- 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