| Nelson Muntz's catchphrase on "The Simpsons" | 58 |
| Nelson who sang "Ah! Sweet Mystery of Life" | 53 |
| Nelson who wrote "The Man With the Golden Arm" | 56 |
| Nelson ___, author of "The Man With the Golden Arm" | 61 |
| Nelson's catchphrase on "The Simpsons" | 52 |
| Nelson's grandmother in the comic strip "Pickles" | 63 |
| Nen whose signature pitch was called "The Terminator" | 63 |
| Neo's realization that prompts the line "Show me" | 63 |
| Neoclassicist who painted the fresco "Parnassus" | 58 |
| Neologism that describes any of this puzzle's starred entries | 65 |
| Nereus, Proteus, Glaucus and Phorcys, to the ancient Greeks | 59 |
| Nero's portrayer in "The Story of Mankind" | 56 |
| Nervous sentiment after wrecking the parents' car | 53 |
| Nestlé brand named for its covering of tiny white confection balls | 69 |
| Netherlands seat of government (with ''The'') | 61 |
| Netizen who might hear "You've got mail!" | 55 |
| Network merger between an American company and a French one? | 60 |
| Network that brings you the movie "Piranhaconda" | 58 |
| Network that debuted with "Star Trek: Voyager" | 56 |
| Network that employed Rush Limbaugh for about two months | 56 |
| Network that once aired the "Cartoon Express" | 55 |
| Network that tried a "Charlie's Angels" reboot | 60 |
| Network that wants us all to get ''Lost'' | 57 |
| Network whose first broadcast was "Gone With the Wind" | 64 |
| Network whose first broadcast was a 1979 speech by Al Gore | 58 |
| Network with "Fast Money" and "Mad Money" | 61 |
| Network with the dating show "12 Corazones" | 53 |
| Network with the slogan "Not Reality. Actuality" | 58 |
| Network with the slogan "Not Reality. Actuality." | 59 |
| Neurosurgeon's favorite film, with "The" (1983) | 61 |
| Neutral color running through the four longest puzzle answers | 61 |
| Neutral Milk Hotel's "In the Aeroplane Over the ___" | 66 |
| Nevada city that hosts the annual National Cowboy Poetry Gathering | 66 |
| Nevada city that's home to the National Automobile Museum | 61 |
| Nevada city whose Shoshoni name means "pile of rocks" | 63 |
| Nevada county in which part of Death Valley National Park is located | 68 |
| New Age musician who famously played at the Acropolis | 53 |
| New element in each of this puzzle's theme answers | 54 |
| New England Patriot who caught a record 23 touchdown passes in 2007 | 67 |
| New England sch. with campuses in Durham and Manchester | 55 |
| New England town name that means "peace" in Hebrew | 60 |
| New Guinea port from which Amelia Earhart left on her last flight | 65 |
| New Hampshire city known for its annual motorcycle week | 55 |
| New Hampshire's "Live Free or Die," e.g. | 54 |
| New Haven collegian hidden in this puzzle's longest entries | 63 |
| New home of the toned-down "Sex and the City" | 55 |
| New Jersey borough in which the New York Giants play home games | 63 |
| New Jersey childhood home of Whitney Houston and Queen Latifah | 62 |
| New Jersey city on the west side of the George Washington Bridge | 64 |
| New Jersey governor whose first name starts his last name | 57 |
| New Jersey home of America's first movie studio, the Black Maria | 68 |
| New Jersey hometown of Carl Sagan and Milton Friedman | 53 |
| New Jersey town that formerly had a bustling film industry | 58 |
| New Jersey town where Edison built the first electric lighting system | 69 |
| New Jersey village that was the first ever to be incandescently lit | 67 |
| New Mexican town whose name means "place of red willows" | 66 |
| New Mexico county where the first atomic bomb was exploded | 58 |
| New Mexico national monument whose name is a misnomer | 53 |
| New Mexico town mentioned in the hit "Route 66" | 57 |
| New Mexico town whose name means "place of red willows" | 65 |
| New Mexico's ___ Canyon, a national historic park site | 58 |
| New Orleans bluesman in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame | 54 |
| New Orleans musician nicknamed "The Night Tripper" | 60 |
| New Orleans Saint who was the Super Bowl XLIV M.V.P. | 52 |
| New parents might scour Consumer Reports for info about them | 60 |
| New product line after Amana's takeover of Ford? | 52 |
| New product line after Armani's takeover of Philip Morris? | 62 |
| New product line after Crayola's takeover of Delta? | 55 |
| New product line after Hallmark's takeover of Mensa? | 56 |
| New product line after the NFL's takeover of Polaroid? | 58 |
| New product line after the U.S. Mint's takeover of Maytag? | 62 |
| New product line after USPS's takeover of Firestone? | 56 |
| New slogan for a Michigan city trying to seem a little more crazy? | 66 |
| New tax relief that rewards successful players (5,4) | 52 |
| New Testament book that chronicles the story of Ananias and Sapphira | 68 |
| New Valentine's phrase added on Sweethearts candy in 2010 | 61 |
| New Wave band with "Senses Working Overtime" | 54 |
| New year of which there are five anagrams in this puzzle | 56 |
| New Year's Eve techie's apology ... or is it? | 53 |
| New Year's item "dropped" in a brothel? | 53 |
| New Year's promise made to one's self while stoned? | 59 |
| New Year's tune transposed nine times in this puzzle | 56 |
| New York and Chicago have the oldest ones in the Americas | 57 |
| New York city home to the National Soccer Hall of Fame | 54 |
| New York City neighborhood abutting Hell's Kitchen | 54 |
| New York City nickname ... and this puzzle's title | 54 |
| New York city nicknamed "City of the Hills" | 53 |
| New York city that's home to Playland amusement park | 56 |
| New York City transport from the Bronx to Coney Island | 54 |
| New York city where the first Woolworth's store opened | 58 |
| New York college where the Red Cross and NAACP were organized | 61 |
| New York county bordering Pennsylvania, or vice versa | 53 |
| New York location of the first WoolworthÂ’s store | 52 |
| New York mayor nicknamed "The Little Flower" | 54 |
| New York proto-hip-hop group that wrote "Moody" | 57 |
| New York school whose team is aptly named the Setters | 53 |
| New York silverware company started in a utopian community | 58 |
| New York tickertape honorees, 1962, '69 and '86 | 55 |
| New York Times film critic who succeeded Janet Maslin | 53 |
| New York weekly since 1955 (with ''The'') | 57 |