Ti seguo da molto e sempre di più mi rendo conto di quanto tu sia davvero una gran bella persona. Mi piace osservare questa mia nazione attraverso il tuo sguardo che brilla di intelligenza, di sensibilità, di amore per questo paese, per le persone che lo abitano. Hai ragione su tutto, spesso sottolinei aspetti che ormai - da italiano - nemmeno prendo più in considerazione. Riesci a farmi capire questo paese più di quanto io abbia fatto durante tutta una vita. Sei davvero grande e sono onorato di averti fra noi italiani, con i nostri pregi e con i nostri difetti. Non lasciarci mai. Abbiamo bisogno di persone come te!
Grazie per queste belle parole e per sostenere il mio canale! L'Italia è un viaggio personale e mi sento molto onorata che le mie osservazioni possano dare aiutino ad altre persone .
@@MsBritaly Grazie anzi a te! E grazie per aver messo in evidenza il mio commento che mi è venuto proprio dal cuore... e scritto anche con tutto il cuore!
I appreciate your thoughtful observations that go deeper into the complexities of a certain area. I live in the United States and spent two weeks on Sicily in May. I was charmed by Palermo. There was a point where I got over stimulated by the city so I did the hike up to the cave sanctuary of your patron saint, Santa Rosalia. That was deeply moving and calming. It is a wonderful City despite its challenges.
I lived in Palermo in the early 90s...i was a nanny initially..then went on to teach English. I have lived back in the UK for many years now....i still miss the madness and vibrancy that is Palermo. I yearned for many years to return. I have returned to visit friends etc and i always cry when i have to leave. Im 52 years of age now and i know that Palermo will have my heart forever.I really hope you stay there..its so amazing. I lived in Mondello for a while also..the sea there was just gorgeous and i have so many happy memories of being there. Obviously i was there in my 20s..but its never left me the missing of it..❤️
We visited Palermo for the first time this past November. We were surprised by how much we liked Palermo. We cannot wait to return to discover more of it.
This is absurd. Quality of life in Palermo is better than London which is crippled with crime, high rents, terrible weather, inflation, Brexit and the list goes on
Nowhere in the world is perfect and of course there are many upsides to life here compared to London. However, there are many difficulties here - it’s not all Aperol Spritz and sunshine.
it's not absurd ... it is reality and I say it as a person who would love to live both in London and in the province of Palermo and now hate living in continental Italy (in the corrupt crime ridden Lazio region)
I live in Italy and it's very safe for me, I think as long as you keep to yourself and not disturb anyone it's ok. Even though I speak fluent Italian I stand out from the others because I'm Australian, I'm tall and I have blonde hair and green eyes.
"Rankings" don't reflect the soul of a place...your insights about insularity are very valuable...This exists in MANY places in the US, too. And the North/South divide is another thing here, including within individual states! (i.e., N vs S, New Jersey; N vs S, New Mexico). Thank you for appreciating Palermo...
Thanks for adding your great perspective of both pro and con. One of the things that drives me insane as an American is when people (usually Brits and Americans) romanticize Italy, especially to what they consider the "Tuscan Dream." And how they compare everything to Tuscany, as if that is the real Italy. Which to those of us who live in Italy as ex-pats know is simply a bad marketing scheme they've bought into. We chose to live in Abruzzo after considering Sicilia and Calabria (my husband's roots are in all 3 regions.) While we adore the latter 2 regions and Napoli and Palermo are my favorite big cities, we felt more at home in Teramo province. Bought a house and spend up to 6 months a year living there with the intent of retiring and moving in full time. He has his Italian citizenship; I'm working on mine. Abruzzo, also, is mis-understood by many people, including Italians. However, it's rapidly becoming the new Toscana and Puglia with the American/Brit/Aussie ex-pat community due to the 7% max tax program, very high quality of life/food/wines, and reasonable cost of living. We've always been the summer/winter playground of the Bolognesi and Milanesi, but now the Romani have sort of discovered it post-quarantine (the stories of Romans getting lost hiking without adequate clothing and water in the Apennine and the Abruzzo Mountaineering Club having to go rescue them were hilarious!) We've made an effort to fit in, learn Italian, be good neighbors, and be proud of all things Abruzzese, which is crucial. Frequently we'll go 2-3 months without hearing a word of English, even on the beaches during high tourist summer season. If one is going to live in Italy, it's important to do your homework, learn at least livello B1 Italian, and find a region that appeals to you and gives you what you need, whether that be housing, medical care, shopping, culture, cuisine, etc. City life or country home? Big city or suburb? It's all there. And for God's sake, forget about getting the condo or house with the "Italian charm" and "Tuscan kitchen" like everyone mentions on House Hunter's International and other reality TV shows! The Tuscan kitchen idea was a fake design created by a designer in Dallas, TX for her rich clients back in the 1980's. Similar to the current Farmhouse kitchen esthetic in the US. I work a lot in Lucca, and you should see what most normal Tuscan kitchens look like :)
Thank you for sharing your experiences. I couldn’t agree with you more about romanticizing Italy - it drives me insane when people do it. On a surface level, this is a beautiful country but to really discover the beauty of Italy, on a much deeper level, takes time.
