¿Quieres ver el video en español? Haz clic en el botón de configuración para cambiar la pista de audio. Want to watch this in Spanish? Head over to the settings button to change the audio track.
This is the first time I come across a youtube video with different audio tracks/dubbing. I'm impressed that it'd never ocurred to me this option could even exist.
Her mention at the end about shadows cast by buildings where the rich don't even live impacting everyday people for me was the most profound thing in this video.
the rich work and are responsible.the poor love being lazy and have kids they can´t feed, much less offer a good future.so to eat these will become criminals.
The most telling thing is that the more outlandish her behavior, the more the agents believed that she was ultra rich. Its because those people are completely detached from reality and insulated from consequence.
Not just that, it says that they don't care what other people think of them...poorer people are more conscious of other folks opinions...a part of being successful at time sis going against the grain and doing your own thing even if it doesn't make sense to others...It's not just about consequence there's consequence to everything, science provides that as ultimate law...but these folks are operating completely differently. I would have loved to know ALL of what she did that made her seem richer...that part is something study and is quite fascinating. But that man and his narration about daughter speaking hungarian...lolz....I would be CRACKING UP and rolling on the floor laughing.
Imagine believing that being isolated in your millions of dollars home is the best investment and not realizing the best view is actually free. For instance, walking outside interacting with nature.
Her talking about how we always view poverty from the bottom and not from the top just hit me like a truck. We focus on the problem but not what causes it.
If you think about it, our whole modern world is focusing on the problems on the shallow levels. Think about how doctors think about the "disease". Same thing. We are, as humanity, still ridiculously stupid.
Most people are taught that "you only need a good job to become rich". These billionaires are operating on a whole other playbook that many don't even know exists.
@Rob Micheal yeah just that I can't get a millionaire loan from my dad like Jeff bezos, or my family can't afford to pay harvard like Bill Gates family
@James Rico Yeah! I agree with you sir.If you want to be successful have the mindset of the rich, spend less and invest More. Don't give up your dreams.
@@sashabondarev7357 Most People intend to chase money more than knowledge and that will damage your progress, trust me. Chase knowledge first and I promise! The money will follow you just like it's following some of us now.
I always think about this especially when I'm in the city and that's why I'm growing more and more annoyed that buildings are going up all over NYC especially where there are residential one family houses
Yup. Over on Brooklyn we managed to successfully fight off one that was going to kill the wonderful Brooklyn Botanic Garden by taking most of its light. But it took a LOT of community pushback
@@gnarbeljo8980 Right, I remember when San Diego's small downtown was going through a building boom in the early 2000s that sunlight corridors was something that was stressed in the planning. Tall buildings that took up whole blocks had to reduce footprint progressively at certain elevations. I stayed in one for a few years on the 25th floor and there were only 7 units on our floor, and they weren't particularly big (900-1400 sqft).
@@brandall101 wind is another huge aspect. Building tall and densely has a massive impact, creates microclimates on the ground. Beein to areas where they got it wrong and the street became a windtunnel. I love NY and have stayed high up at The Standard with spectacular views, but I wouldn't want to live like that. Too claustrophobic fish tank like for me.
A lot of people don't understand it - but these buildings are never intended to be lived in. They are purely a piggy bank for money, laundering money or investments. There are stories of some of these buildings essentially falling apart when people try to live in them - elevators failing, fixtures coming apart because they are not well constructed. They're basically beautiful junk
"...the stranger I act, the more convincing it is that I'm actually a billionaire" Truer words were never spoken. One of the best short videos I've watched in a long time.
It's obscene. My appartment barely has a floor and I fear the balcony might collapse because of how unkempt the building is. And I'm actually lucky just to have an appartement I can * usually * afford cause finding a place to stay period is a challenge in itself rn. And that's in Canada where we're supposed to be more protected by our government
@@Carmen4ever your sentence is exactly whats wrong the cities are so PRODUCTIVE how could anyone think that something like this could happen :OOOO bro come on
@@_ee75 these cities make BILLIONS of dollars, you can argue whatever you want bruh but Los Angeles, New York, honey look at the numbers they make us the most money, so I’m not sure what the problem is with my comment lmaoo did it bug ya that I have so many likes?
My cousin is an architect in NYC. He told me there is no practical way to build the garbage shoots in those buildings that have a single unit on each floor without the garbage going into free fall (120 mph) so the other residents hear garbage flying past their $50,000,000 apartments and exploding into a dumpster on the bottom.
The idea that these empty buildings are robbing others of sunlight really struck me. How sad. Thank you for doing this project and sharing! This was a really special watch.
People here in NYC don't like "NIMBY." That term used to mean something. Now it means "how dare you have an opinion on what happens around you!" So we end up tolerating garbage like this because it's republican or something to want views and space and low crime.
It's something that really grates on you if you spend too much time in the inner city... It's especially bad for the people living on the lower floors. You end up subconsciously wanting to pick a higher floor just so you can get some sun in the morning...
As a former high-end carpenter, I often marveled at how people with money invariably build fantastically expensive, utterly cold and desolate spaces. You look at one of their kitchens and think, "Where are the glasses?" There's no way to tell. It's an inscrutable mystery. You look at the living room and, think "where do I sit?" And the truth is that there's nowhere to sit. You dare not fart in one of those homes, or stink up the bathroom, or so much as give your kid a box of crayons, much less allow a bout of stomach flu to run its course. They aren't homes. They're mausoleums. Beautiful, ornate, cold and lifeless. They are places for the bodies whose souls died (or were sold) long ago. There is nothing there worth desiring.
@@robinabernathy2829 It's means he's not a mom and pop shop bro in overalls that builds simple tables and shelves. He's a skilled artisan that can build complex, cold, beautiful works of art for the super rich.
It's funny you say that. I live in an area with a lot of pointlessly large brand new mansions, and I call them "Mausoleums for giants". The buildings are too big for the blocks and there's very little garden around them. Some even have giant urns out the front. All very grand and spotless and formal looking, and very empty.
It is ridiculous that so many people had to give up their access to sunny views of the outdoors so some of the elite can have access to ultra luxury places that they don't even occupy. How crazy. In Japan, it has been illegal for DECADES to put up a building that would block your neighbor's access to sunlight. That shows where our priorities are in this nation. All about the money.
Yeah but Japan has some horrible priorities too. They have a 99% conviction rate because they'll hold a suspect indefinitely and subject them to mentally torturous interrogation every day until they confess to a crime they didn't even commit. There is a class of person that is more or less untouchable in the Indian cast system sense. There is a lot more racism and xenophobia in Japan, generally, although it doesn't go to the same extremes that it does in the West quite so often, they have a six week work day and if you take any of your legally entitled holiday time you're looked down upon and treated as a really lazy person. It isn't all sunshine and roses over there and I know you're not saying it is, in fact I agree it's a positive policy to have, but Japan is pretty messed up too.
Look at 10:16 They are owned but no one lived in them. Usually, they work as “wealth preservation” because real estate doesn’t lose value like stocks or other traded assets do.
@@IRLSuperb Fed printing money for stimmy checks causes capitol to flood into assets, eg real estate. Why are we blaming people for doing the right thing, while ignoring why they are forced to do so?
Vacant: The best word I'd use to describe New York. I lived there 7.5 years and would never return. Those characterless, lifeless buildings with the views reminds me of all that I hated about that place. Nope. I'd never live in one of those units, and I'd never return to that awful city. Life is much, much better nearly everywhere else.
I’ve lived in NYC all my life and worked in those buildings. I don’t see the appeal. So much money down the toilet. Yes, the apartment is big, but when you go downstairs you are just one of us. Mingling with the homeless and drug addicts, sharing Central Park with so many people and tourists, hours stuck in traffic to get anywhere even if you have a driver and an equally expensive, brag worthy car. It’s the opposite of exclusivity imo and just plain dumb. So many nicer places to live in the world.
I saw a documentary or something on the people that buy these. Usually the people that buy these have so much money that they literally just buy it as a vehicle for their money
I’m guessing the act was something like “billionaire’s wife,” but I still was cringing at all the “I’m sure your husband would love to buy this for you if you asked him,” little lady.
@@igcarism_atiqueclickmehh7001 she’s young and not famous, the only way she’d have access to that money is rich parents or a rich partner. But still he could at least not to be a creepy dick stuck in the 1950s
Her video tour of the building with the actual realtor's voice in the background was really creepy. It sounded like the devil making unrealitic offers to you with very diabolical intentions.
The part about the skyscrapers stealing sunlight from everyone else felt like the perfect metaphor for the relationship between billionaires and the rest of us.
The people buying these apartments aren’t even living there they are buying them as a safe investment, it’s honestly evil how there are people freezing on the street and these skyscrapers are literally empty
You forgot one of the important parts. They are driving up the property tax and cost of living in those eye sores that they don't live in through in insane cost they are buying them for.
@@ForceField9 how would you feel if you were freezing on the streets of New York and these people with more money than they know what to do with are buying places what could be affordable apartments ?
I was once invited to the bday dinner of one of the wealthiest men in the UK, and present were five private bankers whose sole client was the birthday boy, his three PA's who ran his bussinesses, households and travelling, the dog-nanny who worked full time to make sure his six dogs were happy and healthy. Half the people there basically worked for him in some capacity, including my ex- who was his parttime private soprano. I'm not kidding. He owned a few appartments like those, lived in about six of them, with his main domicile in (of course) a tax-haven where he owned a mansion and his main yacht was stationed. His private interior designer (also present) was constantly remodellling/redocrating at least one of them, selling or buying new art to go along with the new furniture. It felt like I was dining with royalty, everyone laughing with his lame jokes and tolerating his smug demeanor. I couldn't wait to leave the place, the disconnect was just insane. The only positive was that his employees were all very nice to me, as if relieved to have at least one normal person around the table.
Why are we focusing on the people who use the system to their advantage instead of the people who uphold the system I'm talking about the politicians and non-politicians who creates and uphold the political system
@@johnyossarian9059 Because what would be the point? The "people who use the system to their advantage" are the ones paying off the politicians and people who uphold the system.
Amazing story, I think my soul left me a few times from some details, like shadows from the empty buildings and how a realtor was guiding how to talk to her husband, how transactional some people's lives are.....
The only glorious part to realize, is that if that's actually a successful sales strategy, it shows how manipulable even ultrarich people are to mere flattery and compliment. Personally I think I'd find that attitude revolting, like it shows how being rich garners a type of treatment absent much aside being rich. Being rich can easily be seen as a vice. To be smothered in that not only you get this treatment as a function of wealth, but that it's clearly an expected style, just makes me even more sickened by the ultrarich.
The part about the empty buildings taking sunlight from others in the city really broke my heart Edit: I'm surprised by the amount of people who can't or simply refuses to understand such a simple comment
I feel like this could be a first argument to start suing developers and tear down these towers. The park is public property. Light and silence are things that, in their absence, can be brought to court for breaking the peace at home. At least, those are things that you can sue others for in Europe. I wouldn't be surprised USA is different.
@Turdy Birdie to me it's a problem. We'd be talking about inconvenience if all of those apartments were habited, a.k.a. the number of tall buildings were due to the big population, bad but necessary. But given the amount of empty apartments unnecessarily blocking a natural resource that everyone should have access to, and also contributing to the inflation in real estate prices, it can be considered a problem
That guy talking to her about her husband and trying to get her to convince him to buy a 80 million dollar apartment is creepy af. The guy sounds like he could be an amazing narrator, but he lives to pray on people's emotions. Cool.
Also its super transparent. I can't take these salesman seriously, it's like they try to be cleverly manipulative but it is so obvious. Sometimes it is just arkward how they think, you are so naive that these tricks would work on you.
He was definitely selling. I find that she took it in a humorous way. She even gave him a curveball "I prefer the 21st century" when he was talking about the 19th century. She may have said she had a husband to explain the camera. The salesman was definitely projecting, whic is annoying. He was trying to make as many highlights as possible & getting her to envision the entire process to make a huge sale.
I work in a wealthy area for wealthy clients. I'm often in ripped up, dirty clothing. Reason for that is mostly from what I do but I started dressing like when I didn't need to. Got into some interesting encounters with people while working on homes. Like wealthy neighbors who assume I'm the actual owner and I play the part as a joke. They think I'm just the quirky, artsy owner who's rarely there.
@@chrisd5133 I'm a landscape architect. But like to do some of the construction too for clients I like. Definitely in steel cap boots and a fluro I rarely get offered a coffee. Compared to turning up in a suit with my laptop and plans.
@@lancemillward1912 I'm in a similar field. Garden design (but have also worked in interior woodworking in the past). There are homes I work on where I am that literally nobody lives in. I work on them, constantly redoing and evolving them. Large, multimillion dollar homes. I have one where nobody has been in it for over three years at this point. Another one gets used a month or so a year.
This is just as ridiculous as most of the tax laws in California. 1. Who cares what people do with their property so long as they pay their taxes? My home. I'll do with it as I please. Why would I rent it if I wanted a second home to be available anytime I wanted to use it? 2. (As with most things in the government) Why is it any of their business what a private individual does with their private residents that they paid for and pay taxes on? This is a great example as to why people are leaving California and leaving New York. Dumbest tax laws ever.
Fun fact, Deborah Berke is the dean of architecture at Yale. She preaches inclusivity and community engagement within the building industry, yet designs for the top 1%... ironic much? 9:12
this reminds me of Zou Yaqi's, an art student's, project where she lived a luxurious life for free by pretending to be a fake socialite in bejing. she was able to eat for free, get into several auctions, and sleep in expensive hotel lobbies. By forging VIP passes, she spent 5 days inside an airport, while the rest of the time she stayed in hotels where she was able to enjoy saunas and their gyms.
"VIP" is just a tag really, most of the time Doormen or people gatekeeping those types of areas/events could care less if you are a millionaire/billionaire. As long as you act and look the part you can almost get into anywhere for free. Its all truly just a social illusion created by successful individuals to bar themselves from the less fortunate. And worst they can do is just ask you to leave, plus you've already had your fun :)
There's something unsettling about how the realator was talking to her. Just creepy. I'm getting major dystopian vibes. I know probably not everybody shares the same opinion about this, but I feel like there's something messed up about paying billions to live at the top of a souless empty building suffocated in the middle of an overcrowded city blocking out the sun. Is it just me?
Like she said, they don't actually live in it, most of the time. But the creepy realtor was acting as if she would. Her kids would be running around (in the apartment? in the streets hundreds of meters below?) speaking Hungarian.
@@msfundioits crazy that they dont live in it. I am from the caribbean, i once wanted to live in America like that, but i visited new york and realized, nope, i prefer to visit these places and come back to trees, animals, birds, the sun, my yard, farms, streams, fresh air, quiet, islands etc. I have developed an appreciation for my home. People run away from the caribbean for a "better life" and its sad because there is nothing better than peace and nature. Even tho we have poverty, we dont have to. People just want to be rich, they can live in nature and live minimal out here, they just dont want to.
