LA Times Crossword 26 Jun 23 Monday


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Constructed by: John Michael Currie
Edited by: Patti Varol

Today’s Reveal Answer: Tip-Top Shape

Themed answers are all in the down-direction, with the TOP word being a SHAPE:

  • 10D Exceptional physical health, and a feature of the answer to each of this puzzle’s starred clues : TIP-TOP SHAPE
  • 6D *West Wing workplace : OVAL OFFICE
  • 14D *Multilevel investment swindle : PYRAMID SCHEME
  • 24D *Pet’s post-surgery device, facetiously : CONE OF SHAME
  • 28D *Two, to four, e.g. : SQUARE ROOT

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

Bill’s time: 6m 17s

Bill’s errors: 0

Today’s Wiki-est Amazonian Googlies

Across

1 1997 crime drama “Donnie __” : BRASCO

The 1997 movie “Donnie Brasco” is about an FBI agent who infiltrates a New York City crime family. The film is loosely based on the true story of agent Joseph Pistone who worked his way into the Bonanno family. Johnny Depp plays Pistone on screen, and uses the name Donnie Brasco when undercover.

7 Demo stuff : TNT

“TNT” is an abbreviation for “trinitrotoluene”. Trinitrotoluene was first produced in 1863 by the German chemist Joseph Wilbrand, who developed it for use as a yellow dye. TNT is relatively difficult to detonate so it was on the market as a dye for some years before its more explosive properties were discovered.

10 Egyptian boy king : TUT

“King Tut” is a name commonly used for the Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun. Tutankhamun may not have been the most significant of the pharaohs historically, but he is the most famous today largely because of the discovery of his nearly intact tomb in 1922 by Howard Carter. Prior to this find, any Egyptian tombs uncovered by archaeologists had been ravaged by grave robbers. Tutankhamun’s magnificent burial mask is one of the most recognizable of all Egyptian artifacts.

13 Boxing film co-starring Sage Stallone : ROCKY V

1990’s “Rocky V” was intended to be the last in the “Rocky” series of films. It seems that all parties were unhappy with the movie, both the critics and Sylvester Stallone, who wrote the screenplay and starred. Stallone eventually made a sixth film though, 2006’s “Rocky Balboa”, which got a much better reception.

Sage Stallone was the eldest son of Hollywood actor Sylvester Stallone. He played Rocky Balboa Jr., the son of his father’s character, in the movie “Rocky V”. Sadly, Sage passed away in 2012 at only 36 years of age.

15 German pronoun : ICH

Ich is the German for “I”, as in “Ich bin ein Berliner” (I am a Berliner), the famous words of support uttered by President John F. Kennedy (JFK) in 1963 in a speech in West Berlin.

16 Light-sensitive eye layer : RETINA

The retina is the tissue that lines the inside of the eye, and is the tissue that is light-sensitive. There are (mainly) two types of cells in the retina that are sensitive to light, namely rods and cones. Rods are cells that best function in very dim light and only provide black-and-white vision. Cones on the other hand function in brighter light and can perceive color.

17 Mixed breed lapdog : YORKIPOO

The yorkipoo (also “yorkiepoo”) designer dog breed is a cross between a Yorkshire terrier and a poodle.

19 Role in a Thanksgiving pageant : PILGRIM

The early settlers of the Plymouth Colony were known as English Dissenters and belonged to congregations that separated from the Church of England. Many English Dissenters headed for Holland in the Netherlands, but the Mayflower Pilgrims opted to set up a new colony in North America in an effort to maintain their English cultural identity.

21 The Rockies, e.g.: Abbr. : MTNS

North America’s Rocky Mountains stretch from the very north of British Columbia in Canada to New Mexico in the US. The length of the range is over 3,000 miles. The highest point is Mount Elbert in Colorado, which has an elevation of 14,440 feet.

22 Some soft drinks : COCA-COLAS

The exact formula for Coca-Cola is a trade secret. The secret recipe is locked in a vault. That vault is on public display in the World of Coca-Cola museum in Atlanta, Georgia.

25 Hearty steak : T-BONE

The T-bone and porterhouse are related cuts of meat, with the latter being a larger version of the former, and both being cut from the short loin.

26 Parka part : HOOD

A parka is a hooded jacket that is often lined with fur, and that is worn in cold weather. The original parka was a pullover design, but nowadays it is usually zipped at the front. “Parka” is the Russian name for the garment, and it was absorbed into English in the late 1700s via the Aleut language.

