Country singer with the #1 album and single "Killin' Time" [New Hampshire] | 88 |
Celebrity couple nickname #4: "Cheers" actor and "U.N.I.T.Y." rapper | 88 |
Compound based on the formula XeF (hey, cut me some slack; this was a tough one to find) | 88 |
Celebrity chef Matsuhisa who had cameos in "Casino" and "Goldmember" | 88 |
Comedian with the 2010 Legally Prohibited From Being Funny on Television Tour, familiarly | 89 |
City of northern Spain featured in Woody Allen's "Vicky Cristina Barcelona" | 89 |
California city that was the longtime host of the World's Wristwrestling Championship | 89 |
Cheating euchre player in Bret Harte's "Plain Language From Truthful James" | 89 |
Company whose founder first proposed the business concept in a college paper, earning a C | 89 |
Comic actor George who was nicknamed "Toastmaster General of the United States" | 89 |
Commercial interruptions literally found in this puzzle's three other longest answers | 89 |
Chemical element #38 (also part of the name of a pre-Police Sting/Stewart Copeland band) | 89 |
Connector that completes a phrase made from the starts of the three longest across answers | 90 |
Common word spelled in the "Spelling Bee" game on "The Price Is Right" | 90 |
Comedian who'll be playing George Burns's role in a remake of "Oh, God!" | 90 |
Columbian drug kingpin Pablo ranked the seventh richest man in the world by Forbes in 1989 | 90 |
Chairman you shouldn't carry pictures of if you want to make it with anyone, per Lennon | 91 |
Communications device described by the first words of the puzzle's four longest answers | 91 |
Comic who coined the words "eneagled," "mantasy," and "freem" | 91 |
Chronologically first but last-published of the Leatherstocking Tales, with "The" | 91 |
Classic rap outfit whose more famous members are circled in this puzzle's theme answers | 91 |
Company that won Harvard's 2002 IgNobel Prize for Most Creative Use of Imaginary Numbers | 92 |
Channel with programming such as "The Real Lunch Ladies of Lincoln Middle School"? | 92 |
Characteristic of this puzzle's circled letters, which suggest a 1991 Oscar-winning film | 92 |
Character whose last words are "For hate's sake I spit my last breath at thee." | 93 |
Captain who says "Well, gentlemen, between ourselves and home are 27,000 sea miles" | 93 |
Cry a channel surfer might hear a few minutes after the final ticks of "60 Minutes" | 93 |
Country bordered by Den., Pol., the Czech Rep., Aus., Switz., Fr., Lux., Belg., and the Neth. | 93 |
Count played by Jim Carrey in "Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events" | 93 |
Comedian George who said, "If you can't beat them, arrange to have them beaten" | 93 |
Camaros like the one Ryan Holt used to gun in the parking lot during my 8th period math class | 93 |
California team [and 18 letters in the grid to circle ... and then connect using three lines] | 93 |
Comedy about a government takeover that's alternately well-organized and absurdly sloppy? | 93 |
Chinese general who fought in the sugary-chicken-cube-and-white-rice wars of the 19th century | 93 |
Classic TV show whose first episode was "Where Is Everybody?", with "The" | 93 |
Classic 1977 song with the repeated line "Let's get together and feel all right" | 94 |
Campus radio log, Monday: Iggy airs cubic-zirconia infomercial in response to requests for ... | 94 |
Counterculture author who wrote about and drove the psychedelic "Furthur" school bus | 94 |
Company with the slogans "It's thinking" and "Up to 6 billion players" | 94 |
Colts fullback Alan who famously scored the winning touchdown in the 1958 NFL championship game | 95 |
Charles Gounod piece based on the first prelude of Bach's "Well-Tempered Clavier" | 95 |
Composer threatened with arrest in 1940 for adding a major seventh chord to the national anthem | 95 |
Character in the comic strip "Garfield," "Hi and Lois," or "Nancy" | 96 |
Calle ___ (main drag in Miami's "Little Havana," literally "8th Street") | 96 |
City where, in a letter from jail, King asserted "a moral duty to disobey unjust laws" | 96 |
Confronting unpleasant consequences of one's actions (and a hint to this puzzle's theme) | 96 |
Celebrity couple nickname #5: Kate Hudson's mother and a "Meet the Fockers" father | 96 |
Command to the promiscuous widow in "The Night of the Iguana" to take her clothes off? | 96 |
Comic who occasionally contributes to the "Motormouth" column ofThe London Sunday Times | 97 |
Computer term, based on an arcade game, regarding the annoyance of fending off recurring spammers | 97 |
Classic ad line, and question you need to answer to find the hidden theme in four starred answers | 97 |
Comics character who said "Some days even my lucky rocketship underpants don't help" | 98 |
Change the condition of a fish part? (and three words that can follow BLUE and RED, but not WHITE) | 98 |
Coulter parodied on "SNL" with the line "I think torture is good and Christiany” | 99 |