I live on a mountain in the southern Appalachians near the Smokies. In a 600sq' glorified shack I built myself for less than 25k I share a property line with the Nantahala national forest. My view is incredible. Nothing but mountains layered to the horizon.
yeah my parents house in wytheville va had a ridiculously better view than that metropolitan view. And their house ran 100k when built in beginning of 80's. Worth like 230k (heavy renovated) today.
@@ChrisErbVideo form would still feel different. The part where the seller was talking weirdly of Florance and speaking Hungarian just feels like something thatsore impactful in video form
This should be a full documentary, it’s actually scary how much America consumes , to many products , way to much food , and the lifestyle that includes unnecessary luxury and space .
@@a.a.3699 agreed. As someone who lives about 30-45min from midtown in NJ, I can assure you the small 1br me and my husband live in is far from luxurious.
The comment she made regarding the shadows cast by these building was striking to me. It honestly made me think of dystopian fiction (think Blade Runner or the city planet of Corusant in Star Wars), where years into the future there are megastructures littered throughout a city that are so tall, that sunlight no longer reaches the ground and street levels, essentially casting an entire segment of society into perpetual darkness. But this isn’t fiction anymore, this is becoming reality. We are already living in a modern dystopia in many ways.
reminds me of Kowloon Walled City in Hong Kong. And basically, the reality of living in slums. I've been to those places and it's really damp and dark once you get inside, even if it's daytime. Imagine how people living there suffered during lockdowns in the height of the pandemic.
here in south brazil, in the most expensive city to buy a house (balneario camburiu), they had to extend the beach sand with landfill. Because the skyscrapers at the beach took all the sun at 14 hours and now 1year later the landfill are having several natural problems...
You are correct; there are many arguments that we already live in a dystopia. There's a good video I like that I'd recommend called "Why Dystopias are more popular than Utopias" by Yugopnik.
"Being so high up it's cool but then it didn't feel good to be there in a way.". That's basically the moral we've been taught a long time ago with a different quote: It's lonely at the top.
To say that this whole situation has an ominous dystopian feeling is underselling it... I visited NYC back in the summer of 2015 and in every corner, every alley, basically everywhere, there were homeless people. Some were holding signs that say "They wouldn't give me a job" or "I'm trying to find a job, please" but there was this one sign b a homeless woman that caught my eye at the time. And it never left my memory. The sign said "America has failed me, dare to hear me?". I saw that sign and sat down with the woman, offered her some of my soup as we talked about her difficulties. She said she was in the army, served in Iraq as a medic. She had to come back home due to her injuries in hopes that the government would take care of her. But they didn't. Her leg had to be cut with an operation and government still asked for money. She then said that she reached out to VA's, but they didn't help her at all saying that her injuries and her debt had nothing to do with her time in service. So, with both government and VA turned their backs to her, she paid her bills with the money she saved for her child when she has one, in the future. Then she begun to look for a job but most of the establishments would frown when they heard she was in the military. With nothing else and no hope in sight, she said she turned to VA again, for job. But she still got refused and rejected. It's heartbreaking to say the least, to see and hear all these people when the U.S. government keeps putting hundreds of millions of dollars into defense contracts and fights in "wars" that has nothing to do with them... But hey, American Dream right? What a joke!
Very interesting story ... we never know what is the reason that people live in the strees some are because of drugs, some others because of the economy ..maybe one led to the other... we have to be more empathetic
Hmmm. This sounds very fishy. She doesn’t seem like a veteran. They would have put her on disability. Also the VA would have offered voc rehab. Moreover, TAPS/GPS is a congressionally mandated course to attend; she would have learn of her education, employment and medical options. I’m sorry, as a veteran, I can sense stolen valor a mile away. That homeless woman wasn’t a veteran
If you live in NY you actually know why this is a problem.. the homeless problem in Ny is insane and there’s homeless ppl sleep on the same blocks as these buildings and the subway at night turns in a mental ward/ shelter, women are being followed home and murdered but yet we have empty useless buildings smh
Homeless people with mental issues shouldn't be allowed to roam freely. They should be institutionalized. But the situation today is thanks to a liberal over correction that nobody shall be institutionalized against ones own will. It's not just the case in NY, I can tell you from Europe even in great well fare countries, we have these homeless lunatics that piss every, have such a smell that the whole subway-wagon empties out once they get in - of course homeless can ride the subway for free :) And also murders are committed by them. And it is not that they wouldn't have the option for free housing, care, etc.. They are just crazy and refuse to be institutionalized and as long as they haven't committed a murder they can roam freely.
I lived in the wealthy Annapolis MD for many years. One day we took a water taxi tour of all the rich homes and I will Never forget the guide saying “the larger the home, the less it is used”…. That one sentence changed my life outlook forever.
@@Vancouver-rh4fx wealthy people are usually traveling so they're never home to enjoy it. Actors, Musicians, Politicians, Businessmen... all require a life of constant travel so they're rarely, if ever, home. This is true of all their properties (vacation homes, ski villas, beach/lake front homes, etc.)
my story is called - "What I Saw as a REAL Poor Person." odd how no one is interested in my story. i'm an american sentenced to poverty. although i committed NO CRIME i'm punished everyday. corporations and elite land speculators have made affordable housing so sparse its booked for years. now renters are REQUIRED to have 3 times the rent in income which means, living on s. s., i don't qualify for ANY rental over $400 a month. AND THEY DON'T EXIST! some poor have learned to manipulate the system to make their housing inter-generational as they hand their govt subsidized housing to their kids making affordable housing EVEN HARDER to attain. as a very ill, elderly person on FULL medicare i'm routinely denied much needed medical care. I CAN BARELY FUNCTION. i've notified adult protective services who DO NOTHING! i've notified politicians, govt agencies, doctors, lawyers and even the news media and NO ONE gives a damn. i'm denied legal representation as lawyers refuse to help the poor. i can't even sue my abusers! we poor, disabled and elderly are left to fend for ourselves and since we DON'T HAVE THE RESOURCES we're left to suffer and be abused by everyone in sight - even other poor! this is THE REAL U. S. that no one will allow me to expose!
i posted this 12 days ago and now its gone - my story is called - "What I Saw as a REAL Poor Person." odd how no one is interested in my story. i'm an american sentenced to poverty. although i committed NO CRIME i'm punished everyday. corporations and elite land speculators have made affordable housing so sparse its booked for years. now renters are REQUIRED to have 3 times the rent in income which means, living on s. s., i don't qualify for ANY rental over $400 a month. AND THEY DON'T EXIST! some poor have learned to manipulate the system to make their housing inter-generational as they hand their govt subsidized housing to their kids making affordable housing EVEN HARDER to attain. as a very ill, elderly person on FULL medicare i'm routinely denied much needed medical care. I CAN BARELY FUNCTION. i've notified adult protective services who DO NOTHING! i've notified politicians, govt agencies, doctors, lawyers and even the news media and NO ONE gives a damn. i'm denied legal representation as lawyers refuse to help the poor. i can't even sue my abusers! we poor, disabled and elderly are left to fend for ourselves and since we DON'T HAVE THE RESOURCES we're left to suffer and be abused by everyone in sight - even other poor! this is THE REAL U. S. that no one will allow me to expose!
Could EASILY have been 45 min to an hour. super interesting story with lots of room to get into the psychology, reasoning, and affects on the society. super interesting topic
anyone who could afford it probably already knows, but it's ultimately not really that big of a deal for them either way. A totally different human experience.
I live in an 11M$ penthouse and have all the amenities you can dream of. Never have i ever used any of them in 5 years of living in the building. It's all BS. It's for show. It's always empty. Nobody ever goes down there to use any of what is offered. Go buy land and build mansions instead for friends and families. Dont ever waste time or money in the big cities. It's all a trap!!! In the last 2 years, i have invested in land and started building 3 huge houses for all my siblings and parents. Almost 20 acres of land plus 3 mansions. Total cost under 4M$. Tell me, that's not worth it
If you want to see some of these apartments you don’t have to go through all the prep she went through. Literally just call up the agent, sound confident, say you’re interested in purchasing an apartment and would like to see their listing. On vacation, I regularly go look at very nice apartments as like, a fun activity. You’re not obligated to do anything-you’re just looking.
My family bought a 1.2 million dollar home in Baltimore last year and they asked for a credit check/government ID before the tour. Even asked for my ID, and I’m only 28 just to go inside. Not really.
@@Scythe_Voltage Maryland is one of the wealthiest states in the country, also Baltimore County is one of the best public school systems on the east coast.
Absolutely impersonal. Only there to be sold on. Not one of the apartments had any warmth that would invite living. Anyone living in a single house with a plot of land is better off in terms of quality of living.
@Turdy Birdie these buildings casting huge shadows on other peoples homes is a problem because it means that having access to natural lighting in your house or public space is becoming a luxury item. an elitist product almost. we are not talking about a little shadow in your house, but a house that maybe when you bought/started renting it had nice sunlight in your bedroom when you wake up, and maybe some evening lighting, and now it is in the dark shadow at all times because there is an empty building blocking the sun. on top of that it also blocks the sun in public spaces like parks, which in cities are very important for people to be able to enjoy some nature, sun, trees.. I find it unfair that some say: then move out of the city. it is unfair that people are driven out of their communities like that, without having a say in the matter. on top of it all it is expensive to move, and you would have to build up family/friends/work etc at a new place. would you want that? I honestly don't get why so many people are making fun of the comments about this valid critique, please enlighten me: do you people not want a house or public park that has natural lighting? what if your current house would suddenly get surrounded by empty skyscrapers and you would have to live in the dark, would that not make you sad or angry?
@@winnieconradi4221 -additionally it lowers the temperature dramatically, snow builds up and takes longer to melt making travel inconvenient, and on hot summer days the city basically becomes an oven trapping in all of the heat. This is why I'm glad I live in FL and only visit NY rarely
@Turdy Birdie Not a core problem by itself, just a metaphor for the overall issue: developers cater to the 1% at the expense of everyone else, while the middle class is being pushed out of neighborhoods that they helped build and form communities around.
@@winnieconradi4221 But do the shadows not move so it is only dark in one spot for a small amount of time. Also I would imagine in 100 years from now new york and other citys will have much higher buildings. I mean that seems to be a pattern. We build higher and higher. It seems like shadows are just an inevitability. I mean at one point new work had no buildings. It's an island so they have to build high. They always have. How is it any different than it ever was before? I am not saying it is not a problem but it seems it is just a downside to having high rise citys. Thats what you should expect in metropolises like this. Thats what these citys are about. You can't have your cake and eat it.
The fact that the only way she could convince these real estate agents to show her these properties was to say that she was looking for a second home, vacation property (pied e tiere) or investment property says a lot. These are all sitting empty, and the developers have convinced the city government officials that if we just keep building more and more of these that it will eventually “trickle down” to make housing more affordable. But they’re having the opposite effect, they’re making housing more expensive as they sit completely empty while the owners or off in their yachts.
It's "pied à terre" from french language not pied e tiere that doesn't mean anything. It means an appartement often in a big city or capital where you only stay when you need it.
@@typical_snowflake Well at least you’re named aptly. I’m not a great speller on comments sections. When making a more important written document, I do use the internet and have editors before publishing. But in comments sections I often find that leaving a small typo or inconsequential spelling error can really bring out the very worst prigs in the comments section. And that’s always good to expunge those folks from one’s life. I know what the word means, OBVIOUSLY. But I hope you got your low self esteem boost of the day by attempting to make someone else feel small. Sorry it didn’t work as I know your type.
Why would they just let any old person into the listing? It's like allowing ratchet crackhead into Gucci or bvlgari to cause a ruckus cause they don't have the understanding or advanced education to understand why things are priced the way they are. Be for real.
I own a copy of her book! If anyone wants to know it is titled Private Views: A High-Rise Panorama of Manhattan. It is absolutely gorgeous! And it is not only about the views, but it also has a lot of conversations with the agents, and other longer texts and info so you really get a sense of the whole luxury real estate thing... It is such a clever, fun, and beautiful book!
@@sxckme.sideways_3955 Physical books are expensive, especially art books. Art books for a video game usually cost about $60-70 more than just the game. So it's par for the course.
@@paris5768 you see it as a book, I see it as an opportunity to learn more on how luxury estate agents deal with people to expand strategies. I’m not an agent, just one example.
@@edityourmood if you're not rich to be at par to that lifestyle then it's not worth the money. If you're into beautiful pictures and would read just anything, sure go for it.
I think ima start saying it when I want to convince anyone of anything now too- "do you want to go to taco bell?" "no, not really." "ok, but have you imagined your daughter running around, saying words in Hungarian?"
This is a disgusting reality The shadows they cast are symbolic and to me one of the saddest parts for some reason Blocking the sunlight is the epitome of greed, completely disregarding the needs and lives of others
There's a story says more than 60% of these "executive" buildings are empty. Not enough billionaires. Yet the city homeless problem gets bigger every day. Crazy
The most striking info I got from her project: "Appartments are literally 60-70% empty." I was like, really? When there are homeless people across New York dying on the streets? I always used to think a lot of people used to live in those tall towers. Why have them standing in the first place? No human centric approach......
you're fully welcome to buy a unit and give it to the homeless. But research has shown that just giving homeless people a place to call 'home' doesn't fix the problem, and nearly every time it's attempted the facility is destroyed in the process. So good luck with that.
@@fredlebhart1393 that's funny because I've seen the opposite outcome in implemented programs. I don't understand why people make up stuff to demean people who already have such terrible living conditions. Why do you hate them so much? Why do you want to make their lives even worse?
@@SeanGilligan2JV you’ve misunderstood. I love humanity. I try to help as much as humanly possible. Everything my city and state has done has backfired. I’ve learned that guy can’t force people into homes or shelters.
This is why there should be an occupancy tax. If the majority of housing is empty and driving up the cost. A lot of these properties are probably foreign investments.
@@adampatterson Well it depends. In some countries, it's very beneficial to try and attract wealthy, foreign buyers to boost the local economy. In others, such as the US, it can be detrimental. As with most everything else, it's not black and white. It's Schroedinger's cat....it can be both things at the same time.
it's amazing that a property that goes unused and no one has any intention of every using is valued in the millions whereas there is a housing crisis in the city and no one has anywhere to live. something has got to give.
The most moving comment in the whole video was about the empty buildings also casting huge shadows, taking away more from the city than just sitting empty
I live in one such shadow. It impacted the amazing wildflower meadow that took years to create in my front yard (now dead), my house plants, my own depression (my home gets no natural light now), and I used to watch the aun set from my yard. Now I have a massive wall that is someone’s giant home. I call it the Death Star. These “neighbors” have never spoken to me. Meanwhile I tuen the other cheek and smile genuinely because I am sure they actually suffer more than I do.
I live in a similar situation, but in a smaller scale. The next door neighbor had an one-family house. Just ground floor. When she died, the family sold it and built a 4 story house. Our once sunlit yard feels like a dungeon now. Not only is the light gone, but it's now surrounded by walls.