34 “Feel Good” creator/star Martin : MAE

Mae Martin is a very talented comedian and actor from Canada who moved to London, England in 2011. She is a regular on British television, and is probably best known on this side of the pond as the creator and star of the comedy-drama show “Feel Good”, in which she plays a fictionalized version of herself.

37 Beret, e.g. : HAT

The beret is a type of hat that is believed to have originated in ancient Greece, where it was worn by shepherds.

40 Doo-wop syllable : SHA

Doo-wop developed in the 1940s and can be described as a vocal-based R&B music. Even though the style has been around since the forties, the name doo-wop wasn’t introduced until the early sixties.

45 Track legend Owens : JESSE

Jesse Owens is famous for winning four gold medals at the Berlin Olympic Games in 1936, much to the chagrin of Adolf Hitler. Jesse’s real name was James Cleveland Owens, and he went by “JC” as a child. However, his Alabama accent was misconstrued at school when his family moved to Cleveland, so teachers and classmates called him “Jesse” instead of “JC”, and the name stuck.

49 Tylenol target : ACHE

Tylenol is a pain-relieving drug with the active ingredient acetaminophen (which is known as “paracetamol” outside of the US).

53 “Booksmart” director Wilde : OLIVIA

Actress Olivia Wilde’s break came with the role of “Thirteen” on the medical drama “House”. Olivia’s birth name is Cockburn, and she chose her stage name in honor of Irish author Oscar Wilde.

“Booksmart” is a 2019 comedy film about two high school students breaking out of their relatively bookish ways just prior to graduation. The movie was actress Olivia Wilde’s directorial debut, and apparently, the critics loved this film.

58 “9-1-1: Lone Star” star Rob : LOWE

Actor Rob Lowe is one of the “founding” members of the so-called Brat Pack, having appeared in the movie “St. Elmo’s Fire”. More recently, he played a regular character on the TV show “Parks and Recreation”. My favorite of his roles though, was playing Sam Seaborn on Aaron Sorkin’s great drama series “The West Wing”. When “The West Wing” first aired, Seaborn was billed as the show’s main character, but outstanding performances from the rest of the cast and some great writing meant that Lowe’s role became “one of many”. This led to some dissatisfaction on Lowe’s part, and eventually he quit the show.

“9-1-1: Lone Star” is a procedural drama show that is a spin-off of “9-1-1 “. The Texas (Lone Star State) version features Rob Lowe as a firefighter from New York City who relocates from Manhattan to Austin.

59 Sea creatures with multiple arms : OCTOPI

The term “octopus” comes from the Greek for “eight-footed”. The most common plural used is “octopuses”, although the Greek plural form “octopodes” is also quite correct. The plural “octopi” isn’t really correct as the inference is that “octopus” is like a second-declension Latin noun, which it isn’t. That said, dictionaries are now citing “octopi” as an acceptable plural. Language does evolve, even though it drives me crazy …

61 Chili __ carne : CON

The full name of the dish that is often called simply “chili” is “chili con carne”, Spanish for “peppers with meat”. The dish was created by immigrants from the Spanish Canary Islands in the city of San Antonio, Texas (a city which the islanders founded). The San Antonio Chili Stand was a popular attraction at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair, and that stand introduced the dish to the rest of America and to the world.

Down

2 Caviar : ROE

Caviar is the roe of a large fish that has been salted and seasoned, and especially the roe of a sturgeon. Beluga caviar comes from the beluga sturgeon, which is found primarily in the Caspian Sea. It is the most expensive type of caviar in the world. 8 ounces of US-farmed beluga caviar can be purchased through Amazon.com for just over $850, in case you’re feeling peckish …

5 Skeptical sort : CYNIC

Antisthenes was a Greek philosopher, and a pupil of Socrates. He was one of the founders of the cynicism school of thought, which holds that the purpose of life is to live in virtuous harmony with nature. The name “cynic” comes from the Greek for “dog”, and that name was originally applied to the cynics as an insult.

6 *West Wing workplace : OVAL OFFICE

Although there have been several “oval” offices used by US presidents in the White House, the current Oval Office was designed and constructed at the bequest of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The room has four doors. One door opens onto the Rose Garden; a second door leads to a small study and dining room; a third opens onto the main corridor running through the West Wing; the fourth door opens to the office of the president’s secretary.

