Thursday, September 26, 2024

Scavenging, “Shrimporting,” Snack-noshing, Seafaring, Serpentine! Fops & foam pianos; From terrycloth to cloying! “Singularization” spawns synonyms; An Invitation to a “double-beheading” Less letters = more faces and space;

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 5πe2 SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

Fops and foam pianos

Half of the thirty letters in a six-word sentence are the same letter. 

The other half consists of six E’s and the nine
letters in either “foam piano” or in the statement, “Am I a fop? No!”  

What is this six-word sentence?

Hint: The first two words in the six-word sentence contain 60% of its thirty letters.  

Appetizer Menu

“Enlightning Appetizers:

Scavenging, “Shrimporting,” Snack-noshing, Seafaring, Serpentine!

Pub Libations and Public Library?

1.📖📚🕮 The first entry on a scavenger hunt list has five letters. Start looking for it at a pub. 

The second entry begins with the first entry’s last three letters and adds on the entire first entry. No rearranging needed. 

Visit a library to find what endures of the second entry. 

Who or what are these entries?

“Shrimporting” files on the Barbie?

2. 🦐 Discover a famous brand name that everybody knows, as follows: 

a.~ Name a friend of Barbie’s. 

b.~ Add the name of a popular computer application. 

c.~ Delete the letter C. 

d.~ Rearrange to get the brand.

Nineteenth-Century Noshing

3.🥘🍲 Name a common food item in two words (five and four letters). 

The first three letters of each word are spelled
the same but pronounced differently. 

This food item was introduced in the 1800s. 

What food item is this?

A canoe crosses creeks, not an ocean!

4. 🛶The title of a 1977 Top-10 hit song includes a five-letter body of water – like ocean, river, creek, swamp, etc. 

Rearrange the body of water to find something that’s found in other bodies of water. 

What’s the hit song? 

What’s the thing found in other bodies of water?

Serpent...?

5.🐍 Think of a label (in seven letters) you might give a pest that lives in your garden. 

Remove the last letter and rearrange the rest to name the gardens in a popular game. 

What’s the label, the name of the gardens, and the game?

MENU

Synonyms Galore Hors d’Oeuvre:

An Invitation to a “double-beheading”

Describe either lightning or winds or drought using a two-word phrase. 

If you remove the initial letter from each of the two words of this description, the result is a pair of synonyms. 

What are these synonyms? 

What is the two-word phrase?

More “Galorious” Synonyms Slice:

“Singularization” spawns synonyms

Take the singular forms of three plural words that appear in an idiom. 

Rearrange their combined letters to spell a pair of synonyms.

What are these synonyms and the idiom?

Riffing Off Shortz Entrees:

From terrycloth to cloying!

Will Shortz’s (September 22nd NPR Weekend Edition Sunday Puzzle Challenge reads:

Take the phrase NEW TOWELS. Rearrange its nine letters to get the brand name of a product that you might buy at a supermarket.

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz Entrees read:

ENTREE #1

Take a three-word phrase – an adjective, conjunction and adjective – that means “brief yet still satisfying or to-the-point” (like the clues a talented crossword puzzle editor will always produce). Write it in uppercase letters. 

Abbreviate the conjunction by deleting twoletters. Rotate the remaining letter 90-degrees, either clockwise or counterclockwise. Replace the first letter of the third word with a duplicate of  its last letter.

The first six letters of the result spell the surname of the above-mentioned crossword puzzle editor. 

The remaining letters spell a post made on a certain online message service run by a “Musk(m)elon.”

What is the phrase? Who is the puzzle editor? What if the post?

What is the online message service? Who is the “Musk(m)elon?”

(Note: Entree #2 is the brainchild of Plantsmith, author of  “Garden of Puzzley Delights.”)

ENTREE #2

A satellite music radio channel, in hopes of appealing to a younger demographic, adopted the slogan: “No Oldy Jams!” 

In accordance with that slogan, the channel’s “music rotation” includes no music “more moldy” than one-year-old... nothing but the newest tunes in the mix!

Did somebody say “mix”? Okay. Mix the letters in “No Oldy Jams!” to get the plural form of a brand name. What is it?

(Note: Entrees #3-through-#8 are the brainchildren of Nodd, author of “Nodd ready for prime time.”)

ENTREE #3

Take a word from the title of a popular song of 1969. 

Add two letters and rearrange to get a brand-name product you might buy at the supermarket. 

The singer’s last name is part of another brand-name product you might buy at the supermarket. 

What are these two brand-name products?

ENTREE #4

Take the name of a brand-name supermarket product. 

Add a C and rearrange to spell two foods you might prepare from ingredients you bought at the supermarket. 

One of the foods is an entree, the other a dessert.

ENTREE #5

 Add two letters to the name of a cultural movement of the 1950s and 60s. 

The result is a brand name food product you might buy at the supermarket. 

What is it? 

