they had moonshine, laundry detergents and liquid nails.
And I keep it going, and I just got,
(Laughter)
also, this suggestion from Milan:
it's our traffic divider, which we call "panettone," and it's painted;
it's these beautiful concrete things that you use around Milan
to define all the lanes of traffic.
So, think of your own,
send them on if you want to -- they're always welcome.
But an exhibition like that made me understand even more
what I've been thinking of for 13 years ever since I got to MoMA.
I'm Italian. In Italy, design is normal.
Different parts of the world have a knack for different things.
I was just recently in Argentina and in Uruguay,
and the default way of building homes in the country is a beautiful modernism
that you don't see elsewhere, but the contemporary art was terrible.
In Italy, in Milan especially,
contemporary art really doesn't have that much of a place.
But design -- oh, my God.
What you find at the store at the corner, without going to any kind of fancy store,
is the kind of refined design that makes everybody think that