The West Wing of the White House Complex is also known as the Executive Office Building, and houses the Oval Office, the Cabinet Room and the Situation Room. The West Wing was constructed at the behest of President Theodore Roosevelt to house his staff, leaving the residence to his family alone. President William Howard Taft had the West Wing expanded, and it was he who created the first Oval Office built. President Herbert Hoover had the West Wing rebuilt after it was significantly damaged in a fire. President Franklin D. Roosevelt had the West Wing redesigned to its current layout, including the Oval Office that is used today.

7 Un et deux : TROIS

In French “deux + un” (two + one) is “trois” (three).

8 Name shouted on “Cheers” : NORM!

The character Norm Peterson was the only customer of the bar to appear in every episode of “Cheers”, something that one couldn’t really call ironic since he loved that barstool! George Wendt played Norm. I suppose the fact that Wendt was expelled from Notre Dame after one semester with a 0.0 GPA, that might have helped him get the role!

11 The Huskies of the NCAA’s Big East : UCONN

The UConn Huskies are the sports teams of the University of Connecticut. I wasn’t able to uncover the derivation of the “Huskies” moniker. Although it is true that “UConn” sounds like “Yukon”, that isn’t the derivation of the “Huskies” nickname. The school didn’t become the University of Connecticut (UConn) until 1939, and the Huskies name has been used since 1933.

14 *Multilevel investment swindle : PYRAMID SCHEME

A pyramid scheme is a type of business that depends on the energetic recruitment of others into the scheme. New members typically make a payment of some sort to join, and are pressured to recruit their own circle of new paying recruits. Shares of the recruitment payment proceed up the chain so that those in the higher echelons can make a lot of money. The scheme breaks down as more and more members find themselves competing for fewer and fewer potential recruits.

18 Fill (with) : IMBUE

To imbue is to pervade, to soak in. “Imbue” has the same etymological roots as our word “imbibe”.

23 Marine Corps battle cry : OORAH!

The US Marine Corps (USMC) is the smallest of the four branches in the US Department of Defense (DOD).

24 *Pet’s post-surgery device, facetiously : CONE OF SHAME

A vet may fit a cone-like device around an animal’s head to prevent it from biting or licking a wound. That device is known as an Elizabethan collar or pet cone, although it has more frivolously been referred to as a cone of shame, pet lampshade or pet radar dish.

33 Surgical tube : 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.

35 Thin coin : DIME

The term “dime”, used for a 10-cent coin, comes from the Old French word “disme” meaning “tenth part”.

36 Catherine of “Best in Show” : O’HARA

Catherine O’Hara is an actress and comedian from Toronto, Ontario. One of O’Hara’s more famous film roles is Kevin’s mother in the Christmas classic “Home Alone”. She also plays a lead character (Moira) in the excellent sitcom “Schitt’s Creek” alongside Eugen Levy.

“Best in Show” is a comedy film released in 2000 that is in the mockumentary style. It follows five entrants to a big dog show. It is a Christopher Guest film, so I gave up after about 10 minutes of viewing …

39 Fenway Park corners : BASES

The Boston Red Sox are one of the most successful Major League Baseball teams and so command a large attendance, but only when on the road. The relatively small capacity of Boston’s Fenway Park, the team’s home since 1912, has dictated that every game the Red Sox have played there has been a sell-out from May of 2003 to April 2013. I had the pleasure of touring Fenway Park some years ago. It’s quite a place …

41 Technology shunner : LUDDITE

In contemporary usage, a “Luddite” is someone who is slow to adopt new technology. This usage has even been extended to “Neo-Luddism”, meaning the active opposition to some technologies. It has been suggested that the term “Luddism” commemorates a youth called Ned Ludd, who smashed two mechanical knitting machines in 1779, in the belief that they represented automation that took away jobs. In the following decades, Luddism became an active movement, with Luddites going on rampages, smashing equipment that was deemed to create unemployment.

45 “Guns, Germs, and Steel” writer Diamond : JARED

“Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies” is a 1997 book by geographer and historian Jared Diamond. Diamond argues that Eurasian societies owe their success to advantages they enjoyed, such as a diversity of plants and animals, and a temperate climate. The book won a Pulitzer in 1998, and was adapted into a documentary aired on PBS in 2005.

46 French school : ECOLE

In French, an “élève” (pupil) attends “école” (school).

47 Breed, as salmon : SPAWN

When young salmon (born in freshwater) are at the smolt stage, they become adapted to saltwater and head for the sea. They return to freshwater to reproduce, often traveling long distances upstream.