ENTREE #6

Take the brand name of a beverage you might buy at the supermarket. 

Rotate the middle letter, in lower case, 180 degrees. Rearrange the result to get another brand-name product you might buy at the supermarket. 

These two products may be used together. What are they?

ENTREE #7

Take the name of a brand-name product you might buy at the supermarket. 

Remove the first two letters and rearrange to get a generic food item you might buy at the supermarket. 

What are the brand-name product and the generic item?

ENTREE #8

Take a word for attractions often found in amusement parks. Rearrange the letters to get the generic name of a brand-name product you might buy at the supermarket. What are the attractions and what is the generic product name?

ENTREE #9

Name a more-than-century-old candy brand with a “morsel of punctuation” in its name. Spell out that morsel of punctuation. 

Combine these spelled-out letters with the other letters in the brand name. Rearrange the result to spell the following four words:

~ the surname of a preacher whose first name is an anagram of a first name of a past country singer whose surname is a synonym of “wizened” and “gaunt,”

~ the surname of a pioneering geneticist
whose first name is almost, but not quite, an anagram of “George,” and

~ two-word term for Moxie, Bazooka, Bubble-Up or Brownie.

What is this candy brand?

Who is the country singer?

What are the surname of the preacher, surname of the geneticist and two-word term? 

ENTREE #10

Consider the two-paned image that accompanies this puzzle text. 

The text of a caption of the top pane image is:

“Boy plays with his ___ ____”

The text of a caption of the bottom pane image is:

 “___ poodle sits on its ___”

Rearrange the seven letters in the top-image caption to spell a brand-name food item.

Rearrange the six letters in the bottom-image caption to spell the kind of food the item is.

What are the four missing words?

What are the brand name and the kind of food?

Dessert Menu

A More-Or-Less More-Is-Less Dessert:

Less letters = more faces and space

Remove one s from the interior of the name of the nation.

Remove also the gap resulting from that removal.

The final result is the name of a new nation – one that has fewer letters, of course, but that is more populous and larger in area.

What are these two nations?

Every Thursday 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.

67 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. In Entree 9, I believe it should say the geneticist's first name, not surname, is almost an anagram of George.

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    2. Boy, I'm glad to see you say that, Nodd, because I could get absolutely NOwhere with that geneticist's surname being 'akin' to George.

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    3. My question for Lego, as it so often is, re this Entree 9 (which I finally finished solving) is HOW ON EARTH DO YOU COME UP WITH SOMETHING LIKE THIS? I mean, how does one "just happen to notice" that this works out?

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    4. Should Entree 2 be "No Oldy Jam" (without the "S")?

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    5. What was the answer to the Slice last week? I think we figured out everything else.

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    6. Tortie, I agree with you re Entree2. I had just decided to believe that the candy bar actually has an "S" at the end!

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    7. I tweaked ROSS #2 so it asks for "the plural form of the brand name."

      Last week's Slice read:
      Gas & Petrol Slice:
      Unhealthy habits & hamburgers?

      Write down, side-by-side, an unhealthy habit and a not-so-healthy meal, each in two words.
      The first four letters of the two middle words are identical.
      The first and fourth words are associated with a one-word anagram of a two-word phrase describing what gasoline and petroleum do.
      What are this habit and meal?
      What is the one-word anagram of a two-word phrase describing what gasoline and petroleum do?

      The answer is "CHAIN SMOKING" and "SMOKED LINKS."
      The two-word phrase for what gasoline and petroleum do is CONTAIN OCTANE," which is an anagram of CONCATENATION.
      LegoLinking

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    8. Ah, well, no wonder nobody got that solution. That has to be one of the most complicated ones ever!

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    9. Ahem, VT, but it's not true that nobody got that solution. See the archive. 🙂

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    10. yes about E # 2." Bet you can't eat one."

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    11. I think Nodd cracked that case.

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    12. Nodd got the CHAIN/LINKS part correct; however, nobody figured out the CONTAIN OCTANE/CONCATENATION part which was confusing.

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    13. QUESTION FOR NODD: re your hint for your Entree 6: I finally came up with a beverage brand name that obeys your hint. However, it has eight letters, so I don't know which middle letter is supposed to be rotated somehow. Of course, my brand name could be wrong, though it fits your hint perfectly.

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    14. VT, the Entree 6 beverage brand has seven letters. If you got the product in Entree 8, you should be able to figure out the second brand name in Entree 6.

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    15. Sorry, VT; I just now saw your question. Here are some more hints for #6:
      1. The last five letters of the seven-letter beverage name are "fruity."
      2. The middle letter that you rotate sounds like a three-letter vegetable.
      3. The beverage is something that sounds like a letter of the alphabet, or something used in golf.

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    16. Well, Nodd and Tortie, I guess I can safely say that what beverage I'd come up with was Dr. Pepper (i..e the last six letters being a member of produce.) So I will have to start again. But right now, I am reveling in having FINALLY solved the Schpuzzle, so I'm not eager to face any more challenges at the moment.

