today and the concert series brought to us by our friends. welcome to the center square today. good morning to both of you. i m pumped up and ready to go! and you are heading to west point after this. i am headed to west point. you haven t had any free food on friday, have you? there s never food on your set! this the first time. on a our summer concert series,we ves boisterous son, out on the veranda. what are you making for the crowd today? we are making you guys some skirt steak street corn tacos, and john has salsa going on there. if you re from the south, we call it chimchurra, but it s really chimichurri. this is mixed in with corn bread and eggs, we will dial it up from barbecue sauce with our buddies at leas. a bacon wrap because we no you live everything bacon wrapped. and that s what you call a fatty, it s a big burrito where the tortilla is baked. you can roll it out and stuff it, roll it up, bacon-weave it, cut it up and eat it. and we ve g
we all have the benefit of the system, which is the most successful democratic system in the world. the reason is that this is a leap of faith. not in our government but in each other. we live by these rules and the president should be saying that. jonathan, we appreciate your legal expertise and analysis on this friday morning and now you can go home, put on your apron, because you re going to be barbecuing all weekend, right? i will indeed. slow cooked ribs. sounds delicious. jonathan turley getting up early. , sir. speaking of food, will cain is having breakfast with friends as we kick off independence day weekend. he s not far from west point. we are at andy s restaurant in highland falls, new york. i m going to introduce you to two individuals. one is living at the american dream, the immigrant dream. another follows his grandparents
many of them living in brick lane. i m not going to lie, a lot of those haircuts still exist amongst bengali uncles. the immigrant dream, i think, for a lot of people is to have your own business. so, my dad, he was a chef. he was an incredible chef, still is. my dad saved, saved, saved, saved. there was a restaurant in devon that someone was selling, and my dad was like, this could be my opportunity to have my own business. you know, that was the only indian restaurant in my little town. and, of course, white people love curry. so, you know, my dad made a really good decision. we d make one annual trip to london from devon, and you felt a real sense of culture in brick lane. as a family, we d come here and fill our boots up with meat and chicken and halal groceries. and obviously we d go into one of these indian restaurants,
lane. i m not going to lie, a lot of those haircuts still exist amongst bengali uncles. the immigrant dream, i think, for a lot of people is to have your own business. so, my dad, he was a chef. he was an incredible chef, still is. my dad saved, saved, saved, saved. there was a restaurant in devon that someone was selling, and my dad was like, this could be my opportunity to have my own business. you know, that was the only indian restaurant in my little town. and, of course, white people love curry. so, you know, my dad made a really good decision. we d make one annual trip to london from devon, and you felt a real sense of culture in brick lane. as a family, we d come here and fill our boots up with meat and chicken and halal groceries. and obviously we d go into one of these indian restaurants,
50 years ago this year, back in 1971, bangladesh became a new country. tv: many of these people have spent most of the past - nine months running away from somebody who wanted to kill them. it was a painful road to independence. tv: the new flag of bangladesh, a state of bengal. i ve never seen this footage. bangladesh! my dad migrated from bangladesh to england in the 19705. ..to a land in which he did not know the language of, he didn t know anyone there. he came in the hope and in the pursuit of a better life. tv: there s an estimated 50,000 bangladeshis in london, - many of them living in brick lane. i m not going to lie, a lot of those haircuts still exist amongst bengali uncles. the immigrant dream,