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NPR host Terry Gross talks about her 25-year career in public radio and offers the inside scoop on her interviews with Grover Norquist and Bill O'Reilly. (05:35)
NPR host Brooke Gladstone explains why her graphic novel is similar to radio and fights the popular notion that the media control minds. (05:40)
Al Qaeda should replace Osama bin Laden with hot new Internet sensation, Anwar al-Awlaki. (02:51)
James O'Keefe asks his supporters to donate to a confessed criminal, attempted boat molester and dildo monger. (03:41)
Stephen receives the Colbert Nation Five Years of Excellence Award and assembles a montage of his most world-changing moments. (06:32)
Dawn causes the BP oil spill, underprocessed SpaghettiOs get recalled, and the Texas GOP wants to criminalize sodomy. (05:07)
Dave Isay has learned that moms, no matter where they come from, share a lot in common. (05:27)
Forbes Magazine forgets to add Richard Branson to its list of fictional rich people, and hipsters don't fill out Obama's census. (04:36)
On his radio show, "Car Shout," Stephen answers questions about Chrysler's merger with Fiat and the difference between cars and phones. (05:14)
Stephen offers a travel mug, tote bag and a book on quilting to NPR hosts to tempt them to air his inaccurate statements. (3:57)
As a child, Stephen gave up his velvet hat and jodhpurs to play center field. (3:02)
The government has been monitoring your calls, and they agree that your boyfriend is a tool. (0:30)
If you pledge $1,000 to The Colbert Report, Nina Totenberg will come to your shower in a plush terry cloth robe. (5:27)
Stephen talks to documentarian Ken Burns, while Prince Charles and Camilla Parker Bowles begin their tour of America. (0:32)