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    17. Okay, the seven letter brand name finally came to me, but no anagrammer helped find the second brand name...it finally hit me, although it was NOT anything I had expected (especially to use WITH the first brand name...but then I don't drink tea of any kind.)

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    18. ANd I still haven't solved your 3, 4, 5, 7 or 8, Nodd. [Altho I had an idea for the #8 amusement park ride, it just hasn't gone anywhere for me.)

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    19. Using the above-mentioned relationship between Entree 6 and 8, and working backwards, I solved Entree 8. But never would have without that hint....and I had had the wrong 'ride' (i.e. coasters.)

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  2. Replies
    1. SUNDAY HINTS FOR ENTREES 3-8:
      3. The second brand-name product could be a downer.
      4. The second half of the product name is an anagram of a synonym for steal.
      5. Not the breakfast of champions.
      6. Remove the first two letters of the beverage to get a produce item.
      7. The brand-name product’s a cereal.
      8. See Entree #6.

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    2. Late Sunday Evening Hints:
      I shall allow Chuck and Plantsmith the first crack at hint-giving for their excellent puzzles. Nodd's hints appear immediately above. I will check back in tomorrow if anyone needs further "hinting help."


      Schpuzzle of the Week:
      Half of the thirty letters in a six-word sentence are the same letter...
      An adjective describing that letter begins with the same three letters with which a synonym for a sister or brother begins.

      Synonyms Galore Hors d’Oeuvre:
      The two-word description of "lightning, winds or drought" contains four and six letters. Removing the initial letter from the four-letter word results in a rhyming word. Removing the initial letter from the six-letter word does not.

      More “Galorious” Synonyms Slice:
      The three plural words in the idiom begin with the three letters in the surname of a legendary hoops mentor named Hank.

      Riffing Off Shortz Entrees:
      ENTREE #1
      The three-word phrase: "lacking in height" plus "not sour."
      ENTREE #9
      That “morsel of punctuation” in the candy brand's name literally means "and per se and."
      ~ the preacher is a fictional fellow concocted by a guy from Sauk Centre, Minnesota.
      ~ Moxie, Bazooka, Bubble-Up & Brownie are soft drinks.
      ENTREE #10
      The first missing word in text of a caption of the top pane image rhymes with "Boy." So does the first missing word in the second caption. The second missing word in the second caption rhymes with "Bug."

      A More-Or-Less More-Is-Less Dessert:
      "Remove "one s" from the interior of the name of the nation...

      LegoAndPerSeAndLambda

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    3. Speaking of needing further hinting help, I haven't been able to get the Schpuzzle, Hors d’Oeuvre, or Slice from yesterday's hints. Anything further would be welcome.

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    4. Late Monday Hints
      With the indulgence of Chuck and Plantsmith, here are hints for Chuck's five Appetizers and Plantsmith's Riffing-Off-Shortz Entree #2:
      Chuck's Appetizers:
      1. "Starts" starts with "st". The last letters in "Last" are "st". The "second entry" (the one in which you visit the library, not the pub) contains an "st". But it does not start with an "st", nor are "st" its last letters.
      2. The "friend of Barbie’s" is NOT pictured in the accompanying illustration. The "popular computer application" sounds like "the 24th" followed by "the 12th."
      3.This "common food item in two words" usually has the shape of a capital letter of the alphabet – one that, when spelled out (like "bee" or "em", for example) is the first name of a Fitzgerald character, the middle name of a novelist whose first name is Bruce, and the surname of a U.S. Chief Justice.
      4. The "body of water" begins with a different 3-letter body of water, and ends with a three-letter pronoun that is a homophone of a letter of the alphabet.
      The "something that’s found in other bodies of water" consists of two words.
      5. If you instead remove the first letter of the pest and rearrange the rest you get the first name of a King... or you get the first name and surname, respectively, of a pair of fellow comedians whose surname and first name are Short and Steve.
      Additional/Enhanced Schpuzzle, Hors d’Oeuvre and Slice hints:

      Schpuzzle of the Week:
      Sunday Hint, in italics:
      Half of the thirty letters in a six-word sentence are the same letter...
      An adjective describing that letter begins with the same three letters with which a synonym for a sister or brother begins.

      That "synonym for a sister or brother" sometimes precedes the word "rivalry." The letters in the adjective (if you remove the first three) are an anagram of "Latin."

      Synonyms Galore Hors d’Oeuvre:
      Sunday Hint, in italics:
      The two-word description of "lightning, winds or drought" contains four and six letters. Removing the initial letter from the four-letter word results in a rhyming word. Removing the initial letter from the six-letter word does not.
      The two-word description of "lightning, winds or drought" is an anagram of FAIR GENDER or DEAF RINGER.
      After you remove the initial letters in that description, you can rearrange the letters to spell GREEN AIR.