Just curious is Italian bureacracy even worse than in the UK? Coming from the US I get the impression Britain is also very overregulated plus overtaxed and very business unfriendly. Is Italy actually safer than Britain, for example is there anything in Italy as bad as the council estates and places like the East End?
The U.K. is far from perfect and I’ve never shied away from that. However there is certainly better organization when it comes to bureaucracy in the UK and a lot of things can be done online, saving time spent visiting individual offices. Tax is high in the UK but a whole lot more complicated here in Italy! As for safety - the U.K. is problematic for sure but there are parts of Italy where crime levels are also high. I guess it’s the same same problems, just a different place.
There is an active Expat group here in Palermo so that can be a good way to start. Other than that, it will come with time - you'll start to see the same faces in the same places and then connections naturally form.
So for the 1st aspect, as you know the south of Italy and Sicily specifically are the more economically disadvantaged parts. It seems a bit tone-deaf to say that the people there should travel more and get more perspective, when they may be able to hardly afford. It's not necessarily a choice for many people.
This video is spot on, you seem to have fully understood the reality of southern Italy and the whole country. Your analysis about why Sicily (and the south in general) are like that really impressed me because it's true and it shows that the culture and history of Sicily have combined and produced this situation. I also feel that life there is sometimes taxing for you and you are also carrying the problems of a country that's not (yet) yours and I feel sorry about it (I'm italian from Salerno). I would also like to share my opinion on Milan, where I lived for five years: it's not the city of careers that people may figure out from this video, it's actually a city of squalid employee jobs with neither a career nor any other satisfaction, it detached me completely from nature, gave me an unsatisfactory social life, very high cost of living with low salaries and it basically sucks your energy (I'm talking about my experience of working in a multinational consultancy company where I also had foreign colleagues from Iran, India, Pakistan ad they were all disappointed about the same things and almost all of them left Italy and are now living in Belgium or the Netherlands). Of course I want to compliment with you for this very high quality content.
My take: Sicily is doing great! It is well on the rise in a number of ways. There are things in Sicily that can put the best of America behind it. You have to know Sicily well to understand this, though it's still possible you may have seen some of this with just your time there. Sicily has everything and doesn't truly lack for anything of importance. Just a little side note of fact, Sicilians in general are far wealthier than they might 'appear'. What I say here about Sicily is actually true though in all of Italy, but very true of Sicilians. They are characters sometimes, in a good way, to me, but they are also very conservative in their 'ways'. They are not at all about 'show'. This is entirely cultural. Again, this can be said of most of Italy as well. It is engrained in the culture for many centuries. As far as business, there is plenty in Sicily. If you toured all of Italy, as say an American, you would probably not be so fascinated at all by it's 'business aspect'. It looks too different. Where are all the huge high rise buildings, flashing lights, billboards, etc. and so on? So very easy to be fooled, but there is an incredible amount of commerce and business in Italy. More than most could ever really believe, and a huge amount of it avoids showing in any 'official data'. So how would you know? There are many people that do know though. So not all is as might 'meet the eyes', when it comes to businesses. This is especially true of Sicily. I have seen things in Sicily I basically couldn't believe. How do they do this? Well, they do. I speak as someone, mind you, who lives in America and in Sicily my whole life, and not nowheresville. Moving now to Sicily permanently though. Your comments toward the latter part of the video are very nice, and true. Stai bene e ti salutiamo cordialmente.
