Mark, I have just found your UA-cam videos and love them. I am 80 years old and have been traveling Europe mostly Italy for over 40 years and you have shown me things I never seen before thank you.
Verona steeped in history ,tradition , hospitality and excellent cuisine. A great testimonial to the people of northern Italy who have suffered much and you documented their exuberance and love of life, Bravo! Great vlog!
@@EuroTrotter buono il tiramisù! È il mio dolce preferito .mia mamma fa un tiramisù da leccarsi i baffi, ahahah e naturalmente anch'io so farlo meravigliosamente. È un dolce veneto . Spero tu capisca ciò che ho scritto.Grazie
Just wanted to say thank you! I love all your videos: very informative. It is fun and vibrant! You exude positivity. Watching them again and again takes me away even for just a day from these uncertain times.. Be safe!
Fun video. A few years back my AirBnB hostess in Mantova took me to Verona for a day visit, and her favorite local treat was the hot chocolate the serve just off that plaza.
I can only travel in winter, but if you’re there during opera season, you should treat yourself to a show at the Arena. The series “Opera Explained” by Thomsen Smillie on Audible, is a great one-hour primer to get you ready for a particular work. He assumes the listener doesn’t know anything about opera, because most people don’t, and he gets you up to speed without patronizing. Because of the size and openness of the Arena, the stage and set is unlike any other. For $5 on premieropera.com you can get a DVD of Nabucco, by Verdi, performed there at the Arena. The costumes and makeup you just have to see for yourself. When they come to the Hebrew slave song, “Và, pensiero”, which is the unofficial national anthem of Italy, it’s with the lights out under a full moon, and it gives you goose bumps.
The same person who recommended Thomsen Smillie to me also recommended L’elisir d’amore (The love potion) as the first opera I should see. It’s still my favorite; the music is fantastic, and the characters and story are fun and easy to follow. And something notable about Donizetti is all his humorous operas have a thread of seriousness running through them, while his serious works have a thread of humor or irony. To me, this clip is a perfect example of the seriousness in L’elisir d’amore: ua-cam.com/video/ipcYLEwrk3E/v-deo.html Up to this point it’s all been fun and games and silliness about a naïf lovesick young man, a quack doctor who sells him cheap wine telling him it’s a magical love potion, and a comically bombastic army officer who is his competition for the girl. Suddenly all of that is stripped away, and it’s just the young man on stage, having just been struck by the realization that the girl he loves so much loves him back. With just enough instrumentation to set the tone, a bassoon (an odd but perfect choice) and a harp, you don’t just hear the words, you FEEL with him his elation as he realizes how his whole destiny has just changed. You don’t have to understand the words to feel the emotions, because Italian opera in particular does not emphasize clarity of words, which is why they always put subtitles (technically supertitles) above the stage so that Italian audiences can understand Italian performers singing in archaic Italian. To me this is a perfect snapshot of the multifaceted beauty of opera, where they use poetry, drama and especially music, together to PROJECT emotions to the audience. This is Rolando Villazón, originally from Mexico, at the state opera house of Vienna. He looks like Mr. Bean, which you won’t be able to unsee 😂.
EURO TROTTER once things blow over, if you’d like to go to the opera house in Parma, I’m friends with the house doctor there. She only speaks Italian, but she’s a great lady and knows absolutely everybody. She could give you a backstage glimpse and introduce you to a lot of interesting folks. That would make a great video- Mark and Ryan at the opera! You just can’t record during the performance. Parma is Verdi’s hometown, or the closest major city to his village anyway, so it’s the center of all things Verdi.
I am going to visit Verona with my husband this weekend and I can’t wait to go to that restaurant and taste the risotto and focaccia bread followed by the tiramisu. Thanks for sharing this video. ❤❤. It is very useful. And of course visiting the city and discover that marvellous architecture ❤
You sita you people watcha and you drinka ;) love Verona..just there last September..so hard to believe what’s happening there..be safe be strong be positive..we will go back soon I hope ... grazie Mille !
Fun fact about Ponte Pietra: in the exact middle there is a Stone that used to sign the border between the Verona owned by Napoleone and the Austrian Verona (or Veronetta, little verona but with a bad meaning).
