very long. they smoke a little dope, go to a cheap hotel and go home with bedbugs. and a great story. and a great story. the attitude here is different than other parts of morocco. i think they have a higher tolerance of tradition of bad or outrageous behavior. they have a high tolerance of mad people, you know? but moroccans essentially are very tolerant people. they quite like madness, as well. they kind of celebrate that a bit. you know? how moroccan is tangier? it s a moroccan city with a european outlook. you can stand up on the boulevard and see spain and gibraltar and see all sorts of people passing through, but it is a moroccan city. i m 62 years old. i didn t know international days which finished in 1956, but at that time, i think europeans may have outnumbered moroccans in the center of this city. it s not the case now. there s very few europeans actually living here full time. the notion of living a life apart, of being somewhere else,
of life here. i have a very tender feelings from morocco and the friendliness and the courtesy of the people and its children. it s bonjour. [ speaking foreign language ] i always feel welcomed here. i never consider it s mine. it s theirs and they ve allowed me to feel here in a nice way. i feel recognition. they know who i am. they know who i am. there is a side by side aspect to life here that s very unusual. very unusual here. it s mostly you can do whatever you want if you do it with good manners. it is a station of the cross for, you know, bad boys of culture. i mean, rambo. iggy pop. the stones. burroughs writes and came here
olive oil. that s delicious. i heard you are the greatest taste for food in the world, man. i love good food. this is good. yeah. after dinner some fruit, some mint tea, and let the music begin. for centuries, the master musicians of jajouka have been the musical choice of the royal families of morocco, excused by the country s rulers from manual labor to devote themselves to musical training.
it became something of an obsession. now his artifacts from morocco, and north africa, are bought by collectors all over the world. jewelry and old doors. wow, these are incredibly beautiful. tell me about that. amber, coral, shells. these used to be currency. these shells. how old is this? early 20s. the amber is millions of years old. how much are you selling it for? by weight. quite heavy piece this one, 429 grams. so it comes like 42,000 so that s how much in dollars? almost $5,000. about $5,000. almost. should we look at another floor? oh, yes, follow me. there s a nice collection of
live it, but they don t stay very long. they smoke a little dope, go to a cheap hotel and go home with bedbugs. and a great story. and a great story. the attitude here is different than other parts of morocco. i think they have a higher tolerance of tradition of bad or outrageous behavior. they have a high tolerance of mad people, you know? but moroccans essentially are very tolerant people. they quite like madness, as well. they kind of celebrate that a bit. you know? how moroccan is tangier? it s a moroccan city with a european outlook. you can stand up on the boulevard and see spain and gibraltar and see all sorts of people passing through, but it is a moroccan city. i m 62 years old. i didn t know it in its international days which finished in 1956. but at that time, i think europeans may have outnumbered moroccans in the center of this city. it s not the case now. there s very few europeans actually living here full time. the notion of living a life apart, of being s