anthony: kulcha. a perfect little flavor-bomb of wheat dough pressed against the side of a very, very hot clay oven, slathered with butter, and served with a spicy chole, a chickpea curry on the side. did i mention the butter? navroop: how is it? anthony: mmm! navroop: nice? anthony: delicious! everyone in amritsar seems to be an expert on kulcha, including this lady, navroop. navroop: it s a chutney, and this is all radish. anthony: very, very, very good. generally speaking, punjabis are famous for being a warrior class, taller, bigger. navroop: yes, they re big. anthony: still, maybe not fighters so much, but still eaters. navroop: oh, yeah! big time, yes. the religion doesn t matter. food is religion here!
clean it up? don t upset the reporters. really they re gonna get a little lathered. if you go to the ocean and looking at my boys love to fish and you know, i m lucky enough to go out there and be near them. what they re doing is they re just plastic everywhere. and john, i ll tell you some of the most beautiful places i ve been, i can go to northwest alaska. you know, i ve been to islands in the south pacific, the most remote places and pick up and just tell you where it came from where it floated from. based on the labels, you know, did it come from asia to come to the united states? but this is the cost to hidden cost of a disposable consumer lifestyle. where have it now? throw it away, but we were learning. there is no way that s the way it is our oceans and this is all we ve got. so it s a pretty stunning new study. if we can go to mars, we can clean this up. just have to have of the consensus to do it. bill weir. thank you so much, even though you came for me this morning. honest