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Herman Cain's ad sends the message that he doesn't just want to be the president of the United States, he wants to be the president of flavor country. (07:51)
Stephen doesn't trust books, but he will read their covers, and proves he's a bigger fan of Tolkien than James Franco is. (03:57)
Tom Brokaw calls the last 10 years the "Oh My God" decade where everything was out of sync with what it had been before. (07:01)
Rush Limbaugh makes a bid to buy the St. Louis Rams, and cryogenics employees play baseball with Ted Williams' frozen head. (04:04)
The forefathers of today's Colbert Nation read aloud from Stephen's masterpiece, "I Am America (And So Can You!)" (01:35)
Stephen has to answer for some things he wrote in "I am America (and So Can You!)." (1:33)
Since Stephen's voice isn't worth a Grammy, he's going to stop talking forever. (04:01)
Al Gore has already won an Oscar, an Emmy, a Nobel Prize and the 2000 presidential election -- he doesn't need a Grammy. (04:39)
Stephen does not -- not -- want you to take his interview with Lawrence Lessig and remix it with a pumping k-hole groove. (04:02)
The vice presidential debate: Stephen's impartial, but gosh darn it, he thinks it was pretty doggone good. (00:35)
Stephen leaves his mark on Philadelphia's National Constitution Center. (5:33)
Now that GM introduced the self-driving car, Stephen wonders about a self-writing television show. (4:27)
Stephen tips his hat to The New York Times after his book hit number one, but wags his finger at neuroscientists at U.C. Berkeley for saying that people need sleep. (3:43)
It's the anniversary of the ThreatDown and Stephen bought you rubber pants to celebrate. (3:53)
Stephen is right behind sweater weather on a Marie Claire magazine list of things to get excited about. (2:20)
Congressman Dennis Kucinich accepts Stephen's challenge to come on the show and empty out his pockets. (7:00)
Stephen demands that Bruce Springsteen come on the show and apologize, or at least accept Stephen's apology. (5:57)
General Wesley Clark joins Stephen to talk about the difficulties of leadership and how diplomacy is the way to go. (5:36)
Questions about Barack Obama's patriotism threaten to overshadow questions about Barack Obama's blackness, and Stephen's book finally comes out. (0:34)
It's not a party until the edges of the book line up with the angle of the display table. (1:59)