiar with at least part of his most famous composition, the set of four violin concertos called “The Four Seasons”. Vivaldi was nicknamed “The Red Priest” because he was indeed a priest, and he had red hair.

42. “Imagination Taking Shape” sloganeer PLAY-DOH
Back in the 1930s, a manufacturer in Cincinnati produced a doughy compound that was used to clean wallpaper. Twenty years later, school-kids started using the cleaning material as a modelling compound, so the manufacturer reworked the formula, and sold it to local schools. It was given the name Play-Doh.

44. Church compositions MOTETS
A motet is a simple musical composition based on a sacred text, usually sung without an accompaniment. The term “motet” is a diminutive of the French for “word” … “mot”.

46. Kiddie lit character with a detachable tail EEYORE
Eeyore is the donkey character in A. A. Milne’s “Winnie-the-Pooh”. Eeyore is very lovable, but has a gloomy and pessimistic outlook on life.

47. Composer Debussy CLAUDE
Claude Debussy is one of my favorite composers, someone who epitomises the Romantic Era and Impressionist Movement in music. One of my favorite CDs is a collection of some “lighter” Debussy pieces called “Debussy for Daydreaming”, and what an evocative collection it is. Included are “Syrinx”, “Maid with the Flaxen Hair”, “Rêverie” and everyone’s favorite, “Clair de Lune”.

51. “There!” VOILA!
“Et voilà” is French for, “and there it is!”

55. He or I, e.g. ELEM
Helium (He) and Iodine (I) are chemical elements (elems.).

61. Crow cousin DAW
Daws are better known today as jackdaws and belong to the crow family. The jackdaw features in a famous pangram (i.e. a short sentence containing all 26 letters of the alphabet) … “Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz”.

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For the sake of completion, here is a full listing of all the answers:
Across
1. Holiday portmanteau TURDUCKEN
10. Turned up ON END
15. Hoops situation involving a bonus free throw ONE AND ONE
16. Odds, essentially RATIO
17. Tennessee’s state reptile BOX TURTLE
18. Pointless INANE
19. Mental health org. APA
20. Longest-serving Dodger coach Manny MOTA
21. Puts forth POSITS
22. Bucks GELT
24. Like some sins MORTAL
26. Holiday serving LEG
27. Dental crown alternative ONLAY
29. People magazine Sexiest Man Alive of 1999 GERE
30. Harmonia’s daughter, in Greek myth INO
31. Vituperate CURSE AT
34. Menu option UNDO
35. Program, perhaps BOOKLET
38. Chaac, to Mayans RAIN GOD
40. Looking frightened ASHY
41. Pretend, in a way LIP SYNC
43. NCAA year-end games system BCS
44. Word with sugar or spice MILL
45. Put in ELECT
49. Slangy agreement YAH
50. Common hand span OCTAVE
53. Catch in pots EELS
54. Receives GREETS
56. Shakespearean “over there” YOND
58. Go on YAK
59. Doddering ANILE
60. Cut EDITED OUT
62. Sign of emptiness TO LET
63. Stud revelations HOLE CARDS
64. Toponymic dairy items EDAMS
65. Summer TV offering with a “Jaws of Steel Collection” DVD SHARK WEEK

Down
1. Lesser Antilles island TOBAGO
2. Sealed UNOPEN
3. Old drugstore chain REXALL
4. “Can’t Help Lovin’ __ Man” DAT
5. Word on a bill UNUM
6. Storage medium CD-ROM
7. Actor Yaphet __ of “Midnight Run” KOTTO
8. Swell ENLARGE
9. Formerly NEE
10. Yankee foe ORIOLE
11. Some flatbreads NANS
12. Selling using servers ETAILING
13. Kyoto-based entertainment company NINTENDO
14. Acts altruistically DOES GOOD
21. Bash, affectedly PARTAY
23. Tasteless TACKY
25. Rushes TEARS
28. Co-star of Steve in “The Magnificent Seven” YUL
32. They may be dug up RELICS
33. Circus elevator STILT
34. Godfather, sometimes UNCLE
35. Minor obstacle? BABY GATE
36. Academy affirmation OSCAR NOD
37. 1985 #1 hit for Ready for the World OH SHEILA
39. Like Vivaldi’s “Spring” IN E
42. “Imagination Taking Shape” sloganeer PLAY-DOH
44. Church compositions MOTETS
46. Kiddie lit character with a detachable tail EEYORE
47. Composer Debussy CLAUDE
48. Reproachful warning TSK TSK
51. “There!” VOILA!
52. Join ENTER
55. He or I, e.g. ELEM
57. Sea level? DECK
60. Half-hearted responses EHS
61. Crow cousin DAW

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4 thoughts on “LA Times Crossword Answers 23 Nov 13, Saturday”

  1. Hi Bill! So much I didn't know today:
    Hole Cards, Gelt, BCS, Oh Sheila,
    Elem, but I guess it all makes sense after the fact.
    I got all of the puzzle yesterday, but not the theme. I think it just dawned on me that the the black squares "hack" the computer names.
    But…was totally confused by the "row" numbering.
    Sun's out, maybe I'll work outdoors today.
    Have a great weekend all!

  2. Hi there, Pookie.

    Sounds like you got your money's worth out of the puzzle today. Yesterday's theme was hard to unravel. I worked it out, but it took a kind blog reader to tell me that I had "missed" two of the hacked computer names (there were two names on a couple of lines in the grid, and I stopped looking after finding one).

    My wife and I leave on a week-long roadtrip in a couple of hours time. I'll be puzzling away as we go, but may be a little late catching any comments. Off to LA for tonight, and then Las Vegas for a few days.

    Enjoy the weekend, Pookie!

Comments are closed.