Thursday, September 4, 2025

Dreamy “Brylcreemy” Thespian?; Sole-Role Thespian; “Associated” but not “The Association”; Rhymin’ ‘n’ Chimin’; Fowl-Fish-Fowl (Shot); Pyramid Frock? “Go down, Oops!”; “Paulgrim’s” Intrastate Progress... (“writ” by a Bedfordshire Bunyan) “Walkin' past a plate of pasta?” “Six sides” versus “nix sides!” Chills two centuries apart; “Rasher-a-Roni, the San FranCrisco Treat!”

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 5πe2 SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

“Paulgrim’s” Intrastate Progress... (writ by the Bedfordshire Bunyan)

According to folklore and legend, Paul Bunyan was able to “create geological features” in Minnesota by donning certain distinctive duds. 

Replace “create” and “geological features” with synonyms  – a different verb and a different single-word.

The two identical vowel sounds in that verb and noun become different identical vowel sounds in the word for the distinctive duds.

For example, “Phone home” (instructions to E.T.) might become “Fun Hum” (an amusing buzz). Or “Fine wine” (a great vintage) might become “Fun one!” (an entertaining puzzle).

What are these duds, synonym of “create,” and synonym of “geological features?”

Appetizer Menu

Tortie’s Slow-Cooked But Surely Challenging Appetizer:

Sole-Role Thespian; Dreamy “Brylcreemy” Thespian?; Fowl-Fish-Fowl; “Associated” but not “The Association”; Rhymin’ ‘n’ Chimin’; Pyramid Frock?; “Go down... Oops!”

Sole-Role Thespian

1. 🎥Think of a movie actor of the past who was mostly known for one particular role. 

The first name has four letters and the last name has six. 

Write his first name backwards followed by his last name backwards. 

Take every other letter, starting from the first letter. You’ll have a well-known sequence that’s
familiar even to young children.

Who is the actor? 

What is the sequence?

Dreamy “Brylcreemy” Thespian?  

2. 💇Think of an actor who was largely known for playing a certain type of role. 

His name consists of five consecutive letters of the alphabet, four consecutive letters of the alphabet, and “Y.” Three of these letters appear twice in his name.

Who is the actor?

Hint: When he was young, this actor’s career got a “shot in the arm” after he grew some facial hair.

Fowl-Fish-Fowl (Shot)

3. 🕊🐟🐦Name a six-letter type of bird. 

Change one of the letters to produce a type of
fish. 
Change another letter to produce another bird.

What are these animals?

“Associated” but not “The Association”

4. 🎜🎝Take the last name of a famous musician. Change the first letter to the letter that immediately precedes it in the alphabet. 

Now add the letters that surround the sixth letter of the last name in the alphabet. (For example, if the sixth letter in the last name is “C”, you’d add “B” and “D.”) 

Rearrange the letters to produce the first and last names of another famous musician who is closely associated with the first musician.

Rhymin’ ‘n’ Chimin’

5. 🎸Name an eponymous album by two guitar greats. Both of them went by their nicknames, which don’t rhyme; however, their first names at birth rhyme.

Who are they? 

What is the album?

Pyramid Frock? 

6. 🎥⭐Name a singer and musician who was famous in the pre-rock era. 

Now think of something the musician used, and place that word between the first and last names. 

Remove a space. You’ll have the name of an even earlier movie star.

“Go down... Oops!”

7. 💃⏺🎶Name a very early classic doo-wop song in two words, five letters in each word. 

Rearrange the letters to produce two things that you might need to calculate mathematically.

What is the song? 

What might you need to calculate?

MENU

Truly Cubical Yet Nearly Spherical Hors d’Oeuvre:

“Six sides” versus “nix sides!”

Name a substance often seen in a cubical form. 

Slightly alter the consonant sound of the substance to get what sounds like partially
unseen things in a nearly spherical form.

What is this cubical substance?

What are the partially unseen things in a nearly spherical form

Cinema Versus History Slice:

Chills two centuries apart

Change one letter in a 2020’s horror movie to spell a historical horror that happened nearly two centuries earlier. 

What are this movie and historical horror?

Riffing Off Shortz And Reiss Entrees:

“Rasher-a-Roni, the San FranCrisco Treat!” 

Will Shortz’s September 31st  NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Mike Reiss, who's a showrunner, writer, and producer for “The Simpsons,” reads: 

Name a famous English author. Change the first letter of the last name to an S. Then move the first, second, and final letters of that last name in front of the first name. 

The resulting string of letters reading from left to right will name a major American city. What city is it?

