% replaces any number of letters (la% - lake, lamp)_ replaces one letter (ca_ - car, cat)

Other crossword clues for answer "MAD"

MAD
Crazy
__ Dogs and Englishmen
Alfred E. Neuman's mag
Alfred E. Neuman's magazine
Frenzied
Like a wet hen
Magazine since 1952
Ready for commitment?
Cracked competitor
Hatter's mental state?
Batty
Nuts or crackers
A lot of, in slang
Ireful
Very, in slang
Spy vs. Spy magazine
Word before men or money
Steamed
Demanding satisfaction, perhaps
Like people who should wait before responding to a text, perhaps
Liable to rant
Magazine for which Richard Nixon is the only president with an authorial credit (however dubious)
Magazine with such spoofs as "The Ecchorcist" and "The Violence of the Hams"
Wicked relative?
U ___ BRO?
Loopy
With 63-Across, ... Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce
Mental
Three fries short of a Happy Meal
Squirrelly
Fanatical
Raving
Bonkers
Infuriated
Unhinged
Al Jaffee employer
Crazed
Off one's rocker
___ cow disease
Sore
Crackers
Beside oneself
Like Dr. Frankenstein, arguably
...but why will you say that I am ___? ("The Tell-Tale Heart" line)
___ Dogs and Englishmen (Noel Coward song)
Crackbrained
Irrational
Ticked off
Like Don Quixote
Not calm, say
It was ad-free from 1957 to 2001
Like Peter Finch, in a climactic 1976 movie scene
Very, in modern slang
Like one texting >:-(
Hardly happy
Fit to be tied
Insane
Wild
Humor mag
Over the edge
Crackers, so to speak
Like Wonderland's hatter
Spy vs. Spy mag
Cracked
Gaga
Bananas, nuts, or crackers
Boiling
Cap or house starter
Satirical magazine since 1952
Off-the-wall
Cheap satire magazine
Frantic
Furious
Harebrained
Humor magazine
What, me worry? magazine
Angry
Wacky
Humor magazine since 1952
Spot to spy "Spy vs. Spy"
Magazine written by the "usual gang of idiots"
Crackers or nuts
Word before money or dash
___ money
Spitting nails, so to speak
Ticked
Cheap! magazine
Alfred E. Neuman promoter
Frantic, and a word that can precede the ends of 17-, 26-, 43-, and 56-Across
Magazine featuring a Fold-In
Pretty ticked
Daft
Magazine that features "Spy vs. Spy"
Ticked off but good
Certifiable
Loony
Magazine with "The Lighter Side Of..."
With 65-Across, TV series that ended 5/17/15
Salty
Like Anthony Wayne
Enraged
Incensed
TV's "___About You"
____ About You
___ About You
Not all there
Out of one's gourd
In a lather
Nuts or bananas
Deranged
Kind of money
Seeing red
Like the Hatter
Demented
Magazine that had a "Lighter Side of ..." feature
Hot under the collar
It facetiously calls its regular writers "the usual gang of idiots"
Magazine that featured Don Martin cartoons
Alfred E. Neuman is its mascot
Steamed up
Magazine that began as a comic book
Moonstruck
Hot
Hopping __
Very angry
Magazine with Don Martin cartoons
Zoo
Irate
Like many a villainous fictional scientist
Satiric magazine founded in 1952
Alfred E. Neuman magazine
Like Ophelia, ultimately
Satiric magazine since 1952
__ money
Like Lear, ultimately
Word that appears four times in a 1963 film title
Magazine with a satirical "fold-in" back cover
More than enthusiastic
Magazine with "The Lighter Side of..." features
Fuming
Like a March hare
Publication credited to the "Usual Gang of Idiots"
Outraged
Up in arms
__ About You
Satire magazine
Satire mag
Gaines' magazine
More than miffed
Satire publication
Steaming
Teed off
Totally impractical
__ about (in love with)
Miffed and more
Ready to flip
Satirical periodical
__ dash
Ranting and raving
Like __
Very sore
More than sore
Much more than miffed
Apt to flip
Seething
Ill-considered
See 56 Across
Cracked rival
Rival of Cracked
Magazine with a fold-in inside back cover
Magazine featuring movie satires
Bench wear
It publishes an annual "20 Dumbest People, Events and Things" list
Cuckoo
Magazine with a gap-toothed mascot
Sergio Aragonés's magazine
Foolish.
In ill temper.
Rash.
Beside one's self.
___ Parliament, 1258.
Infatuated.
Lucy Ashton's final state of mind.
___ Anthony Wayne.
The ___ Hatter.
Senseless.
Choleric.
Gen. "Howlin' ___ Smith."
Extravagantly gay.
Imprudent.