I once accompanied my dad to a job he was doing setting up a sound system in this very wealthy family's home. They weren't the kind of uber wealthy that would ever own investment property in New York, but wealthy enough that they could afford to throw money away on almost anything a normal person could imagine and still be fine afterwards. These were also people that we actually knew kinda personally because they went to our church. When I stepped foot into that house, I was afraid to even breathe too close to any surface. The house was immaculate, and even though there were supposed to be 4 or 5 people living in it, it didn't feel at all like a space someone would actually live in. Marble everywhere, crystal chandelier in the front entry, modern-country décor. The living room (the one I went into, there were apparently multiple) was home to the husbands exotic hunting trophies (taxidermy lion, zebra, etc. from trips to Africa), just literally floor to ceiling taxidermy. It had all this stuff in it and was such an opulent display of wealth but it was completely soulless. I have never been more uncomfortable in my life than when I was in that place.
Guilt is a peculiar. Often, people aren’t even aware of its presence, yet it seeps into every facet of their lives, leaving its mark on their surroundings. There is something spooky about these places, Those who achieve what they believe is their dream, obviously at the expense of others, often discover that their reality ends up eerily hollow.
I've done this at a car dealership, just to joyride on my day off. The salesman sounded like an even skeezier version of this guy. He made disparaging remarks about women and relationships by comparing them to old cars, and then he topped it off with "You know, I really see you in that car" - No, you see the big fat comission you're not getting. It's hilarious what you can get away with if you just dress up and act confident.
it's hilarious that how people treat you, perceive you and what you can achieve with them is 99% how you dress and act, 1% who you are and what you really can do you can have a lot of cash and be very successful and all that, all it takes is for you to dress way below your status and act a little shy for people to assume they are better than you you can use that too by the way, to have some fun
I used to do the same thing with my friends lmao! we would look at used car sites and always look for big engine cars like ferrari, c63s, m5's, one time a freaking mclaren, just so we could go and drift and test it out. Some guy let us try his m3 for like a week. We blew his tires out looool but we did buy him a whole new set of ps91's, and a set of sparks, i think 1 injector was blown or something too lmao, but we paid him for it. another guy had to travel and called and asked me to take care of his f10 too. why go to dealerships when you can just rent big cars for free lmao good times. bro the cops even caught us drifting in the city center once. he didnt even have to say anything to me, he just looked disappointed and I asked him laughing okay which jail/pound? he said the name of it and i just drove there, but we brided him so he let us go with a warning lool
How do you knows skeezier? Did you figure out if either were being tortured into only appearing/sounding like they could possibly be doing that? How about for those they interact/interacted with? -Slaves dont buy/sell even if they’re being lied about.
And the most ironic part is that their value comes only from their exclusivity and how inaccessible they're to the people who would actually benefit from them, rather than their usefulness to the people who own them.
I bet you pay Netflix every month, got a gucci bag for your birthday and pay 10 dollars for a cup of coffee. Do you need it? Why don't you share with the poor one?
@@nadie7480why would you need any of the things you mention? I neither have such a bag, nor do I buy coffees outside home ecc. That's so strange that someone things of these things as normal or even daily purchases!
I'm glad that developers and the local governments (at least here) now factor in the impact of the shadows high rise buildings cause. Apparently that's one of the reasons why Sydney and Melbourne don't have insanely high buildings. How upsetting to live in darkness due to a building shadow :(
its sometimes embarssing thinking about how much humans really care about the status of the level of their life. the self ego build in this world is the biggest thing that crumbles it.
Why isn't there more people thinking like you and I? My whole life I could never understand people fighting over "things" whatever its value, and it is not because I have things, in fact I got into so much trouble for swapping an 18k necklace with Madonna pendant, also 18k, for a necklace that was the colour of the Caribbean sea, I fell in love with it. Till this day it's still my favourite colour. I was 11 years old when I did that. I did not change with age, I frequently gave away stuff that I could have sold for extra money, as money has always been tight, but always thought, "we got food, a roof over our head, bills paid, and my family is safe, so we're good". Don't get me wrong I'm no "Mother Teresa", I swear like a sailor, am as stubborn as a mule but will go all the way if I see injustice! Have had my head used as a punching bag just because I got involved when a 6 foot 3 young man, built like pro, was chasing down a 5 foot 2, very thin young lady. I at 5 feet and advanced years, and by no means athletic, did not miss a beat when this young girl started screaming for help, I ran up, just as he grabbed her, and demanded that he let her go. Was told to mind my own business, when I told him, I was making this my business, he was not impressed. Had the audacity to scream an inch from my nose, so I got his spit in my face, "Is that right, what's a fat old looser like you going to do about it?" This exchange made it possible for the young woman to escape, without her abuser realising. When he did, he was angry, or should I say, it looked like he was about to burst his muscles or veins or his head, hard to tell, especially once he punched me in the head, lucky for me a neighbour came out and stopped him. That's just one incident, I really don't know why I just mentioned this. Peace😀
well, to be fair, NYC was trash. and still is trash. just because you raise prices and put a nice big pink bow on garbage, its still gonna be garage. its all about generating hype to skyrocket the prices on real estate in NYC, much like crypto currency. one day it will crash hard and 81 million dollar apartments will be worth 100k.
it’s crazy that it totally shows this idea that the exclusive parts of society aren’t actually that “exclusive” that one can “play” the game which involves saying the right things and putting up a whole persona to be accepted in. It was quite easy after she put on an expensive looking outfit, did her nails, and said the right things to get access to these high rise buildings. It questions the idea of those in the 1% as a whole theatrical performance they are all willingly playing into.
You're right. Billionaires should have to show identification to see houses. Poor people don't even belong to look at it. If anything she showed that a little research and acting can get you into some cool scenarios.
then play the game and get into hmtheur money space and then use your money and influence to change the system. but no… everyone is too righteous to try and do so.
Yeah. I guess that's why that Ben Mallah guy is so popular, he's the opposite. Super rich dude who slums it with the regular folks and cracks everybody up with his jokes and then teaches them actual knowledge on how to be good with money.
the original game was survive the lion, outrun the deer, and die of disease before 20, you can still go play that game if you want, but if you want the perks of society you gotta play societies game
Weird thing about wealth is these people don't usually have the money cash in hand to spend. A lot of wealth isn't liquid and it is entirely possible many of these apartments are either financed (I know crazy but really happens) or straight up owned by a business entity like a hedge fund or similar so no single person really owns it.
@@oldleatherhandsfriends4053 Yeah...I mean..that's exactly why the *Rump family has so much real estate. Leverage their asses on inflated valuation and never pay the banks back.
The agent in the very beginning read “How to Win Friends & Influence People” about 20 times too many with his antics. I’d have struggled to keep a straight face with how ridiculous he was being. The title of the video drew me in and I’m glad it did because this was a great talk!
@@chrisr.6638 Can relate. Some of the self-help books I've read have been trash at best (like Power Of Habit) I feel stupid for having read them carefully and slowly for better impact. Though, some of them were life-changing in my case. 12 Rules For Life by Jordan Peterson and Thinking Fast & Slow Daniel Kahneman have noticeably improved my life. Learning to separate the wheat from the chaff helps a lot.
Idk man. Being from the Caribbean, I find all that concrete in the view hella ugly and depressing. Unless I really needed to be in the city, I can't imagine spending a fortune for that.
There's something putrid in the heart of that city and that's why I moved out many years ago. The wealth inequality in NYC is more evident than anywhere else. I visit from time to time to see my elderly mom and come back home.
Honestly, I was dreaming of New York ever since I was 11 being a European girl. I did some traveling and ended up in January 2024 there. On the first evening being in the city for nearly 2 hours this was my conclusion that I told my boyfriend. This city is fun to be in when you are rich. I have romantisized NYC for so long, only to come there and be dissapointed and hit by the reality. I still managed to find a bar that was super small, had a character of old New York before all this commercial freak has begun with super low prices. Which proves that the rent is the killer of all the New York vibe. It is a vibrant city but if these fake development projects would not ruin the market it could be 1000 times better.
There must be a psychology play here where the person who buys these over-the-top, high-end, top-floor condos actually thinks they’re above everyone else. I got that from thinking about how a person wakes up and looks down at everyone else because that’s all they can do.
This project sheds light on many relevant issues from inequality, the housing crisis, privilege, and everything in-between. And to top this, it is very entertaining. I shared it with my entire friend group and they loved it too.
The old saying capitalism breeds inequality still rings true. I mean we can go as far as we’d like. I’m fine with what I have because I’m happy with it. An $85,000,000 penthouse comes with its own share of problems I wouldn’t want to deal with.
@@skeezix8156 incorrect. Historically, capitalism has been the most equal system we've had. What currently breeds inequality is the constant debasement of our currencies
@@VincentHondius it’s all about personal drive to do well. Siblings raised under the same roof by the same parents can turn out wildly different in terms of economic stature. One may view a recession as an opportunity while the other struggles.
I love how she explained that you can't even get to the viewings without special knowledge. I didn't know that. And pointed out how those buildings literally cast shadows on whatever is beneath them depriving them of the sun.
Well on the flip side, that looks like an easy target. Imagine wanting to be so disassociated it's like yep. Hardly no1 wants to stay up here. My ears hurt but still. Ok I'm being extra but that's not really the view I'd actually want. I remember losing 1 of my front teeth bc I was trying to walk through a window door thing, at my uncles. Like imagine waking up every morning & ur immediate reaction is getting startled. And u just gradually hafta get to the PT where it's like oh yeah. I live here. I certainly don't know any billionaires. But I know in down town historic areas I'm near by, ppl live up on the top floors. That seems cooler than this. Only bc it seems peaceful convenient & has a more realistic nice view tho. But they prob hear crime & love their guns. But I can appreciate all kinds of living spaces. Just not this. If I wanted to be ridiculous I want to live like dolly Parton or mj. These ppl literally look down on ppl. From their apts. Where ppl look like blobs of color, ants
I can see the swinging pendulum, it's slowly hypo not using me. Maybe you have to listen to the entire voicemail😂😂anyone calls and leaves a creepy ass VM like that is NOT getting a call back
I live in NYC and my job has made it so that I go into a lot of apartments in many different buildings. I never knew what a true wealth discrepancy was before I came here. It put me in a funk for the better part of a year, but then as time went by I realized that even if I could buy a super expensive apartment in NYC, I probably wouldn't. My personal preferences, like not wanting the doormen to know all my business for example, would keep me at a much lower level of living. As a service provider, I have seen some terrible behavior of the very wealthy as well as the joke they become to the other "help"...the word eccentric is often used, but crazy is also a good word to describe a lot of these people. Not to mention completely out of touch with reality.
@@sarapickard7634 its easier for them to be so, unlike poorer people. Though poor proplr can be eccentric, homeless crypto bros and whatnot come to mid. (as the social status/class OUTWEIGHS the economic class)
I knew someone in college who was this wealthy. He made me sick. His sense of reality was fucking warped. And he felt that humans were just something that existed until he didn't need them anymore. I distinctly remember telling a friend that I may need to drop out of college because my mom is having a hard time making ends meet and we'll be homeless unless I start working and financing half our expenses. He overheard me and he laughed and said "what is your father doing sitting on his ass? Your mom also has a responsibility to make sure he's giving her enough allowances." When I said that my parents are divorced, he insisted that my mother's lawyer was was stupid for not making him pay alimony and child support. No matter how I explained that things did not work like that, he laughed and told me in fancy descriptive words that our financial standing was because my mom was stupid and chose the wrong man to marry and then couldn't even take half his assets during the divorce. Then he suggested I find myself a successful man to marry and take care of me. "Your problems are a lot easier solved than you think 😉"
@@petrifiedviewer He then got need to be careful to marry a wrong woman to cause his life go sucks if following his logic to tell the suggestion back to him. That kind of wealthy people has an issue is that they don't know what the real world is. Or that is never an issue for them because they are wealthy enough to use money to cover all those issues in regular people's eyes. 🤷
It took me four years to discover that forecasting the market based on charts is pointless; you never know what will happen. Without a mentor, those four years were miserable. Now, I watch market trends and keep things basic and disciplined. I currently earn an average of $35k every week, despite the fact that I barely trade myself.
I'm new to cryptocurrency and don't understand how it really works. how Can someone know the right approach to investing and making good profits from cryptocurrency investments?
As a beginner investor, it’s essential for you to have a mentor to keep you accountable. Myself, I’m guided by (Nate Elishaa). A widely known crypto consultant
yeah (Nate Elishaa) was my hope during the 'bear summer' last year. I did so many mistakes but also learned so much from it, and of course from (Nate Elishaa). She is my number one source when it comes to crypto and TA.
Good job with this piece!! I live in Vancouver which is among the most expensive real estate in North America. It's gotten so bad here, that the government imposed a foreign buyers tax, and possibly a complete freeze on foreign buyers. They are also talking about a tax for empty homes.
The Australian government ruined us by lifting the ban on foreign investors owning more than one investment property in Australia. A few years ago I was trying to buy a small unit in Melbourne's outer eastern suburbs. At auction day it was sold to a foreign investor. It was his third purchase for that day.
This just made me sad. I just saw on the local news, they're increasing rent on a low-income apartment building for seniors. This would mean a lot of senior citizens would be houseless within less than a year. Because none of them could afford the hike of rent.
@bradleysmith in one US city recently they made the children stay home and do school remotely because they were housing illegals in the school! It’s a woke mind virus that has infected about 90% of women under age 40. It’s why I choose to be single, although I may eventually meet a woman overseas, perhaps one who has endured communism rather than worshipping it
yes, in my mom's apartment for seniors, they doubled the rent in a year because it was not regulated or rent controlled. She had to move but couldn't in just one year. It was agonizing. We had to move her out of town and far away to a different senior apartment that was more controlled via subsidies.
I mean, everyone has their own taste, but as someone who lives in the city, those views are absolutely gorgeous. It's like you're on a cloud, to get away from the bustle of the city, it's genuinely different. I lived in nature all my life, and now i'm grateful to live in the city. I don't own a freakishly expensive apartment, BUT the views, especially at night, are to DIE for.
As someone who’s lived in an apartment like this(not in NYC but a city I lived in), she’s absolutely not lying about how soulless it is. Never lived in a place with so few locals, so few homes filled. Only lived there because I had some studies nearby the area until we sold the property on a return. Would have to imagine the overwhelming majority of residents did not see this as a long-term stay either. Got the super high up view, only good thing about it was how many clouds were present. Not worth casting shadows to the district. The locals of cities around the world with these “international class” apartments need to god damn vote out the politicians enabling this and vote in politicians who want to make real estate for locals to live in. NYC, Los Angeles, Toronto, Vancouver, London, Frankfurt, Tokyo, Jakarta, Shanghai etc. Cities like this, which seemingly don’t have regulations for what market you can develop real estate for and who can buy them (or at least not nearly enough), need voter base change
City I lives in (Europe) had major downtown development (well still is active in fact). At night, those skyscrapers are almost all black and surroundings is kinda sketchy. Soulless Id say. I heard rumors that even inside it is not very safe since its always empty
Voting won't help. The only thing that will help is socialist revolution and the removal of the bourgeois class. Then, buildings will be built to maximize the wellbeing of the median individual in society rather than to get sold to the ultra-rich.