      More “Galorious” Synonyms Slice:
      Sunday Hint, in italics:
      The three plural words in the idiom begin with the three letters in the surname of a legendary hoops mentor named Hank.
      One of the three plural words is "conditional," one is "conjunctive," and one is "to the contrary."

      LegoGivingInscrutableHints

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    5. I haven't yet digested the Hors D'O or Slice hints, but re the Schpuzzle: as Nodd indicated, the first hint wasn't enough. However, it DID tell me that I hda chosen the correct letter all along (for the 15 of them).

      Sadly, the additional hint doesn't help. I had already tried, last Thursday, everythign I could think of using the correct (as it turns out) letter. NO anagram program coughed up the sentence. (My favorite one won't even accept 30 letters.) I chose a verb I thought might work, thus removing its letters from the long list, but still got nowhere.

      On to see if the other hints result in better luck.

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    6. Oops, I forgot that I had already managed to solve the Hors D'O last Thursday. One small victory.

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    7. The sentence in the Schpuzzle answer contains words, in order, of 9, 9, 1, 4, 2 and 5 letters... noun, verb, article, noun, preposition, noun.

      LegoFoppishly

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    8. Lego, I literally just waded through nearly 3500 possibilities, using the ONLY nine-letter verb that I can even find from among those 30 letters. In no case would either of the ONLY two nine-letter nouns that have appeared WORK with that verb, i.e, leaving anything else that would complete any kind of sentence. By now, my eyes are completely blurry. I officially give up.

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    9. The first word in the sentence (the 9-letter noun) would probably be couched within "quotation marks"... if that helps at all.
      The first letters of the six words in the sentence, in order, are:
      S, P, A, M, O and E.

      LegoWhoEncouragesAllToCrackTheSchpuzzle

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    10. I finally figured out the Schpuzzle prior to the latest hint. VT, the Iterative Anagram Solver at https://boulter.com/anagram/ helps with longer anagrams.

      The puzzles this week were very hard, and I only managed to figure out maybe a third of them prior to any hints. Now, though, I have most of the answers. I still need to figure App 2 and Entree 4. I thought I figured out the "synonym of steal" anagram, but I'm still not getting anywhere. Also, I am pretty sure my answer for Entree 5 is wrong, as my "cultural movement" only has one word, and it's usually listed as two.

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    11. OK, have App 2 now. Wasn't as difficult as I thought it would be.

      Delete
    12. Well, the "P" for the verb matches what I have been using all along (even BEFORE any of the hints), along with the "A" and the "O". The trouble is, when I have removed those words from the 30 letters, thus reducing the number of them down to what ought to be manageable (Tortie, when I can face it again,IF I can face it again, I will try the site you mentioned above)....I STILL don't come up with anything useable for the remaining three words. I surely have never spotted ANY nine-letter noun starting with "S". sigh.

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    13. Ah, Tortie, that site you told me about is glorious. HOW did you ever find it? It hasn't ever shown up for me when I have Googled for 'anagrams.' Indeed, it finally indicated a nine-letter noun for the subject of the sentence, that I had somehow never seen when using Inge's Anagrams. And know the other three words, the last two just fell out. Though I NEVER would have considered the five-letter last 'word' to be a word, frankly.

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    14. I wholeheartedly agree about the anagram solver. It is indeed glorious, and you, Tortie are equally glorious for having shared it with us!

      Boulter: a long stout fishing line to which many hooks are attached and which is used for bottom fishing especially in deep water.

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    15. VT and Nodd, glad you liked the anagram solver. I forget when I stumbled across that site, but I do remember I did a search specifically looking for a site like that.

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    16. Tortie, I'm impressed not only by the site, but by the fact you were able to formulate a search for a site like that. I would not know how to even begin to describe what I was looking for. Your computer skills must be invaluable in puzzle-solving.

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    17. Tortie, if you did not already solve Entrees 4 and 5:

      4. The anagram of the "synonym of steal" is something you might do when buying something at the store.

      5. The brand name food product is a two-word phrase. The first word is another term for a non-alcoholic drink. The second word may refer to a woman of ill repute.

      Delete
    18. NOw that we can reveal answer, I wanted to further add that the reason I could NOT find "sassiness" for the 9 letter noun was because the ONLY site I had known about that would take 30 letters (my favorite other one has a limit of about 25) was INGE's, and I went again to double check and indeed, nowhere did it EVER list "sassiness" as one of the avaiable words. So no wonder I had been stuck with either "Messiness" or "Mossiness."!!!!

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  3. Replies
    1. I'm amazed to see this comment category still empty! SO I will comment here that I finally stumbled on the answer to App #2. Had the correct 'friend' all along, but had been utterly stumped by what "popular computer application" meant. A browser? A program? Finally, my eye fell on the correct thing (that had a "C" in it) and bingo, out came the brand name. Hurrah.

