"Takeout Order" June 21, 2024

A place to discuss the weekly Wall Street Journal Crossword Puzzle Contest, starting every Thursday around 4:00 p.m. Eastern time. Please do not post any answers or hints before the contest deadline which is midnight Sunday Eastern time.
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sharkicicles
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Location: Chicago, Walter the Shih-Tzu's home town

#301

Post by sharkicicles »

I forget who said “a void” on the Friday zoom call, but that ratcheted up my respect for this puzzle by quite a bit.
If you like Rows Gardens check out my mini ones here: viewforum.php?f=41. Nudges are free on the off chance I’ve solved the meta.
PQ63
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Joined: Sat Jun 06, 2020 4:17 pm

#302

Post by PQ63 »

Almost got sucked into a rabbit hole. The grid answer “THANKYOUMAAM” threw me a bit. If you take HANOI, remove the HAN from THANKYOUMAAM, replace the HAN with the O from HANOI you get TOKYO which is another Asian Capital. That leaves the letter “I” as a straggler. But I couldn’t find a similar pattern with the other 4 grid answers. Hats off to Mike for his rabbit holes.
Ergcat
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#303

Post by Ergcat »

woozy wrote: Mon Jun 24, 2024 12:12 am So... why is the word "avoid" (as opposed to "bunny" or "cocoa" or "habit")? Does "avoid" have anything to do the title or theme? I thought "takeout order" can be a command to assassinate and "avoid" could be an instruction to avoid direct contact. But that's morbid, isn't it?
AVOID and TAKE OUT both share a synonym “ELIMINATE”(among a couple of others). So I think the title fits as both mechanism direction and confirming the answer.
Ergcat
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#304

Post by Ergcat »

Here’s a TAKEOUT ORDER from REGFISH7 (my DD)….Baby Muggle is on his way today! Regfish7 at the hospital “take this baby OUT!”😂
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SamKat9
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#305

Post by SamKat9 »

Ergcat wrote: Mon Jun 24, 2024 8:43 am Here’s a TAKEOUT ORDER from REGFISH7 (my DD)….Baby Muggle is on his way today! Regfish7 at the hospital “take this baby OUT!”😂
Best wishes for an uneventful delivery and a speedy discharge! 💙
Shannon 🐱
PS: If you want help with a meta, PM what you have so I can help without spoiling too much. I've received lots of help in the beginning and I love to pay it forward!
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woozy
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#306

Post by woozy »

Ergcat wrote: Mon Jun 24, 2024 8:04 am

AVOID and TAKE OUT both share a synonym “ELIMINATE”(among a couple of others). So I think the title fits as both mechanism direction and confirming the answer.
See. I don't think AVOID and ELIMINATE are synonyms as ELIMINATE is to actively remove whereas AVOID is to passively avoid.

Still I think a phrase avoiding a letter is valid. I didn't really see it at first but it feels a little better now.
GUAVA is not an anagram of VAGUE
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ship4u
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#307

Post by ship4u »

sharkicicles wrote: Mon Jun 24, 2024 12:57 am I forget who said “a void” on the Friday zoom call, but that ratcheted up my respect for this puzzle by quite a bit.
'twas @HeyMikey, I recall, our spirited zoom participant!
Don & Cynthia

We are always happy to get to know other muggles and help in any way! PM's are always welcome. The next best thing to winning a mug is helping a fellow muggle win a mug!
MikeMillerwsj
Posts: 348
Joined: Tue Apr 09, 2019 2:46 pm

#308

Post by MikeMillerwsj »

The contest answer is AVOID. Each of the theme answers includes a contraction that drops a letter (YOU’RE/YOU ARE; NE’ER/ NEVER; DON’T/DO NOT; WHO’S/WHO IS; MA’AM/MADAM). The dropped letters, in order, spell the contest answer.

After a string of tough contests, this was a crowd-pleaser, with one of our highest success rates ever. We had 1,947 entries with a stratospheric 98% correct. Incorrect entries included a few actual takeout orders, including PIZZA (3), SUSHI (3) and FRIES (2), plus IDIOM (5), VIDEO (2) and a few others.

Congrats on this week's winner: Ben Landrum of Reisterstown, MD!
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The XWord Rabbit
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#309

Post by The XWord Rabbit »


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Last week’s feast of four Rabbit hole nominations was followed, unsurprisingly, by this week’s famine. “Takeout Order” by Mr. Shenk resulted in a mob of Muggles on the shore after seeing that the five anchor across entries each contained a contraction: YOU’RE, NE’ER, DON’T, WHO’S and MA’AM. The missing letters spelled out the meta: AVOID.

That being the case, your Rabbit has nowhere else to go but to fill this space with You Tube videos.

First, a musical homage to the answer of this week’s puzzle: It’s Dick Clark’s American Bandstand from 1966. Your Rabbit particularly likes the way the video ends with an “Okay, everybody, song’s over. Get off the stage.”



And this week we have a rare second video.

The passing of Donald Sutherland was sad enough without the omission of one of your Rabbit’s favorite movies in his New York Times obituary: From 1970 it’s Start the Revolution Without Me. Literate and silly (not unlike your Rabbit) here's a clip – and see you next week.

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Bird Lives
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#310

Post by Bird Lives »

The XWord Rabbit wrote: Mon Jun 24, 2024 5:14 pm

First, a musical homage to the answer of this week’s puzzle: It’s Dick Clark’s American Bandstand from 1966. Your Rabbit particularly likes the way the video ends with an “Okay, everybody, song’s over. Get off the stage.”




"A Must to Avoid" is such an unusual phrase, it lends itself to many mondegreens, especially if, like me, you usually heard it on a cheap AM radio. I thought it was "She's a muscle boy" -- a concept more likely (and more controversial) in 2024 than in 1966.
Jay
Susan Goldberg
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#311

Post by Susan Goldberg »

LadyBird wrote: Fri Jun 21, 2024 7:54 pm
Susan Goldberg wrote: Fri Jun 21, 2024 6:22 pm
LadyBird wrote: Thu Jun 20, 2024 4:24 pm Ashore and missed page one again!

I am GREen with envy for those who found the pATH more quickly than I did--and I tried to go fast! At least I won't be wORN out with endless rabbit holes and rEDOing my grid trying to find the answer. I'm guessing that the muggles will be packed cheek by joWL at the tiki bar this weekend.
I feel Ike you’ve used Great Horned Owl before!!
When I was thinking of a bird for this week, I was surprised to see that I hadn't used Great-horned Owl before. But I double-checked my spreadsheet (yes, my meta statistics spreadsheet has a column for the bird of the week! :geek: ) and it wasn't there. I HAVE used Burrowing Owl, Eastern Screech Owl, Northern Saw-whet Owl, and Short-eared Owl. We all nerd out about something.

And here is a pic of some Great-horned Owlets at the wildlife hospital I volunteer at. They really click their beaks at you when you go into their cage!

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They are beautiful! And no wonder I was confused - who knew there were so may owls?
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