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A half-black, half-Hispanic Spider-Man replaces a dead Peter Parker, setting a terrible precedent for superhero diversity. (02:33)
In the GOP's all-you-can-eat superstar buffet of white bread and potato candidates, Herman Cain stands out as dessert. (03:59)
Governor John Kasich stirs the passions of Ohio's black community by appointing an all-white cabinet. (05:01)
North Carolina Tea Partiers want to reverse socially engineered progress until things get so bad for the poor that they can't be ignored. (04:53)
Eugene Robinson sees four categories of black America, and Stephen should feel threatened by all of them. (07:11)
White viewers can increase Stephen's black ratings by buying an inflatable Nielsen Mandela from P.K. Winsome. (07:37)
Stephen says goodnight with Nielsen Mandela. (00:05)
Notorious Canadian paparazzi often ambush stars after first politely asking permission. (04:00)
Stephen doesn't see race, but he notices that Ujjal Dosanjh doesn't look Canadian. (06:39)
Chellie Pingree doesn't have to explain why Portland has the nation's third largest concentration of women living together -- it's just hot. (05:22)
Sonia Sotomayor's nomination sends a terrible message to all the white boys out there who dream of having their judicial reputations destroyed by the media. (02:49)
After 106 white male Supreme Court justices, Jeffrey Toobin thinks it might be time to change the court dynamics. (03:26)
Walter Kirn believes that putting Ivy League schools like Princeton on the web would show those attending state schools they're not inferior. (06:24)
Cliff Sloan estimates that the odds on the new Supreme Court justice being a white male are close to zero, even if that male is Stephen. (05:15)
Presenting: Stephen's Black Chinese History New Year Month Minute. (5:59)
Stephen and Congressman Gregory Meeks share a Twinkie sandwich. (:59)
After seeing his black friend, Alan, at an anti-war protest, Stephen has decided to look for a new black friend. (3:10)
Representative Bill Pascrell introduced legislation to limit stereotypical portrayals of Italian-Americans; Stephen recuts "The Godfather" accordingly. (6:44)
Congressman Steve Rothman talks about New Jersey, the war in Iraq and what date movie he'd see with Stephen. (6:43)