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    2. And to further help fill this section, I shall add that all of a sudden, the three words for the Slice popped into my head. The second hint, about the basketball coach, had completely MISled me, as I had googled up the wrong person, obviously, and therefore had three erroneous letters. I still don't know WHO the actual basketball coach was supposed to be; I was thrilled to have suddenly realized what the idiom is.

      Delete
  4. Good Friday to one and all 'pon the blog!
    Mom and I are fine. We went shopping in Aldi this afternoon(and got a little rained on, too!). Bryan, Renae and the kids went out to eat in Birmingham last night, so we didn't eat out tonight. Mom bought a whole chicken today, so we were going to eat in tonight anyway. I also did my regular puzzles earlier, which included THEGUARDIAN(3,8) PRIZE CROSSWORD(as it was written in the puzzle set by Paul). He also included the phrase SOMETHING FORTHE(3,3)WEEKEND. Forgive me for mentioning this part, but the Private Eye Crossword(which can be a bit more vulgar by comparison)actually included the British word ARSEHOLE(and yes, you're right, it means exactly what you think it does). Bad Cranberry!
    Not much progress so far with the week's entries, though I definitely have Appetizer #4 and entrees #1, #2, and #10(and most of, but not all of, #9). Let's see some hints, you guys!
    Good luck in solving to all, and please stay safe, and let's hope tomorrow night's SNL is good. Gonna be the season premiere of their 50th year on the air! I'll certainly be watching. Cranberry out!
    pjbHas(Really)VagueMemoriesOfSeeingTheShowWayBackWhenItAllBeganIn1975(AndHeWasOnlyFiveYearsOld!)

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  5. Lots of rain here too. Like 6 inches in 24 hours. What I remember is the screaming sound of the wind- like a Banshee? It sounded kind of l ike Yeeeeeee-eeee. More high-pitched in fact.
    Roll tide. Tonights the night.
    You probably saw the story on T.V. yesterday about the GA fan who rescued his high school buddy by raft, from his house in Brookhaven -{suburb of Atlanta} in order that they could drive to Tallahassee? for the game tonight. First of all -he did not have a raft and had to search Dick's sporting goods all over town to find one. He said they are going to kick Alabama's behind. But he did not use that word, but one more like the one you use above. This is a true story.
    Roll tide.

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  6. I don't know if you caught pilot of new Love boat remake-sort of- "Odyssey-"but Rachel Dratch has a prominent guest appearance. She was Debby Downer on SNL.
    The 70's were kind of an SNL golden age for me-with Ackroyd, the Belushis, Jane Curtin, Chevy , Belushi brothers and Gilda Radner- RIP

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    Replies
    1. A lot of the old SNL stars did seem, sadly, to die an early death. Gilda Radner's was particularly heart-breaking.

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    2. Plantsmith, don't forget "Sherry Norwalk." She was definitely part of the SNL golden age.

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    3. (AKA Laraine Newman, as a Valley Girl).

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    4. No wonder I couldn't find that name anywhere. That's a really deep SNL cut you're referencing, Nodd. BTW I've had a crush on Rachel Dratch for years. Mom doesn't even know.
      pjbAlsoLikesMs.Dratch'sPerformancesOn"Frasier"And"KingOfQueens"

      Delete
  7. What a game for the ages. "Still Bama."

    ReplyDelete
  8. MY PROGRESS SO FAR
    I now have all of Chuck's Appetizers except #1, I definitely have Entree #9 solved, and the Dessert.
    pjbGotNothingOutOfNodd'sHints,Unfortunately

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  9. "Sassiness" possesses a mess of esses.
    Wow!

    I'm ashamed of myself for not getting Ind(ones)ia without the hint.

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    Replies
    1. Paul, Lego has used that kind of 'trick' before, i.e. we aren't just supposed to remove (or add) some letter, but the qualifying word(s) before it...I just NEVER remember that such is a possiblity, like in Dessert this week. Sigh!

      Delete
    2. Fool me once, shame on you; fool me a dozen times, I give up!

      Delete
  10. SCHPUZZLE – “SASSINESS” POSSESSES A MESS OF ESSES
    APPETIZERS
    1. STEIN, EINSTEIN
    2. KEN; EXCEL; KLEENEX
    3. CANDY CANE
    4. “BLUE BAYOU”; A BUOY
    5. VARMINT; MARVIN; MONOPOLY
    HORS D’OEUVRE – FIRE DANGER; IRE, ANGER
    SLICE – BAD, UNFIT; “NO IFS, ANDS, OR BUTS”
    ENTREES
    1. SHORT AND SWEET; WILL SHORTZ; TWEET; ELON MUSK
    2. ALMOND JOYS
    3. CHEERIOS (“MY CHERIE AMOUR”); WONDER BREAD
    4. HANDI WIPES; SANDWICH, PIE
    5. POP-TARTS (POP ART)
    6. SNAPPLE; SPLENDA
    7. GRAPE-NUTS; PEANUTS
    8. CAROUSELS; SUCRALOSE
    9. GOOD & PLENTY; GANTRY; MENDEL; SODA POP
    10. TOY, PAIL; TOY, RUG; YOPLAIT; YOGURT
    DESSERT – INDONESIA; INDIA

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    Replies
    1. I figured that the second part of Entree 4 was WIPES after the first hint, but I never found HANDI WIPES.