March hares are.
Hilarious.
Unwise.
Fantastic.
Wild about.
Wildly guy.
Wildly gay.
___ Avenue: New Yorkese term.
Foolish and rash.
Completely zany.
Extravagant.
___ Hatter.
Reckless.
Ophelia's ___ scene.
Illogical
Anthony Wayne
Kind of hatter
Carroll's hatter
Rabid
___ dogs and Englishmen . . .
Balmy
Kind of cap or house
Cap or house
Dog or Hatter
Kind of money or Hatter
Like Ophelia
Like Ophelia, in Act IV
Like the Chaillot woman
Hatter or money
Like Carroll's Hatter
See 18 Down
Wildly merry
Dippy
Like a Wonderland tea party
Mindless
Word for Alice's hatter
Kind of scientist in cartoons
Like Mr. Dick
Coward's "___ About the Boy"
Follower of hopping
Epithet for Anthony Wayne
Hopping ___
All poets are ___: Burton
___ Wednesday, H. Lloyd film
Non compos mentis
Daffy
___ About the Boy: Coward
___ Max, Mel Gibson role
___ Wednesday, Harold Lloyd film
William Gaines founded it in 1953
Bats
Like Lear
Like the woman of Chaillot
Touched
Worked up
Hopping ____
Hopping _____
Unbalanced
Breathing fire
Harvey Kurtzman was its first editor
Like King George III
Wacko
Ready for an asylum
Like some scientists
Magazine with a fold-in back cover
Plenty ticked
Certifiable, so to speak
It has a cover price of "$2.99 CHEAP"
Like some love
Like Lady Macbeth
On the warpath
Out of one's mind
Magazine with a fold-in
Monthly originally published by EC Comics
Extremely upset
Magazine that features "Alfred's Poor Almanac"
Are you ___?
Usual gang of idiots magazine
Magazine featuring 47-Down
Foaming at the mouth
George III descriptor
Magazine with a back-cover fold-in
Raging
Berserk
I learned to be a movie critic by reading ___ magazine: Roger Ebert
___ Men
Extremely, in modern lingo
About to explode
Out of one's head
Word before dog or dash
It began as a comic book with the tagline "Humor in a jugular vein"
Plenty steamed
Passionate (about)
Ready to blow
Very, informally
___ dash
We're all ___ here. I'm ___. You're ___: Cheshire Cat
More than a little annoyed
Like some fictional scientists
Beyond balmy
TV's '-- About You'
Loco
Miffed
Quite cross
Livid
Very cross
Really riled
Queen "I'm Going Slightly ___"
Gary Jules "___ World"
What Queen was "Going Slightly"
Magazine founded by William Gaines
Word to describe a hatter or a hater
Pissed off
Fired up, say
Bent out of shape
Cross
In a red state?
Upset
Ready for a commitment?
Dam's reversal
Satirical magazine
The year one thousand in Rome? That's crazy
_____ About You (Belinda Carlisle)
Like Mel Gibson in a 1979 film
March hare characteristic
Ranting or raving
Like some cinematic scientists
Ready to be committed
Like one hatter
Not in one's right mind
5-Across relative
Mentally unbalanced
1952-2019 humor magazine
Like a fictional hatter
Like the emoticon >:-<
Boiling or fuming
Former humor magazine
Longtime satirical magazine
Filled with 30-Down
None too pleased
I'm not ___, I'm just disappointed
why some people be ___ at me sometimes (Lucille Clifton poem)
Like this emoticon >:-(
Ready to throw a fit
Spy vs. Spy magazine ... or, after flipping a letter, mouthful of gum
Far from pleased
Angry / Portuguese wine?
Humor magazine first published in 1952
Magazine that had fold-ins
It made Alfred E. Neuman famous
Really angry
Me worry? magazine
Insane or angry
Dam reversal
Zany
See 1 Down
Type of money
Brainsick
Bananas, so to speak
Boiling, in a way
Throwing a hissy fit, say
In your feelings, perhaps
___ woman (Taylor Swift song)
I Ain't ___ at Cha (1996 2Pac hit)
Satire source since 1952
It features "Drawn-Out Dramas"
Its first issue included "Crow Vadis?"
It has a gap-toothed mascot
U ___ bro? (phrase for taunting an angry user)
With 81 Across, drama featuring the advertising firm Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce
Magazine first published in 1952
Spy Vs. Spy publisher
It's written by "the usual gang of idiots"
Spitting bullets
In a seething state
Magazine with a foldable back cover
Ready to hit the roof
Rubbed the wrong way
The Lighter Side of... magazine
Apoplectic
Hulking out
Its first cover identified it as "Humor in a Jugular Vein"
What Hamlet is thought to be, or not to be