PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 6!π SERVED
Schpuzzle of the Week:
An era ere Happy Chandler was MLB Commissioner
A pitcher’s first name sounds like a sad word.
Change the initial of an outfielder's surname to the initial of that sad word to form what sounds like a second sad word.
Add a letter in the middle of the pitcher’s first name to spell a third sad word.
Name these ballplayers and three sad words.
Hint: The letter you add to the pitcher’s first name is the letter in the alphabet that is to the left of the first letter in either of the first two sad words.
Appetizer Menu
“The Unusual Suspects” Appetizer:
Strangers Bound North by Northwest on a South by Southeast Train
Note: This word puzzle, cloaked in mystery, was created and submitted by a Puzzleria! habitue. Clues and hints to the puzzle solution can be found at every twist and turn in the following story:
It was a stormy and dark night when Edd Coe received a package containing a note and other items. The note read:
“Capture the flag. Pen the poem again. Recite
the characters by the symbols.”
Other items included: a mirror; a compass with the needle fixed to point only to “South”; an Edinburgh, Scotland, street map; and a July 7, 1930, issue of “Enigmatologist’s Fortnightly” newsletter. Clipped to the newsletter was a business card from an establishment on Badestan Str, Cairo, Egypt. On the back of the card was written:
3 4 26 / 16 21 22 26 / 6 12 / 14 13 24 2 18 /
21 11 10 17 8 // 23 10 / 11 24 12 4
There was nothing else in the package.
Edd Coe realized that the numbers were a coded message and that clues necessary to find the key to the code and read the message were in the package. Edd Coe methodically deciphered the message and then set about identifying the package sender and planning a counterstroke.
What is the message?
How was it deciphered?
MENU
Intimidating Hors d’Oeuvre:
An idiom becomes antonymical
Take an idiom consisting of an adjective and noun.
The noun can also be a verb, like the words “rock” and “roll” are.
An anagram of the adjective and the past tense of the verb are synonyms of “intimidated.”
(Note: The past tense of the verb, which ends in “ed”, is also an adjective.)
What is this idiom?
What are the synonyms?
Piano Man Slice:
Carbon-based black viscous coffee?
Name what you might see on a piano bar piano or on a coffee shop countertop, in four words containing 13 letters.
Spoonerize words #1 and #4, then switch words #2 and #3 to name what sounds like a mineral used as a fertilizer and a carbon-based black viscous liquid, separated by a contraction of a conjunction.
What might you see?
What are the mineral and viscous liquid?
Riffing Off Shortz And Gwinn Slices:
Wait! Wait! Great Scott!
Will Shortz’s July 9th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Peter Gwinn, who writes for National Public Radio’s “Wait Wait... Don’t Tell Me!”, reads:
Take the first name of a famous movie director.
Write it in uppercase and lowercase letters.
Rotate the third letter of this name 180° and you’ll get the name of the main character in one of this director’s most popular movies. Who is it?
Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Gwinn Slices read:
ENTREE #1
Take the full name of a puzzle-maker who, it seems, is on the NPR payroll.
Write it in lowercase letters.
A. Rotate the seventh and ninth letters of this name 180° and rearrange to get a caption for image A.
B. Rotate the first and seventh letters of this name 180° and rearrange to get a caption for image B.C. Rotate the ninth letter of this name 180° and rearrange to get a caption for image C.
D. Rotate no letters of this name 180° and rearrange to get a caption for image D.
Who is this puzzle-maker?
What are these captions?
ENTREE #2Take the surname of a famous movie director who dabbled a tad in television. Rotate the third letter of this name 180°. Move the second letter to the end so that it replaces the last letter. You’ll get the first name of a character in the main cast of an American mystery serial drama television series that this director directed.
Who is this director?
What is the name of the character in the television series, and what was the series?
ENTREE #3
You are participating in a chess tournament. Your opponent’s ____ has just captured your queen.You exclaim, “____!”
Rotate two letters in the first blank 180° and you’ll get the word in the second blank.
What two words are these?
ENTREE #4
Take the first three letters of a five-letter word one may be trying to rid him-or-herself of.
Rotate two of these three letters 180° and you’ll get a word for where one might get ushered into to rid oneself of this word.
What are this five-letter word and three-letter word?
ENTREE #5
Capitalize the first and fourth letters of a naturally occurring psychedelic protoalkaloid known for its hallucinogenic effects comparable to those of LSD.
Rotate the first letter 180°. Place a space before the fourth letter and an “r” after that fourth letter.
Reverse the order of the last two letters. Replace a Roman numeral equal to 51 with a Roman numeral equal to 5.
The result is the a horror movie director.
What is this protoalkaloid?
Who is this director?
ENTREE #6
Take the 12-letter name of a famous movie director. Switch the order of two adjacent letters. Move the twelfth letter to the middle and place an “h” next to it, forming letter-segments – of five, four and four letters – separated by spaces. The result, after rearranging the four letters in the middle segment, is three parts of the human body.
Who is this movie director?
What are the three body parts?
ENTREE #7
Take the surname of a famous movie director. Move the last letter to the front and divide the result into three parts that make up the first two-and-a-half words of the first line in the chorus of a Johnny Cash hit song that was co-written by his future wife June Carter and Merle Kilgore.
The first, sixth, fifth and fourth letters of the movie director’s eight-letter first name spell the last word in that “chorus line.”
Rearrange the four remaining letters of the first name to spell a word that belongs in both of the blanks below.