Paul Lee that is typical in all of northern Italy, it's called "Tagliere di salumi" and tagliere is "cutting board" and salumi are "cured meats". You can find it with some variations of composition (and at least 3 different cheese, not just one) anywhere from Turin to Verona and all the places in between, the more you get close to the Alps the more the specialties become "wild" and include boar salame, duck prosciutto and very strong and tasty mountain cheese types.
One of my favorite cities and when I was 1st there in January 2011 I didn't get to see enough of it, so I went back in 2016 and spent 8 days and fell in love with this city! The food and the people are wonderful and the city is so beautiful it looks like a screensaver. Love the video my friend! I hope you are well and thanks for taking my mind off this insanity! xx
Hey Mariah! It is really an amazing city...I actually feel quite at home there. Glad to help take all our minds off of the insanity...stay safe my friend! Hugs and love!
One day...one day!🤣. I want to travel to both Greece and Italy, for the scenery, culture, & FOOD!👍. Love love love the focaccia and the tiramisu, but I’m obsessed with all things risotto! Being a Filipina, rice is an obsession😋😋😋. Another awesome mouthwatering video😋. Stay healthy😊 Stay safe😷 Stay strong 💪...while I’ll stay hungry til your next installment of your spectacular travels and home recipes! As always, thank you for sharing👏👏👏
The Tarantella/mediterranean music doesn't fit for Verona city, a northern city with the Austrian hungarian empire background...but anyway..I enjoyed the tour of my city
Maddalena, c'è la musica napoletana in questo video perché molti stranieri credono che la musica napoletana faccia parte di tutte le regione italiane. È una cosa che dà fastidio addirittura a me, che non sono italiana!!!
Lo so benissimo, è roba da marketing anni Cinquanta...non sarebbe ora di dare spazio anche alla musica veneziana tradizionale? @@carolprofessoressa3237
Complimenti per il bel video. Naturalmente per visitare bene Verona servirebbero almeno tre giorni con almeno uno nel vicino lago di Garda. Verona ha almeno quattro cattedrali ricche di storia e di opere d'arte che andrebbero visitate, parlo del Duomo, e delle cattedrali di San Zeno (dove Shakespeare ambientò il matrimonio di Giulietta e Romeo), di Sant'Anastasia e di San Fermo. Inoltre Castel Vecchio, fortezza del 1300, con il suo ponte sull'Adige, via Sottoriva in riva all'Adige, con i suoi romantici locali con vista su Ponte Pietra e la collina del Castel San Pietro sulla Riva sinistra dell'Adige. Sulla riva sinistra sotto la collina di San Pietro è da visitare il Teatro Romano di un secolo più antico dell'Arena e dove seduti su quelle antiche pietre, durante tutto il periodo estivo si può assistere ad una ricca stagione di spettacoli musicali e teatrali! Sulla cima della collina, spicca Castel San Pietro, una costruzione del periodo Austriaco e dal quale si può godere di una vista mozzafiato sulla città e dei romanticissimi tramonti. La parte della città che si estende sulla riva sinistra dell'Adige viene chiamata Veronetta, è sede dall'Università e vi si trovano alcuni importanti palazzi rinascimentali. Sicuramente da visitare è palazzo Giusti con i suoi stupendi giardini che sono fra i più famosi e ben tenuti giardini rinascimentali d'Italia. Voglio spendere alcune parole per descrivere meglio il riso all'Amarone. È un piatto pregiato, tipico di Verona, difficilmente si può gustare altrove, ha un gusto intenso e delicato. Tutti gli ingredienti sono pregiati ad iniziare dal riso "vialone nano" coltivato nelle valli a sud della città. Il vino "Amarone" è uno dei vini più pregiati al mondo. Il formaggio usato NON è il Parmigiano, come erroneamente indicato nel video, ma un formaggio di montagna a media stagionatura "monte veronese" che viene prodotto sulle colline e prealpi a nord della città.
7:48 ... hahahah...you are starting to make typical Italian expressions, that one means "what can you say...what can you do...can't beat it" :-) Ciao da Milano.
you couldve left Juliettes balcony off...just a fictional tourist trapazoid. All those little spots around Erbe are okay but the better places are just off the square or just over the bridge
I had never been there before so I had to see what all the hype was about...I think it's nice in a fantastical kind of way to allow yourself to pretend...I didn't mind it. Thanks for the comment and for watching!