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    2. They are okay, but don't absorb liquids too well. I prefer microfiber dishcloths.

      Delete
  11. Too much of this is post hint this week, so much so that it would just clog up my answers….
    Schpuzzle: “SASSINESS” POSSESSES A MESS OF ESSES
    App:
    1. STEIN, EINSTEIN
    2. KLEENEX (KEN + EXCEL - C)
    3. CANDY CANE
    4. BLUE BAYOU, A BUOY
    5. VARMINT, MARVIN, MONOPOLY
    Hors d’Oeuvre: IRE, ANGER; FIRE DANGER (Pre hint tries: EVENT/VENT (GUTTER/UTTER, WHOLE, HOLE))
    Slice: UNFIT, BAD, NO IFS, ANDS, OR BUTS
    Entrees:
    1. SHORT AND SWEET (SHORT N SWEET), WILL SHORTZ, TWEET; TWITTER (what its owner calls “X”), ELON MUSK
    2. ALMOND JOYS
    3. CHEERIOS, WONDER BREAD (STEVIE WONDER, MY CHERIE AMOUR; was previously stuck on either Neil Diamond or B.J. Thomas; coincidentally, not only were “My Cherie Amour” and “Sweet Caroline” on the charts as the same time, but there’s also a Marcia/Marsha connection between the two songs (“maybe” in the case of “Sweet Caroline”)
    4. ??? WET ONES, STEW, CONE (???? WIPES (-> SWIPE; Clorox, Lysol, Pampers, etc. + C did not work))
    5. ???? Best I could do was (BABY) BOOM, KABOOM
    6. SNAPPLE, SPLENDA
    7. GRAPE-NUTS, PEANUTS
    8. CAROUSELS, SUCRALOSE
    9. GOOD & PLENTY (GOOD AMPERSAND PLENTY); GANTRY (MERLE HAGGARD -> ELMER), MENDEL, SODA POP
    10. TOY PAIL, TOY RUG; YOPLAIT, YOGURT
    Dessert: INDONESIA (- ONE S); INDIA

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  12. SCHPUZZLE: EEEEEE FOAM PIANO SSSSSSSSSSSSSSS => SASSINESS POSSESSES A MESS OF ESSES.

    APPETIZERS:

    1. STEIN, EINSTEIN [Pre hint]

    2. KEN & EXCEL => KLEENEX

    4. CANDY CANE [Post hint….Duh!]

    4. BLUE BAYOU => A BUOY [Pre hint]

    5. VARMINT => MARVIN [GARDENS]; MONOPOLY

    HORS D’O: FIRE DANGER => IRE & ANGER [Pre hints]

    SLICE: “No IFS, ANDS or BUTS” => IFANDBUT => BAD & UNFIT

    ENTREES:

    1. SHORT AND SWEET => SHORT N SWEET => SHORTZ TWEET; TWITTER or ‘X'/ELON MUSK

    2. ALMOND JOYS

    3, 4, 5,

    6. SNAPPLE => SNADPLE => SPLENDA

    7.

    8. CAROUSELS => SUCRALOSE

    9. GOOD & PLENTY (AMPERSAND) => [Elmer/Merle Haggard] GANTRY, MENDEL , SODA POP [Pre hints]

    10 TOY PAIL => YOPLAIT; TOY RUG => YOGURT

    DESSERT: INDONESIA => INDIA

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  13. Schpuzzle
    "SASSINESS" POSSESSES A MESS OF ESSES.
    Appetizer Menu
    1. STEIN, EINSTEIN
    2.
    a. KEN
    b. EXCEL
    c. KENEXEL
    d. KLEENEX
    3. CANDY CANE
    4. "BLUE BAYOU"(Linda Ronstadt); BAYOU can be rearranged to spell A BUOY.
    5. VARMINT, MARVIN, MARTIN(hint), MONOPOLY
    Menu
    Synonyms Galore Hors d'Oeuvre
    FIRE DANGER, IRE and ANGER
    More "Galorious" Synonyms Slice
    NO IFS, ANDS, OR BUTS; IF AND BUT; BAD, UNFIT
    Entrees
    1. SHORT 'N' SWEET, WILL SHORTZ, TWEET
    2. ALMOND JOYS
    3. "MY CHERIE AMOUR"(STEVIE WONDER), CHEERIOS, WONDER BREAD
    4. HANDI-WIPES, SANDWICH, PIE
    5. OP ART, POP TARTS
    6. SNAPPLE, SPLENDA
    7. GRAPE NUTS, PEANUTS
    8. CAROUSELS, SUCRALOSE
    9. GOOD & PLENTY=GOOD AMPERSAND PLENTY=GANTRY, MENDEL, SODA POP
    10. TOY PAIL, TOY, RUG=YOPLAIT YOGURT
    A More-Or-Less More-Is-Less Dessert
    INDONESIA-"ONE S"=INDIA
    Masked Singer Results
    SHOWBIRD=YVETTE NICOLE BROWN
    Panelist Ken Jeong correctly identified her in part because both starred together on the NBC sitcom "Community". In these first two weeks of the show's return, Ken has correctly guessed both singers.-pjb