"i come from one of the richest places of trhe world, what am i doing in trhis shithole..?". yes, thsi could be a 12 years old spoilt kid thought at his very first trip. nothing to buld a channel on. its just a childish thought. you want to create something around a childish idea..? yes you re free to do it, but it s reallly disappointing, if you want my opinion
Hello ms, hope you are enjoing your stay in Sicily. You've made your video, you've called I reply. Brits have always been, in a way, obsessed with Sicily. The most attentive italians know why from a geo-political point of view. You or sicilians may or may not know, when Garibaldi "decided" to get involved in the one thousand expedition to conquer Sicily he asked to the piedmont monarchy to be financed. Of course the not so enlightened "italian" king replied simply "nein" to such an unscruopulous revolutionary maybe comunist s.o.b. So Garibaldi found money for his expedition from the more "enlighted" english free-masonry. The 1000 expedition took place and unexpectedly succeded agaist all odds. Garibaldi, for what had been agreed, had to stop in the isle once conquered. But he, being such an unpredictable character he went on and landed in the continental main land and, with the help of some high rank patriots almost conquered the entire south of italy handing it over to the pidmontese king. Why the united kingdom is alway been interested in Sicily is not hard to find out. The mediterranean area has always been of interest for the english monarchy. More now that in the past actually. As you probably know a great deal of goods, at the time of the british east india company as well as nowdays becouse of the chinese travel from the far-east world and arrive to britain flowing through the chinese-sea, the indian ocean, up to the red sea, nowdays crossing the suez canal (which unfortunately from the brits, it is nowdays in the hands of egyptians, who, of course, as we've recently seen, has been devoting a great deal of attention to maintain their rule) then crossing the mediterranea sea, then the strict of giblatar, circumnavigating the iberian peninsula and finally arriving in the mighty british ports. Uk beeing a thalassocracy alway tried to control the narrow strict of this entire path. So they financed the suez canal. They had once the control of middle east. They have even nowdays a military base in cyprus. They control the strict of giblatar. There is an other narrow passage in the mediterranean sea which is not in full controll of the uk (beside malta): the strict of Sicily. Controlling Sicily, more now then in the past would be of great geo-political interest for the british. Even more now that the north pole route even if sometimes free of ice has become more hard to navigate becouse of the recent not so friendly relationships between uk and russia. Of course sicilians and the most of inconsequential italians don't even realize such kind of things. For the economic point of view for sicily I'll limit to quote a notable story of a continental businessman who wanted to invest in sicily. Of course before taking the step he well understood that he had to question one of the real sicilian potentates. You guess what I mean. He ask to a "mammasantissima" (ask what it means to your boyfriend) if he would agreed on such a deal which would have brought a great development to his own area. The not so enlighted sicilian simply replied nein. Since he had to face with the presence of 1500 unionized free workers. This would have implied to loose the control of the few work places he had always decided to whoever friend would deserved to obtain. This story put a full stop to the last decades of the sicilian development issue which, by the way, comes in favor of the thalassocracies. As for milan and the delinquency is just an other well spread narrative. I've worked for 15 years in milan going out in the evening alone and in company and I've never ever witnessed a tense situation. Beside this I've met a lot of young sicilian working here.
sicily is like a second-and-half world country. best place for laze around, living for the moment but not for business and money. the nature is magnificent tho
Ti seguo da molto e sempre di più mi rendo conto di quanto tu sia davvero una gran bella persona. Mi piace osservare questa mia nazione attraverso il tuo sguardo che brilla di intelligenza, di sensibilità, di amore per questo paese, per le persone che lo abitano. Hai ragione su tutto, spesso sottolinei aspetti che ormai - da italiano - nemmeno prendo più in considerazione. Riesci a farmi capire questo paese più di quanto io abbia fatto durante tutta una vita. Sei davvero grande e sono onorato di averti fra noi italiani, con i nostri pregi e con i nostri difetti. Non lasciarci mai. Abbiamo bisogno di persone come te!
Grazie per queste belle parole e per sostenere il mio canale! L'Italia è un viaggio personale e mi sento molto onorata che le mie osservazioni possano dare aiutino ad altre persone .
@@MsBritaly
Grazie anzi a te! E grazie per aver messo in evidenza il mio commento che mi è venuto proprio dal cuore... e scritto anche con tutto il cuore!