Just watched an episode where you were dining in a spectacular elegant ristorante EMANUELE E VITTORIO Really couldn’t you have dressed up a little bit better
E te pareva che non ce metteva na tarantella! ma che robba è..... il tiramisù su un vasetto delle conserve sembra.... In english: why when someone make a documentary about italy, put always the same tarantella music? Verona is not Naples!
unfortunately we in the US don't really understand the cultural regional music differences...you hear something, you like it and there you have it...thanks for letting us know and for watching
@@EuroTrotter ma un bel va pensiero di verdi no? In english: you could put for example "va pensiero" by Giuseppe Verdi, "the spring" by Antonio Vivaldi or "Juditha Triumphans" by Antonio Vivaldi, should be more realistic for a documentary about verona. Northern italian people are tired to be always rapresented like naples :D
Daniele Pelt thank you...we have Milan and Bologna and one more Verona coming out next Sunday so I will gladly take your suggestions!!! Much appreciated my friend!
robin fereday According to some studies W. Shakespeare did travel to Italy when he was 28 in 1592 to escape the plague that then struck London and England. Moreover it's a fact that he chose as environments for many of his plays (15 out of 37) Italy and certain Italian cities, precisely Venezia, Verona and Messina in Sicily. There is also a theory based on documents by which W. Shakespeare was just a "nòm d'arte" because he factually was an Italian from Sicily that adopted such measure in the hope of having more chances of success in Britain in which he moved with his family of merchants.
Well, actually the Arena of Verona it's an amphitheatre. You know, the round thing. The word "amphi" of Greek origin means 'around, on both sides, double' (amphitheatre = double theatre). The Taormina's one, for example, is a theatre, that is half an amphitheatre. Just saying.
Lei e una persona intelligente però basta con il mandolino Verona non c'entra nulla con il mandolino. E BASTA E poi musica spagnola per la casa di Giulietta Ma in America suonate tutti il Banjo?
What I hate about these travel videos is how they misinform viewers. You stated that "Casa Juliet" dates back to the 14th century, when in fact it is a modern building built in 1899 or 1905. I've visited Italy many times and made friends with several Italians who ALL told me that the most gullible tourists on the planet are Americans. They believe everything they tell them and they love mocking them because of their degree of gullibility. You just proved them right. Also, I confirmed the age of this building from the Italian Tourist board when I attended an Italian travel expo. They stated that Italians peddle this bs story because Americans are SO gullible. They said the owner of this building made it to look like a medieval house as a tourist cash cow and he's laughing all the way to the bank! Even more ridiculous is the fact that Romeo and Juliet never existed. It's like saying Casa di Godzilla! And on top of that, you have ridiculous females dragging their boyfriends to a place that holds no significance whatsoever! You should check your facts first. Rick Steves you're not.
I'm Italian, living in Verona, and maybe you didn't understand really well what they told you… Just the balcony is a fake situation stetted up in the early '900 (but not the building and the materials), and yes, Romeo and Juliet were fictional characters, but everyone knows it! The meaning of that build is to show an example of house about their times. And people uses to go there just to romantically dream. You're more rude than pragmatic and prepared, my friend.
I wish American UA-camrs would learn how to pronounce basic foreign words/names like Veneto (VEneto) and Osteria (OsterIa) before they film these videos. It is not that hard to learn where the emphasis goes.
@@EuroTrotter carissimo intendevo che la musica era superata, ma i tuoi video di divulgazione alimentare sono ben fatti,io sono un esperto di sicurezza alimentare se passi dalle mie parti ti offro l'aperitivo saluti
Mark, I have just found your UA-cam videos and love them. I am 80 years old and have been traveling Europe mostly Italy for over 40 years and you have shown me things I never seen before thank you.
Nice. I know very nice Verona. You need to visit all the "lago di garda" or "lago di tenno".
Verona steeped in history ,tradition , hospitality and excellent cuisine. A great testimonial to the people of northern Italy who have suffered much and you documented their exuberance and love of life, Bravo! Great vlog!
thank you so much for such a great comment
Verona.. Questa è la mia bellissima città ! Wowwww
very cool!
