Marcus Samuelsson’s New TV Show Explores Immigrant Communities in America
Here's how to watch.
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Marcus Samuelsson, chef, restaurateur, and TV personality, is adding another notch to his belt (or, um, a new fold on his chef’s hat?) with the premiere of his new show tonight. Produced by Eater, No Passport Required is slated to air at 9 p.m. Tuesdays on PBS.
Each of the show’s six episodes will pivot around an American city and an immigrant community that flourishes in the area. Tonight’s installment shines a spotlight on the vast and vibrant Middle Eastern diaspora in Detroit and Dearborn, Michigan. Upcoming episodes will feature: the Vietnamese community in New Orleans, the Mexican community in Chicago, the Indo-Guyanese enclaves of Queens, New York, the Haitian community in Miami, and the Ethiopian community centered in Washington, D.C.
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The show organizes itself around food and the way people, families, and communities construct meaning and relationships around acts of eating. “As an immigrant myself [born in Ethiopia, raised in Sweden, and now living in Harlem] it is a dream to be a part of a show that shines light on the food culture of immigrant communities all around us," Samuelsson shares in an interview with Eater. "I love nothing more than heading to a new city and making my way to a local market or being invited into a family home for dinner. My hope is that the program helps show people how similar we all are—something that I think is incredibly important in our current climate. Through these moments we’ve captured, it’s my hope that people feel connected and invited into a community they may not know.”
Check out some behind-the-scenes updates about the show from Samuelsson himself, via his Instagram: