The reality is that I spent years in the factories in Italy when I first set up Jimmy Choo. Today, everyone who has a job at Jimmy Choo, I've done their job - right down to the cleaner.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
My first job was a Greek tragedy, and ever since, one job just seemed to roll onto the next. I've been terribly lucky.
I'm very proud of being Italian-American, but people don't realize that the mafia is just this aberration. The real community is built on the working man, the guy who's the cop, the fireman, the truck driver, the bus driver.
Some Italians are geniuses, but you have to find a balance.
I have been going to Italy since 1980, but I always went to do work. I did not live overseas, because I do not like running around with everything I own in a paper bag.
Factories not what they used to be - they're all extremely high-tech.
My first job, I was Chuck E. at Chuck E. Cheese's.
When I first immigrated to the United States, there were not many jobs that stood out. So I worked at a gas station, cleaning.
I built RPM Italian, a restaurant I frequent as much as I can, because that is what people from Chicago do. They build things.
We at Ferrari are a small, dynamic company, and we show what Italy can do.
The Viennese wash everything. Where else in the world does the government hire public servants to wash public telephone booths and the glass over traffic lights? Every time I see someone doing these things, I smile like a child.