@@EuroTrotter buono il tiramisù! È il mio dolce preferito .mia mamma fa un tiramisù da leccarsi i baffi, ahahah e naturalmente anch'io so farlo meravigliosamente. È un dolce veneto . Spero tu capisca ciò che ho scritto.Grazie
Nice tour guide VIVA Verona ❤
Yum Tiramisu favourite dessert ..great video cant wait to see Verona again best place I went to in Italy💗
Hi Estelle, it's such an awesome place, JUST WAIT until you see dinner next Sunday!
That’s awesome, standing in Juliet’s balcony! One more off the bucket list 😃
Ha! That's awesome Ted! Hope you are doing well my friend!
Just wanted to say thank you!
I love all your videos: very informative. It is fun and vibrant! You exude positivity. Watching them again and again takes me away even for just a day from these uncertain times.. Be safe!
lynx Nel what a great comment thank you so much for sharing that and for watching! Stay safe!
Beautiful and romantic city ! I loved it!
it's one of my favorites, thanks for watching
E i te fè anca ben
Fun video. A few years back my AirBnB hostess in Mantova took me to Verona for a day visit, and her favorite local treat was the hot chocolate the serve just off that plaza.
What a fun memory, and I'm glad you liked the video Ted...it's such a magical place, fairly compact, but fairly fairy tale feeling!
Thanks for the video Mark! Hope you are staying well and safe.
you are welcome, i'm doing well and hope you are too! stay safe
Beautiful Video, Loved it.
Thank you very much!
What a lovely city, It is high recomended hotel europa, its very nice and far just 50 mt to the Arena
thanks for watching!
Another stunning part of Italy expensive but awsome
It is yes, but sooo beautiful!
Awesome! Can’t wait to visit here one day
You should! you will love it
We want to go back to Italy so bad and explore the north. When we do, Verona will be on our list of places to visit. Thanks for the video!
Excellent, you guys will love it!
Hi Mark always happy to see ur Video..Regards From Bali Indonesia
Hey there and thanks for watching my friend!
I can only travel in winter, but if you’re there during opera season, you should treat yourself to a show at the Arena. The series “Opera Explained” by Thomsen Smillie on Audible, is a great one-hour primer to get you ready for a particular work. He assumes the listener doesn’t know anything about opera, because most people don’t, and he gets you up to speed without patronizing. Because of the size and openness of the Arena, the stage and set is unlike any other. For $5 on premieropera.com you can get a DVD of Nabucco, by Verdi, performed there at the Arena. The costumes and makeup you just have to see for yourself. When they come to the Hebrew slave song, “Và, pensiero”, which is the unofficial national anthem of Italy, it’s with the lights out under a full moon, and it gives you goose bumps.
Wow, that's awesome and I would LOVE to see an opera there! Thank you so much for the info, wow, and Nabucco...sounds perfect!
The same person who recommended Thomsen Smillie to me also recommended L’elisir d’amore (The love potion) as the first opera I should see. It’s still my favorite; the music is fantastic, and the characters and story are fun and easy to follow. And something notable about Donizetti is all his humorous operas have a thread of seriousness running through them, while his serious works have a thread of humor or irony. To me, this clip is a perfect example of the seriousness in L’elisir d’amore:
ua-cam.com/video/ipcYLEwrk3E/v-deo.html
Up to this point it’s all been fun and games and silliness about a naïf lovesick young man, a quack doctor who sells him cheap wine telling him it’s a magical love potion, and a comically bombastic army officer who is his competition for the girl. Suddenly all of that is stripped away, and it’s just the young man on stage, having just been struck by the realization that the girl he loves so much loves him back. With just enough instrumentation to set the tone, a bassoon (an odd but perfect choice) and a harp, you don’t just hear the words, you FEEL with him his elation as he realizes how his whole destiny has just changed. You don’t have to understand the words to feel the emotions, because Italian opera in particular does not emphasize clarity of words, which is why they always put subtitles (technically supertitles) above the stage so that Italian audiences can understand Italian performers singing in archaic Italian. To me this is a perfect snapshot of the multifaceted beauty of opera, where they use poetry, drama and especially music, together to PROJECT emotions to the audience. This is Rolando Villazón, originally from Mexico, at the state opera house of Vienna. He looks like Mr. Bean, which you won’t be able to unsee 😂.
