Thursday, September 28, 2023

Flip-180, weighty kin, Irish lass, Euro-city, UK slang, Attila in Italy! A food-and-vessel festival; Synonyms expressing themselves; “Cal-i-fornee, the San Francisco state!” “The Quad(ruplet) Cities?” One Dickens of a metro-mystery!

PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 6!π SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

One Dickens of a metro-mystery!

A currently trending news story is “a tale of two cities... and one man.

The last five letters of one of the cities can be rearranged to spell a word that explains how this man became a resident of that city: “He was _____.” 
The remaining letters of that city spell the first name of a second man whose surname is the same as the name of the other city. 

These two men share a rare distinction regarding their past professions. 

What are these two cities?

Who are the two men and what is their shared distinction? 

What is the missing word that describes how the man became a resident of the city? (“He was _____.”) 

Appetizer Menu

Skydiversionary Septet Appetizer:

Flip-180, weighty kin, Irish lass, Euro-city, UK slang, Attila in Italy!

1. Think of a major European city in three syllables. Change the order of the syllables to
phonetically form a two-word slang expression common in the UK. What are this city and slang expression?

2. Think of a common four-word idiomatic phrase, “____ of the ____,” that means the current situation or state of affairs. Switch the first and last words to get another phrase that phonetically describes our fiftieth state. What are these two phrases?

3. Write a five-letter adverb in lower case letters. Change the second letter to the same as the third letter to spell a noun that might be found where the adverb indicates. Now rotate the second and third letters of this noun 180 degrees to spell an adjective that describes the opposite of where the second word will be found. What are these three words?

4. Name what Attila hoped to become by going to Italy, in two words. Spoonerize these words to spell a feat many baseball players hope to accomplish. What did Attila hope to become, and what is this baseball feat?

5. Think of a three-syllable noun that you might use to privately refer to an overweight relative. What is this noun?

6. Spoonerize the name of a well-known film critic. Switch the order of the two words to describe a fair-complexioned Irish girl.

7. Think of a major European city in nine letters. Rearrange them into three words to sarcastically describe someone who constantly frequents cocktail lounges.

MENU

Celebratory Hors d’Oeuvre:

A food-and-vessel festival

Name a multi-day seasonal festival in Europe.

Rearrange the letters in this name to spell two things you would see at this celebration: a food, and a vessel containing a beverage that complements that food.
What is this festival?
What are this vessel and food?

Commonality Of Capitals Slice:

“The Quad(ruplet) Cities?”

Put four U.S. capital cities in alphabetical order, followed by their locations. (“Boise, Idaho,” for instance, because Boise is situated in Idaho.)

In the second city, replace a pronoun with a state postal abbreviation to form a duplicate of the first city.

Change the third city to a duplicate of the first city by adding a consonant to the beginning, replacing a vowel with a different one, and inverting a consonant. 

After these revisions, all four capital cities, along with their locations, share one word in common. 

And two of the four share another word in common. 

What are are these four cities and the two commonly shared words?

Riffing Off Shortz And Sivakumar Slices:

Cal-i-fornee, the San Francisco state!”

Will Shortz’s September 24th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Sid Sivakumar, who is one of the top crossword contributors for the New York Times, reads:

Name a major U.S. city in two words. Change the first letter of the first word and the next-to-last letter of the second word. Then rearrange all the letters to name the people who live in this city. What city is it?

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Sivakumar Slices read:

ENTREE #1

Name a puzzle-maker in two words. Change the third and fifth letters of his surname. Then rearrange all the letters in the name to name two Greek mythological figures. One is associated with gold; the other is a god of gardens and fertility. 

Who is this puzzle-maker? 

Who are the two Greek mythological figures?

Note: 

Entree #2 is a riff created by Ecoarchitect, whose “Econfusions” feature appears regularly on Puzzleria!

Entree #3 is a riff created by Tortitude, whose “Tortie’s Slow but Sure Puzzles” feature also appears regularly on Puzzleria!

ENTREE #2

“Pleasing” is perhaps the nicest “typewriter word,” a word that uses each finger once and only once on a standard keyboard.

But there are other nice “typewriter words” also, especially if you know your US
geography: 

🌆🏙 People from two US cities are typewriter words. 

🙎 A single person from one US city is a typewriter word. 

🌎Products named after one US city are a plural  typewriter word. 

What are the cities?

ENTREE #3

Name a two-word major American city that is located in a coastal state. 

Change the first letter to the one that is two letters before it in the alphabet (i.e., ROT24). Rearrange the letters to produce the name of an actor who was born in that city. The actor is known for starring in a twenty-first century sitcom that was set in a city that’s on the opposite coast.

What is the city? Who is the actor?

ENTREE #4

Name a major U.S. city in one word. Two consecutive letters in the city, in reverse, name a member of the U.S. armed forces. Replace these letters with a two-letter reviver of dead chrysanthemums. Rearrange the result to name any person who lives in this city. 

What city is it, and who lives there?

ENTREE #5

Name a major U.S. city in two words. Replace the first letter of the first word and the third and last letters of the second word. Then rearrange all these letters to name the people who live in
this city. What city is it?

Hint: The three replacement letters are the only consonants in the surname of an English poet and clergyman or in a word for any group of nine.

ENTREE #6

Name a major U.S. city (in two words and 11 letters) and a word for people who live in that city (in 12 letters). 

Remove the same seven letters from both words – letters that can be anagrammed to spell the oxymoronic phrase “sad grin.” 

Anagram the five remaining letters in the word for the city people to spell what church bells do. Change the long-i vowel sound in that word to a short-u sound to form a synonym of the dialectal noun that is an anagram of the four remaining letters in the word for the city.

What is the city and word for people in that city? 

What do church bells do? 

What are the dialectal synonym and the anagram of the four letters? 

ENTREE #7

Name a major U.S. city, in two words, that contains ten letters. 
Transpose the words. Remove the space. 
Replace two consecutive letters of this result with a single letter. (The two consecutive letters are the first and third letters of a nearly half-century-old late-night television show abbreviation; the single letter is the second letter in that abbreviation.) 
The result is the name of people who live in this U.S. city. What city is it, and what are its residents called?

ENTREE #8

Name a major U.S. city that is a college town (in two words and 11 letters) and a word for people who live in that city (in 10 letters). Remove the same seven letters from both words. These letters can be rearranged to spell an “auditory crop” and the name of the Roman god that is essential to its growth. 

The three remaining letters in the 10-letter word, spelled forward or backward, are the title of a novel by a Russian author. 

The four remaining letters in the college town can be rearranged to spell the brand name for an insecticide with an advertising campaign for which the future Dr. Seuss (then known as Theodor Seuss Geisel) created artwork.

What are this U.S. city and the word for people who live there?

What are the novel title and name of the insecticide?

What is the “auditory crop” and the name of the Roman god that is essential to its growth?

ENTREE #9

Name a major U.S. city in two words and eight letters. 

Change the first letter of the second word to a new letter that is two places later in the alphabet to spell the name of a rock group. 

Forget the rock group but remember the new letter. Add it to the eight letters of the U.S. city.

