He Bought A House On Amazon

3,032,028
1,249
2024-03-04に共有

コメント (21)
  • The fact that this is the house they UPGRADED him to AFTER finding out he was going to make a video on it is not a good sign...
  • @andrewg5672
    NO plumbing, NO electrical, No insulation, No permit. Be prepared to spend tens of thousands more.
  • This is not revolutionary or amazing. This is dystopian. Amazon is selling slightly oversized Walmart garden sheds as houses here. This is some sort of next level trailer park living.
  • Hearing someone say they didn’t even think twice before making a $26,000 purchase is wild to me
  • @bobanoda
    Gotta love the mindset. “It’s not good enough for me to live in so I’m going to turn this into a shitty rental to make it someone else’s problem”
  • @amaliar5735
    my heart sank when he said he was gonna use it as an airbnb lmao
  • @Gafafsg
    The house folding in on you won’t be a problem for your squishy bones
  • @Knapperoni
    Bro bought an awful house and the spirit of all landlords immediately surged through him 💀
  • @Feyraligatr
    Well, I guess now we need these Amazon houses to target advertise at Drew Gooden so he buys it to test.
  • I'm a civil engineer who has worked with prefab houses so let me tell you this. These houses are essentially containers with holes and minimal insulation, so they're pretty small in general. You have to pay extra to have outlets and all the electricity stuff. You need to build a minimal foundation since they're so small but I wouldn't recommend them for areas with earthquakes and other extreme climate conditions or you'll end up like Dorothy in the wizard of Oz.
  • You could just buy a steel barn for the same price and its bigger and has room for a 2nd floor. And yes, some companies will build it for you, no extra cost.
  • I was all ready to be sympathetic to the guy because this being the only path to homeownership for a lot of people is absolutely depressing and then he hit us with the “I’ll just turn it into an Airbnb” and those feelings quickly turned into rage lmao
  • From the 1900s-1940s, Sears (then Sears-Roebuck) used to sell homes through their mail catalogue, they ranged from small to big ranch style homes, and basically you would receive pre-cut wood pieces that you (and I guess neighbors or friends) could assemble together, over the course of several weeks to a month, and the end products looked pretty good! (as long as you knew what you were doing) Back then, people could forego bank loans and mortgages and purchase their homes through Sears-Roebuck's loan program, which almost always resulted in the buyer getting a loan (so they could buy from Sears-Roebuck) but when the Great Depression hit, Sears also took a massive hit and ended up having to foreclose on a LOT of those homes. Think about a house you built with you own hands being taken away by the company you bought it from... Anyways, a lot of those homes are actually still around and as long as they haven't been too renovated you can often tell which homes are from the catalogue! Just thought it was interesting that history was repeating itself
  • @charenzo95
    The fact that he'd buy a house without having the land to purchase it on, tells us that he has a much bigger problem than ugly couches. He needs therapy.
  • @melissad4056
    This video is the best anti-AirBNB ad I've ever seen.
  • @snorble
    danny blasting out those second channel videos like nobody's business
  • @miriguyunari
    Much respect to Danny Gonzalez for actually bringing up how wrong it is to make an AirBnB out of one of these tiny houses that the guy who bought it himself wouldn't even live in.
  • @mjbraighboy
    The reason so many people are suggesting renting to salon workers is due to the nature of the industry. Most people don't realize that many hair stylists usually have to go through a process called booth renting. If a stylist can't afford to run their own salon they usually have to rent a space inside an existing salon to serve clients.