An international airport is named after this film director. Its International Air Transport Association ____ is RMI; its International Civil Aviation Organization ____ is LIPR.
Who is this director?
What is the first line in the chorus of this Johnny Cash hit song?
What word belongs in both blanks?
ENTREE #8
Take the full name of a famous Pulitzer Prize-winning and Obie Award-winning playwright and film director.
Four letters in his name can be rotated 180° to form different letters, but don’t do that.
Instead just rearrange the ten letters to spell:
* the profession of a character named “Hazel” in a 1960’s sitcom;
* the title of the actress who portrayed Violet Crawley, the Dowager Countess of Grantham on a popular PBS serialized drama; and
* the medium that brought these characters into viewers’ living rooms.
Who is this playwright/director?
Who are the profession of the character and title of the actress?
What is the medium?
ENTREE #9
Remove one letter from the first name of a famous movie director. The result is a part of the human body.The surname of the director spells a calculus
that may form within an adjacent body part.
Who is this director?
What are the two body parts?
ENTREE #10
Take a famous movie director whose surname is a plural noun.
Rotate the first letter of the first name 180° to get what sounds like a four-letter singular noun. You can draw water from both nouns.
Who is this director?
What are the singular and plural nouns?
ENTREE #11
Take the surname of a “film noir” documentary filmmaker.
Change the first letter to the letter that precedes it in the alphabet and its fifth letter (a vowel) to the vowel that precedes it in the alphabet (U becomes O, O becomes I, etc.), and remove the last letter. The result is the surname of an actor who moved to America from Germany after Hitler took power.
Spell the first name of the filmmaker backward to spell that same surname.
Who are this filmaker and actor?
Dessert Menu
Candy-Minty-“Brandy” Dessert:
Candy-brand transformation
Spell a nearly-century-old candy brand backward.
Switch the two vowels. The result sounds like an approximately-half-century-old brand of mints.Replace the second vowel with a different vowel to spell a service brand, less than a decade old.
What is this candy brand?
What is the brand of mints?
What is the service brand?
Every Friday at Joseph Young’s Puzzleria! we publish a new menu of fresh word puzzles, number puzzles, logic puzzles, puzzles of all varieties and flavors. We cater to cravers of scrumptious puzzles!
Our master chef, Grecian gourmet puzzle-creator Lego Lambda, blends and bakes up mysterious (and sometimes questionable) toppings and spices (such as alphabet soup, Mobius bacon strips, diced snake eyes, cubed radishes, “hominym” grits, anagraham crackers, rhyme thyme and sage sprinklings.)
Please post your comments below. Feel free also to post clever and subtle hints that do not give the puzzle answers away. Please wait until after 3 p.m. Eastern Time on Wednesdays to post your answers and explain your hints about the puzzles. We serve up at least one fresh puzzle every Friday.
We invite you to make it a habit to “Meet at Joe’s!” If you enjoy our weekly puzzle party, please tell your friends about Joseph Young’s Puzzleria! Thank you.
Lego, I think you meant "what are the synonyms?" at the end of the Hors D'Oeuvre.
ReplyDeleteMerci Mucho, "ViolinTedditor!"
DeleteLegoThankingInFrenchAndSpanish
De rien, bitte sehr
DeleteVTYou'reWelcome-ingInFrenchandGerman
ReplyDeleteEntree #7 riff-off – The name of a place associated with Johnny Cash has three instances of the same letter. Delete one and rearrange to get a two-word phrase for something often connected with residents of the place. What are the place and the phrase?
NoddWhoWentToThePlaceButLeftTheSameDay
Is the first word a two letter word - one that, if you repeat the last letter, you'll have something that would remind you of a puzzle from last week?
DeleteI tried the other similar (but more famous) place first, with no luck.
Sorry, Tortie, I just now noticed your question. Yes, you are correct.
DeleteI'm currently working through the puzzles, and will give a full progress report. For now, however, I think the instructions for C & D in Entree #1 should be reversed (i.e., the picture in C has a caption where no letters are changed, and D has the ninth letter changed).
ReplyDelete"will give a full progress report" later, likely tomorrow, unless I make unusually good progress before that.
DeleteThank you, Tortitude. I made the image kind of confusing, I think, and I apologize.
DeleteThe 4 sub-images are labeled, clockwise from upper-left as A, B, C and D. In such images C and D usually appear, respectively, in the lower-left and lower-right positions. But in my image they appear (probably counterintuitively) in the lower-right and lower-left positions Sorry for the confusion.
LegoASlaveTheTheClock...Wise
Oh, you're right! I don't even think I checked the labels, but thought they would be where I would be expecting them. Will update my answers accordingly.
DeleteStrangely, in my four-part lower-left sub-image of the bowling lane, I did not use the clockwise approach I had used in the four parts of the larger main image! In the bowling alley montage the four images appear left-to-right and left-to-right, as if I typed then on a typewriter!
DeleteLegoWhoWondersWhichPuzzleriansUseThe"TypewriterApproach"WhenEatingCornOnTheCobAsOpposedToWhichPuzzleriansUseTheArguablyMoreEfficient"BoustroprhedonApproach"?
I had trouble with the B and C images in that Entree....A and D were easy, but I still can't figure out which of many possibilities B and C might be.
DeleteVT, think of the last names of the women in the pictures.
DeleteThat's just it, Tortie, I don't KNOW who the women are...and I even put 'C' into Google Image search (it gave me nothing.)