Three of these nine letters spell a word for a strong desire or craving. 

Remove them. 

Rearrange the remaining letters to spell the name of any resident of this city.

What are this city and one of its residents?

What are the rock group and the word for the craving? 

ENTREE #10

Name  a U.S. city in two words. The last two letters of each word, if you put a hyphen between them, spell a four-letter hyphenated chiefly British interjection used to express farewell.

Bid “farewell” to this interjection. Replace it with a four-letter word for “intelligence, news, facts and data.” Anagram the result to spell the people who live in this city.

What city is it?

Who are the people who live in this city?

What are the interjection and the word for intelligence and news?

Hint: The city can be anagrammed to spell a two-word term for a subject about which Lilith Starr has written.

ENTREE #11

Name a major U.S. city in one nine-letter word, and the residents of this city, in two words and eight letters. 

Place an apostrophe, an “s” and a three-letter noun after the city, implying that the city is Internet-friendly. This 13-letter result is also the title of a popular literary work. 

Each of the eight letters in the term for the city’s residents also appears in the literary title.

Remove these eight letters from the title, leaving five letters that can be rearranged to spell out, if you place a space someplace, the year twenty-and-a-quarter centuries ago.

What are this city and residents of this city?

What is the title of the literary work?

What is the year twenty-and-a-quarter centuries ago?

Dessert Menu

Scrabble-Legal Sea-Worthy Dessert:

Synonyms expressing themselves

Place two synonymous nouns next to each other to form a nine-letter string made up of five different letters. 

Remove all vowels and two consonants, leaving a Scrabble-legal word for an expression of these synonyms.

What are these synonyms and the expression?

Hint: The letters you removed can be anagrammed to spell the name of a sea.

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.

114 comments:

  1. Amazing temp swings here in the deep south- today 58/ 85.
    I really don't know any jokes about skydiving but always enjoyed this Stephen Wright adage, "If at first you don't succeed, you probably should not try skydiving."

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, that's funny, Plantie. Which I can use after not solving very many of these puzzles (not that I had enough fortitude to continue reading the entrees.)

      Delete
    2. I think i have seen A4. 0r a variant somewhere else recently. HUM...?? Top o' the morning to ya.? Toot a loo.

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    3. Or is it tooting in loo? No that sounds obscene.

      Delete
    4. Skydiving is good to the last drop.

      Delete
  2. Entree #10 begins, "Take a word for a U.S. city in two words." Should the words "a word for" be deleted? Otherwise, what is meant? Thanks!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Nodd. Yes indeed, "Take a word for a U.S. city in two words," is just a bit too puzzling of a way to start a puzzle!
      It is a two-word U.S. city. I have edited the text.

      LegoWhoNowChallengesPuzzleria!PuzzleSolversToRearrangeTheLettersIn"NewDoor"ToFormOneWord

      Delete
  3. A5? Fatilda? Corpula? Megabod? So mean.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Well i guess there are a few jokes. I don't understand some of them.
    "You don't need a parachute to go skydiving. Only needed if you go twice."

    ReplyDelete
  5. For those of you who may have already tackled Entree #7, I must inform you that I have just edited the text. I had made a spelling mistake. But it should be a fair puzzle now.

    LegoNotAGreatSpeler

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I hadn't, but just went to look. "Single" is still spelled wrong...or is that somehow intentional?

      Delete
    2. Thanks, "ViolinTedditor." I corrected my careless "sinlgle."

      LegoWhoObserves"SometimesAPipeIsJustAPipe"And"SometimesATypoIsJustATypo"AlthoughApparentlyAccordingToMagritte"SometimesAPipeIsNotAPipe!"

      Delete
  6. In the Dessert, does Y count as a vowel and therefore have to be removed?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Excellent question, Nodd.
      My answer is, "It depends..."
      "Depends on what?" one may ask.
      It depends on whether the Y is used as a consonant or vowel in the word. The Y in trYst would have to be removed, but the Y in Young would not be removed.
      There are, however no Y's in this Dessert.

      LegoWhoBelivesThatNodd(WhoIsVeryY's)MayBeOntoSomeCleverAlternativeAnswerToTheDessert!

      LegoWhoSuspects

      Delete
    2. Thanks, Lego. I confess I didn't have any alternative answer in mind, just wanted to know if I needed to include words with Y's in looking for a Scrabble-legal word with no vowels.

      Delete
    3. I came up with an alt that contains only three unique letters, but more than two consonants are removed, and there's no sea to be found.

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

      Delete
    5. I thought I had it, but don't. Will try again later.

      Delete
  7. One day Chuck Norris decided to go skydiving without a parachute. The place he met the earth is now called Marianna's Trench. ???

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Chuck Norris doesn't need a parachute to go skydiving. He just repeals the law of gravity on the way down.

      Delete
    2. One more: Why do some skydivers prefer indoor skydiving?--
      They like the rush of the indoor fans.

      Delete
  8. Still working through this week's puzzles, but I have a question about the Slice. There's a first capital, and then various manipulations to get to the next two capitals, but what do we do to get the fourth one?

    I did come up with possible answers for the first three capitals, but I don't understand what word they could possibly have in common.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. In the Slice, when you put four U.S. capital cities in alphabetical order, followed by their locations, you will be looking at a list of eleven words:
      three words, two words, two words and four words.
      Altering the second and third cities-with-locations does not affect that word count.

      LegoEastMidwestWestEast

      Delete
    2. The only way I can get this to work, I've been unable to find any confirmation that the one word in common is a word. And in my answer, the first and third cities share one word in common, and the second and third cities share a different word in common. Maybe I'm missing something.

      Delete
  9. A6. Links to a recent NPR puzzle answer.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Happy Friday(for the remaining hour here in AL anyway)y'all!
    Mom and I are fine. The rest of the family took off to go to the condo this week, so we didn't eat out tonight. We just had some kind of turkey peppers, one of our box meals. Good, but I've tasted better. If I'm checking in later than usual, it's because I had forgotten to listen to "Sounds of the 70s with Johnnie Walker" on BBC2 earlier this week(I've been kind of bad about that lately, though I never miss "Time Warp with Bill St. James" Sunday nights 6:pm-10pm over WVTK out of Middlebury, VT, but the BBC show I can dial up any time), and the show lasts two hours, but with the break for supper it was a little longer. From there, I went to the Prize Crossword, set this week by Boatman(I almost thought I wasn't going to get it solved completely, but his strange little "collar" theme sort of helped. Don't ask me to go into detail about that. Answers included PETERPAN, ETON, ASCOT, MANDARIN, and DOG, but the clues only had the wordplay, not any straightforward part.), and Wordle et al. Which, of course, brings me here.
    Now my progress so far:
    I managed to get everything of SDB's except both Europe-related puzzles and the more-than-likely-just-a-pun-than-anything-else #5(as a possible alternative answer for that one, I'd like to add "AUNTACID" to the few earlier suggestions I saw here). While I have figured out the first three capital cities in the Slice, I too am stumped regarding the fourth and if we should do anything with it once we figure it out. Then I got all Entrees except #2 and #3(apologies to eco and Tortie, but you will have to supply hints for those, especially since I've never had or really even needed any training to use a typewriter, so I've never been familiar with any of the "typewriter words" you speak of). I also have to point out how Lego changed the wording in #7, obviously due to the fact he went for the variant spelling in his original wordplay, but then decided against it. Though there is a variation in the spelling of the name of the people, I do think he made the right call in the end(particularly if you know a lot of Billy Joel's more obscure songs, like I do, and at the risk of offering TMI, I'll say nothing more about that). Yadda yadda yadda, expecting hints later(but not from SDB, of course).
    Good luck in solving to all, please stay safe, and thank God at least all the late night hosts will be coming back live next week! Now all we need are the actors to come back, and we'll be all set(until the next big thing to keep just about everyone from working...probably another pandemic, God forbid). Cranberry out!
    pjbWillBeOfferingUpAnotherCrypticCrosswordThisNextWeek,SoY'AllHaveBeenWarned!!!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yea fancy a hint Tortie? When i lived in OZ that one year-1994- everyday at 3pm- the office manager would say to everyone,"fancy a cuppa? " Everything stopped and for 20-40 minutes folks would enjoy a cuppa in the kitchen area. Much different pace of living there. Kind of miss it.