Heck, I lived in a small city in an amazing wooded retirement community and everything was only 10 minutes away. I could literally walk to McDonalds or the ER. There was a barber shop, a church, and an optometrist in the same street connected to my neighborhood. Didn’t have to live in New York for the luxury of having everything so close.
NYC is a 15 minute city. It’s also going to be a prison after the USA falls . All those empty units are for those who refuse to eat the bugs and get the clot shot or resist the social credit score.
FR you can get that in any medium to large city, and honestly if you have a car even plenty of fairly small towns have everything within 10-15min away.
About this sunlight stealing thing, we have a phrase in India "humare hisse ki dhoop", which is literally used when someone rich creates a house beside a person (often an impoverished person that the rich person already knows) and steals their sunlight.
I live in Manhattan and billionaires row luxury suites are solely empty. You can easily book tours as agents are desperate to find buyers. Some penthouses across the city are being turned into Airbnb or party rentals per night each weekend.
@@alexkpai He might have been bored and wanted to see an apartment. And the fact that he _doesn't_ live in New York, is most likely the main reason *WHY* he had such difficulty seeing the places. _DOYYYY_ !!!!!
As someone who has worked in Financial Services/Wealth Strategies/Management, Billionaires NEVER carry credit cards, cash, or any Identification whatsoever. They don't have to. If they want to look at a property, their bank or lawyer will arrange for three to four real estate agents to be ready to show several properties.
they probs tweaked the story a bit - like real estate agents more often than not are happy to show property off to people interested (of course there are limits) especially does who are quite wealthy. They probably saw her as a student or some artist who's interested and showed her around to gain some publicity.
@@kavalia2307 No, it doesn't work like that. She obviously had a (referral) just to talk to these real estate agents. You just can't call one of these agents up and asked to see a $10 to $85 million apartment.
@@MrSupernova111 "She's clearly used to lying to get her way." Uh, what exactly is "her way" here? She was doing an art project, and she pretended to be someone she's not. She got her photos, and she made her book. That's it. You make her sound like a spoiled child or something.
I wish all the millionaires/billionaires can get together and create places for at risks youth, the homeless, mental health clinics, etc instead of buying all these properties just to be empty 90% of the time.
Too simple, sometimes naive, they'll worm their way out of it, they have enough power to dismantle social reforms in US government (Look at welfare post-cold war era). Even then, they could use the military for their interests, to gain more foreign property by privatizing, put out of business small companies without aid with advanced production, gain more profits in the third world labor they pay less than in the first world and worse, use it to fund infrastructure in their countries. This will not do at all.
@@llamapartyy Not really because there’s a weird loophole where if you donate money you can get it back. They’d have to put it on their taxes. And rich ppl will always find a way to stay rich. 🤔 like having assets, sending money abroad etc
@d b I mean nothing is perfect we live in an imperfect world with imperfect people, all I’m saying is rich people should just have a heart and try to make a difference. The middle class shouldn’t be the only ones trying. WE ALL LIVE ON PLANET EARTH. Also life is fair because it treats EVERYONE unfairly 💀😮💨
This is so surreal, they should do something about the construction in these type of cities. It happens in all the big ones, I guess specially in NYC. I'm from Madrid (Spain) and the rent is going CRAZY, you can't really have a decent apartment for your own, and if you can, it's a shoebox. It's really abusive and only accesible to a very few.
I remember when some new condos being built from an old warehouse here in Chicago - I was living in a cheap apartment with a low paying job. My neighbor asked me to walk with her to look at the new Condos. I asked her Why? She was working at Mcdonalds and there was no way she could afford one. She said "I just want to look inside". We were given a tour of the new condos . My neighbor was telling them that we will buy it - that i was her husband and we had a business. I thought that was hilarious that someone can just come up with a story like that just to look at some condos.
So people are struggling to find places to live and the housing market is way overinflated because of the "shortage", but there are all these empty places sitting around collecting dust? Seems like something is wrong with that.
Definitely. There are a few anarchist groups across Europe (maybe in America too, not sure) that break in to literally empty mansions to house hundreds of homeless people.
@@Just.A.T-Rex technically correct but youre counting the empty homes in the middle of nowhere with no infrastructure. Typical liberal twisting of "facts".
@thorgerdur asgeirsdottir But the problem with this video is that it suggests the billionaires are completely at fault when it's almost entirely the government's fault. It's human nature to exploit every possible opportunity when you can. If the government simply banned these types of buildings or created some law saying that you cannot own a property that you don't live in, none of this would have ever happened.
I was living in an apartment and accidentally became friends with a young woman my age who was also living there, she said her uncle owns one of the apartments there so he allows her to stay during her study in the country (she’s an international student). One day we had to go to her apartment to pick up something and I found out her apartment is actually one of the only two penthouses on the very top of the bld 😄 It was such an experience, the view, the size compared to my unit on the 19th floor, she said a helicopter could easily land on the huge balcony.
@@Bubbles99718 it was really her uncle’s apartment bcos family photos were everywhere; her parents with her uncles and aunt, cousin, etc. Also this was way back when the concept sugar daddy wasn’t really out there yet if that’s what u mean lol
@@r3beatty it seems u can’t accept that a girl or woman has super rich family 😂 Where have u been? U don’t even know my friend, and yes their fam is very rich, move on ur poor as$! 🤣🤣🤣
I could never afford 1000 dollars for rent unless I had a partner. Luckily I own a good condiminium which I paid for with savings and part of a small heritage and incredibly low living costs by swedish standards.
When Americans and Europeans say rent do you guys refer to that as per month/fortnight/week?? In Australia it's by fortnight but from what I know from people I've met in Europe is it's by month but I'm not sure if everyone the same
¿Quieres ver el video en español? Haz clic en el botón de configuración para cambiar la pista de audio.
Want to watch this in Spanish? Head over to the settings button to change the audio track.
This is the first time I come across a youtube video with different audio tracks/dubbing. I'm impressed that it'd never ocurred to me this option could even exist.
It's a relatively new option (I think) and obviously most people probably don't have the time/budget to create multiple audio tracks. @@gmenezesdea
@@gmenezesdeaMaybe they dubbed it before but for vice español
Just a question to the great video: Is it really necessary that you have a music carpet in the background? I think this is annoying.
El doblaje en español está horrendo, mejor me hubieras dicho que estaba en inglés.
Her mention at the end about shadows cast by buildings where the rich don't even live impacting everyday people for me was the most profound thing in this video.
the rich work and are responsible.the poor love being lazy and have kids they can´t feed, much less offer a good future.so to eat these will become criminals.
😢💯💯💯
Aahh Shade !! So scary 😑😒
@@RenaldMusic it's a metaphor 😒
@@RenaldMusicyes in the winter. Ice won't melt.
The most telling thing is that the more outlandish her behavior, the more the agents believed that she was ultra rich. Its because those people are completely detached from reality and insulated from consequence.
so true
Yep. They don't follow the rules or "standard" behaviours - those are for peasants like us. Rich people make their own rules
Not just that, it says that they don't care what other people think of them...poorer people are more conscious of other folks opinions...a part of being successful at time sis going against the grain and doing your own thing even if it doesn't make sense to others...It's not just about consequence there's consequence to everything, science provides that as ultimate law...but these folks are operating completely differently. I would have loved to know ALL of what she did that made her seem richer...that part is something study and is quite fascinating. But that man and his narration about daughter speaking hungarian...lolz....I would be CRACKING UP and rolling on the floor laughing.
@@beautybonvoyage8624 such a great observation.
And most likely mentally ill at some level without much of a conscience.
They actually trick you into thinking this is the "best view" money can buy. The best view is surrounded by nature, not concrete.
Cities and natures got their own beauty.
Imagine believing that being isolated in your millions of dollars home is the best investment and not realizing the best view is actually free. For instance, walking outside interacting with nature.
Nah, everyone loved being on the top.
Underground is cool too
@giodnfldfnnf everything more than 2 blocks away is a 30+min car drive in NYC
i mean you cant deny some of those views are really nice. it wasnt the point of this video anyway, it was about "unused views"!
Her talking about how we always view poverty from the bottom and not from the top just hit me like a truck. We focus on the problem but not what causes it.
yea you don't get that they don't see it as a problem they don't even see it lol
If you think about it, our whole modern world is focusing on the problems on the shallow levels. Think about how doctors think about the "disease". Same thing. We are, as humanity, still ridiculously stupid.
Pro gamers don't look up lol
I really hated that angle; this is not what causes the problem.
Most people are taught that "you only need a good job to become rich". These billionaires are operating on a whole other playbook that many don't even know exists.
No one is stopping you from having brilliant ideas and starting a company
@Rob Micheal yeah just that I can't get a millionaire loan from my dad like Jeff bezos, or my family can't afford to pay harvard like Bill Gates family
@James Rico Yeah! I agree with you sir.If you want to be successful have the mindset of the rich, spend less and invest More. Don't give up your dreams.
@@sashabondarev7357 Most People intend to chase money more than knowledge and that will damage your progress, trust me. Chase knowledge first and I promise! The money will follow you just like it's following some of us now.
@@broucherjosh8421 That's true...some wants to do what the 99% does but wants to get results that are fit for the 1%, but it doesn't work that way
I love how she made it a point talking about the large shadows these buildings cast. Never thought about that. Taking away the sunlight
I always think about this especially when I'm in the city and that's why I'm growing more and more annoyed that buildings are going up all over NYC especially where there are residential one family houses
Yup. Over on Brooklyn we managed to successfully fight off one that was going to kill the wonderful Brooklyn Botanic Garden by taking most of its light. But it took a LOT of community pushback
Huge topic in architecture and urban planning/development. NYC is one of the few western great cities that puts no limits on these things.
@@gnarbeljo8980 Right, I remember when San Diego's small downtown was going through a building boom in the early 2000s that sunlight corridors was something that was stressed in the planning. Tall buildings that took up whole blocks had to reduce footprint progressively at certain elevations. I stayed in one for a few years on the 25th floor and there were only 7 units on our floor, and they weren't particularly big (900-1400 sqft).
@@brandall101 wind is another huge aspect. Building tall and densely has a massive impact, creates microclimates on the ground. Beein to areas where they got it wrong and the street became a windtunnel. I love NY and have stayed high up at The Standard with spectacular views, but I wouldn't want to live like that. Too claustrophobic fish tank like for me.
A lot of people don't understand it - but these buildings are never intended to be lived in. They are purely a piggy bank for money, laundering money or investments. There are stories of some of these buildings essentially falling apart when people try to live in them - elevators failing, fixtures coming apart because they are not well constructed. They're basically beautiful junk
If this is TRUE where did you get this information?
@@american236 why do you think oligarchs got billions of dollars worth of pent house sweets in the u.s to hide and launder their money
@@american236 it’s true a similar to luxury art. Not impressive or worth looking at/using. Great way to build expenses to lower tax obligation
Also did anyone here watch the video until the end? They literally say this
@@dewmontain123 This is explicitly stated in the video you're commenting on.
"...the stranger I act, the more convincing it is that I'm actually a billionaire" Truer words were never spoken. One of the best short videos I've watched in a long time.
This would be fantastic on Apple TV. It's original and independent.
There’s something dystopian about mostly empty luxury buildings surrounded by rats and squalor. Love her work!
Very dystopian, so crazy how it’s happening in our most productive, wealthy cities - New York, Los Angeles.
You do know most of those empty ones are owned and used to dodge taxes by these people.
It's obscene. My appartment barely has a floor and I fear the balcony might collapse because of how unkempt the building is. And I'm actually lucky just to have an appartement I can * usually * afford cause finding a place to stay period is a challenge in itself rn. And that's in Canada where we're supposed to be more protected by our government
@@Carmen4ever your sentence is exactly whats wrong
the cities are so PRODUCTIVE how could anyone think that something like this could happen :OOOO bro come on
@@_ee75 these cities make BILLIONS of dollars, you can argue whatever you want bruh but Los Angeles, New York, honey look at the numbers they make us the most money, so I’m not sure what the problem is with my comment lmaoo did it bug ya that I have so many likes?
My cousin is an architect in NYC. He told me there is no practical way to build the garbage shoots in those buildings that have a single unit on each floor without the garbage going into free fall (120 mph) so the other residents hear garbage flying past their $50,000,000 apartments and exploding into a dumpster on the bottom.
I’m in the construction industry and your cousin is 100% correct!
that is actually hilarious - thank you for that insight :D
Seems like something that could be mitigated, either by the building or resident with some sound proofing material
what garbage ? you need people live there to have that
@@patrickarsenault5201 touche' 😊. You are 100% correct. Problem solved.
The idea that these empty buildings are robbing others of sunlight really struck me. How sad. Thank you for doing this project and sharing! This was a really special watch.
their fault for living in nyc
People here in NYC don't like "NIMBY." That term used to mean something. Now it means "how dare you have an opinion on what happens around you!" So we end up tolerating garbage like this because it's republican or something to want views and space and low crime.
It's something that really grates on you if you spend too much time in the inner city...
It's especially bad for the people living on the lower floors.
You end up subconsciously wanting to pick a higher floor just so you can get some sun in the morning...
@@Mallchadword !! I moved from nyc just so I can be closer to nature
Yeah, suburbs are the only way.
As a former high-end carpenter, I often marveled at how people with money invariably build fantastically expensive, utterly cold and desolate spaces. You look at one of their kitchens and think, "Where are the glasses?" There's no way to tell. It's an inscrutable mystery. You look at the living room and, think "where do I sit?" And the truth is that there's nowhere to sit. You dare not fart in one of those homes, or stink up the bathroom, or so much as give your kid a box of crayons, much less allow a bout of stomach flu to run its course. They aren't homes. They're mausoleums. Beautiful, ornate, cold and lifeless. They are places for the bodies whose souls died (or were sold) long ago. There is nothing there worth desiring.
Beautiful comment.
"High end carpenter". What the hell does that mean? You either can do the job or you can't.
@@robinabernathy2829 It's means he's not a mom and pop shop bro in overalls that builds simple tables and shelves. He's a skilled artisan that can build complex, cold, beautiful works of art for the super rich.
I hope that if you are no longer working as a carpenter, that you are now a writer. I would read a book you wrote.
It's funny you say that. I live in an area with a lot of pointlessly large brand new mansions, and I call them "Mausoleums for giants". The buildings are too big for the blocks and there's very little garden around them. Some even have giant urns out the front. All very grand and spotless and formal looking, and very empty.
It is ridiculous that so many people had to give up their access to sunny views of the outdoors so some of the elite can have access to ultra luxury places that they don't even occupy. How crazy. In Japan, it has been illegal for DECADES to put up a building that would block your neighbor's access to sunlight. That shows where our priorities are in this nation. All about the money.
Yeah but Japan has some horrible priorities too. They have a 99% conviction rate because they'll hold a suspect indefinitely and subject them to mentally torturous interrogation every day until they confess to a crime they didn't even commit. There is a class of person that is more or less untouchable in the Indian cast system sense. There is a lot more racism and xenophobia in Japan, generally, although it doesn't go to the same extremes that it does in the West quite so often, they have a six week work day and if you take any of your legally entitled holiday time you're looked down upon and treated as a really lazy person. It isn't all sunshine and roses over there and I know you're not saying it is, in fact I agree it's a positive policy to have, but Japan is pretty messed up too.
@@SweetandFitting yeah japan is a nice looking place but it has some fucked up things going on too.. every country has something like that.
These people live in NYC..there not there for sun lite..if they wanted that they would live in "southern NY" aka Florida.
@@BS.-.- or texas or any other place
It’s all
About the Benjamin’s baby
Its wild that looking at a view of buildings is considered extreme luxury
Its a metaphorical way to say that owning one of those penthouses is equivalent to being on top of society.
so claustrophic. Also devoid of nature. sad lives
Fr. I would feel so trapped lol
Seems hideous to me too. I prefer the view from my cheap apartment of my nice green street with loads of mature trees.
@@181cameron surrrrre...just like watching a nature documentary on your 40ft tall tv screen!
I always suspected these buildings sat empty. There is NO way there are that many people that can afford to live like that.
There's so many empty houses hoarded by the rich for profit while homelessness is on the rise.
It’s not that they don’t get purchased, it’s that they are usually only used once or twice a year as a second or third home.
Look at 10:16 They are owned but no one lived in them. Usually, they work as “wealth preservation” because real estate doesn’t lose value like stocks or other traded assets do.
@@IRLSuperb Fed printing money for stimmy checks causes capitol to flood into assets, eg real estate. Why are we blaming people for doing the right thing, while ignoring why they are forced to do so?
@@Voluntarists Stacy didn't blame anyone tho. She corrected that guy above her.
what shocks me most about this video is that so many of those places sit vacant!! 😯
Well made for the 1%
The Chinese bought them up because their monetary system is so corrupt. I image they are trying to dump them now that our money is becoming worthless.
Vacant: The best word I'd use to describe New York. I lived there 7.5 years and would never return. Those characterless, lifeless buildings with the views reminds me of all that I hated about that place. Nope. I'd never live in one of those units, and I'd never return to that awful city. Life is much, much better nearly everywhere else.
I live in a suburb with lots of vacant mansions. Real estate is used by rich Chinese to park their money where their government can't get at it.
@@lillyvgutierrez9685 It stopped being exclusive as soon as it was desecrated
I’ve lived in NYC all my life and worked in those buildings. I don’t see the appeal. So much money down the toilet. Yes, the apartment is big, but when you go downstairs you are just one of us. Mingling with the homeless and drug addicts, sharing Central Park with so many people and tourists, hours stuck in traffic to get anywhere even if you have a driver and an equally expensive, brag worthy car. It’s the opposite of exclusivity imo and just plain dumb. So many nicer places to live in the world.
Exactly!
I saw a documentary or something on the people that buy these. Usually the people that buy these have so much money that they literally just buy it as a vehicle for their money
they don't live in them. even the guys that own the mansions by the beaches in San Diego don't actually live in them.
A lot of Wall Street and lawyers like to live this way. The actual billionaire billionaires don’t live in New York.
@@Grim67894 nyc has the highest population of forbes billionaires
I’m guessing the act was something like “billionaire’s wife,” but I still was cringing at all the “I’m sure your husband would love to buy this for you if you asked him,” little lady.
Yea like he assumed that SHE wasn't the billionaire
yeah he was creepy af
@@igcarism_atiqueclickmehh7001 she’s young and not famous, the only way she’d have access to that money is rich parents or a rich partner. But still he could at least not to be a creepy dick stuck in the 1950s
only 10% of billionaires are women
RIGHT!
Her video tour of the building with the actual realtor's voice in the background was really creepy. It sounded like the devil making unrealitic offers to you with very diabolical intentions.
LOL
Right?! like he was trying to hypnotize her
It felt like playing a video game
I love it
i found it hilarious ! the most ridiculous and over the top pitch. out of context it would seem like satire.
The part about the skyscrapers stealing sunlight from everyone else felt like the perfect metaphor for the relationship between billionaires and the rest of us.
Meanwhile MAGA vote for Trump who has only cut taxes for the rich. Jeff Bezos paid less in taxes than the average middle class family.
The Simpsons called that one.
Yes that is what they literally do, in every single sense.
But they dont steal from you, thats the diference
@@sarahwedel4681 Capitalism is just socialism for the already wealthy. They're stealing from you and they've always been stealing from you.
I literally laughed out loud so hard when the realtor was describing she should live there and what she should say to her husband.
Lol me too 😂😂😂😂
I can even hear his arab accent.
I'm laughing so hard that I'm crying a little.
that mansplaining and try to manipulating her was hard. 😆
😂 you'd be surprised at the types of people who would eat that up.
The people buying these apartments aren’t even living there they are buying them as a safe investment, it’s honestly evil how there are people freezing on the street and these skyscrapers are literally empty
You forgot one of the important parts. They are driving up the property tax and cost of living in those eye sores that they don't live in through in insane cost they are buying them for.
They CHOOSE to sleep in the alleys and drink, oh look another mentally handicapped furry! 🤡
Exactly
How is it evil?
@@ForceField9 how would you feel if you were freezing on the streets of New York and these people with more money than they know what to do with are buying places what could be affordable apartments ?
I was once invited to the bday dinner of one of the wealthiest men in the UK, and present were five private bankers whose sole client was the birthday boy, his three PA's who ran his bussinesses, households and travelling, the dog-nanny who worked full time to make sure his six dogs were happy and healthy. Half the people there basically worked for him in some capacity, including my ex- who was his parttime private soprano. I'm not kidding. He owned a few appartments like those, lived in about six of them, with his main domicile in (of course) a tax-haven where he owned a mansion and his main yacht was stationed. His private interior designer (also present) was constantly remodellling/redocrating at least one of them, selling or buying new art to go along with the new furniture. It felt like I was dining with royalty, everyone laughing with his lame jokes and tolerating his smug demeanor. I couldn't wait to leave the place, the disconnect was just insane. The only positive was that his employees were all very nice to me, as if relieved to have at least one normal person around the table.
Why are we focusing on the people who use the system to their advantage instead of the people who uphold the system
I'm talking about the politicians and non-politicians who creates and uphold the political system
@@johnyossarian9059 Because what would be the point? The "people who use the system to their advantage" are the ones paying off the politicians and people who uphold the system.
That’s interesting how’d you get invited there
@@Aaron-fb6mb Ex girlfriend. Mentioned it halfway down.
What is a private soprano?
Amazing story, I think my soul left me a few times from some details, like shadows from the empty buildings and how a realtor was guiding how to talk to her husband, how transactional some people's lives are.....
The only glorious part to realize, is that if that's actually a successful sales strategy, it shows how manipulable even ultrarich people are to mere flattery and compliment.
Personally I think I'd find that attitude revolting, like it shows how being rich garners a type of treatment absent much aside being rich. Being rich can easily be seen as a vice.
To be smothered in that not only you get this treatment as a function of wealth, but that it's clearly an expected style, just makes me even more sickened by the ultrarich.
The part about the empty buildings taking sunlight from others in the city really broke my heart
Edit: I'm surprised by the amount of people who can't or simply refuses to understand such a simple comment
Lol then move out of a big city
@@butchdabayboss7073 here's your cookie 🍪
@@butchdabayboss7073 if all the people move away from the city, it would be empty dumbass. Who would serve the rich then and take out their garbage?
I feel like this could be a first argument to start suing developers and tear down these towers. The park is public property. Light and silence are things that, in their absence, can be brought to court for breaking the peace at home.
At least, those are things that you can sue others for in Europe. I wouldn't be surprised USA is different.
@Turdy Birdie to me it's a problem. We'd be talking about inconvenience if all of those apartments were habited, a.k.a. the number of tall buildings were due to the big population, bad but necessary. But given the amount of empty apartments unnecessarily blocking a natural resource that everyone should have access to, and also contributing to the inflation in real estate prices, it can be considered a problem
That guy talking to her about her husband and trying to get her to convince him to buy a 80 million dollar apartment is creepy af. The guy sounds like he could be an amazing narrator, but he lives to pray on people's emotions. Cool.
Good point.
Salesman's #1 trick = "preying on people's emotions"
Lol he's basically doing what pays him. That's what sales people have to do there's nothing creepy about it
Also its super transparent. I can't take these salesman seriously, it's like they try to be cleverly manipulative but it is so obvious. Sometimes it is just arkward how they think, you are so naive that these tricks would work on you.
He was definitely selling. I find that she took it in a humorous way. She even gave him a curveball "I prefer the 21st century" when he was talking about the 19th century. She may have said she had a husband to explain the camera. The salesman was definitely projecting, whic is annoying. He was trying to make as many highlights as possible & getting her to envision the entire process to make a huge sale.
Genius. The stranger she acted the more they believed her
I work in a wealthy area for wealthy clients. I'm often in ripped up, dirty clothing. Reason for that is mostly from what I do but I started dressing like when I didn't need to. Got into some interesting encounters with people while working on homes. Like wealthy neighbors who assume I'm the actual owner and I play the part as a joke. They think I'm just the quirky, artsy owner who's rarely there.
@@chrisd5133 I'm a landscape architect. But like to do some of the construction too for clients I like. Definitely in steel cap boots and a fluro I rarely get offered a coffee. Compared to turning up in a suit with my laptop and plans.
@@lancemillward1912 I'm in a similar field. Garden design (but have also worked in interior woodworking in the past). There are homes I work on where I am that literally nobody lives in. I work on them, constantly redoing and evolving them. Large, multimillion dollar homes. I have one where nobody has been in it for over three years at this point. Another one gets used a month or so a year.
@@lancemillward1912 So when you're actually working with your hands, there is no kindness? Sick.
@@chrisd5133 Aw what a waste of a beautiful home 😢❤️ Well, it can’t just stand there without being taken care of though!
I live in SF and I believe that we just passed a law that taxes the empty buildings as an incentive to rent out the totally empty buildings.
That is a GREAT idea! Either rent it or list it! It would force people to lower rent to competitive rates instead of letting it stand empty!
This is just as ridiculous as most of the tax laws in California.
1. Who cares what people do with their property so long as they pay their taxes?
My home. I'll do with it as I please. Why would I rent it if I wanted a second home to be available anytime I wanted to use it?
2. (As with most things in the government) Why is it any of their business what a private individual does with their private residents that they paid for and pay taxes on?
This is a great example as to why people are leaving California and leaving New York.
Dumbest tax laws ever.
@@rhess10 nah to be honest its a good idea. take your money elsewhere people are literally homeless on the street
They will still pay the taxes and let it sit pretty coz they have that much money and would rather not deal with silly tenants
The government loves the rich and gives them tax shelters and corporate welfare. Taxing unoccupied buildings is a step in the right direction.
Fun fact, Deborah Berke is the dean of architecture at Yale. She preaches inclusivity and community engagement within the building industry, yet designs for the top 1%... ironic much? 9:12
Truly ironic.
that's such an interesting and depressing point, thanks for sharing
champagne socialist lol
Rich money talks and bullshit pays college tuitions.
winniepillow Not surprising at all.
this reminds me of Zou Yaqi's, an art student's, project where she lived a luxurious life for free by pretending to be a fake socialite in bejing. she was able to eat for free, get into several auctions, and sleep in expensive hotel lobbies. By forging VIP passes, she spent 5 days inside an airport, while the rest of the time she stayed in hotels where she was able to enjoy saunas and their gyms.
Yessssssssss I remember that
Dont forget Ana Delvy.The russian version of that.
@priscilla z Nice copy and paste of what was said in the TH-cam video of that, try putting it in your own words next time
@@dicemiceter1122 no one cares
"VIP" is just a tag really, most of the time Doormen or people gatekeeping those types of areas/events could care less if you are a millionaire/billionaire. As long as you act and look the part you can almost get into anywhere for free. Its all truly just a social illusion created by successful individuals to bar themselves from the less fortunate. And worst they can do is just ask you to leave, plus you've already had your fun :)
There's something unsettling about how the realator was talking to her. Just creepy. I'm getting major dystopian vibes. I know probably not everybody shares the same opinion about this, but I feel like there's something messed up about paying billions to live at the top of a souless empty building suffocated in the middle of an overcrowded city blocking out the sun. Is it just me?
Like she said, they don't actually live in it, most of the time. But the creepy realtor was acting as if she would. Her kids would be running around (in the apartment? in the streets hundreds of meters below?) speaking Hungarian.
@@msfundioits crazy that they dont live in it. I am from the caribbean, i once wanted to live in America like that, but i visited new york and realized, nope, i prefer to visit these places and come back to trees, animals, birds, the sun, my yard, farms, streams, fresh air, quiet, islands etc. I have developed an appreciation for my home. People run away from the caribbean for a "better life" and its sad because there is nothing better than peace and nature. Even tho we have poverty, we dont have to. People just want to be rich, they can live in nature and live minimal out here, they just dont want to.
@@shamrockwhiterighty said. People just want to be rich, all their life they chase meaningless things
No. Not just you. It is unsettling.
I agree, very creepy. Just so unnatural and yes, major dystopian vibes. Why is this even a thing
I live on a mountain in the southern Appalachians near the Smokies.
In a 600sq' glorified shack I built myself for less than 25k
I share a property line with the Nantahala national forest.
My view is incredible. Nothing but mountains layered to the horizon.
That’s the good life brother
yeah my parents house in wytheville va had a ridiculously better view than that metropolitan view. And their house ran 100k when built in beginning of 80's. Worth like 230k (heavy renovated) today.
What a dream
That is what actually should worth 80 Million not that stinky cold OBELISK concrete!!!
@@outlawedTV88no it shouldn’t, let’s keep nature free and d open 😅
This should be a full two hour documentary. I would like to see more.
It's there I think
Real
11+ minutes is sick enough already..
I'm sure the book has lots more details.
@@ChrisErbVideo form would still feel different. The part where the seller was talking weirdly of Florance and speaking Hungarian just feels like something thatsore impactful in video form
This should be a full documentary, it’s actually scary how much America consumes , to many products , way to much food , and the lifestyle that includes unnecessary luxury and space .
Hater
The average American never sees anything like this in their lifetime
You are not wrong. However a great deal of these properties and dare I say most, are purchased by overseas robber barons.
@@a.a.3699 agreed. As someone who lives about 30-45min from midtown in NJ, I can assure you the small 1br me and my husband live in is far from luxurious.
Not "America" maybe the people who own it / run it.....but most of America is also suffering under these types of people.
The comment she made regarding the shadows cast by these building was striking to me. It honestly made me think of dystopian fiction (think Blade Runner or the city planet of Corusant in Star Wars), where years into the future there are megastructures littered throughout a city that are so tall, that sunlight no longer reaches the ground and street levels, essentially casting an entire segment of society into perpetual darkness. But this isn’t fiction anymore, this is becoming reality. We are already living in a modern dystopia in many ways.
reminds me of Kowloon Walled City in Hong Kong. And basically, the reality of living in slums. I've been to those places and it's really damp and dark once you get inside, even if it's daytime. Imagine how people living there suffered during lockdowns in the height of the pandemic.