48 Big name in grape products : WELCH

Welch’s is a beverage and food company that was founded in 1869 by Thomas Bramwell Welch and Lee Steger Welch in Vineland, New Jersey. The company’s first product was “Dr. Welch’s Unfermented Wine”, which was later rebranded as “Welch’s Grape Juice”.

52 Extra-special attn. : TLC

Tender loving care (TLC)

54 The __ Trapps: “The Sound of Music” family : VON

“The Sound of Music” is a Rodgers and Hammerstein musical that was made into a celebrated movie in 1965 starring Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer. The musical is based on “The Story of the Trapp Family Singers”, a memoir by Maria von Trapp. The von Trapp family ended up in Stowe, Vermont after the war. One family descended from the Vermont von Trapps lives in the same town in which I used to live in California.

55 Wall St. investment opportunity : IPO

An initial public offering (IPO) is the very first offer of stock for sale by a company on the open market. In other words, an IPO marks the first time that a company is traded on a public exchange. Companies have an IPO to raise capital to expand (usually).

Complete List of Clues/Answers

Across

1 1997 crime drama “Donnie __” : BRASCO
7 Demo stuff : TNT
10 Egyptian boy king : TUT
13 Boxing film co-starring Sage Stallone : ROCKY V
14 Experts : PROS
15 German pronoun : ICH
16 Light-sensitive eye layer : RETINA
17 Mixed breed lapdog : YORKIPOO
19 Role in a Thanksgiving pageant : PILGRIM
21 The Rockies, e.g.: Abbr. : MTNS
22 Some soft drinks : COCA-COLAS
25 Hearty steak : T-BONE
26 Parka part : HOOD
27 Sibs, ‘rents, etc. : FAM
28 Dish eaten with a spoon : SOUP
29 Large coffee dispensers : URNS
30 Thur. follower : FRI
31 Knightly missions : QUESTS
34 “Feel Good” creator/star Martin : MAE
35 Went extinct : DIED OUT
37 Beret, e.g. : HAT
38 Irrationally afraid : PHOBIC
40 Doo-wop syllable : SHA
41 Frilly fabric : LACE
42 __ and fortune : FAME
43 Automobile : CAR
44 Knowledgeable about : UP ON
45 Track legend Owens : JESSE
47 Most cunning : SHREWDEST
49 Tylenol target : ACHE
50 Picked up with a toothpick : SPEARED
51 Honey-glazed entree : ROAST HAM
53 “Booksmart” director Wilde : OLIVIA
57 Shade tree : ELM
58 “9-1-1: Lone Star” star Rob : LOWE
59 Sea creatures with multiple arms : OCTOPI
60 Lousy grade : DEE
61 Chili __ carne : CON
62 Political nomination, informally : THE NOD

Down

1 [Shiver] : [BRR!]
2 Caviar : ROE
3 Step into character : ACT
4 Click past promos : SKIP ADS
5 Skeptical sort : CYNIC
6 *West Wing workplace : OVAL OFFICE
7 Un et deux : TROIS
8 Name shouted on “Cheers” : NORM!
9 Sound of disapproval : TSK!
10 Exceptional physical health, and a feature of the answer to each of this puzzle’s starred clues : TIP-TOP SHAPE
11 The Huskies of the NCAA’s Big East : UCONN
12 This and that : THOSE
14 *Multilevel investment swindle : PYRAMID SCHEME
18 Fill (with) : IMBUE
20 Cause of squinting : GLARE
22 __ change : CHUMP
23 Marine Corps battle cry : OORAH!
24 *Pet’s post-surgery device, facetiously : CONE OF SHAME
25 Promote aggressively : TOUT
28 *Two, to four, e.g. : SQUARE ROOT
32 Food truck snacks : TACOS
33 Surgical tube : STENT
35 Thin coin : DIME
36 Catherine of “Best in Show” : O’HARA
39 Fenway Park corners : BASES
41 Technology shunner : LUDDITE
45 “Guns, Germs, and Steel” writer Diamond : JARED
46 French school : ECOLE
47 Breed, as salmon : SPAWN
48 Big name in grape products : WELCH
50 “Get lost!” : SHOO!
52 Extra-special attn. : TLC
54 The __ Trapps: “The Sound of Music” family : VON
55 Wall St. investment opportunity : IPO
56 Help : AID

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