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Reiss Entrees read:

Entree #1

Think of two surnames – the singular 5-letter surname of a real person and the plural 8-letter surname of a family of fictional characters that is the brainchild of the real person... who often puts words into the mouths of these fictional family members. 

Rearrange the combined 13 letters of these two surnames to write a three-word caption for the image pictured here.

What are these two surnames? What is the caption?

(Note: Appetizers #2 through #7 are creations penned by our friend and “Riffmaster General,” Nodd.)

ENTREE #2

Write down the first name of a famous English author, followed without a space by the last name of an American Newberry Medal-winning author. 

The American author’s last name is also the first name of a famous former U.K. politician.

Replace the first two letters of the American author’s last name with an S. 

The resulting string of letters reading from left to right will name a famous American city that was the home of two U.S. presidents. 

Who are the two authors and what is the city? 

ENTREE #3

Name a famous English author. 

The first name is the first word in the two-word name of a ghost town in the Western U.S. 

The last name, minus the second letter, is the first word in the two-word name of another ghost town in the Western U.S., in a different state. A famous American author sometimes claimed to be a resident of the second ghost town. 

Who are the authors and what are the ghost towns?

ENTREE #4

Take the first name of a famous English author. Insert a Y between the second and third letters and delete the last letter. 

Follow this with a space and then the first name of the pen name of another famous English author, minus the second letter. The resulting string of letters reading from left to right will name a major tourist destination in the Western U.S. 

Who are the two authors and what is the tourist attraction?

ENTREE #5

Take the first and last names of a famous English author and painter who was also an avid outdoorsman and mystic. 

Rearrange these 15 letters to spell a major English city, a town in France near Paris, and a U.S. state abbreviation. 

Who is the author and what are the city, town, and abbreviation? 

ENTREE #6

Name a famous English author. 

The first name can be rearranged to spell a bodily disorder that is a homophone of a region in Asia. 

The last name is a town in Massachusetts. 

Who is the author, and what are the disorder, region, and town?

ENTREE #7

Name a famous English poet, short story writer and novelist, first and last names. 

Change an A to a Y. Rearrange these 14 letters to spell a U.S. state and the name of a tree. 

The tree name, followed by a space and a homophone of another tree name, is a city in South Carolina. 

Who is the author and what are the state and the city?

ENTREE #8

Take two performers – one whose stage name includes a “Richard” and another whose real name includes a “Richards.” 

The first performer’s stage name includes an adjective seen in a U.S. state capital. 
The second performer is in a band that includes four consecutive letters that spell a word associated with dice. 
The noun modified by the adjective in the state-capital and dice-related word are “bookend words” in the genre of music both performers proffer (and prefer).

Who are these performers?

What is the state capital and word associated with dice?

What genre of music do they proffer?

ENTREE #9

Name a two-word ten-letter U.S. city.

Letters 9 10 followed by 3 2 1 spell the first name of a past American novelist whose surname, if you insert a space, sounds like a
reason to legalize marijuana.

Letters 6 7 8 is the shortened form a first name of a children’s book author whose surname begins with a synonym of “marijuana.”

Letters 3 10 8 6 is an Arab sheik Ray Stevens sang about.

Letters 5 4 8 6 7 is how a president may have introduced himself. 

What is this city?

Who are the novelist, author and sheik? How did the president introduce himself?

ENTREE #10

Is there a Mobile Mobil gas station in Alabama? How about a Texarkana Texaco in Texas? Or a Chevy Chase Chevron in Maryland?

Think of two states that share a border. 

The initial letter of one state, if inverted, becomes the initial letter of the other state. Two burgs beginning with the same vowel were incorporated (one in each state) in the mid 1800s, in the southeastern region of each state. 

That much is true. Take what follows, however, with a grain of salty skepticism:

Early in the 20th century, a gasoline corporation planted gas stations, one each, in these burgs. Both now had their own “Texarkana Texaco” (each with their name followed by the brand-name gasoline that they shared... but it was a brand these burgs did not share with Mobile, Chevy Chase or Texarkana!).

This gas brand’s even letters are identical vowels, each preceded by a single consonant.

Both gas stations can be represented using a “C” for Consonant, and a “V” for Vowel. (The Consonants vary, but all “V’s”  represent the same vowel.):

The smaller burg: VCVCVCV CVCVCV.

The larger burg: VCVCVCVCVC  CVCVCV.

Name these two gas stations, using the name of each burg followed by the identical brand of gasoline.

Dessert Menu

Dietary Dessert:

“Walkin past a plate of pasta?”

Take the surname and profession of a past performer. 

Rearrange those fifteen letters to spell a type of diet a doctor may have prescribed for this performer, in ten letters, and what any dieter's likely response might be to such a prescription, in five letters.

