Lyon, France
Tony accompanies world-renowned chef and restaurateur Daniel Boulud as they travel back to Daniel's hometown of Lyon, France for a pilgrimage of the city's rich food culture and its legendary chefs.
Tony accompanies world-renowned chef and restaurateur Daniel Boulud as they travel back to Daniel's hometown of Lyon, France for a pilgrimage of the city's rich food culture and its legendary chefs.
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Once Johannesburg was the most dangerous city in the world, but the end of the apartheid has lead to vast changes in the city. Tony visits the Johannesburg suburb of Hillbrow, and discovers the culture and, of course food.
This unique episode looks closely at the “other” Massachusetts far away from the blue blood getaways of Nantucket or the urban sprawl of Boston that most people know so little about.
Tony travels to Las Vegas Nevada with his food author friend Michael Ruhlman. Whatever your need, whatever bad behaviour you'd like to display Las Vegas is the place that will allow it... for a price.
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.
Tony travels to Mexico City and Oaxaca to meet who fight for the food, the art, and the lives they believe in. In the Santa Anita neighbourhood of Mexico City, Tony meets boxer Jorge Lacierva.
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.
After eight years, Tony returns to South Korea. And this time, he's no stranger to kimchi. But just as Tony has changed, so has Korea.
Tony explores the other Hawaii, the one that those eight million tourists don't see when they come to the islands. He discovers the fabric of a true cultural mixing pot.
Israel, the West Bank and Gaza are three locations Tony has never travelled to before.The intense and fraught relationship between these places is hard to understand but Tony will attempt to delve into the lives of those who live here, through their food.
In this episode of Parts Unknown Tony travels back to his homeland, his roots, his favorite state in the union: New Jersey. Part nostalgia, part cautionary tale. Tony makes sure to hit up some NJ classics.
For the first time, Tony visits Budapest, 25 years after democracy planted its flag –alongside the Oscar-winning master of light, cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond, as one of his key guides.
In this episode Tony travels to the lesser-known, North Eastern Coast of Jamaica. White sandy beaches and a cool breeze with a tropical umbrella drink in hand is usually the perception of island life.
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.
Sicily isn't about fast food or the fast life. It's about savoring family, life, food and making the most of what you have. Tony will go in search of those foods and their producers and eat his way around the island.
Tony visits Andalucia during Semana Santa – Holy Week – a time filled with great pageantry and excitement. Tony's longtime DP, Zach Zamboni, currently lives in Granada with his fiancée, Fuen Sanchez.
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.
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