      Delete
    2. Also the first place i saw "drive through liquor stores." Lots of the Britishisms they use and they have their own, such as Fair Dinkum -which means something is true. You can get in trouble there pretty easily as like the time i said to a patient, something about a, " fanny pack", not knowing that is the name of a very private part of the female anatomy in OZ. Embrassing- so know before you go.

      Delete
    3. In college, I had a roommate who was from Cyprus. One time she asked for something at dinner and it raised some eyebrows. It was another name for an eraser, but the Americans thought she was asking for a certain form of birth control.

      Delete
    4. I think that is the British term-- right?

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    5. Yes, I think that's what it was.

      Delete
    6. I hate to ask a dumb question, but where is a real OZ?

      Delete
    7. OZ==Australia. Not sure where that came from. Maybe like the way they say Aussie which sounds like Ozzie.

      Delete
  11. Turkey peppers? Like Jalapeno poppers? Sounds different. Today i will attempt to make Strawberry crepes.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Hi, everyone. Progress report: Still missing quite a bit this week. Apps were fairly easy, and I'm just missing #5. Still missing Schpuzzle (feel it should be easy, but I can't get it yet), Hors d'Oeuvre, Entree #2, Entree #5, and the Dessert (despite a few false starts).

    ReplyDelete
  13. For A7- I tried to make Bucharest work--the bar suc. ?? Maybe

    ReplyDelete
  14. Hello, all
    Good puzzles this week. Have solved most of them: Schpuzzle, Apps 1,3,5,6; the Hors d'Oeuvre and Entrées 3,9; and the Dessert still not solved.

    Two points of order on the Slice:
    1. After the described revisions, the second and third capitals each "transform" to the first one . Thus, cities 1-3 will, post-revision, be identical (but with their original "locations"). So obviously the first city name will by definition be shared.
    2. The puzzle asks for shared "words". By taking "fragments" of the respective longest "shared words", I get, at a glance, 6 additional fragment words shared by all 4 cities; plus 14 additional fragment words shared by two of them. Neglecting duplicate fragment words present in both main words, I find the 2 main words and 17 discrete fragment words, making a total of 19. I may have missed some of the fragments.

    A nice puzzle, but IMHO (in part necessarily) clumsily worded.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Got Entrée #9 but never heard of the rock group.

      Delete
    2. Excellent analysis of the Slice, geofan. I admit that I did struggle with how to word it. Congrats on solving it, despite my struggles.
      Your quest to uncover "fragment words" is creative and admirable.

      LegoWhoNotesThatThereIsAlsoA"FragmentWord"(ATwoLetterCheeryGreeting)ThatIsSharedByTheLongerOfThe"TwoSharedCommonWords"AndTheWordForTheShortestState

      Delete
    3. So by location you mean state?

      Delete
    4. "Location" is one of those "(in part necessarily) clumsily worded" words.

      Delete
  15. Since a few of you are struggling with Entree #3, here's a hint (more of a separate puzzle, actually!). Hopefully there is enough to latch on here to do a Google search; if not, more hints will be forthcoming.
    ========
    Hint for Entree #3:
    1) The actor also appeared in a 2008 romantic comedy. The title of the movie includes the first and last names of a female character in the movie. The last name is also the first name of the actor’s character in the sitcom. It is also the last name of “a man with a plan.”

    2) Remove the last letter from that name, and you’ll have a term for a law officer or military officer in some foreign countries;
    3) Remove the last letter from that word, and you’ll have a female first name that is usually spelled differently;
    4) Remove the last letter from that name, and you’ll have a type of wetland (or the first five letters of something that’s white and squishy);
    5) Remove the last letter from that word, and you’ll have a planet;
    6) Remove the last letter from that word, and you’ll have a word that means to spoil or ruin;
    7) Remove the last letter from that word, you’ll have an informal term for a particular relative (or the two-letter postal abbreviation of a New England state);
    8) Remove the last letter from that word, and you’ll have 1000.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Tortie! I just got the actor's name after working backwards from your multilayered hint.
      pjbNeverEvenRealizedTheActor'sNameWasThatCloseToThatOfTheCity(YouLearnSomethingNewEveryDayOnThisWebsite!)

      Delete
    2. Me, too...thanks, Tortie. I haven't even yet READ all the rest of the Entrees after #3, not that I could solved #2. And otherwise, I've solved ONLY Apps #2, 3 and 6, and those first three cities for the Slice. It's clearly a bad week for me. Waiting for hints.

      Delete
    3. The A4 variant that is on Blaine's blog two weeks back? involves a religious order that you also would probably see in Italy. And a city in the frozen north. The two cites also rhyme. The cities also rhyme with a popular place to be.

      Delete
    4. The baseball term involves people that are probably way over the Mendoza line.

      Delete
    5. Mila Kunis anagrams to Islam U.K. LOL.

      Delete
    6. That would be ISLAM IN UK, actually. And Ashton Kutcher anagrams to ON THE UK CHARTS. Coincidence?
      pjbSays,"IfIt'sUKWithYou,ThenIt'sUKWithMe!"

      Delete
  16. Did someone just rip off a recent Lego puzzle and stick it on NPR?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's not exactly the same puzzle, but at least this time I solved it right away.

      PS, do you still submit puzzles to Will? I'm still at it, with no success yet.

      Delete
    2. Yea. Not very often. Not a very good -batting average. OK. Like way below the," watch a macallit line."

      Delete
    3. The Mendoza line of around a .200 batting average. But i guess it also has another name or two.

      Delete
  17. For Entree #2, I finally got one of the answers. Another answer I have is not the official demonym for a particular city, but it's a plausible alternative.

    Still missing the Schpuzzle, App #5, Hors d'Oeuvre, rest of Entree#2, Entree #5, and Dessert (sheesh!).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. OK, have Entree #5 now. Still missing the rest.