That's the only thing she said that meant anything. This video could have been 10 seconds long.
here in south brazil, in the most expensive city to buy a house (balneario camburiu), they had to extend the beach sand with landfill. Because the skyscrapers at the beach took all the sun at 14 hours
and now 1year later the landfill are having several natural problems...
You are correct; there are many arguments that we already live in a dystopia. There's a good video I like that I'd recommend called "Why Dystopias are more popular than Utopias" by Yugopnik.
NYC is not the whole world. This would never happen in some European countries.
"Being so high up it's cool but then it didn't feel good to be there in a way.". That's basically the moral we've been taught a long time ago with a different quote: It's lonely at the top.
It's more lonely at the bottom
To say that this whole situation has an ominous dystopian feeling is underselling it... I visited NYC back in the summer of 2015 and in every corner, every alley, basically everywhere, there were homeless people. Some were holding signs that say "They wouldn't give me a job" or "I'm trying to find a job, please" but there was this one sign b a homeless woman that caught my eye at the time. And it never left my memory. The sign said "America has failed me, dare to hear me?". I saw that sign and sat down with the woman, offered her some of my soup as we talked about her difficulties. She said she was in the army, served in Iraq as a medic. She had to come back home due to her injuries in hopes that the government would take care of her. But they didn't. Her leg had to be cut with an operation and government still asked for money. She then said that she reached out to VA's, but they didn't help her at all saying that her injuries and her debt had nothing to do with her time in service. So, with both government and VA turned their backs to her, she paid her bills with the money she saved for her child when she has one, in the future. Then she begun to look for a job but most of the establishments would frown when they heard she was in the military. With nothing else and no hope in sight, she said she turned to VA again, for job. But she still got refused and rejected. It's heartbreaking to say the least, to see and hear all these people when the U.S. government keeps putting hundreds of millions of dollars into defense contracts and fights in "wars" that has nothing to do with them... But hey, American Dream right? What a joke!
Very interesting story ... we never know what is the reason that people live in the strees some are because of drugs, some others because of the economy ..maybe one led to the other... we have to be more empathetic
nobody refuses to give you a job just because you were a medic in the military. you were lied to sorry.
Hmmm. This sounds very fishy. She doesn’t seem like a veteran. They would have put her on disability. Also the VA would have offered voc rehab. Moreover, TAPS/GPS is a congressionally mandated course to attend; she would have learn of her education, employment and medical options. I’m sorry, as a veteran, I can sense stolen valor a mile away. That homeless woman wasn’t a veteran
this country truly is a joke.
@@waverider69420yeah I agree. The VA actually does help, they have to. Either she lied or didn’t call the correct number and gave up right away.
If you live in NY you actually know why this is a problem.. the homeless problem in Ny is insane and there’s homeless ppl sleep on the same blocks as these buildings and the subway at night turns in a mental ward/ shelter, women are being followed home and murdered but yet we have empty useless buildings smh
Blue leadership is out of touch wake people up locally man we are here with you same with boston atm
Homeless people with mental issues shouldn't be allowed to roam freely. They should be institutionalized.
But the situation today is thanks to a liberal over correction that nobody shall be institutionalized against ones own will.
It's not just the case in NY, I can tell you from Europe even in great well fare countries, we have these homeless lunatics that piss every, have such a smell that the whole subway-wagon empties out once they get in - of course homeless can ride the subway for free :) And also murders are committed by them.
And it is not that they wouldn't have the option for free housing, care, etc..
They are just crazy and refuse to be institutionalized and as long as they haven't committed a murder they can roam freely.
people keep voting for the same policies . That's not the government's fault.
It is an economic system: Cruel Capitalism installed in a stolen continent = Colonialism. Many people call this freedom.
it makes sense. We have giant empty buildings so that a small group of ruling elite can make more millions to add to their billions- see, makes sense
I lived in the wealthy Annapolis MD for many years. One day we took a water taxi tour of all the rich homes and I will Never forget the guide saying “the larger the home, the less it is used”…. That one sentence changed my life outlook forever.
What does it mean?
@@Vancouver-rh4fx wealthy people are usually traveling so they're never home to enjoy it. Actors, Musicians, Politicians, Businessmen... all require a life of constant travel so they're rarely, if ever, home. This is true of all their properties (vacation homes, ski villas, beach/lake front homes, etc.)
What Did you learn? Do you still live there?
my story is called - "What I Saw as a REAL Poor Person." odd how no one is interested in my story. i'm an american sentenced to poverty. although i committed NO CRIME i'm punished everyday. corporations and elite land speculators have made affordable housing so sparse its booked for years. now renters are REQUIRED to have 3 times the rent in income which means, living on s. s., i don't qualify for ANY rental over $400 a month. AND THEY DON'T EXIST! some poor have learned to manipulate the system to make their housing inter-generational as they hand their govt subsidized housing to their kids making affordable housing EVEN HARDER to attain.
as a very ill, elderly person on FULL medicare i'm routinely denied much needed medical care. I CAN BARELY FUNCTION. i've notified adult protective services who DO NOTHING! i've notified politicians, govt agencies, doctors, lawyers and even the news media and NO ONE gives a damn. i'm denied legal representation as lawyers refuse to help the poor. i can't even sue my abusers! we poor, disabled and elderly are left to fend for ourselves and since we DON'T HAVE THE RESOURCES we're left to suffer and be abused by everyone in sight - even other poor! this is THE REAL U. S. that no one will allow me to expose!
i posted this 12 days ago and now its gone -
my story is called - "What I Saw as a REAL Poor Person." odd how no one is interested in my story. i'm an american sentenced to poverty. although i committed NO CRIME i'm punished everyday. corporations and elite land speculators have made affordable housing so sparse its booked for years. now renters are REQUIRED to have 3 times the rent in income which means, living on s. s., i don't qualify for ANY rental over $400 a month. AND THEY DON'T EXIST! some poor have learned to manipulate the system to make their housing inter-generational as they hand their govt subsidized housing to their kids making affordable housing EVEN HARDER to attain.
as a very ill, elderly person on FULL medicare i'm routinely denied much needed medical care. I CAN BARELY FUNCTION. i've notified adult protective services who DO NOTHING! i've notified politicians, govt agencies, doctors, lawyers and even the news media and NO ONE gives a damn. i'm denied legal representation as lawyers refuse to help the poor. i can't even sue my abusers! we poor, disabled and elderly are left to fend for ourselves and since we DON'T HAVE THE RESOURCES we're left to suffer and be abused by everyone in sight - even other poor! this is THE REAL U. S. that no one will allow me to expose!
One of the best and most meaningful projects I have ever encountered recently. Thanks for doing it!
Could EASILY have been 45 min to an hour. super interesting story with lots of room to get into the psychology, reasoning, and affects on the society. super interesting topic
I totally agree with you!
Yeah . Would totally watch it . VICE should make longer documentaries.
@Brian Rodriguez totally.
it was too long
@@jackparry6983 😆🤝
The views, fixtures, the amenities or the location are just an illusion.
Once you have it, it's not as good as you think it will be.
anyone who could afford it probably already knows, but it's ultimately not really that big of a deal for them either way. A totally different human experience.
True. its like a large cell.
then you'd be bored and want other stuff.
It's a hold and sell, it's not being bought to be lived in. What do you hold and sell? Stocks???
I live in an 11M$ penthouse and have all the amenities you can dream of. Never have i ever used any of them in 5 years of living in the building. It's all BS. It's for show. It's always empty. Nobody ever goes down there to use any of what is offered. Go buy land and build mansions instead for friends and families. Dont ever waste time or money in the big cities. It's all a trap!!!
In the last 2 years, i have invested in land and started building 3 huge houses for all my siblings and parents. Almost 20 acres of land plus 3 mansions. Total cost under 4M$. Tell me, that's not worth it
It’s money laundering for many foreign tycoons
If you want to see some of these apartments you don’t have to go through all the prep she went through. Literally just call up the agent, sound confident, say you’re interested in purchasing an apartment and would like to see their listing. On vacation, I regularly go look at very nice apartments as like, a fun activity. You’re not obligated to do anything-you’re just looking.
I doubt that would fly for these apartments. If you can get into an $85 million apartment, good for you. 3:50
My family bought a 1.2 million dollar home in Baltimore last year and they asked for a credit check/government ID before the tour. Even asked for my ID, and I’m only 28 just to go inside. Not really.
@@STEINBERG2329 who tf pays for a million dollar home in Baltimore, that’s like the broke version of New York
Yeah, same. I saw a $15 million home in Bel Air, just because they had an open viewing and we rolled up. We had a tour and everything.
@@Scythe_Voltage Maryland is one of the wealthiest states in the country, also Baltimore County is one of the best public school systems on the east coast.
When she said it was really hard to keep a straight face while the guy was speaking.... I had already failed from a mobile screen 😂
She has a straight faced sense of humor.
The artist did a good job portraying the personality of the city and how lonely and impersonal those apartments are in spite of their huge price.
I wonder how much the book is and what kind of people will actually read it though lol
Concrete, glass and steel. COLD
Wood, jungle and GREEN. WARMTH
Absolutely impersonal. Only there to be sold on. Not one of the apartments had any warmth that would invite living. Anyone living in a single house with a plot of land is better off in terms of quality of living.
Her comment about the tall buildings casting shadows across NYC and people's living rooms is really insightful.
Hahahahhahahhahahahahaha that was so bad and stupid thing to say, just humor!
@Turdy Birdie these buildings casting huge shadows on other peoples homes is a problem because it means that having access to natural lighting in your house or public space is becoming a luxury item. an elitist product almost. we are not talking about a little shadow in your house, but a house that maybe when you bought/started renting it had nice sunlight in your bedroom when you wake up, and maybe some evening lighting, and now it is in the dark shadow at all times because there is an empty building blocking the sun. on top of that it also blocks the sun in public spaces like parks, which in cities are very important for people to be able to enjoy some nature, sun, trees.. I find it unfair that some say: then move out of the city. it is unfair that people are driven out of their communities like that, without having a say in the matter. on top of it all it is expensive to move, and you would have to build up family/friends/work etc at a new place. would you want that?
I honestly don't get why so many people are making fun of the comments about this valid critique, please enlighten me: do you people not want a house or public park that has natural lighting? what if your current house would suddenly get surrounded by empty skyscrapers and you would have to live in the dark, would that not make you sad or angry?
@@winnieconradi4221 -additionally it lowers the temperature dramatically, snow builds up and takes longer to melt making travel inconvenient, and on hot summer days the city basically becomes an oven trapping in all of the heat. This is why I'm glad I live in FL and only visit NY rarely
@Turdy Birdie Not a core problem by itself, just a metaphor for the overall issue: developers cater to the 1% at the expense of everyone else, while the middle class is being pushed out of neighborhoods that they helped build and form communities around.
@@winnieconradi4221 But do the shadows not move so it is only dark in one spot for a small amount of time. Also I would imagine in 100 years from now new york and other citys will have much higher buildings. I mean that seems to be a pattern. We build higher and higher. It seems like shadows are just an inevitability. I mean at one point new work had no buildings. It's an island so they have to build high. They always have. How is it any different than it ever was before? I am not saying it is not a problem but it seems it is just a downside to having high rise citys. Thats what you should expect in metropolises like this. Thats what these citys are about. You can't have your cake and eat it.
The fact that the only way she could convince these real estate agents to show her these properties was to say that she was looking for a second home, vacation property (pied e tiere) or investment property says a lot. These are all sitting empty, and the developers have convinced the city government officials that if we just keep building more and more of these that it will eventually “trickle down” to make housing more affordable. But they’re having the opposite effect, they’re making housing more expensive as they sit completely empty while the owners or off in their yachts.
It's "pied à terre" from french language not pied e tiere that doesn't mean anything. It means an appartement often in a big city or capital where you only stay when you need it.
@@typical_snowflake Well at least you’re named aptly. I’m not a great speller on comments sections. When making a more important written document, I do use the internet and have editors before publishing. But in comments sections I often find that leaving a small typo or inconsequential spelling error can really bring out the very worst prigs in the comments section. And that’s always good to expunge those folks from one’s life. I know what the word means, OBVIOUSLY. But I hope you got your low self esteem boost of the day by attempting to make someone else feel small. Sorry it didn’t work as I know your type.
Why would they just let any old person into the listing? It's like allowing ratchet crackhead into Gucci or bvlgari to cause a ruckus cause they don't have the understanding or advanced education to understand why things are priced the way they are. Be for real.
not sure if the comparison fits 100%, but to me all this is a parasitic behaviour of these rich fucks
If soneone has to PROMISE you something, to get something, it's a SCAM
I own a copy of her book! If anyone wants to know it is titled Private Views: A High-Rise Panorama of Manhattan. It is absolutely gorgeous! And it is not only about the views, but it also has a lot of conversations with the agents, and other longer texts and info so you really get a sense of the whole luxury real estate thing... It is such a clever, fun, and beautiful book!
This lady only worked when she took the pics and wrote the book and she wants 80 dollars for a book?
@@sxckme.sideways_3955 Physical books are expensive, especially art books. Art books for a video game usually cost about $60-70 more than just the game. So it's par for the course.
@@paris5768 go to your local library or find other options. Stop acting like there’s no other ways to read for free. There is plenty!
@@paris5768 you see it as a book, I see it as an opportunity to learn more on how luxury estate agents deal with people to expand strategies.
I’m not an agent, just one example.
@@edityourmood if you're not rich to be at par to that lifestyle then it's not worth the money. If you're into beautiful pictures and would read just anything, sure go for it.
“Imagine your daughter running around, saying words in Hungarian.” I can’t stop saying this
😂😂😂😂 wtf was that guy saying
That definitely was a made up voice speaking in such "posh" tone
Andi is Hungarian, that's why he said that :) Not gonna lie, it sounds strange even for me
I think ima start saying it when I want to convince anyone of anything now too- "do you want to go to taco bell?" "no, not really." "ok, but have you imagined your daughter running around, saying words in Hungarian?"
I would be like Will Smith and tell him to get my daughter's name out his mouth and then slap him really hard...🤣🤣🤣
That first salesman was trying to hypnotize her!! “Imagine Gabriella”. 🤣🤣🤣
Sit down, Gabriella!
It's so cringy 😫
Hahahahahahahahha
I was fantasying living there as he spoke, it’s soothing if I’m gonna be honest.
🤣🤣
This is a disgusting reality The shadows they cast are symbolic and to me one of the saddest parts for some reason Blocking the sunlight is the epitome of greed, completely disregarding the needs and lives of others
There's a story says more than 60% of these "executive" buildings are empty. Not enough billionaires. Yet the city homeless problem gets bigger every day. Crazy
The homeless are drug addicts, it's got nothing to do with housing costs. People who can't afford it move to city they afford.