Ted Angell it sounds great Ted and now it’s on my bucket list....
“...oh heavens, I could die... die of love.” ❤️
EURO TROTTER once things blow over, if you’d like to go to the opera house in Parma, I’m friends with the house doctor there. She only speaks Italian, but she’s a great lady and knows absolutely everybody. She could give you a backstage glimpse and introduce you to a lot of interesting folks. That would make a great video- Mark and Ryan at the opera! You just can’t record during the performance. Parma is Verdi’s hometown, or the closest major city to his village anyway, so it’s the center of all things Verdi.
One of the most underrated city's in Italy! LOVERONA!
I agree you should have your own travel show. I just love your narration... hope to see you travel in Spain and France.
I am going to visit Verona with my husband this weekend and I can’t wait to go to that restaurant and taste the risotto and focaccia bread followed by the tiramisu. Thanks for sharing this video. ❤❤. It is very useful. And of course visiting the city and discover that marvellous architecture ❤
Splendida Verona
You sita you people watcha and you drinka ;) love Verona..just there last September..so hard to believe what’s happening there..be safe be strong be positive..we will go back soon I hope ... grazie Mille !
thank you Paul and Gail, stay safe and thank you for watching
Amazing! Thank you. Btw, what camera setup are you using (Camera/ lens)? It looks awesome.👌🏼👌🏼👌🏼
Grazie tanti per maravilloso video.
grazie per aver guardato
Literally drooling over the focaccia bread.. Verona looks beautiful. 😍
it really was so good, never had anything like that
Yes, it's very beautiful but as a city in Veneto it's obscured by the shadow of Venice.
I love it verona
Beautiful city!
Hi Mark. Where did you stay in Verona? Great video 📹. Thank you for sharing. You have a new subscriber 😊
Awesome thank you! Colombo d’Oro, great price and perfect location
Beautiful videography!!! Love how you are so positive and immerse yourself in the culture!!! I can almost taste the food!!!
Grazie per questi video. Sono orgoglioso della mia terra.
Amazing picture. Subscribed
Thank you for watching and subscribing!
Fun fact about Ponte Pietra: in the exact middle there is a Stone that used to sign the border between the Verona owned by Napoleone and the Austrian Verona (or Veronetta, little verona but with a bad meaning).
Did you get a set of those knives and forks ?
And that mixed meat platter with the bread and cheese
Mmmm
Hi Paul, I just got the knives, that was expensive enough lol.
You get what you pay for as we say in Liverpool
And talk about going the extra mile
Sharpening your knives superior service and knives
Paul Lee
that is typical in all of northern Italy, it's called "Tagliere di salumi" and tagliere is "cutting board" and salumi are "cured meats".
You can find it with some variations of composition (and at least 3 different cheese, not just one) anywhere from Turin to Verona and all the places in between, the more you get close to the Alps the more the specialties become "wild" and include boar salame, duck prosciutto and very strong and tasty mountain cheese types.
You should work on getting a travel show Mark, your evolving!
Thanks Joe! I would love that.
I like you because you try to speak the local language when you travel. Not many Americans do that. (Sorry if you are not! )
thank you, i am American and I do try to speak the language, thanks for watching
One of my favorite cities and when I was 1st there in January 2011 I didn't get to see enough of it, so I went back in 2016 and spent 8 days and fell in love with this city! The food and the people are wonderful and the city is so beautiful it looks like a screensaver. Love the video my friend! I hope you are well and thanks for taking my mind off this insanity! xx
Hey Mariah! It is really an amazing city...I actually feel quite at home there. Glad to help take all our minds off of the insanity...stay safe my friend! Hugs and love!
One day...one day!🤣. I want to travel to both Greece and Italy, for the scenery, culture, & FOOD!👍. Love love love the focaccia and the tiramisu, but I’m obsessed with all things risotto! Being a Filipina, rice is an obsession😋😋😋. Another awesome mouthwatering video😋. Stay healthy😊 Stay safe😷 Stay strong 💪...while I’ll stay hungry til your next installment of your spectacular travels and home recipes! As always, thank you for sharing👏👏👏
Jewel of Troy thank you so much, I LOVE rice too by the way!!!! More good food on the way!!!!