DeleteThe woman in Image B, VT, wrote and recorded a sweet song with a four-word title. Its first and fourth words echo a three-word Beatles song title. The combined letters in the second and third words are an anagram of "yestermyth" (a word with no Google hits..." so I guess I just coined it!).
DeleteSpeaking of Google, if you can see the five white letters at the base of Image C, you could likely use Google to find the broadcast journalist's 3-letter surname. She seems to be having a bawl.
LegoAPaleolithFromTheEraOfYestermyth!
Ok, I have them both now. Thank you, Lego. I had had the correct longer word for "C", but didnt think the remaining three letters made a name, but now I see that they do. And I hadn't tried Googling the title in B's picture until now.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThink of a puzzle that has become very popular in recent years. Change a vowel and mix the letters up without spelling anything meaningful. Fill the Schpuzzle's "pitcher" with this mixture and you'll have a synonym of the ENTREE #5 director's surname.
DeleteExcellent riff, Paul!
DeleteLegoWhoProvidesTheFollowingHintForSolvingPaul'sExcellentEntree#5Riff:"OzVizitorWhozeRezidenceIzAtZeeZoo"
OOH, that is a clever riff, Paul!
DeleteVery nice!
DeleteWORDLE > C(OWARDL)Y > CRAVEN
DeleteHad I solved the Hors D’Oeuvre, I probably would have tried to work that in, as well.
DeleteOnce again, a good Friday to you all here upon this blog!
ReplyDeleteMom and I are fine. We had some bad weather come through West Alabama this afternoon when we would ordinarily be getting ready to go out to eat, so we made sure to check with our local stations for information first(and I was starting to not want to go out in this weather, as a result). Then we found out from our "social director" Mia Kate that we wouldn't be eating out tonight anyway. Bryan and Renae had a "date night" in Birmingham earlier this evening, once the weather had died down. So Mom and I were on our own for supper. I suggested that, since we'd discussed Zaxby's introducing a new funnel cake dessert earlier in the week(and their ad for it aired about twice today), we should get that. Mom actually had some other things fixed for her to eat, but she definitely wanted to try it, so she got two funnel cakes and a "Signature Sandwich" with bacon and cheese, fries, and a Diet Dr. Pepper for me. We both liked the funnel cakes, but Mom said it was a bit chewier than she had expected. I loved it all, though. The cake had sugar all over it, and you could also get it with caramel on it, but somehow Mom didn't get the caramel, due to some miscommunication with the girl at the drive-through. Tasty enough without it, IMHO. Then I did the Prize Crossword, set this week by Arachne. It was actually a tribute, in loving memory, to Margaret Irvine, who set under the pseudonym Nutmeg, and had recently passed away. Great puzzle. Had a few clues which were indirectly laudatory of her, yet still could stand on their own. Was going to do Wordle etc. after that, but they haven't updated it yet, so here I am.
Now for this week's puzzles:
Fairly easy ones this week, though the Appetizer easily wins the most difficult of the bunch, hands down. It just screams "you're gonna have to ask for, nay demand, hints on this one". Other than that, the only ones I couldn't solve were the Hors d'Oeuvre and Entree #4(no offense, vaguest one of the lot). Both of them are sort of vague, to some extent. I also almost had the same problem as Tortie regarding the images for Entree #1. A little strange to see C. underneath B., then D. is under A. I wouldn't have done it that way if I were Lego, but since I was able to solve that one(even though I had to zoom in on C. to get that answer, and then look up who the woman is), I certainly can't complain. Will be looking forward to any hints forthcoming, as usual(and all the help I can get with that Appetizer!).
Good luck in solving to all, please stay safe, and I certainly hope the whole writers'(now actors' as well)strike will be over sooner than later. Cranberry out!
pjbDidn'tKnowFranDrescherHadBecomeThePresidentOfSAG-AFTRA(OrAboutThe"-AFTRA"PartBeingAdded,ForThatMatter!)
There is a two-syllable word in the text of Entree #4 that I thought might have been a "giveaway" word.
DeleteLegoWhoSays"I'llNowReturnToMySeatToCollectMyThoughts!"
Brother Lego, I do believe I have just solved it! Amen, and thanks!
DeletepjbKnowsOneMustTrulyHaveFaithIn"Puzzling"MattersSuchAsThis
Progress report: Schpuzzle and Dessert were easy. Got all of the Entrees, once I learned how to read labels (duh!). I figured out most of the Slice (not really sure about the "contraction of a conjunction" part. I have an answer for the Hors D'Oeuvre, but I'm pretty sure it's not correct. Have made no progress on the Appetizer whatsoever, although I tried a few things and find it to be intriguing.
ReplyDeleteRemember last week when geo had a puzzle that he didn't send to Lego yet, but Lego posted a similar puzzle? Well, it's my week for that experience! In my list of unused puzzles is a puzzle that's very similar to the Dessert! I don't think I ever really wrote it to my satisfaction. I think I mostly wrote it down because I thought it was something NPR might publish, since Will loves the brand name puzzles so much (and I usually don't).
I agree with you, Tortitude, that our "Puzzleria! Habitue's" Appetizer is intriguing... indeed, it oozes intrigue! (Just look at those images, courtesy, of course, of the equally intriguing Puzzleria! Habitue.)
DeleteThere may be some Appetizer hints in the offing.
I composed this week's Dessert last November 25, but just got around to submitting it to Will Shortz during the wee hours of this past Monday-into-Tuesday.
