steveinbsas
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This video explains why Argentina and Brazil got the Northern Italians:

You gotta make from scratch. Maybe try at Maria Fedele.Well I know for a fact it must be Northern Italians cooking in Restaurants because the pasta is errrrrrr Lasagna made with pancakes!??????
A true lasagna bolognesa must have paper thin dow layers. The dry layers sold in Supermarkets are way too thick. Where to find a real Lasagna Bolognesa..? with a real Ragu...
italmarket.com.ar
As far as I can tell from the surnames I see here in Buenos Aires it appears to me that there were two waves of immigrants from Italy: the first in late 1800 early 20th century mostly from Piedmont, Liguria, Lombardy (where I am from) and Veneto, and a second one after the second World War mostly from the southern Italian regions. I can surmise it from two things: 1) when I see that the name of companies, streets (e.g. Repeto) and on some of the chapels in the Recoleta Cemetery are mostly typical of the North, while 2) when I talk with the porteños with Italian parents, abuelos or bisabuelos, they are mostly (not all) with southern last names. Not take it too scientifically though!Talking about Southern Italians, not making it to Argentina, and the Mafia, isn't Macri descended from a Calabrian family (as well as being descended from the boats, of course)?
We could have done with some decent pizza, though.
On a different note, though still related to how immigrants went to different places, I believe Paul Theroux wrote that while the Irish in the US traditionally moved into the police force, directing traffic, in Argentina, the Italian immigrant population was famously associated with directing traffic, while the Irish went into farming.
Regarding Macri, I have not checked, but a very common Calabrian last name is Macrí (with the accented i), so it is possible his ancestors came from Calabria.