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A Molotov cocktail of doom known as Phobos-Grunt hurtles toward the Earth's surface, threatening New York, London and Tokyo. (03:57)
An alternative to vaccines emerges, Rick Perry unveils another campaign ad, and notorious lobbyist Jack Abramoff's book examines Washington corruption. (00:34)
The Bolshoi Ballet's David Hallberg describes Fred Astaire as his main artistic inspiration and explains that dance has always been his calling. (04:04)
While Vladimir Putin bags tigers in Siberia, Barack Obama bags a pie on his Midwestern safari. (03:13)
Atlantis crewmembers Chris Ferguson, Doug Hurley, Rex Walheim and Sandy Magnus discuss the final space shuttle mission in this uncut version of their interview with Stephen. (05:21)
Space shuttle Atlantis crewmembers -- Chris Ferguson, Doug Hurley, Rex Walheim and Sandy Magnus -- discuss their final mission and the future of American space travel. (05:42)
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice believes the U.N. is the one place where America can marshal the military and financial support of other nations. (06:03)
In this unedited, extended interview, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice explains the role of the U.N. in protecting American interests. (05:15)
America ends its space program, making Stephen's astronauts skills as obsolete as dodo husbandry, Zune programming and American manufacturing. (04:10)
Henry Kissinger and Stephen have a difference of opinion regarding the Cold War. (04:18)
Stephen wonders if Americans can put the national debt in vertical stripes and asks Ian Frazier how much a Toblerone costs in the gulag minibar. (00:35)
Ian Frazier describes being on a train for 52 hours and never leaving the Russian forest. (06:09)
Iran reveals its diorama technology by unveiling an "ambassador of death" with cardboard clouds, painted backdrops and fake snow. (04:24)
Jeffrey Goldberg says bad things could come from a decision, either by Israel or the US, to bomb Iran. (06:26)
Stephen downloads the solution to stop media piracy, and Hephzibah Anderson talks about her year without sex. (00:37)
North Korea demands reparations from the US, and the FBI arrests 10 Russian spies raising families in the suburbs. (05:08)
Stephen competes with Russia by placing his intern, Jay, in a state-of-the-art gym locker for 519 days. (02:29)
John Pike talks about the popularity of the AK-47 as the Russian designer celebrates his 90th birthday. (05:26)
Karim Sadjadpour describes Iranian math superstar Mahmoud Vahidnia's unprecedented act of challenging Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Khomeini. (06:51)
Vera Lengsfeld uses sex to campaign in Germany, Russian dogs take the subway, and flying rabbis ward off swine flu. (06:10)