It, and a decent percentage of my puzzles that appear on P! have been rejected by the Puzzlemaster. I don't send him my puzzles that I am pretty sure do not have a ghost-of-a-chance of appearing on NPR!
LegoWhoOozesNotIntrigueButFatigue
Here is a hint to “The Unusual Suspects” Appetizer, courtesy of the "Puzzleria! habitue":
ReplyDelete"The solution can be reached independently from two separate starting points:
1. the note
2. the other items in the package.
The paths do merge, however."
LegoHopingThisDemystifies"TheMystery"Somewhat
Sunday Hints:
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle of the Week:
It sounds as if this outfielder, not Shoeless Joe Jackson, shoulda been out in the Iowa Field of Dreams cornfield.
Bob Dylan wrote a song about the pitcher and yours truly.
"The Unusual Suspects" Appetizer:
(hint courtesy of the "Puzzleria! Habitue")
"eco alley is a two-way street connected to a race track"
Intimidating Hors d’Oeuvre
The anagram of the adjective and the past tense of the verb may be synonyms of “intimidated,” but finished products produced by the noun come in containers that are just "dated."
Piano Man Slice:
What you might see on Billy Joel's piano bar piano is in the lyics to one of his early songs.
Riffing Off Shortz And Gwinn Slices:
ENTREE #1
A. Donald is a lad in a lamp!
B. Some may say, "Let the Mystery Be," but I'm giving this hint anyway!
C. "_ _ _'s tears"
D. "That's not the nine-pin that expanded."
ENTREE #2
In ENTREE #1 D., if the nine-pin tweaks the pin next to it, that pin won't topple... the nine-pine needs to slam into it!
ENTREE #3
Indeed, you exclaim, “____! My Dame is done for!”
ENTREE #4
“This House of Usher is musty... Pee-ew, it stinks!”
ENTREE #5
The victims in this director's films were often "faminine." The perpertators were usually "mesculine."
ENTREE #6
"Face-____" is an expression of embarrassment.
"No-_____er" is an easy choice.
"Figure____" is a carved figure on a ship's bow.
ENTREE #7
"And the flames went higher..."
ENTREE #8:
Minute ____, Notre ____, M__
ENTREE #9
The adjacent body part rhymes with "tall ladder.".
ENTREE #10
He directed "The Forty-Eight Legs" (1970)
ENTREE #11
The “film noir” documentary filmmaker is a Badger who collaborated with Philip Glass.
Candy-Minty-“Brandy” Dessert:
The service brand is the name of a Croc who swallowed a clock and bit the hand that fed him, swallowing it also!
LegoAlsoKnownAsCluelessJoeMeetsShoelessJoe
Finally solved the Hors d'Oeuvre, and I just now got why I couldn't find the film title in #10 listed anywhere(cute, Lego!), but the appetizer still remains a mystery. I guess there's probably a connection to palindromes(?)in there somewhere, but I think it's gonna take a little more breaking down on that one.
ReplyDeletepjbAlsoHasToAdmitHeHasNeverSeenTheActualFilmHintedAtIn#10Either
O.D. -Hakuna Matata
ReplyDelete“The Unusual Suspects” Appetizer Hints:
ReplyDelete"Palindrome" has 10 letters.
"Alphabet" has 8 letters, but has 7 letters.
"Flag" has 4, Count them.
"Puzzleria!" has 8 letters, 4 vowels, and a punctuation mark.
LegoWhoSaysThatPuzzleria!AlsoHasAHostOfBrilliantPuzzleCreatorsWhoShareTheirWares!
A Hopefully Helpful Appetizer Hint:
ReplyDelete"Someone should write an article on that number of letters phenomenon in an appropriately titled publication."
LambdaLegoStormyAndDark
Sadly, to all the Appetizer hints, I can say only "HUH?"
DeleteNo VT, I believe the phrase you're looking for here is "WTF!?"
DeletepjbWillHaveNoChoiceButToAdmitDefeatOnThisOneTomorrow...ButProudly!
I don't actually use that kind of language, even in initial, pjb.....but perhaps a loudly yelled "I DON"T GET IT" might suffice?
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteI'm sure cranberry simply meant to say that this puzzle is a Wasteful Time-Consuming Folly.
DeleteHoly puzzling Batman. What a tough fibonacci.
DeleteLooks like we're all in the same boat in this one (the Titanic?).
DeleteI think the message itself may refer to synonyms of the streets Lego mentioned in his hints. I tried solving the cryptogram itself without any other hints from the puzzle, but with no luck. The first word might be "the," but I'm not sure. Maybe we also need to find a synonym for Enigmatologist's Fortnightly (Puzzler's Biweekly?). I guess it's also important how many letters are in certain words (also vowels? unique letters? punctuation marks?). Lego's hint above just confuses things further for me.
Perhaps some additional last minute hints will be forthcoming from Lego, although I suspect the only hint that would help me at this stage is an outright answer.
TortieWhoShouldBeHappyIGuessToSolveTheRestOfThisWeek'sStumpers
Tortie, You are 12% of the way to solving "the message."
DeleteLegoWhoSuggestsSeekingSoAsToFindThe"HiddenButInPlainSightTebahpla"
When cranberry posted above that he believed "the phrase ViolinTeddy was looking for here" was not "HUH?" but rather 'WTF," I am sure the acronym to which he was alluding was "WayTooFormidable!
DeleteLegoWhoSuggestsPuttingTogetherAllTheHintsPostedThusFarBecauseYouStillHaveFiveHoursAndThirtyNineMinutesToSolveThisExcellentAlbeitUnconventionalAppetizer
...Or, as cranberry put it, this Formidable Appetizer!
