|
|
Stephen addresses the beautiful people of South Carolina at the College of Charleston and praises Herman Cain, the man people came to see introduce him. (07:21)
The establishment may have thwarted Stephen's campaign for President of the United States of South Carolina, but there is one moment it can never take away from him. (07:05)
Stephen reminds the Colbert Nation to join him and Herman Cain for Rock Me Like a Herman Cain South Cain-olina Primary Rally at the College of Charleston. (00:31)
When Occupy Wall Street protesters at U.C. Berkeley refuse to leave the campus, they are forcibly removed by baton-wielding police. (02:52)
Seth Meyers believes that "Saturday Night Live"'s Weekend Update provides an alternative for Americans unfulfilled by mainstream news options. (05:41)
A new immigration law has unintended consequences, Halloween horror strikes, and Taylor Branch believes that college athletes should get paid. (00:31)
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Taylor Branch describes the NCAA as a cartel that hoards the billions of dollars generated by unpaid college athletes. (06:34)
To undo the damage he has unwittingly done to Karl Rove's otherwise spotless reputation, Stephen issues a rare clarification. (06:11)
Mexico City renders marriage less binding than a Verizon cell phone contract, and gamers earn Call of Duty Double XP time just by buying snacks. (03:57)
John Lithgow talks about growing up in a theater family and getting hooked on acting in spite of himself. (05:29)
Some states have found a great way to discourage illegal immigrants from coming to America and squatting out a freedom fetus. (05:06)
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)
Debates are supposed to help Americans find the Republican presidential candidate, but instead they found the running mate. (03:24)
Controversy erupts over a DC monument, Des Moines may be hiding something, and Robin Wright discusses her book on the Arab Spring. (00:35)
Neuroscientist David Eagleman likens the brain to a neural Parliament with different political parties that are battling it out to steer the ship of state. (05:45)
Michael Sandel uses real-world examples to test big philosophical concepts and ethical questions about justice and cannibalism. (07:10)
Sheila Krumholz refuses to disclose her Social Security number and closet skeletons despite the OpenSecrets.org stance on campaign finance transparency. (02:06)
Justin Vernon might have written a club album if he had been sick with St. Vitus Dance instead of mono. (04:52)
Republicans hope to attract the youth vote, seniors face a shocking threat, and Keith Olbermann returns to television. (00:37)
Before Osama bin Laden came along, it was possible to get on a plane with an adult-sized bottle of shampoo. (03:48)