we are getting on it. that is exciting. you can see the tracks were the other cars will go. i love trains but i like the idea that the train goes on a boat. i think we should get a car on top of the sentence have a horse on top of the car. i am stanley tucci and i am fascinated with my italian heritage and i am traveling across italy to discover how the food is as unique as the people and their past. sicily is a mythical land of contrasts. fire and water. dry and fertile. refined and rough. [speaking non-english] how did one of the poorest regions in europe create the richest of cuisines? get ready. this is delicious. every mouthful here is a eruption of flavor. before i arrive in sicily there is one delicious food ritual i have to experience. it is a tradition to eat these while you are on a boat passing this statue. these beautiful little cones with rice, saffron, peas and meat. the story goes that the arabs brought these two sicily in the 9th century, handr
call or go online today. tonight on the reidout. when true democracy goes away, people get hurt. it has real life consequences. it s not some abstract political science question. we are all affected. and we take this for granted and we can t. and he s not kidding around. after 240 years after peacefully transferring power, every presidency since george washington ended his term after the second one, we re reminded our democracy really is a fragile construct. and taking a look at some. overlooked races this cycle, a reminder that anyone can win if enough people vote for them. and later rob reiner and michael moore join us to give us their takes on this tumultuous mid term and who they think won the week. we begin four days from an election with massive consequences for our democracy. the stakes in this election could not be higher for so many reasons. in her first public remarks, speaker of the house nancy pelosi thanked supporters for their good wishes for paul pe
center for newcomers in sicily, and this new wave of migration is already changing the city and its food. emmanuella and mimmo pistone run a supper club where young refugees and migrants cook the food from their homelands and share their stories. mustafa, ciao. nice to meet you. nice to meet you too. hi. joy. tucci: hi joy, how are you? joy, from nigeria, is now a close family friend and mustafa, a young migrant from egypt, has become their foster son. and i ve heard they re both amazing cooks. this one we have carrots, green beans, and the shrimps. tucci: and little shrimps? the little. joy: they are fried already. oh, delicious. oh i can t wait. it s very exciting. tonight they re making a fusion
center for newcomers in sicily, and this new wave of migration is already changing the city and its food. emmanuella and mimmo pistone run a supper club where young refugees and migrants cook the food from their homelands and share their stories. mustafa, ciao. nice to meet you. nice to meet you too. hi. joy. tucci: hi joy, how are you? joy, from nigeria, is now a close family friend and mustafa, a young migrant from egypt, has become their foster son. and i ve heard they re both amazing cooks. this one we have carrots, green beans, and the shrimps. tucci: and little shrimps? the little. joy: they are fried already. oh, delicious. oh, i can t wait. it s very exciting.
poland alone. joining me from kraków, is nbc news correspondent, alison barber. alison? hi joy. we have spent the last 12 or so days, stopping, visiting border crossings, all along the polish, you cranium border. we want to follow the journey that so many people are taking, because oftentimes, they are not staying in these border cities. they board trains, and then head to bigger cities, like this, kraków. then, they are lining up, waiting, trying to figure out if there is a place for them to sleep. we were in a train station today, on platform four, where there was countless refugees, standing, waiting in line, hours at times, to try and talk to someone, to see if there was a place where they might have shelter for the night. in that line, we met one woman, in her 70s, who had fled her home town, kharkiv. we asked her a question that we have asked every refugee we met in the last two weeks. what do you want americans to understand about what