Beautiful
Thank you!
The Tarantella/mediterranean music doesn't fit for Verona city, a northern city with the Austrian hungarian empire background...but anyway..I enjoyed the tour of my city
Thank you for watching!
Beautiful video, but the neapolitan music... why????
Maddalena, c'è la musica napoletana in questo video perché molti stranieri credono che la musica napoletana faccia parte di tutte le regione italiane. È una cosa che dà fastidio addirittura a me, che non sono italiana!!!
Lo so benissimo, è roba da marketing anni Cinquanta...non sarebbe ora di dare spazio anche alla musica veneziana tradizionale? @@carolprofessoressa3237
Italy♡
Complimenti per il bel video.
Naturalmente per visitare bene Verona servirebbero almeno tre giorni con almeno uno nel vicino lago di Garda.
Verona ha almeno quattro cattedrali ricche di storia e di opere d'arte che andrebbero visitate, parlo del Duomo, e delle cattedrali di San Zeno (dove Shakespeare ambientò il matrimonio di Giulietta e Romeo), di Sant'Anastasia e di San Fermo.
Inoltre Castel Vecchio, fortezza del 1300, con il suo ponte sull'Adige, via Sottoriva in riva all'Adige, con i suoi romantici locali con vista su Ponte Pietra e la collina del Castel San Pietro sulla Riva sinistra dell'Adige.
Sulla riva sinistra sotto la collina di San Pietro è da visitare il Teatro Romano di un secolo più antico dell'Arena e dove seduti su quelle antiche pietre, durante tutto il periodo estivo si può assistere ad una ricca stagione di spettacoli musicali e teatrali!
Sulla cima della collina, spicca Castel San Pietro, una costruzione del periodo Austriaco e dal quale si può godere di una vista mozzafiato sulla città e dei romanticissimi tramonti.
La parte della città che si estende sulla riva sinistra dell'Adige viene chiamata Veronetta, è sede dall'Università e vi si trovano alcuni importanti palazzi rinascimentali.
Sicuramente da visitare è palazzo Giusti con i suoi stupendi giardini che sono fra i più famosi e ben tenuti giardini rinascimentali d'Italia.
Voglio spendere alcune parole per descrivere meglio
il riso all'Amarone.
È un piatto pregiato, tipico di Verona, difficilmente si può gustare altrove, ha un gusto intenso e delicato.
Tutti gli ingredienti sono pregiati ad iniziare dal riso "vialone nano" coltivato nelle valli a sud della città.
Il vino "Amarone" è uno dei vini più pregiati al mondo.
Il formaggio usato NON è il Parmigiano, come erroneamente indicato nel video, ma un formaggio di montagna a media stagionatura "monte veronese" che viene prodotto sulle colline e prealpi a nord della città.
What do you mean when you say the hotel has traditional Italian rooms?
7:48 ... hahahah...you are starting to make typical Italian expressions, that one means "what can you say...what can you do...can't beat it" :-)
Ciao da Milano.
very funny, love that, thank you for sharing
Can you please tell me the camera your using ..
This is the very city where Romeo and Juliet is set!
you couldve left Juliettes balcony off...just a fictional tourist trapazoid. All those little spots around Erbe are okay but the better places are just off the square or just over the bridge
I had never been there before so I had to see what all the hype was about...I think it's nice in a fantastical kind of way to allow yourself to pretend...I didn't mind it. Thanks for the comment and for watching!
Just watched an episode where you were dining in a spectacular elegant ristorante EMANUELE E VITTORIO
Really couldn’t you have dressed up a little bit better
Fazzini will be added to my list when the gondola comes in.
the store is amazing! thanks for watching
E te pareva che non ce metteva na tarantella! ma che robba è..... il tiramisù su un vasetto delle conserve sembra....
In english: why when someone make a documentary about italy, put always the same tarantella music? Verona is not Naples!
unfortunately we in the US don't really understand the cultural regional music differences...you hear something, you like it and there you have it...thanks for letting us know and for watching
@@EuroTrotter ma un bel va pensiero di verdi no?