Who is this performer? 

What are the type of diet and a performer’s likely response to it?

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.

45 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...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Replies
    1. In App 3, does the letter that is changed to produce the fish remain changed when another letter is changed to produce another bird?

      Delete
    2. Thanks, that works for my answer.

      Delete
    3. I think the "bookend words" in App 8 are both the same part of speech. Have I gone over the edge?

      Delete
    4. My thank you, Paul.
      My mea culpa to all.
      In ENTREE #8, I have replaced my original text (below, in italics) with the text (beneath it, in boldface).
      The first performer’s stage name also includes an adjective in a two-word state capital.
      The second performer is in a band that includes four consecutive letters that spell a verb associated with dice.
      That adjective and noun are “bookend words” in the genre of music both performers proffer (and prefer).


      The first performer’s stage name includes an adjective seen in a U.S. state capital.
      The second performer is in a band that includes four consecutive letters that spell a word associated with dice.
      That adjective and dice-related word are “bookend words” in the genre of music both performers proffer (and prefer).


      LegoOverthinkingThings(OrMoreLikelyUnderthinkingThings!)

      Delete
    5. Isn't the noun in the state capital the bookend word, rather than the adjective?

      Delete
    6. Thank you, Nodd. You are correct. For some reason I am having a difficult time properly completing this App #8 puzzle!

      LegoWhoWillTinkerWithTheTextTillCorrected!

      Delete
    7. Sometimes words have two meanings.

      Delete
    8. Now we have an Entree #10?! I think having this week's Sunday Puzzle(which I have solved earlier today, BTW)has gone to Lego's head, and he's decided to keep adding on to the Entrees because of it!
      pjbGot#9,ButHe'sNotSureAboutThisNextOne

      Delete
    9. When I checked on Thursday, I only saw Entrees #1 through #8. When I checked again on Saturday morning, #9 and #10 were both added. I guess #9 was added some time on Friday, and #10 was added a bit later. In any case, #9 was quite easy, but #10 took a bit of guessing and research.

      Delete
  3. Replies
    1. App hints:
      1. Think of the actor's most famous role. The character’s title implies a child-friendly sequence of another kind.
      2. Shall we play a game? Not such a bad guy, his middle name was the same name as Trump's alma mater.
      3. Bird app, Nemo's dad, 2/3 of the main cast of "Only Murders in the Building". If you change a different letter in the last word, you can get a mammal.
      4. The Fab Two.
      5. Both are in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame; one for Musical Excellence, and the other as an Early Influence.
      6. If you know the singer, you'll almost certainly know half of #5. Hypothetical discussion in the Grant Tinker household in 1976: "I don't think that Carter has enough experience to be president. ____, ____ ____!"
      7. Swap the last two letters of the second word in the song title to find something else you might need to calculate. Move the last letter of the first word to the front. The following equation plots a picture of this item: (x^2 + y^2 - 1)^3 - x^2y^3 = 0.

      Delete
    2. SUNDAY HINTS FOR ENTREES 2-7:
      2. The first name of the American author is also the first name of the English author’s sis.
      3. Who’s afraid of Edward Abbey?
      4. Charlie but not McCarthy, Winston but not Churchill.
      5. Jeffrey went to a square by that name, according to Jethro Tull.
      6. Knowing the author might be serendipitous.
      7. Remove two letters from the author's last name to name a racetrack in California on Jimmy Durante Blvd.

      Delete
    3. Very Late Hints (My Apologies!)
      Schpuzzle of the Week:
      10,000 bodies of water created by just one pair of distinctive duds!

      Appetizer Menu
      Tortie’s Slow-Cooked But Surely Challenging Appetizer:
      We thank Tortie for her hints at Tortitude September 7, 2025 at 5:18 PM, above.

      Truly Cubical Yet Nearly Spherical Hors d’Oeuvre
      "I see" preceded by a two-word homophone of "I see"

      Cinema Versus History Slice:
      Change a short "i" in the middle word of the movie to a short "o".

      Riffing Off Shortz And Reiss Entrees:
      Entree #1
      That's not a "Ms." pictured with the scissors, it's a synonym of "whiff" or antonym of "hit."

      (Note: Hints for Appetizers #2 through #7 appear above in Nodd's September 7, 2025 at 6:24 PM comment, above.)

      ENTREE #8
      "Stone "n" Biscuit!"

      ENTREE #9
      The two-word ten-letter U.S. city was home of “The Jackie Gleason Show” from 1964 until it went off the air in 1970.

