felicity, nice to meet you. when angelo acquired this place 30 years ago his mission was to create an authentic osteria, accessible to everyone. you can have lunch here every day for less than $11, hang out in the afternoon, but in the evening this becomes a hotspot, celebrating the region s finest foods and entertainment. oh my god, that looks delicious. we were joined by angelo s nephew, francesco. this is nice. yeah..and our mutual friend, the actress lella costa. oh god it looks amazing. my god. oh beautiful.
historical venue. felicity! nice to meet you. hi felicity. when angelo acquired this place thirty years ago, his mission was to create an authentic osteria, accessible to everyone. you can have lunch here every day for less than $11. hang out in the afternoon. but in the evening this becomes a hotspot, celebrating the region s finest foods and entertainment. alora ah! oh, my god. that looks so delicious. ravioli. ravioli. we are joined by angelo s nephew, francesco, and our mutual friend, the actress, lala costa. oh, god it looks amazing. my god. oh, beautiful! si? yeah. for a long time, it s been the only place where people could afford to go to eat out.
that s his family and i want to respect kids because they get hurt in all of this. let me go to miranda on this question. emma joe morris, our mutual friend, and you did an amazing job exposing to the world hunter biden s laptop, but it was censored all over social media by big tech at a moment where it really mattered. you ve written the laptop from hell, all that is in there. you ve experienced this censorship yourself. absolutely and particularly now we are talking about jeff zucker, there was a recording of a news conference just after our story broke three weeks before the election and there is jeff zucker telling his people at cnn, we are not following the new york post story, just ignore it.
unfofrp intly, kyiv may look like bosnia in a couple of months. of course, it was utter ly destroyed during the war putin launched in the early 2000s. do you have any insight into what stalled that convoy? what went wrong for russia? they re having a lot of problems with logistics and moving the huge amount of troops is not easy. having talked to our mutual friend, who was part of the invasion of iraq. he said the u.s. army put a lot of effort into traffic management to move the huge number of troops around and seems the russians were unprepare interested it. and they re having issues with equipment, having parked the track vehicles for so long. the tires appear to be rotting. they weren t doing maintenance. you have these huge convoys moving down pretty small roads, two lane roads in some of the cases. if they run out of fuel, it
there are logistics challenges. as john kirby, our mutual friend said, it is escalatory. i think it is time to take some additional risk here and this is less risk than having u.s. jets flying over poland, creating the no-fly zone. this is something we can, in my view, continue to think about doing if we can overcome these logistic challenges. again, it is about risk calculus. when i hear john say at this time, i m not sure what else putin would do that would cause us to take this step. so i hope we continue to examine this. i thought it was a kraetive idea. poeland s thought was to transfer them to germany so they could be transerred to ukraine. why would that not work for nato? i know that s not your position