Thursday, August 7, 2025

“The late radio host’s great organization” Anger Rangers, Evil Devils, Slander Islanders, Ruin Bruins! “Salamander Mineo?” Dickens’ Scrooge-Cratchit Stitchcraft; “Does this restaurant serve port?” Exhibitors of uninhibited artistry;

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 5πe2 SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

“Does this restaurant serve port?”

Name a restaurant chain and a colloquial name of a past service industry – both in two
words, ending with the same word.

 The first two words, together, without a space, spell a port city. 

What are this city, chain and service industry?

Appetizer Menu

“Collegiate Encouragement Of Youths” Appetizer:

“The late radio host’s great organization”

Take the name of a famous radio personality of the past. 
Change a letter in the last name to get the second word in the two-word name of a nonprofit organization. The radio personality’s first name and the first word in the organization have the same first two letters. 

Who is the person?  What is the organization?

MENU

Hot Cold-War-Era Teen Idols Hors d’Oeuvre:

“Salamander Mineo?”

Name a heading under which one might classify a salamander. Interchange the first two vowels that appear in the name and then change their vowel-sound pronunciations from short-to-long. (For example “ad-libber” would become “I’d-labor.”)
The result, if spoken aloud (and if you begin with the classification for a salamander), is how a particular Cold-War-Era still-living teen idol likely introduced himself. 
What is this salamander classification?
How might this teen idol have introduced himself?

Caretakers Of Culture Slice:

Exhibitors of uninhibited artistry

Take a word for hosts, caretakers or custodians of certain cultural or artistic
exhibitions. 

Interchange two adjacent letters and replace one of them with a different vowel to name those who exhibit at these exhibitions. 

Who are these exhibition hosts and the exhibitors?

Riffing Off Shortz And Chaikin Entrees:

Angry Rangers, Evil Devils, Slander Islanders, Ruin Bruins!

Will Shortz’s (September 1st NPR) Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Eric Chaikin of Westlake Village, California, reads:

“I turned on the TV and saw anger, evil, slander, and ruin. It was all pleasant news.
What channel was I watching and what specifically was on the screen?

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Chaikin Entrees read:

ENTREE #1

Name a puzzle-maker, first and last names.

Remove and rearrange the first and last three letters to spell the world’s largest supplier of athletic shoes.

The last two letters followed by the first of the remaining letters spell the first word a line of basketball shoes produced by this supplier.

The last two followed by the first two of the remaining letters spell the brand of a producer of jeans that churns out more than half a million articles of clothing every week.

Who is this puzzle-maker? 

What are the supplier, line of basketball shoes, and jeans producer?

Note: Entrees #2 through #7 were created by our friend and puzzle-maker extraordinaire, Nodd.

ENTREE #2

A TV channel’s name, with a punctuation mark added, suggests it would be popular with radio enthusiasts.

What is this TV channel?

ENTREE #3

Switch two letters in the name of a TV channel to get the first name of a popular writer who created three TV shows in the 1960s and
1970s. 

What’s the channel and who’s the writer?

ENTREE #4

Move the last two syllables of the name of a TV channel to the front of the name and add a space to get a two-word description of much of the popular music in the 1970s. 

What are the channel and the description?

ENTREE #5

The name of a former TV network has the same letters in the same order as the last name of a performer who starred with popular comedians in seven films from the 1920s to the 1940s. 

This performer’s most memorable co-star hosted a TV show in the 1950s and 1960s. 

What’s the network and who’s the performer?

ENTREE #6

Rearrange the letters of a popular TV channel and add at the front of the letters the name of a male animal to get something often discussed on the channel. 

What’s the channel and what is often discussed? 

ENTREE #7

Many a host of a TV channel’s programs might be described by the name of that channel.

What is the name of this channel?

ENTREE #8

Teams hailing from states containing double-n’s (like Connecticut or Tennessee, for example) play each another. 

Delete the first letter from one team’s singular-form nickname – like Whaler”/haler (Hartford) – to spell what that team celebrated vis-à-vis the game’s outcome.

Delete the first letter from the other team’s singular-form nickname – Like “Titan”/“itan” (Tennessee). The result is an adjective describing that team’s players vis-à-vis that game’s outcome.

What are the states and the names of the teams?

What did one team celebrate? What is the adjective?

ENTREE #9

When a pair of professional sports teams from Los Angeles and New York square off at Madison Square Garden, the nickname of the visiting team, if not properly maintained, may inflict:

~ a homophone of the short version of the nickname of the home team, 
or...

~ a homophone of the first syllable of the long
version of this nickname, 

or...

~ the first syllable of a word that has thus far appeared thrice in this puzzle.

What are these competing teams and their nicknames?

ENTREE #10

“I turned on the TV and saw An NFL game with a team from Denver, then switched the channel and watched an NBA game with a team from Indiana. I saw John Elway and Floyd Little. I saw Reggie Miller and, more recently, Tyrese Haliburton.

Both contests were interspersed with commercials and infomercials. I saw various kitchen gadgets like the Veg-O-Matic and the Pocket Fisherman; I saw various computers like the Predator Triton 14 Gaming Laptop, Chromebook Enterprise and TravelMate!

What four-letter network was I watching? 

What are the teams from Denver and Indiana?

What two companies were hawking their kitchen hardware and computer hardware?

ENTREE #11

One Minor League Baseball team, based in a North Carolina town in with an arboreal name, is known by two nicknames.


 
One nickname ends with a synonym of “papas”; the other nickname begins with a double-consonant (like “ssh,” a synonym of “shush”). Delete the first letter from that nickname and, as an “Ogden” could have told you, a beast becomes a priest!

What are these two team nicknames?

ENTREE #12

Take the two-word nickname of a collegiate team with one of the most successful baseball
programs in the country. 
Remove its first letter and the space between the two words. The result is not  word. However, if it were a word, it would be a synonym of the nickname of a major league baseball team that is based in a neighboring state.

What are these two teams and their nicknames?

Dessert Menu

Tinny Time Dessert:

Dickens’ Scrooge-Cratchit Stitchcraft

"A child sometimes (BLANK) a (BLANK) that (BLANK)."

In the BLANKS, from left to right: (9-letter verb), (4-letter noun), (6-letter verb)

Words 1 and 3 share identical 5-letter strings.

The first 4 letters of Word 1 are a rearrangement of Word 2.

What is the sentence?

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 Thursday.

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.

10 comments:

  1. Note:
    To place a comment under this QUESTIONS? subheading (immediately below), or under any of the three subheadings below it (HINTS! PUZZLE RIFFS! and MY PROGRESS SO FAR...), simply left-click on the orange "Reply" to open a dialogue box where you can make a comment. Thank you.
    Lego...

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  2. Replies
    1. The only puzzle I've gotten so far is the Hors D'O, BUT I do not understand what that parenthetical instruction to 'begin with the other word for the salamander' is doing there. That is just confusing, because one is ALREADY dealing with the altered word for the salamander.

      Delete
    2. You are correct about the hors d'oeuvre, VT. I have tried to "unclunk" my "clunky prose" a tad.

      LegoWhoMayNeedToTweakFurther

      Delete
  3. IF YOU HAVE COMMENTS THAT DO NOT PERTAIN TO ANY OF THE FOUR CATEGORIES ABOVE, YOU MAY WRITE THEM BELOW THIS POST. THANK YOU.

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