Jamaica Part 2
Ainsley takes to the water of the Martha Brae river to learn about the area and to experience the beauty.
Ainsley takes to the water of the Martha Brae river to learn about the area and to experience the beauty.
Showing1to20of539results
Tony seeks to challenge his notions of Mississippi by taking a road trip to meet a cast of Mississippians enjoying the diverse foodways and embracing the traditional and contemporary music worlds.
Libyan hip-hop, Italian restaurants, tribal allegiances and post-war uncertainty in Libya. Bourdain looks at the country through personal stories, food, and the music of anti-Qaddafi rapper expats.
Tony dives into the ever-changing state of Punjab, India. Starting off his journey in Amritsar, Tony is immediately struck by the chaos around him.
Tony will explore several regions of Colombia from the mountains down to the Caribbean coast to the coca leaf growing inlands formerly controlled by drug cartels.
Welcome to Putin's Russia. If you don't fall into line, you could be the target of a show trial and be thrown into a penal colony. But if you're hungry you might actually find something worth eating.
Bourdain looks at the Congo as one of the more industrialized powers in Africa now largely crumbled to nothingness and chaos with Tim Butcher author of Blood River.
A country of only six million people where a vast percentage of the land is steaming hot jungle or a huge scrub desert known simply as The Chaco. This is one of the least known nations in the world.
Tony explores what Burroughs called "Interzone," where artists sought escape from Western moral prohibitions and the possibilities of great empty spaces. But what is it like now?
The beautiful island of St Lucia is the next stop for Ainsley's Caribbean Kitchen.
Ainsley's first stop is Jamaica, the island where his father grew up.
Ainsley takes to the water of the Martha Brae river to learn about the area and to experience the beauty.
Tony travels to Shanghai. Forget the antiquated views you might hold about a communist-run, creativity-devoid State of androids. The modern China is a vibrant, dynamic monument to capitalism.
Few countries have a more contentious relationship with the United States than Iran. In this episode we heads to this Shia Muslim nation to explore a country few Americans have visited since the 80s.
Roy Choi's food reflects a new American idea of "natural" fusion. Bourdain examines the meeting point of Asian, Mexican, Latino culture in modern LA.
Tony heads back to his much-beloved Salvador, Brazil. The ever-present street festivals and the famous Carnival parade begin with sitting down with a local artist in the streets of the historic Pelo.
New Mexico has the largest Hispanic population per capita in the US. No better way to see the mash-up of cultures that make up this uniquely American State, than by what the people here are eating
In this episode of Parts Unknown, we first visit the city of Glasgow, then we head north into the Scottish Highlands.
Welcome to Putin's Russia. If you don't fall into line, you could be the target of a show trial and be thrown into a penal colony. But if you're hungry you might actually find something worth eating.
The first time Tony visited Beirut, it didn't end well. Now Tony is back in Beirut, where all the world's troubles and all the world's good comes together to form a city like no other.
Bourdain looks at the Congo as one of the more industrialized powers in Africa now largely crumbled to nothingness and chaos with Tim Butcher author of Blood River.
Showing1to20of539results