DeleteLegoWhoNotesThatTheWord"Formidable"IsAnAnagramOfTheWords"Doable"And"Firm"WhichIsFittingBecauseThisParticularAppetizerIsBoth"Doable"And"Firm"InTheSenseThatItIsBoth"NotWeakOrUncertain"AsWellAs"Well-Founded"
An 11th-Hour Appetizer Hint:
ReplyDelete"Within the text of the puzzle, in plain sight, sits a 26-letter alphabet... one that consists of 14 different letters."
Ogel
Finally solved!
DeleteI actually thought that the first three words, plus the fifth, might be the first four words.
Congrats, Tortitude! Good sticktuitiveness!
DeleteLegoImpressed
I've deciphered the message and think I know why the mirror was included but I am not sure about the other items.
ReplyDeleteAppetizer Explanation
ReplyDelete(a simple word puzzle slightly shrouded)
Note: If this explanation is too long for a single post, I will post it in segments.
A. Internal clues point to "reverse".
"stormy and dark night" is the reverse of the usual expression
Mirror shows a "mirror (reverse) image" or is used to look backward
South on a compass suggests "doing a one-eighty" (degrees)
One drives on the "opposite side" on Edinburgh streets
Writing on the Cairo business card is presumably in Arabic, which is
read right to left
The numbers are on the back, or reverse, side of the business card
B. The note states the solution.
"Capture the flag" = Take the title of the newsletter
(Flag is a term for a publication's name.)
"Pen the poem again" = Re-verse, or Reverse
"Recite the characters by the symbols" = Read the letters by the
numbers [Merriam-Webster supports these synonyms.]
Summary: Take "Enigmatologist's Fortnightly", reverse it, and read the letters by the number (positions)
[Enigmatologist's Fortnightly is essentially a 26 letter alphabet, and the solution is to read each letter by its numbered position from right to left.]
The message thus reads: "The game is still afoot. Go fish."
Posted Hints:
7/16/23 at 5:27 pm: eco alley, two-way street, & racetrack allude to the backward reading elements of two recent NPR Challenges
7/17/23 at 3:46 pm: mentions palindrome, a nod to cranberry's post, which suggests reverse; suggests an alphabet with not all different letters; draws attention to the number of letters in the flag (which is the alphabet); and suggests counting letters in general
7/18/23 at 12:35 pm: focus is on the title
7/19/23 at 6:52 am: Ogel has it speaking for flesti
Trivia: Arthur Conan Doyle, whose signature character said, ". . . The game is afoot. . .", was born in Edinburgh and died elsewhere on July 7, 1930, providing something of an additional internal clue.
There are elements in the story not directly related to this solution but which are factors should you wish to join in following up the challenge to "Go fish".
Anagrammatically Yours,
Edd Coe
SCHPUZZLE – CY YOUNG; TY COBB; SIGH, SOB, CRY
ReplyDeleteAPPETIZER – “THE GAME IS STILL AFOOT. GO FISH.” The numbers are a code based on the reverse order of the letters in “Enigmatologist’s Fortnightly.” Presumably that’s what the mirror was for. I was not able to figure out the significance of the other items, though it appears there may be some connection with Sherlock Holmes and/or Umberto Eco.
HORS D’OEUVRE – SACRED COW; SCARED; COWED
SLICE – TIPS IN SOME JAR; GYPSUM ‘N’ TAR
ENTREE #1 – PETER GWINN; TRUMP GENIE; DEMENT GRIN; TUR WEEPING; TEN PIN GREW
ENTREE #2 – DAVID LYNCH; LUCY MORAN; TWIN PEAKS
ENTREE #3 – PAWN; DAMN
ENTREE #4 – DEMON; PEW
ENTREE #5 – MESCALINE; WES CRAVEN
ENTREE #6 – BRIAN DE PALMA; BRAIN, HEAD, PALM
ENTREE #7 – FEDERICO FELLINI; “AH FELL INTO A BURNIN’ RING OF FAR”; CODE
ENTREE #8 – DAVID MAMET; MAID; DAME; TV
ENTREE #9 – OLIVER STONE; LIVER; GALL BLADDER
ENTREE #10 – MEL BROOKS; WELL; BROOKS
ENTREE #11 – ERROL MORRIS; PETER LORRE
DESSERT – KIT KAT; TICTAC; TIKTOK
Schpuzzle: CY YOUNG, TY COBB; SIGH, SOB, CRY
ReplyDeleteApp: (Post WTF (WaymoreThanFive) hints): THE GAME IS STILL AFOOT // GO FISH; take Enigmatologist’s Fortnightly, remove punctuation, and put the letters in reverse order. Y=1, L=2, T=3, etc. Thank goodness it was not a ransom note, as the kidnapped person would have been dead by now if it was up to me solving this in time
Hors D’Oeuvre: (post hint) SACRED COW; SCARED, COWED (pre hint: UNDATED CHECK; DAUNTED, CHECKED)
Slice: TIPS IN SOME JAR; GYPSUM, TAR
Entrees:
1. PETER GWINN; TRUMP GENIE; DEMENT GRIN; WEEPING TUR; TEN PIN GREW
2. (David) LYNCH; LUCY (Moran), TWIN PEAKS
3. PAWN, DAMN
4. DEMON, PEW
5. MESCALINE; WES CRAVEN
6. BRIAN DE PALMA; BRAIN, HEAD, PALM
7. FEDERICO FELLINI; I FELL INTO A BURNING RING OF FIRE; CODE
8. DAVID MAMET; MAID; DAME; TV
9. OLIVER STONE; LIVER, KIDNEY
10. MEL BROOKS; WELL, BROOKS
11. ERROL MORRIS, (Peter) LORRE
Dessert: KIT KAT; (-> TAK TIK) TIC TAC; TIKTOK
My wording: Think of a common two-word branded edible item. Replace the last letter of each word with a letter that makes the same sound as the replaced letter. Now reverse the first word, and reverse the second word. You’ll have another two-word branded edible item. What are these two items? - When first writing this, I thought that KIT KAT and TIC TAC were both candy, but it seems like mints are not exactly candy. Once I realized that, the wording seemed more convoluted. I also wanted to get TIK TOK in there as a hint, but never bothered for some reason.