In english: you could put for example "va pensiero" by Giuseppe Verdi, "the spring" by Antonio Vivaldi or "Juditha Triumphans" by Antonio Vivaldi, should be more realistic for a documentary about verona. Northern italian people are tired to be always rapresented like naples :D
Daniele Pelt thank you...we have Milan and Bologna and one more Verona coming out next Sunday so I will gladly take your suggestions!!! Much appreciated my friend!
@@italianboy826
You're right! Thank you 👏🙋
Playing Sicilian music for northern Italian city? 🤔
but don't you just love that song! lol...thanks for watching
Ah Homage to Shakespeare ;)
All carbs?
How did Shakespeare know about the balcony when he never visited Italy 😳?
robin fereday he was wise past his years lol
Cause Shakespeare was Italian actually. From sicily to be precise (Michelangelo Florio Scrolallanza was his Real name)
robin fereday
According to some studies W. Shakespeare did travel to Italy when he was 28 in 1592 to escape the plague that then struck London and England.
Moreover it's a fact that he chose as environments for many of his plays (15 out of 37) Italy and certain Italian cities, precisely Venezia, Verona and Messina in Sicily.
There is also a theory based on documents by which W. Shakespeare was just a "nòm d'arte" because he factually was an Italian from Sicily that adopted such measure in the hope of having more chances of success in Britain in which he moved with his family of merchants.
Seems so far away - how we used to live - pretty sad!
i know, i hope things will get better soon
What's up with the music choise. Couldn't focus on anything else 🙂
This guy and his mortadella LOL
Well, actually the Arena of Verona it's an amphitheatre. You know, the round thing. The word "amphi" of Greek origin means 'around, on both sides, double' (amphitheatre = double theatre).
The Taormina's one, for example, is a theatre, that is half an amphitheatre.
Just saying.
all fair my friend, thanks for watching!
Looks like Italy is not for keto eaters. Turkey and Croatia cousin is keto friendly.
Damn. That was amazing! Have also an eye to my channel!
Lei e una persona intelligente però basta con il mandolino
Verona non c'entra nulla con il mandolino.
E BASTA
E poi musica spagnola per la casa di Giulietta
Ma in America suonate tutti il Banjo?
What I hate about these travel videos is how they misinform viewers. You stated that "Casa Juliet" dates back to the 14th century, when in fact it is a modern building built in 1899 or 1905. I've visited Italy many times and made friends with several Italians who ALL told me that the most gullible tourists on the planet are Americans. They believe everything they tell them and they love mocking them because of their degree of gullibility. You just proved them right. Also, I confirmed the age of this building from the Italian Tourist board when I attended an Italian travel expo. They stated that Italians peddle this bs story because Americans are SO gullible. They said the owner of this building made it to look like a medieval house as a tourist cash cow and he's laughing all the way to the bank! Even more ridiculous is the fact that Romeo and Juliet never existed. It's like saying Casa di Godzilla! And on top of that, you have ridiculous females dragging their boyfriends to a place that holds no significance whatsoever! You should check your facts first. Rick Steves you're not.
I'm Italian, living in Verona, and maybe you didn't understand really well what they told you…
Just the balcony is a fake situation stetted up in the early '900 (but not the building and the materials), and yes, Romeo and Juliet were fictional characters, but everyone knows it! The meaning of that build is to show an example of house about their times. And people uses to go there just to romantically dream. You're more rude than pragmatic and prepared, my friend.
So much wheat !! That´s not good for the health
I wish American UA-camrs would learn how to pronounce basic foreign words/names like Veneto (VEneto) and Osteria (OsterIa) before they film these videos. It is not that hard to learn where the emphasis goes.
I wish they also quit with idiotic stereotyped S.Italian music for every part of Italy.
la musica iniziale fa cagare, mi sbaglio anche il resto
mi dispiace
@@EuroTrotter carissimo intendevo che la musica era superata, ma i tuoi video di divulgazione alimentare sono ben fatti,io sono un esperto di sicurezza alimentare se passi dalle mie parti ti offro l'aperitivo saluti
It's just because mandolino sounds a little odd describing northern Italy, although good job and thanks for sharing my wonderful hometown
@@MrMartello75 il mandolino ci sta se è Vivaldi il resto mi sa di stereotipo
LMAO Mandolins for Verona..ahahahaahah