      ENTREE #10:
      All the Consonants in both burgs are the first letter in the word "Consonant."

      Dietary Dessert:
      The surname of the a past professional performer begins with an initial letter that is the first letter of three consecutive words in this hint.

      LegoHintingTooLateThePhalarope

      Delete
    4. How can ALL the consonants be C? I've looked up both states(the only two I would know are together and the first letter can be inverted to make the other first letter), and there is NO "burg" in either state that has only a C as the only consonant in its name! Was it really worth adding this puzzle at the last minute? I got #9, and I was content with that. #10, not so much. BTW Managed to look up the Jethro Tull reference, but couldn't find any English author whose name had 15 letters AND contained the letters in the name of the square. Maybe if the hint had actually had something more to do with the AUTHOR HIMSELF(I'm assuming it's a he), then I could possibly have more to work with here. All I really have is information about a deep cut from Tull, one they don't even play on "Time Warp With Bill St. James". At least Nodd didn't make me have to guess anything from one da#n consonant in the whole name!
      pjbIsRemindedOfALineFromComedianRonWhite,WhenThinkingAboutLego'sAddingOnAFewPuzzlesAfterTheFact:"NextTimeYouHaveAThought,LetItGo."

      Delete
    5. My apologies again to all. Cranberry is 100% correct! Only three of the consonants in the two burgs are C's! (There are also two N's, an M, an R and a W.

      LegoLocococococococo!

      Delete
    6. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
    7. Cranberry, there's another "inverted" state pair that border each other as well. I had to look up the Jethro Tull song as well; I mostly remember "Aqualung" and "Bungle in the Jungle" by Tull.

      You have the English city, thanks to the Tull clue. The French city is known for an airport. Ozzy Osbourne had a song about the writer (shows up right after "Crazy Train" on his discography). The first three letters of the writer's first name are a beverage and the first four letters of the writer's last name are a black bird.

      Delete
    8. Got it! Once I saw the writer's name, the anagrams fell right into place! Thanks, Tortie!
      pjbHasDefinitelyHeard"CrazyTrain"MoreOftenThanOzzy'sOtherSong(OrTull's"Square"Song,ForThatMatter)

      Delete
  4. Replies
    1. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
    2. I have answers for everything but the Schpuzzle. I'm not even sure I understand the instructions on that one. I'm not sure about my caption in Entree #1.

      Delete
    3. I may have the Schpuzzle answer. If mine's correct, the "duds" are cold-weather footwear and the geological features are something Minnesota is know for. Then again, I may just be all wet.

      Delete
    4. OK, think I may have it now. I had the right first two words, but am not familiar with the duds. I made up some (wrong) vowel sounds and Google found something.

      Delete
    5. My problem is I can't find any indication he ever wore such duds and they don't seem particularly suited for his profession, but I don't claim any expertise in Bunyan lore.

      Delete
    6. Yeah, it seems like he wore items for cold weather, but Minnesota isn't cold enough for these duds! I was trying to get the Sinatra word to work without luck. That matches what he wore better, I think.

      Delete
    7. Doesn't anybody remember "These Mukluks Are Made For Lake-Makin' "?

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

    ReplyDelete
  6. Good Friday evening to all upon this fine blog, and I hope everyone is having a good September so far this year!
    Sorry I may be a little late posting, but my Kindle needed a little charging. As of this moment it has 79%, so I decided to do this now. Mom and I are fine. Maddy wanted to eat at Sakura, so we went earlier this evening. It was Mom, Bryan, Maddy, Mia Kate, and me. I had the chicken, steak, and shrimp meal with the udon(fat)noodles, egg drop soup, a house salad, and Diet Pepsi; Mom had the sesame chicken, two house salads, and a Starry(and she saved the rest of it for me to have tomorrow, most likely tomorrow night); Bryan probably had steak, with the soba(thin)noodles, and water; Mia Kate probably had chicken and fried rice, and a smoothie; and Maddy had a "Mickey Roll"(whatever that is)and a smoothie. Not much to talk about, it may just be Mom and Bryan going to the condo next week, and the doctor's office called yesterday and said my A1C is a little high. We also had to go to Winn-Dixie to get a few things, and it ended up being a lot less than I had anticipated before they called. I guess I'll be on a diet from now on, can't really have any snacks or anything like that. I figured as much eventually. Better enjoy that leftover Sakura now. Maybe it's a lot healthier, I don't know. Bryan says places like Sakura and Los Reyes and Perico's are doing way better than Cracker Barrel or Applebee's or any other place like that because the former places don't use prefrozen food like the latter does. Apparently CB's biscuits especially are not as good as they used to be, because they've just been buying them elsewhere and warming them up in their kitchen, instead of making them from "scratch". I still would eat them, though. Then we came home, and I did the Prize Crossword(set this week by Vlad). I did start doing some further work on this week's puzzles here(and got a little more done on Tortie's Appetizers), when my phone went dead, and my Kindle was down to 20%. So they've both just been recharging, and I've just been watching TV.
    So far I've got Apps #1, #3, #4, and #7(came to me late last night, actually), and I've only solved Entrees #7, #8, and #9 just now(after checking the site on my phone as I'm typing this on my Kindle, and realizing Lego just added a new one!). I know to whom Lego is referring in #1, but I just can't get the anagram for the caption. As always, I am looking forward to any and all hints for everything else(usually on Sunday evenings).
    Good luck in solving to all, and please stay safe, and may all your A1Cs be at healthy levels. Cranberry out!
    pjbHasToStartWatchingCarbsALotMoreNow(Shudder!)