Nodd riff: SAN QUENTIN (-N); AN INQUEST (tried FOLSOM PRISON (-O) with no luck)
Paul riff: WORDLE -> change E to A -> COWARDLY (this puzzle would also work with the creator of Wordle - (Jeff) Wardle - change E to O in that case)
Schpuzzle: CY (SIGH) YOUNG + R → CRY; TY COBB + S → SOBB (SOB)
ReplyDeleteAppetizers
Hors d'oeuvre:
Slice: TIPS IN A JAR → GYPSUM AN' TAR
Entrées
#1: peter gwinn → peter gmiun = Trump genie; → deter gminn = DeMent grin; → peter gwiun = weeping Tur; peter gwinn → ten pin grew
#2: (Twin Peaks)
#3: PAWN, DAMN
#4:
#5: MesCaline → Wes Craven
#6: BRIAN DE PALMA = H → BRAIN, HEAD, PALM
#7: FEDERICO FELLINI, FIRE, EDCO → CODE
#8: MAID, DAME, TV → DAVID MAMET
#9: OLIVER STONE – O → LIVER, STONE
#10: MEL BROOKS → WELL, BROOKS
#11: ERROL MORRIS → (Peter) LORRE [post-Mon-hint]
Dessert: KIT KAT → TIK TAK sounds like TIC TAC; chg A to O → TIK TOK
#7 riffoff: FOLSOM PRISON – M → PORNO FILMS
Schpuzzle
ReplyDeleteCY(Young), which sounds like SIGH; (Ty)COBB-C+S=SOBB, which sounds like SOB; put R inside CY to get CRY.
The Appetizer had way too much to have to do, and even reading Edd Coe's explanation after the fact proves to be exhausting. I actually just thought I was doing good by rearranging EDD COE to spell DECODE, and that was enough for me.
Menu
Intimidating Hors d'Oeuvre
SACRED COW, SCARED, COWED
Piano Man Slice
TIPS IN SOME JAR, GYPSUM 'N' TAR
Entrees
1. PETER GWYNN
(A.)TRUMP GENIE
(B.)DEMENT GRIN(Iris Dement)
(C.)WEEPING TUR(Katy Tur)
(D.)TENPIN GREW
2. (David)LYNCH, LUCY(Moran), TWIN PEAKS
3. PAWN, DAMN
4. DEMON, PEW
5. MESCALINE, WES CRAVEN
6. BRIAN DE PALMA, BRAIN, HEAD, PALM
7. FEDERICO FELLINI, "I FELL IN TO A BURNING RING OF FIRE", CODE
8. DAVID MAMET, MAID, DAME(Maggie Smith), TV
9. OLIVER STONE, LIVER, GALL BLADDER(gallstone)
10. MEL BROOKS, WELL, BROOKS
11. ERROL MORRIS, (Peter)LORRE
Dessert
Candy-Minty-"Brandy" Dessert
KIT KAT, TIC TAC, TIK TOK
It was the S, geofan, not the M, that you meant to remove in the #7 Riff-Off answer. Not sure you were supposed to remove another letter besides the O, though. Are there that many porn stars in Folsom Prison? Kinda glad I didn't really attempt that one myself!-pjb
SCHPUZZLE: CY (Sigh) YOUNG; TY COBB => SOB; CY + R => CRY
ReplyDeleteAPPETIZER: See HOPELESS letter-counting attempts below 'DESSERT. ' [Arthur Conan Doyle died on July 7, 1930.]
HORS D’O: SACRED COW => SCARED, COWED
SLICE: TIPS IN SOME JAR => GYPSUM ’N TAR
ENTREES:
1. PETER GWINN => peter gwinn => peter gmiun => TRUMP GENIE; DETERGMINN => DEMENT GRIN; PETERGWIUN => WEEPING TUR; TEN PIN GREW
2. David LYnCH => LUCY, TWIN PEAKS
3. PAWN => DAMN!
4. DEMON => dem => PEW [I’d been trying to somehow turn HABIT into REHAB.]
5. MESCALINE => WES CRALINE => WES CRALIEN => WES CRAVEN
6. BRIAN DE PALMA => BRAIN, HEAD, PALM
7. FELLINI => "I FELL IN”; “FIRE" => FEDERICO; EDCO => CODE;
8. DAVID MAMET => MAID, DAME, TV
9. OLIVER STONE => LIVER, KIDNEY (Stone)
10. MEL BROOKS => WELL, BROOKS [Hint: The Twelve Chairs]
11. ERROL MORRIS => Peter LORRE
DESSERT: KIT-KAT => TIC-TAC; TIC-TOC [or TIK-TOK?]
