[upbeat rock music] both: i took a walk through this beautiful world felt the cool rain on my shoulder found something good in this beautiful world i felt the rain getting colder - la, la - sha la, la, la, la sha la, la, la, la - sha la, la, la - sha la, la, la, la sha la, la, la, la, la - pittsburgh is a city of neighborhoods, each with its own rites and rituals, a patchwork of cultures that took shape over a century ago. back then, the city was a beacon of hope and possibility for people from all over the world, offering the promise of work, prosperity, a new life. pittsburgh could have been another company town gone to beautiful ruin, but something happened. the city started to pop up on lists of the most livable places in america. it became attractive to a new wave of people from elsewhere looking to reinvent themselves and make a new world. and so we find ourselves asking the same questions we ask in other cities in transition. are the n
and everyone was gonna go apeshit for whatever it is that i served, and i learned. as serendipity would have it, i met john. asked if i d be interested in going for a walk in braddock. came out to braddock. fell in love. - with braddock, not me. - with braddock. [laughter] you know, it reminded me of mckees rocks, and mckees rocks, you know, has suffered much in the same way as braddock has. - kevin says he has ambitions that go beyond turning a profit. his restaurant hopes to provide tuition-free training, and they re partnering with a local urban farm that employs high school students to grow produce in the shadows of the old steel mill. and though we are talking a swank, high-end restaurant designed to attract the monied classes from out of town, locals will be offered steeply discounted meals. - so this is beautiful, grass-fed beef short ribs sitting on a bed of lightly blanched milkweed buds. on top, a bunch of over-wintered sun choke chips.