      Delete
    2. Ooh, amazing to lil ole me: I just got Entree 5, too. Probably a fluke!

      Delete
    3. Instead of being responsible and going to get some sleep, I have managed to work out all the rest of the entrees, much to my surprise (#s 2 and 4 remain unsolved), altho I'm still confused about that 'dialectic noun' in #6.
      Everything else that has been impossible still is, however.

      Delete
    4. I'm not entirely sure about the dialectic noun in Entree #6, either.

      Hint for Entree #4: If you solved #11, you can solve #4.

      TortieWhoIsAnxiouslyAwaitingHintsFromLegoAndAnyoneElseWhoCaresToGiveThem

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    5. OK, so I'm not so proud of this, but I found a list that showed typewriter words. It verified the two I had, and I saw the other two in the list.

      Delete
    6. Actually, Tortie, for Entree #4, I DID find a city that would relate to #11....however, I didn't know how to turn it into a demonym...so I gave up at that point.

      Yes, Lego, where are you?

      I can't even remember where the puzzle with the typewriter words IS!!

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

      Delete
    8. The demonym in #4 is the same as the one in #11. except that the one in #11 is plural.

      The typewriter word puzzle is Entree #2. For solving the typewriter puzzle, you can tell by looking at the picture that one letter has to be in each word. There's another letter that is very likely in the word as the other two letters are unlikely. Then there's a third letter that is probably around a 50/50 chance of being either one of two letters.

      Change just one of the letters in one of the typewriter words, and anagram. You'll get another one of the typewriter words.

      TortieWhoWondersIfAnyoneHasSolvedTheSchpuzzleOrDessertYet

      Delete
    9. Tortie, re Entree #4...thanks so much. That had never occurred to me....and I had even failed to catch on to the cute little joke about the "mum reviver", having actually hunted for a two-letter chemical!

      I will now attempt to digest the rest of your email about Entree 2.

      Delete
    10. Well, I managed to come up with ONE of the two plural typewriter word demonyms (have the singular one from a list, that I found after your comment about having done so, Tortie). However, neither of these two words anagrams into anything else that works. I am giving up. Thanks anyway.

      Delete
  18. Tuesday Hints:

    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    "Return to Sender," sung by an Adonis named Elvis.

    Appetizer Menu
    I shall respect skydiveboy's request that no hints be given.

    Celebratory Hors d’Oeuvre:
    The food is a meat, but not a frankfurter... The vessel, however, is (unlike Boise, Idaho) often paired with a "frank."

    Common Capitals Slice:
    One of the U.S. capital cities is not, unlike Boise, Idaho, a state capilal.

    Riffing Off Shortz And Sivakumar Slices:
    ENTREE #1
    Finding a "family-friendly" image for one of the two Greek mythological figures was no easy task.
    ENTREE #2
    * People from two US cities are typewriter words: Illinois, Kansas
    * A single person from one US city is a typewriter word: Washington
    * Products named after one US city are a plural typewriter word: Michigan
    ENTREE #3
    "Joe Sans Gel!
    ENTREE #4
    Sir Walter
    ENTREE #5
    DoNNe, eNNeaD
    ENTREE #6
    What church bells do is alliterative (with "church," not "bells"). The dialectal noun that is an anagram of the four remaining letters in the word for the city rhymes with "bard."
    ENTREE #7
    Billy Joel sang about them.
    ENTREE #8
    The Russian novelist is, of course, Nabokov.
    “Auditory crop” is a groaner of a pun.
    ENTREE #9
    "I'm Edam, he's cheddar."
    ENTREE #10
    The four-letter hyphenated chiefly British interjection used to express farewell is echoic, and is an anagram of a word for " wheat flour or meal" that precedes "Boy!" in a cry of encouragement.
    ENTREE #11
    Neither "W.E.B. DuBlanche" nor "W.E.B. DuBois"... lose the W., but keep the Blanche.

    Scrabble-Legal Sea-Worthy Dessert:
    The sea is European.
    The Scrabble-legal word for an expression of the synonyms is made by canines with canines bared.

    LegoWhoRecallsThatMaxAlvisWasAnIndian

    ReplyDelete
  19. Got the Dessert finally, but that's it.
    pjbIsNotAtAllSurprisedThat"Skydiveboy"RhymesWith"Killjoy"

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Another unnecessary nasty crack, pjb? Don't you ever tire of it?

      Delete
    2. I agree, VT. skydiveboy's puzzles are always challenging, but also clever and fun. He just believes that his puzzles ought to "stand on their own," and that hints are superfluous. We should respect his wishes.

      LegoSeekingCivility

      Delete
    3. Sure, puzzlemakers' wishes absolutely should be respected. But personally, I find it more fun when hints are given. Solvers can initially try to solve a hard puzzle "on its own" and get the satisfaction that comes with that, but if they are unsuccessful, there is still the fun of trying to figure out the additional hints -- which often are quite challenging in their own right -- without just giving up. Absent hints, either you get it or you don't, not as much fun in my view.

      Delete
    4. I have learned to give up on skydiveboy's puzzles after a fair try at solving them. Sometimes his puzzles deal with things I've never heard of, and can't even easily be solved with Internet research.

      Delete
  20. Hurrah, got the Dessert thanks to the hint, but just now finally worked out the SLICE completely. That was certainly a 'trick' puzzle! And finished Entree 2 at last.

    The Schpuzzle, and Apps 1, 4, 5, and 7 remain unsolved. And my Hors D'O answer is as close as I can make it, but I'm looking forward to the actual solution [mine is missing an "I".]

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. VT,
      The first four letters of the first and last names of the "second man whose surname is the same as the name of the other city" are the same as the first four letters of the title of this great Nitty Gritty Dirt Band song.

      LegoJangles

      Delete
    2. Finally I got the Schpuzzle! Thanks for getting down to the "Nitty Gritty" with your hint, Lego. For a while there, I was afraid my chances of solving that one had "up and died"!
      pjbSaysIt'sBadEnoughWhenYouDie,ButWhenYou"Up"AndDie...

      Delete
    3. Did you notice the pict in E8 of Geisel could pass for an aging DeNiro and versa visa? Coincidence?

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

      Delete
    5. Well, I believe I finally, finally worked out this Schpuzzle, but I can't say I had any fun doing so. It was just too plain confusing, and OF COURSE, I had NEVER heard of the news story. I just sort of kept grinding and Googling until things seemed to make some sense.

      Delete
    6. Oh, and for Tortie or anyone else still trying to make sense of the latest Schpuzzle hint, I might add that the SONG actually has a title slightly different rom what the hint said...which also threw me off considerably.

      Delete
    7. Thank you for all the hints for the Schpuzzle. I have heard of the news story, but only the name rang a bell. The other details of the story just kind of whiffed past me. BTW, there are clues in the pictures accompanying the puzzle that can help, but they didn't help me at the time. I still don't understand Lego's Schpuzzle hints from last night.

      Solved the Dessert. I think I have the vessel for the Hors d'Oeuvre, but no meat I can add to it yields a festival. Any additional last minute hints will be appreciated!

