[upbeat rock music] both: i took a walk through this beautiful world felt the cool rain on my shoulder found something good in this beautiful world i felt the rain getting colder - la, la - sha la, la, la, la sha la, la, la, la - sha la, la, la - sha la, la, la, la sha la, la, la, la, la - pittsburgh is a city of neighborhoods, each with its own rites and rituals, a patchwork of cultures that took shape over a century ago. back then, the city was a beacon of hope and possibility for people from all over the world, offering the promise of work, prosperity, a new life. pittsburgh could have been another company town gone to beautiful ruin, but something happened. the city started to pop up on lists of the most livable places in america. it became attractive to a new wave of people from elsewhere looking to reinvent themselves and make a new world. and so we find ourselves asking the same questions we ask in other cities in transition. are the n
- so how long have you lived in this community? - 78 years. - so your whole life. - yes. - now, the first wave of italians who came here from italy, why did they come here? did they come here for steel jobs? coal? - actually, trade. i think they came here more for the trade. - yeah. - yeah, plumbers, bricklayers, any kind of trade like that. - some italians said that they were told to come over here and they were gonna find the roads paved with gold. they said, they didn t tell us we had to build them first. - yeah. [laughter] [indistinct chatter] [scattered cheers] - how s the neighborhood changed over the years? still predominantly italian american, or.? - yeah, not as much as it was, but it s still more italian than anything else. - for 35 years or so, it was a tough time for pittsburgh. why did people stay? - family. familia. - i tell people, when you come to bloomfield, don t talk about anybody because we re all connected somehow.
trigger warnings don t lessen negative reactions, and instead they can make it worse. will that put an end to trigger warnings? of course not, they will just issue a trigger warning for a trigger morning and then when there will be a trigger warning for a trigger warning for a trigger warning. which makes sense. for one thing, everyone should get a trigger morning before they see this. my eyes. let s welcome tonight s guests! [scattered cheers] the court asked her to stop leading cheers during the death penalty cases, emily compagno! he s as relaxing as underwear filled with ice water. comedian joe mackie! her husband believes in good communication, like mouthing the
week. actually some guy that works for us pick them but i don t recall his name. who cares. roll it, peggy. [scattered cheers] greg: all right! another glorious day night, in nashville. what a great audience. we ve had great audiences all week. for comparison, here s the gutfeld! crowd. [scattered cheers] look at that! all right. all right, shut up! shut up! knock it off! and here s tonight s audience for jimmy kimmel. meanwhile, here s what you re missing on colbert by watching gutfeld!. come with me and you ll be in a world of reconciliation
threatening to go public with those pictures of steve doocy like you ve never seen him before? disgusting. we can only show you the upper half. we know that the bosses are watching the show right now. that s because people haven t seen a hit this big since the last video of hunter biden puffing on his crack pipe. thoughts and prayers. so maybe i should compare and contrast both cities. today we went all over nashville and looked at what makes a good city buried real estate, stability, cleanliness of the massage parlors. [scattered cheers] greg: they love their massage parlors. so does brian kilmeade. i kid. you think the happy ending is when someone makes it to the ending of one of his books. so here it goes, the comparisons. first let s check out nashville s food.