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  14. This week's official answers for the record, part 1:
    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    Fops & foam pianos
    Half of the thirty letters in a six-word sentence are the same letter.
    The other half consists of six E’s and the nine letters in either FOAM PIANO, or in the statement, “AM I A FOP? NO!”
    What is this six-word sentence?
    Optional Hint: The first two words in the sentence contain 60% of the thirty letters.
    Answer:
    Sassiness possesses a mess of esses
    SaSSineSS poSSeSSeS a meSS of eSSeS
    _a__ine__ po__e__e_ a me__ of e__e_.
    9,9,1,4,2,5 = 30;
    S (15)
    E (6)
    A (2)
    O (2)
    I (1)
    F (1)
    M (1)
    N (1)
    P (1)

    Appetizer Menu
    “Enlightning” Appetizers:
    Scavenging, “Shrimporting,” Snack-noshing, Seafaring, Serpentine
    Pub Libations and Public Library?
    1.📖📚🕮 The first entry on a scavenger hunt list has five letters. Start looking for it at a pub.
    The second entry begins with the first entry’s last three letters and adds on the entire first entry. No rearranging needed.
    Visit a library to find what endures of the second entry.
    Who or what are these entries?
    Answer:
    stein, Einstein

    “Shrimporting” files on the Barbie?
    2. 🦐 Discover a famous brand name that everybody knows, as follows:
    a.~ Name a friend of Barbie’s.
    b.~ Add the name of a popular computer application.
    c.~ Delete the letter C.
    d.~ Rearrange to get the brand.
    Answer:
    Ken + Excel – C --> Kleenex

    Nineteenth-Century Noshing
    3.🥘🍲 Name a common food item in two words (five and four letters).
    The first three letters of each word are spelled
    the same but pronounced differently.
    This food item was introduced in the 1800s.
    What food item is this?
    Answer:
    candy cane

    A canoe crosses creeks, not an ocean!
    4. 🛶The title of a 1977 Top-10 hit song includes a five-letter body of water – like ocean, river, creek, swamp, etc.
    Rearrange the body of water to find something that’s found in other bodies of water.
    What’s the hit song?
    What’s the thing found in other bodies of water?
    Answer:
    Blue Bayou; a buoy

    Serpent...?
    5.🐍 Think of a label (in seven letters) you might give a pest that lives in your garden.
    Remove the last letter and rearrange the rest to name the gardens in a popular game.
    What’s the label, the name of the gardens, and the game?
    Answer:
    Varmint – T --> Marvin (Gardens), Monopoly
    Lego...

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  15. This week's official answers for the record, part 2:
    MENU
    Synonyms Galore Hors d’Oeuvre:
    An Invitation to a “double-beheading”
    Describe lightning, winds or drought using a two-word phrase.
    Removing the initial letter from each word results in a pair of synonyms.
    What are these synonyms and the two-word phrase?
    ANSWER:
    Ire, Anger; Fire Danger
    SENT 8/13/24
    8/9/24
    Describe lightning, winds or drought using a two-word phrase. Removing the initial letter from each word results in a pair of antonyms. What are these antonyms and the two-word phrase?
    Answer:
    Ire, Anger; Fire Danger

    More “Galorious” Synonyms Slice:
    “Singularization” spawns synonyms
    Take the singular forms of three plural words in an idiom. Rearrange their combined letters to spell a pair of synonyms.
    What are these synonyms and the idiom?
    ANSWER:
    Unfit, Bad; "No ifs, ands or buts"
    if+and+but = unfit + bad

    Riffing Off Shortz Entrees:
    From terrycloth to cloying!
    Will Shortz’s (September 22nd NPR Weekend Edition Sunday Puzzle Challenge reads:
    Take the phrase NEW TOWELS. Rearrange its nine letters to get the brand name of a product that you might buy at a supermarket.
    Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz Entrees read:
    ENTREE #1
    Take a three-word phrase – an adjective, conjunction and adjective – that means “brief yet still satisfying or to-the-point” (like the clues a talented crossword puzzle editor will always produce). Write it in uppercase letters. Abbreviate the conjunction by deleting two letters. Rotate the remaining letter 90-degrees, either clockwise or counterclockwise. Replace the first letter of the third word with a duplicate of its last letter.
    The first six letters of the result spell the surname of the above-mentioned crossword puzzle editor. The remaining letters spell a post made on a certain online message service run by a “Musk(m)elon.”
    What is the phrase? Who is the puzzle editor? What if the post?
    What is the online message service? Who is the “Musk(m)elon?”
    Answer: SHORT AND SWEET; (Will) SHORTZ; TWEET; X (formerly Twitter); Elon Musk
    (SHORT AND SWEET=>SHORT 'N' SWEET=>SHORTZ SWEET=>SHORTZ TWEET=>)
    Lego...

