Beautiful places in Italy - Exploring the old town of Caserta
Me and my girl visited a new place together.
We are happy and we enjoy travelling and discover wonderful places.
This is the old town of Caserta, in the south of Italy...
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Al Capone's Life Was More Tragic Than You Realized
During Prohibition, Al Capone became the biggest bootlegger in American history, and ruled the Chicago Mob for six years. But there's more to this legendary gangster than you might think. Let's open the vault and explore the tragic life of Al Capone.
In 1930, the city of Chicago named Al Capone as Public Enemy No. 1. Most knew Capone by a completely different nickname: Scarface. The gangster sported three prominent scars on the side of his neck and left cheek, and they gave him a pretty intimidating look. Whenever he was asked about them, the crime lord would say that he was injured in World War I.
The truth, however, was very different. As a young man, Capone worked as a bouncer for Frankie Yale. One fateful evening, the 18-year-old Al spotted a girl named Lena across the bar, but when he tried asking her out, she turned him down… twice. As she was leaving, Capone tried out one last line, giving her a foulmouthed compliment on her figure.
Lena didn't take it as a compliment, and neither did her brother, Frank Galluccio. Infuriated, Galluccio pulled a knife and went to work on Capone's face, slashing him to ribbons and forcing Capone to get 80 stitches. Frankie Yale intervened before things could get any more violent, and it would eventually turn out that Capone could be a surprisingly forgiving guy... when he wanted to be.
After experiencing his knife work firsthand, Capone later hired Galluccio to work as his bodyguard.
Watch to know more about how Al Capone's life was more tragic than you realized!
#AlCapone #Mobsters #Scarface
Scarface | 0:15
Brother vs. Brother | 1:35
The St. Valentine's Day Massacre | 3:03
The Untouchables | 4:17
Death vs. Taxes | 5:29
Capone in prison | 6:13
Jailhouse Rock | 7:21
Death in Florida | 8:26
The Mystery of Al Capone's Vaults | 9:03
OD ITALIAN FOOD la Campagnola
Little Italy
The director of How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days and Miss Congeniality serves up a delicious new comedy topped with passion, playfulness, and pepperoni. Former childhood pals Leo (Hayden Christensen, Star Wars series) and Nikki (Emma Roberts, We’re the Millers) are attracted to each other as adults—but will their feuding parents’ rival pizzerias put a chill on their sizzling romance? The tasty all-star cast also includes Alyssa Milano (Charmed), Andrea Martin (My Big Fat Greek Wedding), and Danny Aiello (Do The Right Thing).
Funky Town
1976. Montreal. Eight people who wanted to see and be seen at the trendiest disco will be juggling fame and anonymity until they will be forced to make sober choices in an era when excess was the norm, and when disco was king.
MPAA Rating: NOTRATED
Al Capone: Icon
From PBS - Was Al Capone the quintessential self-made American man, a ruthless killer, or both? From his early days rising through the ranks of New York’s gangs, to his slow demise in the aftermath of the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre, this film chronicles the complicated life of one of America’s favorite mob bosses. Capone was not only a bootlegger, killer, and gangster, but also a popular public figure who opened one of the nation’s first soup kitchens, and was a devoted patron and guardian of jazz, giving African American musicians opportunities that they would otherwise never have had. More than 80 years have passed since the height of Capone’s power, yet his impact is still felt today. Al Capone: Icon examines Capone’s personal history and lasting legacy and unveils his unexpected connections to modern-day organized crime, law enforcement, popular culture from movies to rap music, and even everyday life in Chicago.
Al Capone
Al Capone is America's best known gangster and perhaps the single greatest symbol of the collapse of law and order in the United States during the Prohibition era of the 1920s. The FBI branded the bootlegging kingpin America's Public Enemy #1.
Guts and Glory
In a nation forged by guts and glory, it takes true cojones to stand out from the crowd. Legendary figures Benjamin Franklin, Al Capone, Abraham Lincoln and Ernest Hemingway have earned their seat at the tough guy table for their no-nonsense attitudes.