    ReplyDelete
  7. Congratulations to Lego on yet another Sunday Challenge selection!

    ReplyDelete
  8. Schpuzzle: MAKE, LAKES, MUKLUKS (I felt pretty good about “make lakes”, so I tried looking up “macklacks” and Google said, “I think you mean mukluks”)
    App: I have the week off!
    Hors d’Oeuvre: ICE, EYES
    Slice: THE DINNER PARTY, THE DONNER PARTY
    Entrees:
    1. REISS, SIMPSONS; MISS SNIPS ROSE
    2. CHARLOTTE BRONTE, EMILY CHENEY NEVILLE, CHARLOTTESVILLE
    3. VIRGINIA WOOLF, EDWARD ABBEY, VIRGINIA CITY, WOLF HOLE
    4. ROALD DAHL, GEORGE ORWELL, ROYAL GORGE
    5. ALEISTER CROWLEY, LEICESTER, ORLY, WA
    6. HORACE WALPOLE, CHOREA, KOREA, WALPOLE
    7. WALTER DE LA MARE, DELAWARE, MYRTLE BEACH
    8. LITTLE RICHARD, KEITH RICHARDS; LITTLE ROCK, ROLL; ROCK AND ROLL
    9. MIAMI BEACH; CHAIM POTOK (“POT OK”), BEATRIX POTTER, AHAB; I’M ABE
    10. ORONOCO CONOCO (Minnesota), OCONOMOWOC CONOCO (Wisconsin) (not Montana and Wyoming)
    Dessert: PAVAROTTI, SINGER; STARVATION, GRIPE

    ReplyDelete
  9. I think "Little" is an adjective and "Rock" is a noun in the name of Arkansas' capital, but "rock" and "roll" are both verbs in the name of the genre of music played by the Rolling Stones. However, in "Stairway To Heaven", "rock" is used as a noun in association with "roll" as a verb.
    For a while, I was getting Keith Richards confused with Cliff Richard, which accounts for my "over the edge" comment.

    ReplyDelete
  10. SCHPUZZLE – MUKLUKS, MAKE LAKES
    APPETIZERS
    1. BELA LUGOSI, AEIOU
    2. DABNEY COLEMAN
    3. MERLIN, MARLIN, MARTIN
    4. ??
    5. CHET ATKINS, LES PAUL, “CHESTER & LESTER”
    6. MARY FORD, MARY PICKFORD
    7. “EARTH ANGEL”, AREA, LENGTH
    HORS D’OEUVRE – ICE, EYES
    SLICE ??
    ENTREES
    1. REISS, SIMPSON, MISS SNIPS ROSE
    2. CHARLOTTE BRONTE, EMILY NEVILLE, CHARLOTTESVILLE
    3. VIRGINIA WOOLF, EDWARD ABBEY; VIRGINIA CITY, NV; WOLF HOLE, AZ
    4. ROALD DAHL, GEORGE ORWELL; ROYAL GORGE
    5. ALEISTER CROWLEY, LEICESTER, ORLY, WA
    6. HORACE WALPOLE, CHOREA, KOREA, WALPOLE
    7. WALTER DE LA MARE, DELAWARE, MYRTLE BEACH
    8. LITTLE RICHARD, KEITH RICHARDS, LITTLE ROCK, ROLL, ROCK ‘N’ ROLL
    9. MIAMI BEACH, CHAIM POTOK, BEATRIX POTTER, AHAB, “I’M ABE”
    10. ORONOCO CONOCO, OCONOMOWOC CONOCO
    DESSERT – LUCIANO PAVAROTTI, SINGER, STARVATION, GRIPE