Carolina river that was Foster's original choice for "Way Down Upon the Swanee River" | 99 |
Company whose movies, not counting sequels, are all included in this puzzle [Circled Squares: 2009] | 99 |
Comic strip character who said "I refuse to have a battle of wits with an unarmed person" | 99 |
Cofounder of Atlantic Records who was chairman of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame [39 47/127 inches] | 99 |
Comics character who is 65 years old this month (and whose friends are answers to asterisked clues) | 99 |
Casual, noncompetitive curling tournament (sorry, this might be a local thing, I don't know...) | 99 |
Celebrity couple nickname #1: "Button-Down Mind" comedian and syndicated advice columnist | 99 |
Classic children's novel, and what to look for in this puzzle's three other longest answers | 99 |
Classic 1913 novel called "the tragedy of thousands of young men in England" by its author | 100 |
csa4ever: we'll cc'd from u / grantzuni0n: oh its on now / 133zarmy: u h4x0red us, we give | 100 |
Comic that comes to an end on October 3rd, and whose catchphrase ends this puzzle's theme answers | 101 |
Child's word after ''one,'' ''two'' and ''three'' | 101 |
Coach who said "If you aren't fired with enthusiasm, you will be fired with enthusiasm" | 101 |
Creatively-censored 4/28/10 New York Post headline about the foul-mouthed Senate/Wall Street hearings | 101 |
Clint Eastwood's love interest in "The Outlaw Josey Wales" (and for 12 years afterward) | 101 |
Character who says "talk of peace? I hate the word as I hate hell, all Montagues and thee." | 101 |
Classic Hüsker Dü double album whose title sounds like where a Buddhist Monk would play pinball | 101 |
Cryptographers' successes (and what can be found in the circles in this puzzle's long answers) | 102 |
Classic rock band that famously wanted to "pick up where 'I Am the Walrus' left off" | 102 |
Character who runs around in a dark room munching yellow pills while repetitive electronic music plays | 102 |
Classic Mardi Gras song that begins "My grandma and your grandma were / Sitting by the fire" | 102 |
Chemical reaction phenomenon, and what occurs in four symmetrical pairs of long answers in this puzzle | 102 |
Colorful title hit from a 1984 album with "Let's Go Crazy" and "When Doves Cry" | 103 |
Classic song from a movie celebrating its 60th anniversary on 7/18/13 [starting from the second square] | 103 |
Collapsed company chronicled in the 2005 documentary subtitled "The Smartest Guys in the Room" | 104 |
Christopher who wrote "The Berlin Stories," inspiration for the play "I Am a Camera" | 104 |
Cirque du Soleil show subtitled "An immersion into the teeming and energetic world of insects" | 104 |
Currency whose name can become its country's name by changing its last letter to an N and scrambling | 104 |
Crime in which a vehicle's serial numbers, licence plates, etc. are copied and used on a new vehicle | 104 |
Container that holds two generous glasses of wine (as well as a double dose of this puzzle's theme?) | 104 |
Christie who wrote a mystery novel about bridge (but presumably never closed one on purpose to be a dick) | 105 |
CUTE, NAUGHTY vegetarian seeks female for fuzzy times in underground digs. Large family not a problem ... | 105 |
Comic who said "Adopted kids are such a pain — you have to teach them how to look like you" | 105 |
Comic strip character created by Frank Willard in 1923 and continued by Ferd Johnson from 1958 until 1991 | 105 |
Cartoon character who said "What good is money if it can't inspire terror in your fellow man?" | 108 |
Campaign about which Rumsfeld said in 2003 "it could last six days, six weeks - I doubt six months" | 109 |
Copies of "Our Man in Havana," "The Quiet American" and "The End of the Affair"? | 110 |
Classic Doors song in which Jim Morrison refers to himself anagrammatically as "Mr. Mojo Risin'" | 110 |
Comic who said "A short summary of every Jewish holiday: They tried to kill us. We won. Let's eat" | 112 |
Cambridge U.; renter; diamond club; X; six-footer; one who might enter a pool; that lady; loner; snowball gripper | 113 |
Commedia dell'arte character David Bowie dressed as on the cover of "Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps)" | 117 |
Comedy writer Carol (whose new book, "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Crying," inspired this puzzle) | 120 |
Country that recently "built 500 objects contributable to raising the level of modernization," per its website | 120 |
Country that recently certified its election results, thus forever ending any doubt about the legitimacy thereof, totally | 121 |
Character who, in an 8/15/1939 Hollywood premiere, speaks the first words of this puzzle's five other longest answers | 121 |
Celeb in "The First Wives Club" with the cameo line "Remember girls, don't get mad, get everything" | 123 |