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The Tennessee Tea Party demands that textbooks remove references to the Founding Fathers' slave ownership and violence against Native Americans. (04:27)
Mitt Romney denies coordinating with Restore Our Future, the pro-Romney super PAC responsible for a barrage of negative ads against Newt Gingrich. (03:47)
Co-founder and director of 350.org Bill McKibben explains why the Keystone XL pipeline will mean "game over" for the climate. (06:39)
Herman Cain's sexual harassment controversy is a classic case of "he said/she's legally prohibited from saying." (03:26)
Frank Luntz and Stephen debate Colbert Super PAC messaging and classic rock. (01:27)
Documentarian Susan Saladoff explores how the media and corporate America manipulated the public into believing the civil justice system is broken. (05:45)
Frank Luntz helps Stephen make the idea that corporations are people appealing to Americans. (05:44)
Coldplay frontman Chris Martin weighs Stephen's single Grammy Award against his seven and admits to stealing America's Gwyneth. (04:32)
Former FBI Special Agent Ali Soufan discusses the interrogation techniques he used to obtain intelligence from Al Qaeda operatives. (06:42)
John Lithgow talks about growing up in a theater family and getting hooked on acting in spite of himself. (05:29)
David Copperfield explores the art and science of illusion and talks about "gut magic." (05:42)
Chef Anthony Bourdain worries about the ballooning of Americans and occasionally eats endangered birds with a hood over his head. (04:48)
Allegations arise that 80% of Newt Gingrich's Twitter followers aren't real, but making up people may be the key to keeping his campaign alive. (03:48)
Peter Edelman explains why America can't call the troops home and beat its plowshares back into swords when it comes to fighting the war on poverty. (04:22)
Republicans show their Tea Party base that they're against raising the debt ceiling, while reassuring Wall Street that it's political theater. (03:45)
Stephen questions whether the world actually ended and lies about reading James Stewart's book. (00:23)
James Stewart describes the corrosive effect lying has on society and the short-term harm that comes with telling the truth. (06:05)
Stephen celebrates Jon Kyl's groundbreaking excuse-planation by tweeting round-the-clock non-facts about him. (03:43)
David Tang provides celebrities the platform to correct lies and misinformation for much less than the cost of a lawyer. (05:45)
The escalating conflict in Libya means good news for troops, Stephen's self-portrait goes up for auction, and Steve Martin does some bluegrass. (00:32)