American dream
@@aidonger42069 New York isn't America. It's so disconnected from the rest of the country. People need to get out of cities
The homeless don’t want help. It’s not our problem.
What about all the office bldgs. empty with everyone working from home.
The most striking info I got from her project: "Appartments are literally 60-70% empty."
I was like, really? When there are homeless people across New York dying on the streets? I always used to think a lot of people used to live in those tall towers. Why have them standing in the first place? No human centric approach......
Lol nobody would stop 50 or more people from setting up shop in these apartments. People should organize more
you're fully welcome to buy a unit and give it to the homeless. But research has shown that just giving homeless people a place to call 'home' doesn't fix the problem, and nearly every time it's attempted the facility is destroyed in the process. So good luck with that.
@@fredlebhart1393 that's funny because I've seen the opposite outcome in implemented programs. I don't understand why people make up stuff to demean people who already have such terrible living conditions. Why do you hate them so much? Why do you want to make their lives even worse?
@@SeanGilligan2JV you’ve misunderstood. I love humanity. I try to help as much as humanly possible. Everything my city and state has done has backfired. I’ve learned that guy can’t force people into homes or shelters.
that's not the place for these people to solve; talk to your local government, and make them accountable in NYC for once
This is why there should be an occupancy tax. If the majority of housing is empty and driving up the cost.
A lot of these properties are probably foreign investments.
Foreigners shouldn't even be allowed to own property in the US
@@scottnunan4927 So like, Should Americans not own property anywhere else then?
@@adampatterson Well it depends. In some countries, it's very beneficial to try and attract wealthy, foreign buyers to boost the local economy. In others, such as the US, it can be detrimental.
As with most everything else, it's not black and white. It's Schroedinger's cat....it can be both things at the same time.
@@scottnunan4927
Foreign buyers is detrimental to America but not anywhere else? LOL
You’d be surprised how many real estate firms are owned by Chinese capitals lol
it's amazing that a property that goes unused and no one has any intention of every using is valued in the millions whereas there is a housing crisis in the city and no one has anywhere to live. something has got to give.
The most moving comment in the whole video was about the empty buildings also casting huge shadows, taking away more from the city than just sitting empty
It's also a metaphor on how empty headed powerful people cast shadow on society
Completely changed my view on this woman, I can always appreciate a true journalist that is willing to go inside to enlighten the rest, very brave act
a REAL journalist (not bought)
I live in one such shadow. It impacted the amazing wildflower meadow that took years to create in my front yard (now dead), my house plants, my own depression (my home gets no natural light now), and I used to watch the aun set from my yard. Now I have a massive wall that is someone’s giant home. I call it the Death Star. These “neighbors” have never spoken to me. Meanwhile I tuen the other cheek and smile genuinely because I am sure they actually suffer more than I do.
god that's so sad
Maybe you should sell your house and get a new one?
@@SphinxKingStoneI hope you're being sarcastic
I live in a similar situation, but in a smaller scale. The next door neighbor had an one-family house. Just ground floor. When she died, the family sold it and built a 4 story house. Our once sunlit yard feels like a dungeon now. Not only is the light gone, but it's now surrounded by walls.
@@SphinxKingStoneso every building or people that live under those shadows should do this?…I think your brain needs more sunlight than they do
I once accompanied my dad to a job he was doing setting up a sound system in this very wealthy family's home. They weren't the kind of uber wealthy that would ever own investment property in New York, but wealthy enough that they could afford to throw money away on almost anything a normal person could imagine and still be fine afterwards. These were also people that we actually knew kinda personally because they went to our church. When I stepped foot into that house, I was afraid to even breathe too close to any surface. The house was immaculate, and even though there were supposed to be 4 or 5 people living in it, it didn't feel at all like a space someone would actually live in. Marble everywhere, crystal chandelier in the front entry, modern-country décor. The living room (the one I went into, there were apparently multiple) was home to the husbands exotic hunting trophies (taxidermy lion, zebra, etc. from trips to Africa), just literally floor to ceiling taxidermy. It had all this stuff in it and was such an opulent display of wealth but it was completely soulless. I have never been more uncomfortable in my life than when I was in that place.
Guilt is a peculiar. Often, people aren’t even aware of its presence, yet it seeps into every facet of their lives, leaving its mark on their surroundings. There is something spooky about these places, Those who achieve what they believe is their dream, obviously at the expense of others, often discover that their reality ends up eerily hollow.
I've done this at a car dealership, just to joyride on my day off. The salesman sounded like an even skeezier version of this guy. He made disparaging remarks about women and relationships by comparing them to old cars, and then he topped it off with "You know, I really see you in that car" - No, you see the big fat comission you're not getting. It's hilarious what you can get away with if you just dress up and act confident.
True, but it wouldn't be worth it to me to have to hear all the high-pressure sales pitches.
it's hilarious that how people treat you, perceive you and what you can achieve with them is 99% how you dress and act, 1% who you are and what you really can do
you can have a lot of cash and be very successful and all that, all it takes is for you to dress way below your status and act a little shy for people to assume they are better than you
you can use that too by the way, to have some fun
I used to do the same thing with my friends lmao! we would look at used car sites and always look for big engine cars like ferrari, c63s, m5's, one time a freaking mclaren, just so we could go and drift and test it out. Some guy let us try his m3 for like a week. We blew his tires out looool but we did buy him a whole new set of ps91's, and a set of sparks, i think 1 injector was blown or something too lmao, but we paid him for it. another guy had to travel and called and asked me to take care of his f10 too. why go to dealerships when you can just rent big cars for free lmao good times. bro the cops even caught us drifting in the city center once. he didnt even have to say anything to me, he just looked disappointed and I asked him laughing okay which jail/pound? he said the name of it and i just drove there, but we brided him so he let us go with a warning lool
How do you knows skeezier? Did you figure out if either were being tortured into only appearing/sounding like they could possibly be doing that? How about for those they interact/interacted with?
-Slaves dont buy/sell even if they’re being lied about.
That guy must've been talking about Ford cars cuz Toyotas are for life.
The line about sunlight really packed a punch; I love watching these real estate tours, and didn't expect to feel this emotional about it.
1000% little to no natural sunlight in the city. I don't recommend!
This is absolutely insane and sad. All these buildings empty taking up space, resources, sunlight, and money.
i know, its all empty, nobody is home
And the most ironic part is that their value comes only from their exclusivity and how inaccessible they're to the people who would actually benefit from them, rather than their usefulness to the people who own them.
I bet you pay Netflix every month, got a gucci bag for your birthday and pay 10 dollars for a cup of coffee. Do you need it? Why don't you share with the poor one?
@@nadie7480why would you need any of the things you mention? I neither have such a bag, nor do I buy coffees outside home ecc. That's so strange that someone things of these things as normal or even daily purchases!
I'm glad that developers and the local governments (at least here) now factor in the impact of the shadows high rise buildings cause. Apparently that's one of the reasons why Sydney and Melbourne don't have insanely high buildings. How upsetting to live in darkness due to a building shadow :(
its sometimes embarssing thinking about how much humans really care about the status of the level of their life. the self ego build in this world is the biggest thing that crumbles it.
Why isn't there more people thinking like you and I? My whole life I could never understand people fighting over "things" whatever its value, and it is not because I have things, in fact I got into so much trouble for swapping an 18k necklace with Madonna pendant, also 18k, for a necklace that was the colour of the Caribbean sea, I fell in love with it. Till this day it's still my favourite colour. I was 11 years old when I did that. I did not change with age, I frequently gave away stuff that I could have sold for extra money, as money has always been tight, but always thought, "we got food, a roof over our head, bills paid, and my family is safe, so we're good". Don't get me wrong I'm no "Mother Teresa", I swear like a sailor, am as stubborn as a mule but will go all the way if I see injustice!
Have had my head used as a punching bag just because I got involved when a 6 foot 3 young man, built like pro, was chasing down a 5 foot 2, very thin young lady. I at 5 feet and advanced years, and by no means athletic, did not miss a beat when this young girl started screaming for help, I ran up, just as he grabbed her, and demanded that he let her go. Was told to mind my own business, when I told him, I was making this my business, he was not impressed. Had the audacity to scream an inch from my nose, so I got his spit in my face, "Is that right, what's a fat old looser like you going to do about it?"
This exchange made it possible for the young woman to escape, without her abuser realising.
When he did, he was angry, or should I say, it looked like he was about to burst his muscles or veins or his head, hard to tell, especially once he punched me in the head, lucky for me a neighbour came out and stopped him. That's just one incident, I really don't know why I just mentioned this.
Peace😀
well, to be fair, NYC was trash. and still is trash. just because you raise prices and put a nice big pink bow on garbage, its still gonna be garage. its all about generating hype to skyrocket the prices on real estate in NYC, much like crypto currency. one day it will crash hard and 81 million dollar apartments will be worth 100k.
I just think living up high would be cool.
It sure will make it crumble.
just like their yachts! they will float around on the ocean forever while the world burns up. it's disgusting.
it’s crazy that it totally shows this idea that the exclusive parts of society aren’t actually that “exclusive” that one can “play” the game which involves saying the right things and putting up a whole persona to be accepted in. It was quite easy after she put on an expensive looking outfit, did her nails, and said the right things to get access to these high rise buildings. It questions the idea of those in the 1% as a whole theatrical performance they are all willingly playing into.
You're right. Billionaires should have to show identification to see houses. Poor people don't even belong to look at it. If anything she showed that a little research and acting can get you into some cool scenarios.
then play the game and get into hmtheur money space and then use your money and influence to change the system. but no… everyone is too righteous to try and do so.
Yeah. I guess that's why that Ben Mallah guy is so popular, he's the opposite. Super rich dude who slums it with the regular folks and cracks everybody up with his jokes and then teaches them actual knowledge on how to be good with money.
the original game was survive the lion, outrun the deer, and die of disease before 20, you can still go play that game if you want, but if you want the perks of society you gotta play societies game
Um, she gained access so a sales pitch, basically.
Hard to imagine people have $85 million to spend on an apartment they won’t live in because they have 10 others.
Weird thing about wealth is these people don't usually have the money cash in hand to spend. A lot of wealth isn't liquid and it is entirely possible many of these apartments are either financed (I know crazy but really happens) or straight up owned by a business entity like a hedge fund or similar so no single person really owns it.
@@oldleatherhandsfriends4053 Yeah...I mean..that's exactly why the *Rump family has so much real estate. Leverage their asses on inflated valuation and never pay the banks back.
If you're Chinese or Russian and need a way to park your offshore cash, it starts to make a lot more sense.
It's an investment. Real estate prices only seem to go up.
If you can sell in 5-10 years for 200 million it's pretty easy to imagine
I tried being a fake billionaire for a few months. Right up until AmEx threatened to break my kneecaps.
The agent in the very beginning read “How to Win Friends & Influence People” about 20 times too many with his antics. I’d have struggled to keep a straight face with how ridiculous he was being. The title of the video drew me in and I’m glad it did because this was a great talk!
That book is stupidly mind blowing…Dale Carnagie left something huge for us
@@ericvalverderosado2046 what do you mean by mind blowing? Should I read it?
@@Aquamatiic don't bother. All these self help books are BS. I read that book once and tbh don't even remember what it was about.
@@chrisr.6638 Can relate. Some of the self-help books I've read have been trash at best (like Power Of Habit) I feel stupid for having read them carefully and slowly for better impact.
Though, some of them were life-changing in my case. 12 Rules For Life by Jordan Peterson and Thinking Fast & Slow Daniel Kahneman have noticeably improved my life. Learning to separate the wheat from the chaff helps a lot.
Sidewalks of Florence? Daughter running around speaking “Hondurian”?
I’d love to just record this guy and see how crazy it gets.
Idk man. Being from the Caribbean, I find all that concrete in the view hella ugly and depressing. Unless I really needed to be in the city, I can't imagine spending a fortune for that.
It really is ugly.
Same here
it's disgusting and ugly, useless buildings
Thats what i thought
As it's been mentioned, they're not bought as homes, they're bought as investments
in a city with 1000's of homeless people the idea that someone would spend millions to buy high-rise condo units and never live in them is disturbing
There's something putrid in the heart of that city and that's why I moved out many years ago. The wealth inequality in NYC is more evident than anywhere else. I visit from time to time to see my elderly mom and come back home.
One day the meek shall inherit the world
Honestly, I was dreaming of New York ever since I was 11 being a European girl. I did some traveling and ended up in January 2024 there. On the first evening being in the city for nearly 2 hours this was my conclusion that I told my boyfriend. This city is fun to be in when you are rich. I have romantisized NYC for so long, only to come there and be dissapointed and hit by the reality.
I still managed to find a bar that was super small, had a character of old New York before all this commercial freak has begun with super low prices. Which proves that the rent is the killer of all the New York vibe. It is a vibrant city but if these fake development projects would not ruin the market it could be 1000 times better.
There must be a psychology play here where the person who buys these over-the-top, high-end, top-floor condos actually thinks they’re above everyone else. I got that from thinking about how a person wakes up and looks down at everyone else because that’s all they can do.
Same phenomenon with SUVs...
Or the view is just cooler.
the further up you go it's usually more expensive
This project sheds light on many relevant issues from inequality, the housing crisis, privilege, and everything in-between. And to top this, it is very entertaining. I shared it with my entire friend group and they loved it too.
And it's all caused by monetary inflation
The old saying capitalism breeds inequality still rings true. I mean we can go as far as we’d like. I’m fine with what I have because I’m happy with it.
An $85,000,000 penthouse comes with its own share of problems I wouldn’t want to deal with.
@@skeezix8156 incorrect. Historically, capitalism has been the most equal system we've had. What currently breeds inequality is the constant debasement of our currencies
@@VincentHondius it’s all about personal drive to do well. Siblings raised under the same roof by the same parents can turn out wildly different in terms of economic stature. One may view a recession as an opportunity while the other struggles.
more like casts a shadow, but yeah..
I love how she explained that you can't even get to the viewings without special knowledge. I didn't know that.
And pointed out how those buildings literally cast shadows on whatever is beneath them depriving them of the sun.
Well on the flip side, that looks like an easy target. Imagine wanting to be so disassociated it's like yep. Hardly no1 wants to stay up here. My ears hurt but still. Ok I'm being extra but that's not really the view I'd actually want. I remember losing 1 of my front teeth bc I was trying to walk through a window door thing, at my uncles. Like imagine waking up every morning & ur immediate reaction is getting startled. And u just gradually hafta get to the PT where it's like oh yeah. I live here. I certainly don't know any billionaires. But I know in down town historic areas I'm near by, ppl live up on the top floors. That seems cooler than this. Only bc it seems peaceful convenient & has a more realistic nice view tho. But they prob hear crime & love their guns. But I can appreciate all kinds of living spaces. Just not this. If I wanted to be ridiculous I want to live like dolly Parton or mj. These ppl literally look down on ppl. From their apts. Where ppl look like blobs of color, ants
This is genuinely thought provoking
The voice of the property agent is so creepy. Like a nightmare for an introverted person to be with.