3 = PEN, MAP
4 = FLAG, POEM, JULY
26 = Enigmatologists Fortnightly
16 = ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE
21 = BADESTRAN STR, CAIRO, EGYPT
22 =
26 = EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND STREET MAP
6 = RECITE, MIRROR, NEEDLE, EDD COE
12 = BY THE SYMBOLS, FIXED TO POINT
14 = CAPTURE THE FLAG, SHERLOCK HOLMES
13 = COMPASS NEEDLE, ESTABLISHMENT
24 =
2 = BY, TO, OF, ON
18 = DARK AND STORMY NIGHT
21 =
11 = BAKER STREET
10 = CHARACTERS, POINT SOUTH, NEWSLETTER
17 = EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND
8 = BUSINESS, DR. WATSON
23 =
10 =
11 =
24 =
12 =
4 =
Of course, I never saw all the latest discussion/hints posted with 5+ hours left on the Appetizer.
DeleteThis week's official answers for the record, part 1:
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle of the Week:
An era ere Happy Chandler was MLB Commissioner
A pitcher’s first name sounds like a sad word.
Change the initial of an outfielder's surname to the initial of that sad word to form what sounds like a second sad word.
Add a letter in the middle of the pitcher’s first name to spell a third sad word.
Name these ballplayers and three sad words.
Hint: The letter you add to the pitcher’s first name is the letter in the alphabet that is to the left of the first letter in either of the first two sad words.
Cy Young, Ty Cobb; Sigh, Sob, Cry (Cy + r = Cry)
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, part 2:
ReplyDeleteNote: For a more throrough explanation, please see the July 19, 2023 at 12:01 PM post by Cloak'n'Dagger
“The Unusual Suspects” Appetizer”
Strangers Bound North by Northwest on a South by Southeast Train
Note: This word puzzle, cloaked in mystery, was created and submitted by a Puzzleria! habitue. Clues and hints to the puzzle solution can be found at every twist and turn in the following story:
It was a stormy and dark night when Edd Coe received a package containing a note and other items. The note read, “Capture the flag. Pen the poem again. Recite the characters by the symbols.” Other items included: a mirror; a compass with the needle fixed to point only to “South”; an Edinburgh, Scotland, street map; and a July 7, 1930, issue of “Enigmatologist’s Fortnightly” newsletter. Clipped to the newsletter was a business card from an establishment on Badestan Str, Cairo, Egypt. On the back of the card was written: 3 4 26 / 16 21 22 26 / 6 12 / 14 13 24 2 2 / 21 11 10 17 8 // 23 10 / 11 24 12 4
There was nothing else in the package.
Edd Coe realized that the numbers were a coded message and that clues necessary to find the key to the code and read the message were in the package. Edd Coe methodically deciphered the message and then set about identifying the package sender and planning a counterstroke.
What is the message?
How was it deciphered?
Answer:
"The game is still afoot. Go fish."
It was deciphered using the Key written on the back of the card, using a 26-letter "alphabet" consisting of the 26 letters in “Enigmatologist’s Fortnightly” spelled backward:
Y L T H G I N T R O F S T S I G O L O T A M G I N E
So, the numerical message written on the back of the card can be deciphered using the following key:
KEY:
Y L T H G I N T R O F S T S I G O L O T A M G I N E
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
Thus:
3 4 26 / 16 21 22 26 / 6 12 / 14 13 24 2 18 / 21 11 10 17 8 // 23 10 / 11 24 12 4
T H E G A M E I S S T I L L A F O O T // G O F I S H
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, part 3:
ReplyDeleteIntimidating Hors d’Oeuvre
An idiom becomes antonymical
Take an idiom consisting of an adjective and noun.
The noun can also be a verb, like the words “rock” and “roll” are.
An anagram of the adjective and the past tense of the verb are synonyms of “intimidated.”
(Note: The past tense of the verb, which ends in “ed”, is also an adjective.)
What is this idiom?
What are the antonyms?
Answer:
Sacred cow; scared, cowed
Piano Man Slice:
Carbon-based black viscous coffee?
Name what you might see on a piano bar piano or on a coffee shop countertop, in four words containing 13 letters.
Spoonerize words #1 and #4, then switch words #2 and #3 to name what sounds like a mineral used as a fertilizer and a carbon-based black viscous liquid, separated by a contraction of a conjunction.
What might you see?
What are the mineral and viscous liquid?
Answer:
Tips in some jar; Gypsum 'n' Tar,
(Tips in some jar=>Jips some in Tar=>(which sounds like) Gypsum 'n' Tar
TIPS IN SOME JAR=JIPS IN SOME TAR=JIPS SOME IN TAR=GYPSUM 'N' TAR
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, part 4:
ReplyDeleteRiffing Off Shortz And Gwinn Slices:
Wait! Wait! Great Scott!
ENTREE #1
Take the full name of a puzzle-maker who, it seems, is on the NPR payroll.
Write it in lowercase letters.
A. Rotate the seventh and ninth letters of this name 180° and rearrange to get a caption for image A.
B. Rotate the first and seventh letters of this name 180° and rearrange to get a caption for image B.
C. Rotate the ninth letter of this name 180° and rearrange to get a caption for image C.
D. Rotate no letters of this name 180° and rearrange to get a caption for image D.
Who is this puzzle-maker?
What are these Captions?