      Delete
    8. Tortie (and Lego, if interested), I likewise think I have the vessel for the Hors d'Oeuvre, but am unsure about the meat. I did find a festival name that consists of a word for a kind of meat, followed by the word for the vessel, in order. I also confirmed that, in the country in which the festival takes place, that kind of meat is served with the beverage that goes in the vessel. But there is no rearranging involved to get the meat or vessel; as I said, they appear in order in the name of the festival. So perhaps what I have is an alternate answer.

      For the Dessert, I have two synonyms that work to form a no-vowel Scrabble word when the appropriate letters are removed, but the removed letters don't anagram to a sea. Technically, the reference to the sea is provided as a "hint" rather than as part of the puzzle itself, so perhaps my answer qualifies as a legitimate answer even though the hint doesn't work.

      Naturally, I am hoping to get the intended answers in the next 2+ hours, if possible!

      Delete
    9. The obscure festival that I finally found, as I have said above, yields a meat, however it is missing a necessary 'i', and that is all I'm going to do about it.

      Delete
    10. Tortie, I just now figured out Lego's Schpuzzle hint from last night: it's an anagram of the first man's full name.

      Delete
    11. VT, thank you! I missed that one italic word the first time around. Sometimes the default font italics/bolding on this site is a little too subtle for me and I miss it.

      Nodd, the sea has six letters. Four of these letters are vowels (two of each).

      Delete
  21. SCHPUZZLE – BOULDER, CO, JACKSON, MS; DEION SANDERS, BO JACKSON; BOTH PLAYED PRO FOOTBALL AND BASEBALL; LURED
    APPETIZERS
    1. ROTTERDAM; DAMN ROTTER
    2. LAY OF THE LAND; LAND OF THE LEI
    3. UNDER; UDDER; UPPER
    4. ROME HUN; HOME RUN
    5. ANTEATER
    6. PAULINE KAEL; PALE COLLEEN
    7. BARCELONA; A BAR CLONE
    HORS D’OEUVRE – DUCKSTEIN; STEIN, DUCK
    SLICE – COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA; COLUMBUS, OHIO; OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON; WASHINGTON, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA; COLUMBIA (4 cities); IN (3 cities); TON (2 cities), HI (2 cities)
    ENTREES
    1. SID SIVAKUMAR; MIDAS, PRIAPUS
    2. TOPEKA (TOPEKANS); PEORIA (PEORIANS); SPOKANE (SPOKANER); PONTIAC (PONTIACS)
    3. LOS ANGELES; JASON SEGEL
    4. RALEIGH; TARHEEL
    5. LAS VEGAS; NEVADANS
    6. GRAND RAPIDS; MICHIGANDERS; CHIME; CHUM, PARD
    7. LOS ANGELES; ANGELENOS
    8. FORT COLLINS; COLORADANS; ADA, FLIT; CORN, SOL
    9. GREEN BAY; BADGER ; GREEN DAY; YEN
    10. SANTA CLARITA; CALIFORNIANS; TA-TA; INFO
    11. CHARLOTTE; TAR HEELS; CHARLOTTE’S WEB; TWO BC
    DESSERT – GROWL, ROAR; GRR

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You done good, Nodd, but you should have stuck with carbuncle.

      Delete
    2. Thanks, sdb. BTW, at first I thought #2 was certain counties in Nevada (with apologies to anyone who might be offended).

      Delete
  22. Schpuzzle: (Post hint) BOULDER, JACKSON; DEION SANDERS, BO JACKSON, BOTH PLAYED PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL AND BASEBALL; LURED (Pre hint: best I could do was something like AMSTERDAM -> ARMED, for someone who went to prison; think the solution may have something to do with presidents, but got nowhere on that)
    App:
    1. ROTTERDAM, DAMN ROTTER
    2. LAY OF THE LAND; LAND OF THE LEI
    3. Under; udder; upper
    4. ROME HUN, HOME RUN
    5. ??? since I believe this was a comment on Blaine’s blog when MIASMA was the answer, I’m guessing the answer is something like MY???MA or MY???SIS or AR???MA
    6. PAULINE KAEL; PALE COLLEEN
    7. GIBRALTAR; GIRL AT BAR
    Hors d’Oeuvre: (Post hint) I think the vessel is STEIN, but can’t get any further
    Slice: COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA; (-IA + US) COLUMBUS, OHIO; (+C, replace U with Y) OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON; WASHINGTON, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA; COLUMBIA, WASHINGTON
    Entrees:
    1. SID SIVAKUMAR; MIDAS, PRIAPUS
    2. I got PEORIANS, SPOKANER (probably alt. - Internet lists demonym as Spokanite) by myself (after consulting a list of largest U.S. cities); found a “typewriter word” list that also includes TOPEKANS and PONTIACS; https://sites.rootsweb.com/~teschek/words.htm) (If you change the “R” in SPOKANER to a “T” and anagram, you’ll get TOPEKANS)
    3. LOS ANGELES; JASON SEGEL (Marshall from “How I Met Your Mother,” which was set in NYC; also starred in “Forgetting Sarah Marshall”)
    4. RALEIGH (- IG (GI) + E.T.); TARHEEL
    5. LAS VEGAS (NEVADANS) (Hint: John Donne, Ennead -> DNN)
    6. GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGANDERS; CHIME; CHUM, PARD (PARDNER)
    7. LOS ANGELES; (ANGELESLOS - ESL + IN) ANGELINOS
    8. FORT COLLINS, COLORADANS; ADA, FLIT; CORN (has ears), SOL
    9. GREEN BAY, BADGER; GREEN DAY, YEN
    10. SANTA CLARITA; CALIFORNIANS; TA-TA, INFO (hint: SATANIC ALTAR)
    11. CHARLOTTE, TARHEELS; CHARLOTTE’S WEB; TWO BC
    Dessert: (Post hint) ANGER, RAGE, GRR (Hint: AEGEAN) (first tries: SHOUT, HUSH, SHH (Hint: SOUTH, but has extra U) (alt: SHUSH, HUSH))

    ReplyDelete
  23. Schpuzzle:

    Appetizers:
    1.
    2. LAY of the LAND → LAND of the LEI
    3.
    4. ROME HUN (KING) → HOME RUN (KING)
    5. trivial answer: OVERWEIGHT
    6.
    7. BARCELONA → A BAR CLONE

    Hors d'Oeuvre:

    Slice:
    COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA
    COLUMBUS, OHIO – US + IS = COLUMBIA
    OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON; add C at start, chg Y to U → COLUMBIA
    WASHINGTON, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

    after the transformations, all 4 capitals share “COLUMBIA”, “COL”, “UM”, “BI”, “O”, “A” and “I”. Two (OLYMPIA and WASHINGTON) share “WASHINGTON”, “WASHING”, “ASHING”,”SHIN”, “WASH”, “ASH”, “WAS”, “TON”, “HIN”, “HI”, “TO”, “AS”, “O”, “A” and “I”.

