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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)
Chris Matthews talks about John F. Kennedy's World War II heroism and critical health issues. (05:55)
New York bureaucrats stick their budget-cutting knives right into Santa's bowlful of jelly, but the Colbert Super PAC makes things right. (03:27)
Steven Pinker believes the world is increasingly nonviolent and that this may be the most peaceful time in human existence. (05:30)
The fastest way to start a European war is to piss off the Germans, so America should kick them in the schnitzels to jumpstart a World War II-style economic recovery. (04:27)
The end of "don't ask, don't tell" forever changes America's perception of its military. (03:40)
Stephen sets the record straight on English culture, explains why Germans don't like cupcakes and tells you why you don't need to bother visiting Europe. (04:04)
David and Julie Eisenhower talk about what it was like to be with the man who invented the 1950s but didn't know how to use a telephone. (06:16)
Up until Rich Iott wears a Nazi uniform, Tea Party candidates can do anything without rebuke from Republican leaders. (03:23)
Tom Hanks discusses his role as a history maker and the hard work behind the WWII mini-series, "The Pacific." (06:21)
Tom Hanks says everyone between the ages of 21 and 53 will feel inadequate watching "The Pacific." (05:25)
George H.W. Bush remembers the stars of WWII, and Stephen stresses the importance of the "don't ask, don't tell" policy to Stephen. (04:52)
Specialist Tareq Salha and Sgt. Robin Balcom don't look anything like the soldiers from WWII movies. (05:29)
Jonathan Chait believes the New Deal was successful because it eased people's misery. (05:21)
Pat Buchanan believes World War II was the easiest war to avoid in all of history. (6:21)
Andrei Cherny explains how America prevented the spread of Communism by dropping candy bars. (5:42)
Author Jonathan Alter calls Theodore Roosevelt the Bing Crosby of presidents; Stephen calls George W. Bush the FDR of today. (6:30)