    ReplyDelete
  11. Schpuzzle
    MAKE LAKES, MUKLUKS
    Appetizer Menu
    1. BELA LUGOSI, AEIOU
    2. DABNEY COLEMAN
    3. MARTIN, MARLIN, MERLIN
    4. (George)HARRISON, RINGO STARR
    5. CHET ATKINS and LES PAUL, "CHESTER & LESTER"(1976)
    6. MARY FORD(played guitar, so she used a PICK), MARY PICKFORD
    7. "EARTH ANGEL"=LENGTH+AREA
    Menu
    Truly Cubical Yet Nearly Spherical Hors d'Oeuvre
    ICE, EYES
    Cinema Versus History Slice
    "THE DINNER PARTY", THE DONNER PARTY
    Entrees
    1. (MIke)REISS, "(The)SIMPSONS", "MISS SNIPS ROSE"
    2. CHARLOTTE BRONTE, EMILY CHENEY NEVILLE, CHARLOTTESVILLE(VA)
    3. VIRGINIA WOOLF, VIRGINIA DALE(CO), WOLF HOLE(AZ)
    4. ROALD DAHL, GEORGE ORWELL, ROYAL GORGE(CO)
    5. ALEISTER CROWLEY=LEICESTER+ORLY+WA(Washington)
    6. HORACE WALPOLE, CHOREA(Korea), WALPOLE
    7. WALTER DE LA MARE, DELAWARE, MYRTLE, MYRTLE BEACH(Beech)
    8. LITTLE RICHARD, KEITH RICHARDS, LITTLE ROCK(AR), ROLL, ROCK 'N' ROLL
    9. MIAMI BEACH(FL), (Chaim)POTOK("POT OK"), BEA(Beatrix Potter), AHAB, "I'M ABE!"
    10. ORONOCO CONOCO(Minnesota), OCONOMOWOC CONOCO(Wisconsin); I knew it was Minnesota and Wisconsin from the beginning, never Montana and Wyoming.
    Dietary Dessert
    (Luciano)PAVAROTTI+SINGER=STARVATION+GRIPE
    The Donner Party reminds me of the 1971 song "Timothy", by one-hit wonder "The Buoys". If you know about what happened with the Donner Party, you've pretty much figured out what(might've)happened in the song. It peaked at No. 13 on the charts in '71, and yes, Casey Kasem had to talk about it(and reference the Donner Party as well)on American Top 40. Enough said.-pjb

    ReplyDelete
  12. This week's Official Answers for the Record, Part 1:
    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    “Paulgrim’s” Intrastate Progress (penned by the Bedfordshire Bunyan)
    Legend has it that Paul Bunyan was able to “create geological features” in Minnesota by donning certain distinctive duds. Replace “create” and “geological features” with synonyms – a different verb and a different one-word noun.
    The two identical vowel sounds in that verb and noun become different identical vowel sounds in the word for the distinctive duds.
    What are these duds, synonym of “create,” and synonym of “geological features?”
    Answer:
    Mukluks; Make, Lakes:
    "Legend has it that Paul Bunyan was able to “make lakes” in Minnesota by donning "mukluks."
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  13. This week's Official Answers for the Record, Part 2:
    Appetizer Menu
    Tortie’s Slow-Cooked But Surely Challenging Appetizer:
    Sole-Role Thespian, Dreamy “Brylcreemy” Thespian? Fowl-Fish-Fowl (Shot), “Associated” but not “The Association,”Rhymin’ ‘n’ Chimin’, Pyramid Frock? “Go down... Oops!”
    Sole-Role Thespian
    1. Think of a movie actor of the past who was mostly known for one particular role. The first name has four letters and the last name has six. Write his first name backwards followed by his last name backwards. Take every other letter, starting from the first letter. You’ll have a well-known sequence that’s familiar even to young children.
    Who is the actor? What is the sequence?
    Answer:
    BELA LUGOSI; AEIOU
    Dreamy “Brylcreemy” Thespian?
    2. Think of an actor who was largely known for playing a certain type of role. His name consists of five consecutive letters of the alphabet, four consecutive letters of the alphabet, and “Y.” Three of these letters appear twice in his name.
    Who is the actor?
    Hint: When he was young, this actor’s career got a “shot in the arm” after he grew some facial hair.
    Answer:
    DABNEY COLEMAN (AABCDEE + LMNNO + Y)
    Fowl-Fish-Fowl (Shot)
    3. Name a six-letter type of bird. Change one of the letters to produce a type of fish. Change another letter to produce another bird.
    What are these animals?
    Answer:
    MERLIN, MARLIN, MARTIN
    “Associated” but not “The Association”
    4. Take the last name of a famous musician. Change the first letter to the letter that immediately precedes it in the alphabet. Now add the letters in the alphabet that flank the sixth letter of the last name. (For example, if the sixth letter in the last name is “C”, you’d add “B” and “D.”) Rearrange these letters to produce the first and last names of another famous musician who is closely associated with the first musician.
    Who are the musicians?
    Answer:
    GEORGE HARRISON, RINGO STARR
    HARRISON => GARRISON => GARRISON + RT => RINGO STARR
    Rhymin’ ‘n’ Chimin’
    5. Name an eponymous album by two guitar greats with a rhyming title. Both of them went by their nicknames, which don’t rhyme; however, their first names at birth rhyme.
    Who are they? What is the album?
    Answer:
    CHET ATKINS, LES PAUL; CHESTER & LESTER
    Pyramid Frock?
    6. Name a singer and musician who was famous in the pre-rock era. Now think of something the musician used, and place that word between the first and last names. Remove a space. You’ll have the name of an even earlier movie star.
    Who are they?
    Answer:
    MARY FORD, MARY PICKFORD
    “Go down... Oops!”
    7. Name a very early classic doo-wop song in two words, five letters in each word. Rearrange the letters to produce two things that you might need to calculate mathematically.
    What is the song? What might you need to calculate?
    Answer:
    EARTH ANGEL; LENGTH, AREA
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Those Merlins are wicked little birds. I have seen Peregrine falcons move at 140 mph at the Sand piper bird sanctuary out of Hoquiam, Wa. The Merlins are also fast and can pick off a sparrow in a para-sec.

      Delete
  14. This week's Official Answers for the Record, Part 3:
    MENU
    Truly Cubical Yet Nearly Spherical Hors d’Oeuvre
    “Six sides” versus “nix sides!”
    Name a substance often seen in a cubical form.
    Slightly alter the consonant sound of the substance (rendering it less sibilant) to get what sounds like partially unseen things in a nearly spherical form.
    What is this cubical substance?
    What are the partially unseen things in a nearly spherical form
    Answer:
    Ice; Eyes

    Cinema Versus History Slice:
    Chills two centuries apart
    Change one letter in a 2020’s horror movie to spell a historical horror that happened nearly two centuries earlier.
    What are this movie and historical horror?
    Answer:
    "The Dinner Party" (2020); The Donner Party (1846-47)
    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt10358198/

    Riffing Off Shortz And Reiss Entrees:
    “Rasher-a-Roni, the San FranCrisco Treat!”
    Will Shortz’s (September 31st NPR) Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Mike Reiss, who's a showrunner, writer, and producer for “The Simpsons” reads:
    Name a famous English author. Change the first letter of the last name to an S. Then move the first, second, and final letters of that last name in front of the first name. The resulting string of letters reading from left to right will name a major American city. What city is it?
    Answer:
    San Francisco; (Francis Bacon)

    Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Reiss Entrees read:
    Entree #1
    Think of two surnames – the singular 5-letter surname of a real person and the plural 8-letter surname of a family of fictional characters that is the brainchild of the real person... who often puts words into the mouths of these fictional family members. Rearrange the combined 13 letters of these two surnames to write a three-word caption for the image pictured here.
    What are these two surnames? What is the caption?
    Answer:
    (Mike) Reiss, (Homer, Marge, Bart & Lisa, aka The...) Simpsons; "Miss snips rose"
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  15. This week's Official Answers for the Record, Part 4:
    (Note: Appetizers #2 through #7 were penned by our friend and “Riffmaster General,” Nodd.)
    ENTREE #2
    Write down the first name of a famous English author, followed without a space by the last name of an American Newberry Medal-winning author. The American author’s last name is also the first name of a famous former U.K. politician. Replace the first two letters of the American author’s last name with an S. The resulting string of letters reading from left to right will name a famous American city that was the home of two U.S. presidents. Who are the two authors and what is the city?
    Answer:
    CHARLOTTE BRONTE, EMILY NEVILLE; CHARLOTTESVILLE

    ENTREE #3
    Name a famous English author. The first name is the first word in the two-word name of a ghost town in the Western U.S. The last name, minus the second letter, is the first word in the two-word name of another ghost town in the Western U.S., in a different state. A famous American author sometimes claimed to be a resident of the second ghost town. Who are the authors and what are the ghost towns?
    Answer:
    VIRGINIA WOOLF, EDWARD ABBEY; VIRGINIA CITY, NV; WOLF HOLE, AZ
    (The author Edward Abbey sometimes claimed to be a resident of Wolf Hole, Arizona.)