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  16. This week's official answers for the record, part 3:
    (Note: Entree #2 is the brainchild of Plantsmith, author of “Garden of Puzzley Delights.”)
    Entree #2
    A satellite music radio channel, in hopes of appealing to a younger demographic, adopted the slogan: “No Oldy Jams!”
    In accordance with that slogan, the channel’s “music rotation” includes no music “more moldy” than one-year-old... nothing but the newest tunes in the mix!
    Did somebody say “mix”? Okay. Mix the letters in “No Oldy Jams!” to get the plural form of a brand name. What is it?
    Answer:
    Almond joys.
    (Note: "Oldy" is listed as a variant of "oldie" in the Collins Dictionary.)

    (Note: Entrees #3-through-#8 are the brainchildren of Nodd, author of “Nodd ready for prime time.”)
    ENTREE #3
    Take a word from the title of a popular song of 1969. Add two letters and rearrange to get a brand name product you might buy at the supermarket. The singer’s last name is part of another brand name product you might buy at the supermarket. What are these two brand-name products?
    Answer:
    CHEERIOS (“MY CHERIE AMOUR”); WONDER BREAD

    ENTREE #4
    Take the name of a brand name supermarket product. Add a C and rearrange to spell two foods you might prepare from ingredients you bought at the supermarket. One of the foods is an entree, the other a dessert.
    Answer:
    HANDI WIPES; SANDWICH, PIE

    ENTREE #5
    Add two letters to the name of a cultural movement of the 1950s and 60s. The result is a brand name food product you might buy at the supermarket. What is it?
    Answer:
    POP-TARTS (POP ART)

    ENTREE #6
    Take the brand name of a beverage you might buy at the supermarket. Rotate the middle letter, in lower case, 180 degrees. Rearrange the result to get another brand name product you might buy at the supermarket. These two products may be used together. What are they?
    Answer:
    SNAPPLE; SPLENDA

    ENTREE #7
    Take the name of a brand name product you might buy at the supermarket. Remove the first two letters and rearrange to get a generic food item you might buy at the supermarket. What are the brand name product and the generic item?
    Answer:
    GRAPE-NUTS; PEANUTS
    ENTREE #8
    Take a word for attractions often found in amusement parks. Rearrange the letters to get the generic name of a brand name product you might buy at the supermarket. What are the attractions and what is the generic product name?
    Answer:
    CAROUSELS; SUCRALOSE
    Lego...

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  17. This week's official answers for the record, part 4:

    ENTREE #9
    Name a more-than-century-old candy brand with a “morsel of punctuation” in its name. Spell out that morsel of punctuation. Combine these spelled-out letters with the other letters in brand name. Rearrange the result to spell the following four words:
    ~ the surname of a preacher whose first name is an anagram of a first name of a past country singer whose surname is a synonym of “wizened” and “gaunt,”
    ~ the surname of a pioneering geneticist whose first name is nearly an anagram of “George,” and
    ~ two-word term for Moxie, Bazooka, Bubble-Up or Brownie.
    What is this candy brand?
    What are the surname of the preacher, surname of the geneticist and two-word term?
    Answer:
    Good & Plenty; GOOD AMPERSAND PLENTY; (Elmer) Gantry, (Gregor) Mendel, Soda Pop
    ENTREE #10
    Consider the two-paned image that accompanies this puzzle text.
    The text of a caption of the top pane image is:
    “Boy plays with his ___ ____”
    The text of a caption of the bottom pane image is:
    “___ poodle sits on its ___”
    Rearrange the seven letters in the top-image caption to spell a brand-name food item.
    Rearrange the six letters in the bottom-image caption to spell the kind of food the item is.
    What are the four missing words?
    What are the brand name and the kind of food?
    Answer:
    TOY PAIL; TOY RUG; Yoplait; Yogurt

    Dessert Menu
    A More-Or-Less More-Is-Less Dessert:
    Less letters = more faces and space
    Remove one s from the interior of the name of the nation.
    Remove also the gap resulting from that removal.
    The result is the name of a new nation – one that has fewer letters, of course, but that is more populous and larger in area.
    What are these two nations?
    Answer:
    Indonesia, India
    (Indonesia is ranked 14th in area, 4th in population; India is ranked 7th in area, 1st in population.)
    Lego!

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