Sicily may be known for being mafia's birthplace but apparently it is one of those regions in Italy with the lowest rate of petty crime.
Crime exists here of course but overall it does feel safe
I appreciate your thoughtful observations that go deeper into the complexities of a certain area. I live in the United States and spent two weeks on Sicily in May. I was charmed by Palermo. There was a point where I got over stimulated by the city so I did the hike up to the cave sanctuary of your patron saint, Santa Rosalia. That was deeply moving and calming. It is a wonderful City despite its challenges.
I lived in Palermo in the early 90s...i was a nanny initially..then went on to teach English. I have lived back in the UK for many years now....i still miss the madness and vibrancy that is Palermo. I yearned for many years to return. I have returned to visit friends etc and i always cry when i have to leave. Im 52 years of age now and i know that Palermo will have my heart forever.I really hope you stay there..its so amazing. I lived in Mondello for a while also..the sea there was just gorgeous and i have so many happy memories of being there. Obviously i was there in my 20s..but its never left me the missing of it..❤️
Yes it’s a crazy but very special place
We visited Palermo for the first time this past November. We were surprised by how much we liked Palermo. We cannot wait to return to discover more of it.
Yes, underneath its rugged exterior, it really is a beautiful city
You should try living in Padova or Treviso, in Siena, in Pavia, or Como. Then you may have a more complete picture of Italy.
This is absurd. Quality of life in Palermo is better than London which is crippled with crime, high rents, terrible weather, inflation, Brexit and the list goes on
Nowhere in the world is perfect and of course there are many upsides to life here compared to London. However, there are many difficulties here - it’s not all Aperol Spritz and sunshine.
it's not absurd ... it is reality and I say it as a person who would love to live both in London and in the province of Palermo and now hate living in continental Italy (in the corrupt crime ridden Lazio region)
I live in Italy and it's very safe for me, I think as long as you keep to yourself and not disturb anyone it's ok. Even though I speak fluent Italian I stand out from the others because I'm Australian, I'm tall and I have blonde hair and green eyes.
Hahah the tall part I can relate to!
Thank You very much for Your notes.
You're welcome!
"Rankings" don't reflect the soul of a place...your insights about insularity are very valuable...This exists in MANY places in the US, too. And the North/South divide is another thing here, including within individual states! (i.e., N vs S, New Jersey; N vs S, New Mexico). Thank you for appreciating Palermo...
Indeed - statistics only reflect a small part of a place.
Thanks for adding your great perspective of both pro and con. One of the things that drives me insane as an American is when people (usually Brits and Americans) romanticize Italy, especially to what they consider the "Tuscan Dream." And how they compare everything to Tuscany, as if that is the real Italy. Which to those of us who live in Italy as ex-pats know is simply a bad marketing scheme they've bought into. We chose to live in Abruzzo after considering Sicilia and Calabria (my husband's roots are in all 3 regions.) While we adore the latter 2 regions and Napoli and Palermo are my favorite big cities, we felt more at home in Teramo province. Bought a house and spend up to 6 months a year living there with the intent of retiring and moving in full time. He has his Italian citizenship; I'm working on mine.
Abruzzo, also, is mis-understood by many people, including Italians. However, it's rapidly becoming the new Toscana and Puglia with the American/Brit/Aussie ex-pat community due to the 7% max tax program, very high quality of life/food/wines, and reasonable cost of living. We've always been the summer/winter playground of the Bolognesi and Milanesi, but now the Romani have sort of discovered it post-quarantine (the stories of Romans getting lost hiking without adequate clothing and water in the Apennine and the Abruzzo Mountaineering Club having to go rescue them were hilarious!) We've made an effort to fit in, learn Italian, be good neighbors, and be proud of all things Abruzzese, which is crucial. Frequently we'll go 2-3 months without hearing a word of English, even on the beaches during high tourist summer season.
If one is going to live in Italy, it's important to do your homework, learn at least livello B1 Italian, and find a region that appeals to you and gives you what you need, whether that be housing, medical care, shopping, culture, cuisine, etc. City life or country home? Big city or suburb? It's all there. And for God's sake, forget about getting the condo or house with the "Italian charm" and "Tuscan kitchen" like everyone mentions on House Hunter's International and other reality TV shows! The Tuscan kitchen idea was a fake design created by a designer in Dallas, TX for her rich clients back in the 1980's. Similar to the current Farmhouse kitchen esthetic in the US. I work a lot in Lucca, and you should see what most normal Tuscan kitchens look like :)
Thank you for sharing your experiences. I couldn’t agree with you more about romanticizing Italy - it drives me insane when people do it.