    Entrées:
    #1: SID SIVAKUMAR – V,K + P,P → MIDAS, PRIAPUS
    #2: WSX / EDC / RFV / TGB + IANS →
    #3: JASON SEGEL, chg J to L → LOS ANGELES [post-Sun-hint]
    #4: RALEIGH – IG + ET = RALEETH → TAR HEEL
    #5: LAS VEGAS – L,G,S + DNN (nonad, Donne) = DASVENAN → NEVADANS
    #6: GRAND RAPIDS – SAD GRIN = PARD (= CHUM); CHIME → MICHIGANDERS;
    #7: LOS ANGELES → ANGELESLOS – SL + N = ANGELENOS (SNL)
    #8: FORT COLLINS – FLIT (insecticide) = OR COLNS → CORN (ears) SOL (Sun god); COLORADANS – OR COLNS = ADA (Nabokov)
    #9: GREEN BAY (Wisconsin) + D – YEN = GREDBA → BADGER. Rock group = GREEN DAY
    #10: SANTA CLARITA – TA-TA + INFO → CALIFORNIANS (hint: SATANIC ART)
    #11: CHARLOTTE'S WEB – TAR HEELS = COT WB → TWO B.C.

    Dessert:

    ReplyDelete
  24. Sorry for the poor solving and late reply. I was dealing with matters of national importance.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Assuming you aren't joking, geo, that sounds pretty serious!

      Delete
  25. I liked this week's puzzles, even though I did not solve them all.

    ReplyDelete
  26. SCHPUZZLE: “BOJA” => BO/ULDER => LURED; DEION SANDERS; 2nd MAN: BO JACKSON; JACKSON STATE (Mississippi) WAS WHERE SANDERS MOVED FROM.

    APPETIZERS:

    2. LAY of the LAND => LAND of the LEI

    3. UNDER => UDDER => UPPER

    6. PAULINE KAEL => PALE COLLEEN

    HORS D’O: ‘MASLENITSA' comes close: STEIN [I’d figured this was the vessel even before the Hint] & SALAMI (except for missing the second “I”)

    SLICE: COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA
    COLUMB(US), OHIO => COLUMB(IA), OHIO
    OL(Y)MpIA, WASHINGTON => (C)OL(U)MbIA, WASHINGTON
    WASHINGTON, District of COLUMBIA => COMMON WORD IS “COLUMBIA”; “WASHINGTON” IS THE COMMON WORD FOR THE LAST TWO.

    ENTREES:

    1. SID SIVAKUMAR => SID SIPAPUMAR => MIDAS & PRIAPUS

    2. PEORIANS; TOPEKANS; BOISEAN [I just realized this is missing the right pinkie finger, tho]; From a list: SPOKANER; PONTIACS

    3. LOS ANGELES => JASON SEGEL [Tortie’s Hint: MARSHALL…my older son’s name!!]

    4. G.I. => RALEIGH => RALE(E.T.)H => TAR HEEL

    5. LAS VEGAS => NAS VENAD => NEVADANS

    6. GRAND MARAIS & MICHIGANDERS => Remove 'ADGINRS' => MARA & MICHE => CHIME; CHUM => RAMA?

    7. LOS ANGELES => ANGELESLOS => ANGELENOS [SNL]

    8. FORT COLLINS & COLORADANS => Remove ‘COLORNS’ => FLIT & ADA; CORN & SOL

    9. GREEN BAY => GREEN DAY; GREEN BAYD minus ‘YEN’ => GREBAD => BADGER

    10. SANTA CLARITA => SAN CLARI & ‘INFO’ => CALIFORNIANS

    11. CHARLOTTE’S WEB; Remove 'TAR HEELS' => COTWB => TWO B.C.

    DESSERT: ANGER RAGE => Remove 'ANEAGE' => GRR; Sea: AEGEAN

    ReplyDelete
  27. 10/04//23-” Puzzeleria 83 degrees

    Schpuzzle of the Week: —-

    Appetizer:
    1.
    2.Pulse of the nation
    3.
    4. Rome Huns- home runs
    5.Fatilda/ Carb-uncle
    6. Pauline Kael- Paule- Kauline- Colleen
    7. Gibraltar- Bar rat Bill

    Hors d’Oeuvre:
    Ramstein- German Amerian festival/ Tag de Deutschen Einheidt
    Slice:

    Riffing Off Shortz ENTREE #1
    Sid Sivakumar, Midas, Priapus
    E# 2.
    E3.. Finding Sarah Marshall, Marsha-Marsh,Mars, Mar, Ma. Jason Segel- Lason Segel- Los Angeles
    E7. Los Angeles, Angelenos

    E10 –Ta-Ta, Santa Ritta, Californians, info

    Just Deserts Dessert:
    Aegean sea. ??

    ReplyDelete
  28. Schpuzzle
    The story is about Deion Sanders leaving his football coaching job at Jackson State to coach at the University of Colorado.
    BOULDER(CO), JACKSON(MS), BO JACKSON, LURED
    Both Sanders and Jackson were football players, and Jackson recently spoke very highly of Sanders and his coaching future.
    Appetizer Menu
    1. ROTTERDAM(The Netherlands), DAMN ROTTER
    2. LAY OF THE LAND, LAND OF THE LAY=LAND OF THE LEI(Hawaii)
    3. UNDER, UDDER, UPPER
    4. ROME HUN=HOME RUN
    5. ANTEATER(AUNT EATER)
    6. PAULINE KAEL=PALE COLLEEN
    7. I'll choose BARCELONA/A BAR CLONE over GIBRALTAR/GIRL AT BAR. Both are good answers, though.
    Menu
    Commonality Of Capitals Slice
    COLUMBIA(SC), COLUMBUS(OH), OLYMPIA(WA), WASHINGTON, D. C.(District of COLUMBIA)
    COLUMBIA and WASHINGTON are the shared words.
    Entrees
    1. SID SIVAKUMAR, MIDAS, PRIAPUS
    2. PEORIANS, TOPEKANS, BOISEAN, SPOKANITE, PONTIACS
    3. LOS ANGELES(CA), JASON SEGEL("HOW I MET YOUR MOTHER", playing MARSHALL ERICKSON, was also in "FORGETTING SARAH MARSHALL"), MARSHALL/MARSHAL/MARSHA/MARSH/MARS/MAR/MA
    4. RALEIGH(NC)-GI+ET=TARHEEL
    5. LAS VEGAS(NV), NEVADANS, (John)DONNE, ENNEAD
    6. GRAND RAPIDS(MI), MICHIGANDERS, CHIME, CHUM, PARD(partner)
    7. LOS ANGELES(again), ANGELES LOS=ANGELENOS
    8. FORT COLLINS(CO), COLORADANS-ADA(novel by Vladimir Nabokov)=CORN("ears"), SOL, FLIT
    9. GREEN BAY(WI), GREEN DAY, YEN, BADGER
    10. SANTA CLARITA(CA)-TA-TA+INFO=CALIFORNIANS, SATANIC ALTAR
    11. CHARLOTTE(NC), "CHARLOTTE'S WEB"-TARHEELS(again)=TWO B. C.
    Dessert Menu
    Scrabble-legal Sea-Worthy Dessert
    ANGER+RAGE-AEGEAN=GRR
    This next week's edition should feature my latest cryptic crossword, but I still need to check my email after finishing up here to see if Lego has finally sent me details regarding the packaging for said puzzle.-pjb
    QUICK "MASKED SINGER" RECAP:
    DIVER=TOM SANDOVAL(some reality show star, I don't even know him)
    Although Ken Jeong has correctly guessed a few celebs in the past, this is the first time he has done it twice in a row(and at the very beginning of the season at that!). Also unprecedented is Jenny McCarthy-Wahlberg's agreement with him in this, considering the fact in the past she has actually chewed Ken out for usually having rather out-there guesses that are completely wrong, only to witness him then correctly guess that week's celeb to be unmasked. Can he make it three in a row? Stay tuned and find out. Until then, bye for now!-pjb


    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Don't you get more satisfaction from solving my puzzles as they are presented, than having them spoon fed to a crybaby?

