The Man Married to Pussy Riot
Pyotr Verzilov discusses his jailed wife's fate — and fame.
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Pyotr Verzilov discusses his jailed wife's fate — and fame.
"The show was originally a lot more elaborate. It was set in a mansion, the host was a butler, and the butler held a Chihuahua."
And Grub Street respectfully disagrees with the two poor, misguided souls.
The celebrated chef tells us about the Asian sojourn that transformed the way he approaches food.
"Pleasure is not only found in the mouth In the end, it isn’t only about eating; it’s also about discovering.”
The unbelievably optimistic 26-year-old tells Daily Intel about his ordeal.
"One member of our crew on the show is trying to get me to make him a large wooden dildo, complete with balls."
"I think each of the seasons in the past, some challenges are cool, some of them are kind of whatever. I don't think that this season was any 'less' than others."
We realize the phrase "juicing in baseball" typically carries a different connotation.
"I don't know if we should put this on the Internet."
"There are people who try to make it fun, and then they review, like, really cheap bad wine, but I review actually really ridiculously fancy wine."
"I didn't have any other food."
"I’d rather shop in the grocery store than in the department store. I can pick an apple like nobody’s business."
The hotelier reveals a few more details about his forthcoming project.
Wolverine makes the coffee world a better place, himself a little more like Jean-Georges Vongerichten.
"It's not like jeans, where you can just make them and then ship them. There's a lot more attention to details that needs to be paid."
Molto Mario talks to Grub on the eve of his new show's big debut.