On a surface level, this is a beautiful country but to really discover the beauty of Italy, on a much deeper level, takes time.
Just curious is Italian bureacracy even worse than in the UK? Coming from the US I get the impression Britain is also very overregulated plus overtaxed and very business unfriendly. Is Italy actually safer than Britain, for example is there anything in Italy as bad as the council estates and places like the East End?
The U.K. is far from perfect and I’ve never shied away from that. However there is certainly better organization when it comes to bureaucracy in the UK and a lot of things can be done online, saving time spent visiting individual offices. Tax is high in the UK but a whole lot more complicated here in Italy! As for safety - the U.K. is problematic for sure but there are parts of Italy where crime levels are also high. I guess it’s the same same problems, just a different place.
Am moving to PA city in February. Can you advise on any ways to meet people as I am moving knowing no-one. Am also from the UK :)
There is an active Expat group here in Palermo so that can be a good way to start. Other than that, it will come with time - you'll start to see the same faces in the same places and then connections naturally form.
Nicely expressed Claire.
Thank you!
So for the 1st aspect, as you know the south of Italy and Sicily specifically are the more economically disadvantaged parts. It seems a bit tone-deaf to say that the people there should travel more and get more perspective, when they may be able to hardly afford. It's not necessarily a choice for many people.
You go into this on the 2nd point I now see, but it seems it negates the strength of what the first point might really say.
Of course this is true and I respect that as well. This is just an observation and one that I think contributes to the mindset here sometimes.
Complimenti, una descrizione molto accurata
Grazie mille!
This video is spot on, you seem to have fully understood the reality of southern Italy and the whole country. Your analysis about why Sicily (and the south in general) are like that really impressed me because it's true and it shows that the culture and history of Sicily have combined and produced this situation. I also feel that life there is sometimes taxing for you and you are also carrying the problems of a country that's not (yet) yours and I feel sorry about it (I'm italian from Salerno).
I would also like to share my opinion on Milan, where I lived for five years: it's not the city of careers that people may figure out from this video, it's actually a city of squalid employee jobs with neither a career nor any other satisfaction, it detached me completely from nature, gave me an unsatisfactory social life, very high cost of living with low salaries and it basically sucks your energy (I'm talking about my experience of working in a multinational consultancy company where I also had foreign colleagues from Iran, India, Pakistan ad they were all disappointed about the same things and almost all of them left Italy and are now living in Belgium or the Netherlands).
Of course I want to compliment with you for this very high quality content.
Thank you - yes I too have heard that Milan isn't all it's cracked up to be and that working conditions too can be tough!
@@MsBritaly the problem in general here in Italy is comparatively low salaries.
I love Palermo, no matter what anyone else says.
It is a very special place!
It feels Palermo touched your soul...
Indeed
My take: Sicily is doing great! It is well on the rise in a number of ways. There are things in Sicily that can put the best of America behind it. You have to know Sicily well to understand this, though it's still possible you may have seen some of this with just your time there. Sicily has everything and doesn't truly lack for anything of importance. Just a little side note of fact, Sicilians in general are far wealthier than they might 'appear'. What I say here about Sicily is actually true though in all of Italy, but very true of Sicilians. They are characters sometimes, in a good way, to me, but they are also very conservative in their 'ways'. They are not at all about 'show'. This is entirely cultural. Again, this can be said of most of Italy as well. It is engrained in the culture for many centuries. As far as business, there is plenty in Sicily. If you toured all of Italy, as say an American, you would probably not be so fascinated at all by it's 'business aspect'. It looks too different. Where are all the huge high rise buildings, flashing lights, billboards, etc. and so on? So very easy to be fooled, but there is an incredible amount of commerce and business in Italy. More than most could ever really believe, and a huge amount of it avoids showing in any 'official data'. So how would you know? There are many people that do know though. So not all is as might 'meet the eyes', when it comes to businesses. This is especially true of Sicily. I have seen things in Sicily I basically couldn't believe. How do they do this? Well, they do. I speak as someone, mind you, who lives in America and in Sicily my whole life, and not nowheresville. Moving now to Sicily permanently though. Your comments toward the latter part of the video are very nice, and true. Stai bene e ti salutiamo cordialmente.