😂 Yes. Introvert or not. It was ridiculous. That might make the potential buyer not come back.
THATS NOT BEING AN INTROVERT thats called being anti social and in anxious STOP WITH THIS DISINFO
@@5tone_10 W donnie darko
like the voice of a hypnotist trying to get inside of your brain.
I can see the swinging pendulum, it's slowly hypo not using me. Maybe you have to listen to the entire voicemail😂😂anyone calls and leaves a creepy ass VM like that is NOT getting a call back
that real estate agent voiceover sounds like an ad n a dystopian movie 😂
Haha yes!
Was it VO or Off-Camera Voice/Dialogue. A voice over is someone not in the scene and edited in during post-production. This sounded diegetic.
@@NoeticTogue That definitely sounded off camera and not a voiceover lol
I live in NYC and my job has made it so that I go into a lot of apartments in many different buildings. I never knew what a true wealth discrepancy was before I came here. It put me in a funk for the better part of a year, but then as time went by I realized that even if I could buy a super expensive apartment in NYC, I probably wouldn't. My personal preferences, like not wanting the doormen to know all my business for example, would keep me at a much lower level of living. As a service provider, I have seen some terrible behavior of the very wealthy as well as the joke they become to the other "help"...the word eccentric is often used, but crazy is also a good word to describe a lot of these people. Not to mention completely out of touch with reality.
i’ve always wondered what exactly makes them so “eccentric”?
@@sarapickard7634 its easier for them to be so, unlike poorer people. Though poor proplr can be eccentric, homeless crypto bros and whatnot come to mid. (as the social status/class OUTWEIGHS the economic class)
I knew someone in college who was this wealthy. He made me sick. His sense of reality was fucking warped. And he felt that humans were just something that existed until he didn't need them anymore. I distinctly remember telling a friend that I may need to drop out of college because my mom is having a hard time making ends meet and we'll be homeless unless I start working and financing half our expenses. He overheard me and he laughed and said "what is your father doing sitting on his ass? Your mom also has a responsibility to make sure he's giving her enough allowances." When I said that my parents are divorced, he insisted that my mother's lawyer was was stupid for not making him pay alimony and child support. No matter how I explained that things did not work like that, he laughed and told me in fancy descriptive words that our financial standing was because my mom was stupid and chose the wrong man to marry and then couldn't even take half his assets during the divorce. Then he suggested I find myself a successful man to marry and take care of me. "Your problems are a lot easier solved than you think 😉"
@@petrifiedviewer Wow. Yikes. This is the perfect example right here.
@@petrifiedviewer He then got need to be careful to marry a wrong woman to cause his life go sucks if following his logic to tell the suggestion back to him.
That kind of wealthy people has an issue is that they don't know what the real world is. Or that is never an issue for them because they are wealthy enough to use money to cover all those issues in regular people's eyes. 🤷
It took me four years to discover that forecasting the market based on charts is pointless; you never know what will happen. Without a mentor, those four years were miserable. Now, I watch market trends and keep things basic and disciplined. I currently earn an average of $35k every week, despite the fact that I barely trade myself.
I'm new to cryptocurrency and don't understand how it really works. how Can someone know the right approach to investing and making good profits from cryptocurrency investments?
As a beginner investor, it’s essential for you to have a mentor to keep you accountable. Myself, I’m guided by (Nate Elishaa). A widely known crypto consultant
I've come across this name before, is She really reliable?
yeah (Nate Elishaa) was my hope during the 'bear summer' last year. I did so many mistakes but also learned so much from it, and of course from (Nate Elishaa). She is my number one source when it comes to crypto and TA.
She's mostly on Instagram, using the user.
This was very informative especially the bit on how the buildings cast long shadows obstructing other people's view of the sun. Great story telling
Even if you've never been to NYC you'd still realize that any sighting of the sun is a major event for everyday non billionaire locals in NYC.
Praise the sun!
Literally EVERY single building in ANY city will cast a shadow on someone, but when someone has a lot more money, then it’s a problem? Lol
I didnt realize how freakishly tall those skyscrapers are... midpoint in air showed that, it looks very unnatural.
Good job with this piece!! I live in Vancouver which is among the most expensive real estate in North America. It's gotten so bad here, that the government imposed a foreign buyers tax, and possibly a complete freeze on foreign buyers. They are also talking about a tax for empty homes.
I thought the tax for empty homes started 3 years ago? Not yet?
@@cancerino666 Correct EHT started a few years ago but many loopholes can be used around this.
The Australian government ruined us by lifting the ban on foreign investors owning more than one investment property in Australia. A few years ago I was trying to buy a small unit in Melbourne's outer eastern suburbs. At auction day it was sold to a foreign investor. It was his third purchase for that day.
That seems to be the Canadian solution to every problem: raise taxes.
@@williamwingo4740 Well the Libertarian free market one is creating total chaos of inequity.
This just made me sad. I just saw on the local news, they're increasing rent on a low-income apartment building for seniors. This would mean a lot of senior citizens would be houseless within less than a year. Because none of them could afford the hike of rent.
Happening all over this country not just with seniors but all the apartments in apartment complexes in a lot of areas ... terrible really terrible
At least the illegal immigrants get free housing, food, clothes, phones, even free laundry!! Your government sure does care about its citizens
@bradleysmith in one US city recently they made the children stay home and do school remotely because they were housing illegals in the school! It’s a woke mind virus that has infected about 90% of women under age 40. It’s why I choose to be single, although I may eventually meet a woman overseas, perhaps one who has endured communism rather than worshipping it
They should pull themselves up by their bootstrap/s
yes, in my mom's apartment for seniors, they doubled the rent in a year because it was not regulated or rent controlled. She had to move but couldn't in just one year. It was agonizing. We had to move her out of town and far away to a different senior apartment that was more controlled via subsidies.
I mean, everyone has their own taste, but as someone who lives in the city, those views are absolutely gorgeous. It's like you're on a cloud, to get away from the bustle of the city, it's genuinely different. I lived in nature all my life, and now i'm grateful to live in the city. I don't own a freakishly expensive apartment, BUT the views, especially at night, are to DIE for.
And imagine the noise you never have to hear from the streets below.
As someone who’s lived in an apartment like this(not in NYC but a city I lived in), she’s absolutely not lying about how soulless it is. Never lived in a place with so few locals, so few homes filled. Only lived there because I had some studies nearby the area until we sold the property on a return. Would have to imagine the overwhelming majority of residents did not see this as a long-term stay either. Got the super high up view, only good thing about it was how many clouds were present. Not worth casting shadows to the district.
The locals of cities around the world with these “international class” apartments need to god damn vote out the politicians enabling this and vote in politicians who want to make real estate for locals to live in. NYC, Los Angeles, Toronto, Vancouver, London, Frankfurt, Tokyo, Jakarta, Shanghai etc. Cities like this, which seemingly don’t have regulations for what market you can develop real estate for and who can buy them (or at least not nearly enough), need voter base change
City I lives in (Europe) had major downtown development (well still is active in fact). At night, those skyscrapers are almost all black and surroundings is kinda sketchy. Soulless Id say. I heard rumors that even inside it is not very safe since its always empty
@@p2p104 Which cities are these? Most European cities are very crowded.
San Francisco, totally sold it soul. In the morning the sunlight shines into those SOMA towers and you can see many empty units.
Voting won't help. The only thing that will help is socialist revolution and the removal of the bourgeois class. Then, buildings will be built to maximize the wellbeing of the median individual in society rather than to get sold to the ultra-rich.
No wonder rich people are so disconnected they’re high up seeing everyone else as tiny bugs beneath them
Heck, I lived in a small city in an amazing wooded retirement community and everything was only 10 minutes away. I could literally walk to McDonalds or the ER. There was a barber shop, a church, and an optometrist in the same street connected to my neighborhood. Didn’t have to live in New York for the luxury of having everything so close.
NYC is a 15 minute city. It’s also going to be a prison after the USA falls . All those empty units are for those who refuse to eat the bugs and get the clot shot or resist the social credit score.
FR you can get that in any medium to large city, and honestly if you have a car even plenty of fairly small towns have everything within 10-15min away.
Funny to hear McDonald's and ER proximity used in the same sentence.
Making a book project out of this experience was a stroke of genius, it really shines a light on a what a huge problem this is, good for her!
Capitalism is the problem. This is a symptom.
About this sunlight stealing thing, we have a phrase in India "humare hisse ki dhoop", which is literally used when someone rich creates a house beside a person (often an impoverished person that the rich person already knows) and steals their sunlight.
Tomorrow is near, yet so far away. Choose this day to love unconditionally, and be happy within
Richard A . Blair Fx
OR Instagram
He will guide you through the process of investing
@maryauthor9243 Everybody has been talking about (Richard A. Blair Fx) so I'm not surprise you mentioned him again is this his contact
@maryauthor9243 I really need to write him up
I live in Manhattan and billionaires row luxury suites are solely empty. You can easily book tours as agents are desperate to find buyers. Some penthouses across the city are being turned into Airbnb or party rentals per night each weekend.
Not very easy, I got a tour but it took a LOT of convincing. The apartment was amazing and the realtors super nice.
@@levisuccess Try contracting Douglas elliman group they are top tier
what?? khamzat Chimaev does NOT live in new york lol
@@alexkpai He might have been bored and wanted to see an apartment.
And the fact that he _doesn't_ live in New York, is most likely the main reason *WHY* he had such difficulty seeing the places.
_DOYYYY_ !!!!!
@@levisuccess good job on wasting someone's time
As someone who has worked in Financial Services/Wealth Strategies/Management, Billionaires NEVER carry credit cards, cash, or any Identification whatsoever. They don't have to. If they want to look at a property, their bank or lawyer will arrange for three to four real estate agents to be ready to show several properties.
Good point. The woman's story sounds like bs. She's clearly used to lying to get her way.
they probs tweaked the story a bit - like real estate agents more often than not are happy to show property off to people interested (of course there are limits) especially does who are quite wealthy. They probably saw her as a student or some artist who's interested and showed her around to gain some publicity.
@@kavalia2307 No, it doesn't work like that. She obviously had a (referral) just to talk to these real estate agents. You just can't call one of these agents up and asked to see a $10 to $85 million apartment.
@@MrSupernova111 "She's clearly used to lying to get her way." Uh, what exactly is "her way" here? She was doing an art project, and she pretended to be someone she's not. She got her photos, and she made her book. That's it. You make her sound like a spoiled child or something.
@@robertmoray988 her clothes were not posh or billionaire like . And also she was a woman . That sounds bad but it is what it is .
Highly amazing proyect!
The most that impact me when he said ..no neighbords around, no a soul. So sad, extreme isolation of the reallity.
I wish all the millionaires/billionaires can get together and create places for at risks youth, the homeless, mental health clinics, etc instead of buying all these properties just to be empty 90% of the time.
Too simple, sometimes naive, they'll worm their way out of it, they have enough power to dismantle social reforms in US government (Look at welfare post-cold war era). Even then, they could use the military for their interests, to gain more foreign property by privatizing, put out of business small companies without aid with advanced production, gain more profits in the third world labor they pay less than in the first world and worse, use it to fund infrastructure in their countries. This will not do at all.
if they did that, they wouldn't be rich. Selfishness is a big thing in these communities
@@llamapartyy Not really because there’s a weird loophole where if you donate money you can get it back. They’d have to put it on their taxes. And rich ppl will always find a way to stay rich. 🤔 like having assets, sending money abroad etc
@d b I mean nothing is perfect we live in an imperfect world with imperfect people, all I’m saying is rich people should just have a heart and try to make a difference. The middle class shouldn’t be the only ones trying. WE ALL LIVE ON PLANET EARTH. Also life is fair because it treats EVERYONE unfairly 💀😮💨
Inflationary monetary policies cause this. Fix that and you'll see better living standards for everyone
This is so surreal, they should do something about the construction in these type of cities. It happens in all the big ones, I guess specially in NYC. I'm from Madrid (Spain) and the rent is going CRAZY, you can't really have a decent apartment for your own, and if you can, it's a shoebox. It's really abusive and only accesible to a very few.
What an interesting person Andi is! Love how she critically looks at things, not through pure ideology but through careful observation.
as she makes money
I remember when some new condos being built from an old warehouse here in Chicago - I was living in a cheap apartment with a low paying job. My neighbor asked me to walk with her to look at the new Condos. I asked her Why? She was working at Mcdonalds and there was no way she could afford one. She said "I just want to look inside". We were given a tour of the new condos . My neighbor was telling them that we will buy it - that i was her husband and we had a business. I thought that was hilarious that someone can just come up with a story like that just to look at some condos.
@Hello there, how are you doing this blessed day?
So people are struggling to find places to live and the housing market is way overinflated because of the "shortage", but there are all these empty places sitting around collecting dust? Seems like something is wrong with that.
Definitely. There are a few anarchist groups across Europe (maybe in America too, not sure) that break in to literally empty mansions to house hundreds of homeless people.
There’s more empty homes then homeless people in the country
Ya, lets put homeless people on the 80th floor. Get real... It doesn't compare.
@@Just.A.T-Rex technically correct but youre counting the empty homes in the middle of nowhere with no infrastructure. Typical liberal twisting of "facts".
@thorgerdur asgeirsdottir But the problem with this video is that it suggests the billionaires are completely at fault when it's almost entirely the government's fault. It's human nature to exploit every possible opportunity when you can. If the government simply banned these types of buildings or created some law saying that you cannot own a property that you don't live in, none of this would have ever happened.
I was living in an apartment and accidentally became friends with a young woman my age who was also living there, she said her uncle owns one of the apartments there so he allows her to stay during her study in the country (she’s an international student). One day we had to go to her apartment to pick up something and I found out her apartment is actually one of the only two penthouses on the very top of the bld 😄 It was such an experience, the view, the size compared to my unit on the 19th floor, she said a helicopter could easily land on the huge balcony.
Her Uncle....
Lol
@@Bubbles99718 it was really her uncle’s apartment bcos family photos were everywhere; her parents with her uncles and aunt, cousin, etc. Also this was way back when the concept sugar daddy wasn’t really out there yet if that’s what u mean lol
@@artsyhyd The concept of 'sugar daddy' has been around since there was sugar.
@@r3beatty it seems u can’t accept that a girl or woman has super rich family 😂 Where have u been? U don’t even know my friend, and yes their fam is very rich, move on ur poor as$! 🤣🤣🤣
as someone who can barely afford 1000 dollar rent, thank you for doing this.
I could never afford 1000 dollars for rent unless I had a partner. Luckily I own a good condiminium which I paid for with savings and part of a small heritage and incredibly low living costs by swedish standards.
Im in houston texas.@@DeiNostri
When Americans and Europeans say rent do you guys refer to that as per month/fortnight/week??
In Australia it's by fortnight but from what I know from people I've met in Europe is it's by month but I'm not sure if everyone the same
@@tyronebiggums5547 its every 4 weeks here
@@tyronebiggums5547by month
That old man agent is ANNOYING! “Tell your husband…. The best on the market…” 🙄