    ENTREE #4
    Take the first name of a famous English author. Insert a Y between the second and third letters and delete the last letter. Follow this with a space and then the first name of the pen name of another famous English author, minus the second letter. The resulting string of letters reading from left to right will name a major tourist destination in the Western U.S. Who are the two authors and what is the tourist attraction?
    Answer:
    ROALD DAHL, GEORGE ORWELL; ROYAL GORGE

    ENTREE #5
    Take the first and last names of a famous English author and painter who was also an avid outdoorsman and mystic. Rearrange these 15 letters to spell a major English city, a town in France near Paris, and a U.S. state abbreviation. Who is the author and what are the city, town, and abbreviation?
    Answer:
    ALEISTER CROWLEY, LEICESTER, ORLY, WA

    ENTREE #6
    Name a famous English author. The first name can be rearranged to spell a bodily disorder that is a homophone of a region in Asia. The last name is a town in Massachusetts. Who is the author, and what are the disorder, region, and town?
    Answer:
    HORACE WALPOLE, CHOREA, KOREA, WALPOLE

    ENTREE #7
    Name a famous English poet, short story writer and novelist, first and last names. Change an A to a Y. Rearrange these 14 letters to spell a U.S. state and the name of a tree. The tree name, followed by a space and a homophone of another tree name, is a city in South Carolina. Who is the author and what are the state and the city?
    Answer:
    WALTER DE LA MARE, DELAWARE, MYRTLE BEACH
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  16. This week's Official Answers for the Record, Part 5:
    ENTREE #8
    Take two performers – one whose stage name includes a “Richard” and another whose real name includes a “Richards.”
    The first performer’s stage name also includes an adjective in a two-word state capital. The second performer is in a band that includes four consecutive letters that spell a verb associated with dice. That adjective and noun are “bookend words” in the genre of music both performers proffer (and prefer).
    Who are these performers?
    What is the state capital and word associated with dice?
    What genre of music do they proffer?
    Answer
    Little Richard; Keith Richards (of the ROLLing Stones); Little ROCK (Arkansas), ROLLing dice; ROCK and ROLL

    ENTREE #9
    Name a two-word ten-letter U.S. city.
    Letters 9 10 followed by 3 2 1 spell the first name of a past American novelist whose surname, if you insert a space, sounds like a reason to legalize marijuana.
    Letters 6 7 8 is the shortened form a first name of a children’s book author whose surname begins with a synonym of “marijuana.”
    Letters 3 10 8 6 is an Arab sheik Ray Stevens sang about.
    Letters 5 4 8 6 7 is how a president may have introduced himself.
    What is this city?
    Who are the novelist, author and sheik? How did the president introduce himself?
    Answer
    Miami Beach (Florida); CHAIM Potok ("Pot OK!"); BEAtrix Potter; AHAB; I'M ABE

    ENTREE #10:
    Is there a Mobile Mobil gas station in Alabama? How about a Texarkana Texaco in Texas? Or a Chevy Chase Chevron in Maryland?
    Think of two states that share a border. The initial letter of one state, if inverted, becomes the initial letter of the other state. Two burgs beginning with the same vowel were incorporated (one in each state) in the mid 1800s, in the southeastern region of each state.
    That much is true. Take what follows, however, with a grain of salty skepticism:
    Early in the 20th century, a gasoline corporation planted gas stations, one each, in these burgs. Both now had their own “Texarkana Texaco” (each with their name followed by the brand-name gasoline that they shared... but it was a brand these burgs did NOT share with Mobile, Chevy Chase or Texarkana!).
    This gas brand’s even letters are identical vowels, each preceded by a single consonant.
    Both gas stations can be represented using a “C” for Consonant, and a “V” for Vowel. (The Consonants vary, but all “V’s” represent the same vowel.):
    The smaller burg: VCVCVCV CVCVCV.
    The larger burg: VCVCVCVCVC CVCVCV.
    Name these two gas stations, using the name of each burg followed by the identical brand of gasoline.
    Answer:
    Oconomowoc Conoco; Oronoco Conoco
    (Oconomowoc is in southeastern Wisconsin. Oronoco is in southeastern Minnesota.)

    Dessert Menu
    Dietary Dessert:
    “Walk right past a plate of pasta?”
    Take the surname and profession of a past performer.
    Rearrange those fifteen letters to spell a type of diet a doctor may have prescribed for this performer, in ten letters, and what any dieter's likely response might be to such a prescription, in five letters.
    Who is this performer?
    What are the type of diet and a performer’s likely response to it?
    Answer;
    (Luciano) Pavarotti, Singer; Starvation (diet), Gripe

    Lego!

    ReplyDelete