Indeed there is a lot to this city - more than a statistic could ever show.
No where is perfect!! Palermo may have its flaws but on the other hand it also has benefits. Thank you for sharing 😊
Absolutely - thank you 🙏🏻
In many ways Italy is a riddle wrapped in a mistery inside an enigma... And Sicily even more..
So much to discover!
"i come from one of the richest places of trhe world, what am i doing in trhis shithole..?". yes, thsi could be a 12 years old spoilt kid thought at his very first trip. nothing to buld a channel on. its just a childish thought. you want to create something around a childish idea..? yes you re free to do it, but it s reallly disappointing, if you want my opinion
I’m not sure I understand your comment or that you understand my video or channel. Thanks for taking the time to remark though!
Hello ms, hope you are enjoing your stay in Sicily. You've made your video, you've called I reply.
Brits have always been, in a way, obsessed with Sicily. The most attentive italians know why from a geo-political point of view. You or sicilians may or may not know, when Garibaldi "decided" to get involved in the one thousand expedition to conquer Sicily he asked to the piedmont monarchy to be financed. Of course the not so enlightened "italian" king replied simply "nein" to such an unscruopulous revolutionary maybe comunist s.o.b. So Garibaldi found money for his expedition from the more "enlighted" english free-masonry. The 1000 expedition took place and unexpectedly succeded agaist all odds. Garibaldi, for what had been agreed, had to stop in the isle once conquered. But he, being such an unpredictable character he went on and landed in the continental main land and, with the help of some high rank patriots almost conquered the entire south of italy handing it over to the pidmontese king.
Why the united kingdom is alway been interested in Sicily is not hard to find out. The mediterranean area has always been of interest for the english monarchy. More now that in the past actually. As you probably know a great deal of goods, at the time of the british east india company as well as nowdays becouse of the chinese travel from the far-east world and arrive to britain flowing through the chinese-sea, the indian ocean, up to the red sea, nowdays crossing the suez canal (which unfortunately from the brits, it is nowdays in the hands of egyptians, who, of course, as we've recently seen, has been devoting a great deal of attention to maintain their rule) then crossing the mediterranea sea, then the strict of giblatar, circumnavigating the iberian peninsula and finally arriving in the mighty british ports. Uk beeing a thalassocracy alway tried to control the narrow strict of this entire path. So they financed the suez canal. They had once the control of middle east. They have even nowdays a military base in cyprus. They control the strict of giblatar.
There is an other narrow passage in the mediterranean sea which is not in full controll of the uk (beside malta): the strict of Sicily. Controlling Sicily, more now then in the past would be of great geo-political interest for the british. Even more now that the north pole route even if sometimes free of ice has become more hard to navigate becouse of the recent not so friendly relationships between uk and russia.
Of course sicilians and the most of inconsequential italians don't even realize such kind of things.
For the economic point of view for sicily I'll limit to quote a notable story of a continental businessman who wanted to invest in sicily. Of course before taking the step he well understood that he had to question one of the real sicilian potentates. You guess what I mean. He ask to a "mammasantissima" (ask what it means to your boyfriend) if he would agreed on such a deal which would have brought a great development to his own area. The not so enlighted sicilian simply replied nein. Since he had to face with the presence of 1500 unionized free workers. This would have implied to loose the control of the few work places he had always decided to whoever friend would deserved to obtain. This story put a full stop to the last decades of the sicilian development issue which, by the way, comes in favor of the thalassocracies.
As for milan and the delinquency is just an other well spread narrative. I've worked for 15 years in milan going out in the evening alone and in company and I've never ever witnessed a tense situation. Beside this I've met a lot of young sicilian working here.
Thank you for taking the time to leave this comment and for sharing more perspective on this.
sicily is like a second-and-half world country. best place for laze around, living for the moment but not for business and money. the nature is magnificent tho
I think it's honestly such a shame - this region has so much potential if only it realised!
For me Palermo is like 10 of Naples
Naples is another misunderstood city too though - I guess I see beneath the rugged exterior
I sondaggi vanno presi con le pinze io non vivrei mai a Milano città carissima e con quartieri difficili. Poi ogni città ha i suoi pregi e difetti.
Infatti!