
And while no one likes being penned up at home while daily violence surges on the streets, at least they can numb themselves with Good Morning Iraq, a popular daily television show on state-run Al-Iraqiya network. (The same network that airs the Cops-like but slightly less catchy named Terrorist in the Hands of Justice). GMI brings a daily Sawyer-ey, Lauer-y cheer to the crater dimpled days of Baghdad denizens.
The most popular feature of the channel: resident chef Firas's daily cooking segment. It caters to an important demographic in the new Iraq: housewives, according to Firas, the Middle East's Emeril. "We get lots of e-mails asking us to extend the kitchen slot or urging us to dedicate an entire program to cookery," he tells the BBC. While Firas "miss[es] the safety" of the old Iraq, one of the benefits of the American occupation is a wider palette. "Nowadays, there are more ingredients available to us," he says. "I make a different dish each day, five days a week. Today it's a Turkish dish: shashlik guzaban [a chicken and vegetable kebab]. But it could easily be an Iraqi dish. I'm particularly good at preparing French and Chinese food."
Was that someone's stomach rumbling or just the sound of a not-too-distant roadside bomb?