Answer:
Peter Gwinn; A. (Donald) Trump Genie; B. (Iris) DeMent grin; C. (Katie) Tur weeping; D. Ten Pin grew
ENTREE #2
Take the surname of a famous movie director who dabbled a tad in television. Rotate the third letter of this name 180°. Move the second letter to the end so that it replaces the last letter. You’ll get the first name of a character in the main cast of an American mystery serial drama television series that this director directed.
Who is this director?
What is the name of the character in the television series, and what was the series?
David Lynch; Lucy Moran, the the sheriff station secretary, portrayed by Kimmy Robertson in "Twin Peaks"
Lynch=>Lyuch=>Lucy
ENTREE #3
You are participating in a chess tournament. Your opponent’s ____ has just captured your queen.
You exclaim, “____!”
Rotate two letters in the first blank 180° and you’ll get the word in the second blank.
What two words are these?
Answer:
pawn; damn!
ENTREE #4
Take the first three letters of a five-letter word one may be trying to rid him-or-herself of.
Rotate two of these three letters 180° and you’ll get a word for where one might get ushered into to rid oneself of this word.
What are this five-letter word and three-letter word?
Answer:
demon; (church) pew
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, part 5:
ReplyDeleteRiffing Off Shortz And Gwinn Slices, continued:
ENTREE #5
Capitalize the first and fourth letters of a naturally occurring psychedelic protoalkaloid known for its hallucinogenic effects comparable to those of LSD.
Rotate the first letter 180°. Place a space before, and an “r” after, the fourth letter. Reverse the order of the last two letters. Replace a Roman numeral equal to 51 with a Roman numeral equal to 5.
The result is the a horror movie director.
What is this protoalkaloid?
Who is this director?
Answer:
Mescaline; Wes Craven
mescaline=>MesCaline=>WesCaline=>Wes Craline=>Wes Cralien=>Wes Craven
ENTREE #6
Take the 12-letter name of a famous movie director. Switch the order of two adjacent letters. Move the twelfth letter to the middle and place an “h” next to it, forming letter-segments – of five, four and four letters – separated by spaces. The result, after rearranging the four letters in the middle segment, is three parts of the human body.
Who is this movie director?
What are the three body parts?
Answer:
Brian De Palma, Brain, head, palm
Brian De Palma=>Brain De Palma=>Brain Dahe Palm=>Brain Head Palm=>
ENTREE #7
Take the surname of a famous movie director. Move the last letter to the front and divide the result into three parts that make up the first two-and-a-half words of the first line in the chorus of a Johnny Cash hit song that was co-written by his future wife June Carter and Merle Kilgore. The first, sixth, fifth and fourth letters of the movie director’s eight-letter first name spell the last word in that “chorus line.”
Rearrange the four remaining letters of the first name to spell a word that belongs in both of the blanks below.
An international airport is named after this film director. Its International Air Transport Association ____ is RMI; its International Civil Aviation Organization ____ is LIPR.
Who is this director?
What is the first line in the chorus of this Johnny Cash hit song?
What word belongs in both blanks?
Answer:
Federico Fellini: "I fell in(to a burnin’ ring of) fire"; Code
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, part 6:
ReplyDeleteRiffing Off Shortz And Gwinn Slices, continued:
ENTREE #8
Take the full name of a famous Pulitzer Prize-winning and Obie Award-winning playwright and film director. Four letters in his name can be rotated 180° to form different letters, but don’t do that. Instead, just rearrange the ten letters to spell the profession of a character named “Hazel” in a 1960’s sitcom, the title of the actress who portrayed Violet Crawley, the Dowager Countess of Grantham on a popular PBS serialized drama, and the medium that brought these characters into viewers’ living rooms.
Who is this playwright/director?
Who are the profession of the character and title of the actress?
What is the medium?
Answer:
David Mamet; Maid (Hazel's profession), actressnDame Maggie Smith, who portrayed Violet Crawley, the Dowager Countess of Grantham on PBS's "Downton Abbey"; TV
ENTREE #9
Remove one letter from the first name of a famous movie director. The result is a part of the human body.
The surname of the director spells a calculus that may form within an adjacent body part.
Who is this director?
What are the two body parts?
Answer:
Oliver Stone; Liver, (gall)stone
ENTREE #10
Take a famous movie director whose surname is a plural noun. Rotate the first letter of the first name 180° to get what sounds like a four-letter singular noun. You can draw water from both nouns.
Who is this director?
What are the singular and plural nouns?
Answer:
Mel Brooks; Well, Brooks
ENTREE #11
Take the surname of a “film noir” documentary filmmaker.
Change the first letter to the letter that precedes it in the alphabet and its fifth letter (a vowel) to the vowel that precedes it in the alphabet (U becomes O, O becomes I, etc.), and remove the last letter. The result is the surname of an actor who moved to America from Germany after Hitler took power.
Spell the first name of the filmmaker backward to spell that same surname.
Who are this filmaker and actor?
Answer:
Errol Morris; Peter Lorre
Dessert Menu
Candy-Minty-“Brandy” Dessert:
Candy-brand transformation
Spell a nearly-century-old candy brand backward.
Switch the two vowels. The result sounds like an approximately-half-century-old brand of mints.
Replace the second vowel with a different vowel to spell a service brand, less than a decade old.
What is this candy brand?
What is the brand of mints?
What is the service brand?
Answer:
KitKat; TicTac (sounds like TikTak);TikTok
KitKat=>TakTik=>TikTak (sounds like "TicTac')=>TikTok
Lego!