      Delete
    2. I saw the second one with Ken. Pretty amazing detective skills.I don't know how he does it.

      Delete
    3. Actually i think i am switching to the Golden Bachelor.

      Delete
    4. SDB,
      If you were really that proud of your own work(and it were really that good), you would be more helpful to those who couldn't solve it right away.
      pjbBelievesSDBIsBeyondHelpInManyWaysUnrelatedToPuzzles

      Delete
  29. This week's official answers for the record, part 1:

    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    One Dickens of a metro-mystery!
    A currently trending news story is “a tale of two cities... and one man.”
    The last five letters of one of the cities can be rearranged to spell a word that describes how the man became a resident of that city: “He was _____.”
    The remaining letters of that city spell the first name of a second man whose surname is the name of the other city.
    These two men share a rare distinction regarding their past professions.
    What are these two cities?
    Who are the two men and what is their shared distinction?
    What is the missing word that describes how the man became a resident of the city... “He was _____”?
    Answer:
    Boulder, Colorado, Jackson, Mississippi;
    Deion Sanders, Bo Jackson (each excelled in both the NFL and Major League Baseball);
    Lured (Sanders was "lured" from Jackson State to coach football at Colorado University.)
    ("Trending" = "currently popular or widely discussed online, especially on social media websites: 'today's top trending topics' "
    https://search.yahoo.com/search?fr=mcafee&type=E211US1456G0&p=%22trending%22+synonyms)

    Appetizer Menu
    Skydiversionary Appetizer:
    Flip-180, weighty kin, Irish lass, Euro-city, UK slang, Attila in Italy!
    1.
    Think of a major European city in three syllables. Change the order of the syllables to phonetically make a two-word slang expression common in the UK. What are this city and slang expression?
    Answer:
    Rotterdam & damn rotter!
    2.
    Think of a common four-word idiomatic phrase, “____ of the ____,” that means the current situation or state of affairs. Switch the first and last words to get another phrase that phonetically describes our fiftieth state. What are these two phrases?
    Answer:
    lay of the land; Land of the Lei
    3.
    Write a five-letter adverb in lower case letters. Change the second letter to the same as the third letter to describe what might be found where the adverb indicates. Now rotate the second and third letters 180 degrees to describe the opposite of where the second word will be found. What are these three words?
    Answer:
    under > udder > upper
    4.
    Name what Attila hoped to become by going to Italy, in two words. Spoonerize these words to spell a feat many baseball players hope to accomplish. What did Attila hope to become, and what is this baseball feat?
    Answer:
    Attila hoped to become a ROME HUN. Most baseball players hope to hit a HOME RUN.
    5.
    Think of a three-syllable noun that you might use to privately refer to an overweight relative.
    Answer:
    Carbuncle
    6.
    Spoonerize the name of a well-known film critic. Switch the order of the two words to describe a fair-complexioned Irish girl.
    Answer:
    Pauline Kael >>> pale colleen
    7.
    Think of a major European city in nine letters. Rearrange them into three words to sarcastically describe someone who constantly frequents cocktail lounges.
    Answer:
    Barcelona >>> a bar clone

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  30. This week's official answers for the record, part 2:

    MENU
    Celebratory Hors d’Oeuvre:
    A food-and-vessel festival
    Name a multi-day seasonal festival in Europe.
    Rearrange the letters in this name to spell two things you would see at this celebration: a food and a vessel containing a beverage that complements that food.
    What is this festival?
    What are this vessel and food?
    Answer:
    Oktoberfest; Stein, ham; THIS+NAME=STEIN+HAM
    ("Rearrange the letters in THIS NAME to spell two things you would see at this festival.)

    Common Capitals Slice:
    “The Quad(ruplet) Cities?”
    Put four U.S. capital cities in alphabetical order, followed by their locations. (Boise, for instance is in Idaho.)
    In the second city, replace a pronoun with a state postal abbreviation to form a duplicate of the first city.
    Change the third city to to a duplicate of the first city by adding a consonant to the beginning, replacing a vowel with a different one, and inverting a consonant.
    After these revisions, all four capital cities, along with their locations, share one word in common.
    And two of the four share another word in common.
    What are are these four cities and the two shared common words?
    Answer:
    1. Columbia, South Carolina
    2. Columbus, Ohio (which becomes "Columbia, Ohio")
    3. Olympia, Washington (which becomes "Columbia, Washington")
    4. Washington, D.C. (District of Columbia)
    All share "Columbia" in common. Two share "Washington" in common:
    1. Columbia, South Carolina
    2. Columbia, Ohio
    3. Columbia, Washington
    4. Washington, District of Columbia

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. How many times have i been duped by this nomme de pleur? At least three- maybe four.

      Delete
    2. My apologies to all!

      LegoWhoAlasLovesThisTypeOfPuzzle!

      Delete
    3. It was an anagram of THIS NAME? Boo hiss indeed!
      pjbCanCrypticallyAffirm"THEMANIS"Insane!

      Delete
  31. This week's official answers for the record, part 3:
    Riffing Off Shortz And Sivakumar Slices:
    “Cal-i-fornee, the San Francisco state!”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yzOR_Fal_SY
    Will Shortz’s September 24th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Sid Sivakumar, who is one of the top crossword contributors for the New York Times, reads:
    Name a major U.S. city in two words. Change the first letter of the first word and the next-to-last letter of the second word. Then rearrange all the letters to name the people who live in this city. What city is it?

    Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Sivakumar Slices read:
    ENTREE #1
    Name a puzzle-maker in two words. Change the third and fifth letters of his surname. Then rearrange all the letters in the name to name two Greek mythological figures: one associated with gold, the other a god of gardens and fertility.
    Who is this puzzle-maker?
    Who are the two Greek mythological figures?
    Answer:
    Sid Sivakumar; Midas, Priapus
    Note:
    Entree #2 is a riff created by Ecoarchitect, whose “Econfusions” feature appears regularly on Puzzleria!
    Entree #3 is a riff created by Tortitude, whose “Tortie’s Slow but Sure Puzzles” feature also appears regularly on Puzzleria!
    ENTREE #2
    “Pleasing” is perhaps the nicest “typewriter word,” a word that uses each finger once and only once on a standard keyboard.
    But there are other nice “typewriter words” also, especially if you know your US geography:
    * People from two US cities are typewriter words.
    * A single person from one US city is a typewriter word.
    * Products named after one US city are a plural typewriter word.
    What are the cities?
    Answer:
    People from two US cities are typewriter words [Peorians, Topekans].
    A single person from one US city is a typewriter word [Spokaner].
    Products named after one US city are a plural typewriter word [Pontiacs].
    Note: There are also six places called Tampico in the US - towns, villages, unincorporated communities, or census designated places - total population likely less than 2000; hard to find information on most of them. Tampicos is also a plural typewriter word.
    ENTREE #3
    Name a two-word major American city that is located in a coastal state. Change the first letter to the one that is two letters before it in the alphabet (i.e., ROT24). Rearrange the letters to produce the name of an actor who was born in that city. The actor is known for starring in a twenty-first century sitcom that was set in a city that’s on the opposite coast.
    What is the city? Who is the actor?
    LOS ANGELES, JASON SEGEL (who stars in “How I Met Your Mother,” which was set in New York City)
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  32. This week's official answers for the record, part 4:
    ENTREE #4
    Name a major U.S. city in one word. Two consecutive letters in the city, in reverse, name a member of the U.S. armed forces. Replace these letters with a two-letter reviver of dead chrysanthemums. Rearrange the result to name any person who lives in this city. What city is it?
    Answer:
    Raleigh (North Carolina); Tar Heel
    RALEIGH => GAL
    RALEIGH => RALE GI H => RALE ET H
    ENTREE #5
    Name a major U.S. city in two words. Replace the first letter of the first word and the third and last letters of the second word. Then rearrange all these letters to name the people who live in this city. What city is it?
    Hint: The three replacement letters are the consonants in the surname of an English poet and clergyman or in a word for any group of nine.
    Answer:
    Las Vegas; Nevadans
    LAS VEGAS => NAS VENAD => NEVADANS
    Hint: The English poet and clergyman is John Donne; "Ennead" is a word for any group of nine.
    ENTREE #6
    Name a major U.S. city (in two words and 11 letters) and a word for people who live in that city (in 12 letters). Remove the same seven letters from both words – letters that can be anagrammed to spell the oxymoronic phrase “sad grin.”
    Anagram the five remaining letters in the word for the people in the city to spell what church bells do. Change the long-i vowel sound in that word to a short-u sound to form a synonym of dialectal noun that is an anagram of the four remaining letters in the word for the city itself.
    What is the city and word for people in that city?
    What do church bells do?
    What are the dialectal synonym and anagram of the four letters?
    Answer:
    Grand Rapids; Michiganders; Chime, Chum, Pard
    ENTREE #7
    Name a major U.S. city, in two words, that contains ten letters. Transpose the words. Remove the space.
    Replace two consecutive letters of this result with a sinlgle letter. (The two consecutive letters are the first and third letters of a nearly half-century-old late-night television show abbreviation; the single letter is the second letter in that abbreviation.)
    The result is the name of people who live in this U.S. city. What city is it, and what are its residents called?
    Answer:
    Los Angeles; Angelinos: SN=>N (SNL = Saturday Night Live)
    ENTREE #8
    Name a major U.S. city that is a college town (in two words and 11 letters) and a word for people who live in that city (in 10 letters). Remove the same seven letters from both words. These letters can be rearranged to spell an “auditory crop” and the name of the Roman god that is essential to its growth.
    The three remaining letters in the 10-letter word, spelled forward or backward, are the title of a novel by a Russian author.
    The four remaining letters in the college town can be rearranged to spell the brand name for an insecticide with an advertising campaign for which the future Dr. Seuss (then known as Theodor Seuss Geisel) created artwork.
    What are this U.S. city and the word for people who live there?
    What are the novel title and name of the insecticide?
    What is the “auditory crop” and the name of the Roman god that is essential to its growth?
    Answer:
    Fort Collins; Coloradans;
    "Ada" (by Vladimir Nabokov) FLIT;
    Corn, Sol
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  33. This week's official answers for the record, part 5:
    ENTREE #9
    Name a major U.S. city in two words and eight letters. Change the first letter of the second word to a new letter that is two places later in the alphabet to spell an eight-letter rock group. Forget the rock group but remember the new letter. Add it to the eight letters of the U.S. city.
    Three of these nine letters spell a word for a strong desire or craving. Remove them. Rearrange the remaining letters to spell
    the name of any resident of this city.
    What are this city and one of its residents?
    What are the rock group and the word for the craving?
    Answer:
    Green Bay, Badger; Green Day; Yen
    ENTREE #10
    Take a word for a U.S. city in two words. The last two letters of each word, if you put a hyphen between them, spell a four-letter hyphenated chiefly British interjection used to express farewell.
    Replace these four letters with a four-letter word for “intelligence, news, facts and data.” Anagram the result to spell the people who live in this city.
    What city is it?
    Who are the people who live in this city?
    What are the interjection and the word for intelligence and news?
    Hint: The city can be anagrammed to spell a two-word term for a subject about which Lilith Starr has written.
    Answer:
    Santa Clarita; Californians,
    Ta-ta!; Info;
    Hint: Satanic Altar
    ENTREE #11
    Name a major U.S. city in one nine-letter word, and the residents of this city, in two words and eight letters.
    Place an apostrophe, an “s” and a three-letter noun after the city, implying that the city is Internet-friendly. This 13-letter result is also the title of a popular literary work.
    Each of the eight letters in the term for the city’s residents also appears in the literary title. Remove these eight letters from the title, leaving five letters that can be rearranged to spell out, if you place a space someplace, the year twenty-and-a-quarter centuries ago.
    What are this city and residents of this city?
    What is the title of the literary work?
    What is the year twenty-and-a-quarter centuries ago?
    Answer:
    Charlotte; Tar Heels; Charlotte's Web; Two BC
    CHARLOTTE => CHARLOTTE'S WEB => CHARLOTTE'S WEB – TAR HEELS => COT WB => TWO BC

    Dessert Menu
    Scrabble-Legal Sea-Worthy Dessert:
    Synonyms expressing themselves
    Place two synonymous nouns side-by-side to form a nine-letter string made up of five different letters. Remove all vowels and two consonants, leaving a Scrabble-legal word for an expression of these synonyms. What are these synonyms and the expression?
    Optional hint: The letters you removed can be anagrammed to spell the name of a sea.
    Answer:
    Anger, Rage, Grr! (ANGERRAGE – AN+E+AGE = GRR) Hint: AEGEAN (Sea)
    Place two synonymous nouns side-by-side (IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER) to form a nine-letter string made up of five different letters. Remove all vowels and two consonants, leaving a Scrabble-legal expression of these synonyms. What are these synonyms and the expression?
    Optional hint: The letters you removed can be anagrammed to spell the name of a six-letter sea that uses four of the five different letters from the nine-letter string.
    Answer:
    Anger, Rage, Grr!
    ANGERRAGE – AN+E+AGE = GRR
    Hint: Aegean (Sea)

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