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The dictionary might have a liberal bias, an international food crisis arises, and Samuel L. Jackson plays Martin Luther King Jr. on Broadway. (00:36)
Samuel L. Jackson explores Martin Luther King Jr.'s tremendous personal sacrifice and the pressures and dangers he dealt with on a daily basis. (07:56)
Stephen Sondheim discusses the complexity of his characters and rates Stephen's performance in "Company." (05:34)
The Occupy Wall Street protests break out of their fair trade, cage-free, biodegradable, free love sweat lodge and spread their anti-one-percent message worldwide. (03:03)
John Lithgow talks about growing up in a theater family and getting hooked on acting in spite of himself. (05:29)
John Lithgow calls the Atone Phone to do character research for an Ibsen play. (05:11)
A half-black, half-Hispanic Spider-Man replaces a dead Peter Parker, setting a terrible precedent for superhero diversity. (02:33)
Stephen names the GOP debate winner, examines "Sesame Street" corruption and talks to Janny Scott about Barack Obama's mother. (00:33)
The Susan G. Komen for the Cure Foundation spends donor funds to sue other charities, and Spider-Man saves Broadway with violent disfigurement. (03:43)
Stephen asks Stephen Sondheim if there really is a place for an illegal immigrant like Maria and finishes "Send in the Clowns" with his own lyrics. (06:48)
Stephen questions the US mission in Afghanistan and asks Kevin Kline if Phoebe Cates does that thing from "Fast Times." (00:31)
Kevin Kline is known for his great stage presence, but Stephen will not be out-enunciated by him. (05:43)
David Mamet believes the theater is dead because they're showing nothing but revivals that weren't good 40 years ago. (06:23)
If you are going to be in New York, check out "They Call Me Mister Fry" at the Comic Strip Live. (00:18)
Government regulation strangles Tombstone, AZ until actor Stephen Keith fires back with fake guns. (06:24)
Congress cracks down on credit card companies, and Jeff Daniels' Broadway play sounds like a great video game. (00:30)
Jeff Daniels' explains how the play "God of Carnage" shows what happens once the mask of civility is taken away. (04:29)
Stephen wants to know if Ira Glass will be just as lifeless hosting a live cinema performance as he is on the radio. (06:00)
Mr. Schwarzenegger, get back to what you do best: jamming Arnold into people's holes. (3:47)