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Hosni Mubarack gets jilted by 80 million Egyptians, Rick Santorum addresses his long-time Google problem, and Jimmy Fallon becomes Stephen's best friend for six months. (04:54)
Robin Wright believes that, by rejecting extremism, Muslims have created the most important political turning point of the early 21st century. (07:09)
The Obama administration plans to replace Stephen's favorite Egyptian mortuary-based nutritional diagram. (02:03)
Stephen tries out a mosquito net, increases the elephant population and reports on loveable eccentric Muammar al-Gaddafi in his coverage of Africa. (03:50)
Michael Scheuer believes the war on terror has barely begun because the American people don't have a clue about why they're being attacked. (05:56)
Libyans seize Benghazi, and thousands of government workers protest anti-union legislation in Wisconsin. (03:54)
The Daily offers the convenience of using an iPad to read the news online without the Internet's annoying habit of being completely free. (04:46)
President Twitter Bird will lead Egypt, Rex Paul becomes the next GOP star, and David Albright talks about the computer virus that shut down Iran's reactors. (00:37)
Silvio Berlusconi is accused of bringing young girls to bunga-bunga parties, and the Muslim Brotherhood plans to make Egypt an enemy of America. (05:28)
Christiane Amanpour brings a gift for Christiane Aman-purr and believes Egypt's democratic uprising will last. (05:50)
Hosni Mubarak steps down onto a pillowy mound of money, Stephen profiles a new Enemy Within, and LCD Soundsystem performs. (00:38)
Stephen believes the same shadowy forces behind the uprising in Egypt are also responsible for the disappearance of King Tut's penis. (05:34)
The Egyptian people ask Anderson Cooper to step down, and Bill O'Reilly believes God is the answer to everything. (05:55)
America must break its dependency on foreign turmoil, and Sean Kelly has a new book about classic literature. (00:30)
Cairo turns into the "Jersey Shore" as pro-Mubarak supporters punch Anderson Cooper in the head. (01:53)
Christiane Aman-purr must decide whether Egypt's revolution is a democratic uprising or an Islamic power grab. (03:29)
Hosni Mubarak is out, but Sean Hannity knows that the Egyptian uprising won't necessarily end in democracy. (03:10)
Egypt is burning, there's a breakthrough in taser technology, and Dr. Paul Offit talks about the importance of vaccines. (00:33)
The Egyptian people should hold a special election to choose between Hosni Mubarak, Hosno McBarak and Hosna Mooburka. (02:53)
Samer Shehata believes the U.S. can push for a stable Middle East by supporting the 83 million Egyptians rising up. (04:44)