Over urbanization, ecological devastation, complete sealing of the water table from rain, but oh well let's rebuild the same neighborhoods on the same footprint but now with a fancy, never toxicologically tested chemical spray all over the house. Whatever could go wrong?
American houses are pretty much shoeboxes with matchstick framing. Disposable garbage that lasts like 30 years. Most of the country has it because developers are cheap but i think California building codes actually avoid masonry because of earthquakes
Fire Brigade, not knowing the fire was spreading around the exterior of the building told residents to stay inside, thinking the interior fire doors would be sufficient enough to stop the fire spreading inside. But the exterior was cladded with flammable material that was toxic when burnt.
I toured a house in the Santa Barbara when I was in college. It was in the hills above SB. Completely made out of thick concrete. Guy claimed it was fire proof up to certain amount of degrees. That was in 2003. He was ahead of his time.
As an Australian, I never understood why Southern California has so many eucalypt trees. Those trees produce greater heat than most trees when set alight.
I think these were sold to californians way back then by a scammy business man who promised them easy to farm wood trees, only for these to be the opposite, and very flammable
We planted a lot of them for fuel wood back when wood-burning stoves and fireplaces were more common. Then those things died out and we just left the trees standing.
Yes it’s called “Adobe bricks” made of clay and the Spanish used them many years ago. The oldest building in SF is the mission high school that’s survived both ‘06, and ‘89 Earth quakes and still stands. They also burn like a mug in a kiln. They harden!
@ does not make those homes fire proofs like Adobe is because they took a shake. Are they pinned in on both sides with zero side yards? That probably helped the shaking and not falling lots. This is a stand alone and very tall structure
There's ENTIRE SUBURBS here in Australia that are fireproof. They have like 18 inches between houses and there's a fence IN THAT 18 inches. They sell more blocks that way but because the fire brigade can't get between the houses they have to make them fireproof. Brick with concrete slab and steel frame. Only the carpet and crap inside and maybe wiring and any plastic pipes are flammable
a fireproof house is an awesome premise. As a matter of fact, I have a friend out in Malibu and he built a nice home in the hills knowing that every year or two years, the hills will be ravaged by fires.He used exterior concrete wall panels, and roofing materials, but most interestingly he built with a interior and exterior fire suppression system(sprinklers). The exteriors almost remind me of the systems on the football sidelines, or in outdoor seating areas in Palm Springs restaurants. Higher pressure but he house has survived through the last two wildfires (so far). Nice thing is, he saves so much on his water bill from not having 35 acres of grass and trees to maintain, he used drought resistant landscaping, he doesn't get freaked out about a tremendous water bill should a fire run through there. I lived in Malibu in the 80's and in 85 and 87 experienced terrible fires, the 87 burned a corner of my home after it jumped PCH and burned down to the colony. I haven't experienced another wildfire evacuation again. I moved to San Clemente and now Montana. How many times do you have to watch your neighborhood burn or be stressed out that it might burn, before you say, move to Rancho Mirage or Santa Barbara? I know you get it Bill. How long would it take to fly in your Helicopter from the desert to Santa Monica or Van Nuys airport? 1 1/2 hours. That's about the same drive time from Point Dume..
It would make a lot of sense to even subsidize building corridors of homes that have a much higher fire resistance rating. You wouldn't have to use coercion. Just pay part of the cost municipally and the lower insurance costs and higher resale value would take care of the rest. It could help reduce the risks of major neighbourhood fires and improve safety for firefighters dramatically. But incompetent people who just don't care are in charge and almost always are.
We build fireproof House in 3rd world country like Dominican Republic, it's called concrete, the house burns out, you remove the shit, paint it, do new electric writing and its good to go again.
There are companies making fireproof homes, they are made from ICF(Insulated Concrete Forms) and with steel roofs. It’s just not cheap, and hard to modify once it’s in place.
@jameschauvet3140 housing, water, providing government services, ability to evacuate, ability to govern given the tax base. Mostly just cramming that many people between mountain,desert and salt water
There is a type of construction that uses foam panels covered in cement not only for the walls but the roofs also everything is one piece when it's finished. Habitat for Humanity built several of them in Homestead FL a few months before Hurricane Andrew hit and they withstood the hurricane fine.
Fireproof houses were once the traditional way of building in the Southwestern US. They regulated temperature and moisture content inside better than modern houses do today because they built their houses out of mud bricks called adobe. It's just moist compacted dirt, sand, clay for compressive strength and straw/manure to give it some tensile strength. You leave the blocks out to dry in the sun and when they're dry, you use a mortar to bind them together which is exactly the same components used for the bricks, minus the fiber, and a little bit more water in it. A well built monolithic structure made from adobe bricks will become even stronger after a wildfire goes over it because it works like firing clay in a kiln. Your entire house becomes what's essentially a giant brick. With 4-5 ft thick exterior walls, you can ram it with a truck, you're not going to hurt it. If hit with an earthquake, which are quite common in CA, they're so heavy that they move in frequency with the ground instead of being shaken by it like the popsicle stick houses you guys live in. And before you go "Hurr durr, houses in Japan are made of wood too and they can take earthquakes just fine!" Well, houses in Japan cost 10x less to buy compared to the US or Europe. As someone who lives in Europe, I couldn't even fathom living in a house that cost a million bucks that you could break into by cutting into it with a Sawzall. You better bring a sledgehammer with you around here.
@@fazole Central heating in Japan is a very recent phenomenon, only the more recently built housing has central heating. Traditionally, the Japanese built houses that were comfortable during the summer (which is extremely humid in Japan) with a lot of air transfer between the outside and the inside and in the winter, they wear more clothes, eat more hot meals and drink more hot drinks to compensate for the cold temperatures. You can find houses at very reasonable prices even in Tokyo today, they do need some work, but any house that's been built 40 years ago will need work, whether you want to or not. You can't expect to eat lobster tail when you're only paying for a bowl of rice, that's just unrealistic.
Ok but then they can't swoop in to buy it cheap when it's dust. Utility prices going up also benefits the owners and stone/metal don't help that. It's rigged imo
@ good point. Maybe some type of geometric structure like a dome that can withstand earthquakes and fires. Perhaps build under ground in the earth -instead of on top of it
Look into geoship, they are building with composite materials that won't burn and are futuristic and energy efficient. Also because they are domes they can withstand high winds and earthquakes. If the rich people decide to rebuild in Cali after the fires they should invest in geoship and build with a new futuristic and efficient way with geoship. With the eco friendly culture of California it is definitely something the people of California should push for.
It’s simple. Government services and infrastructure have diminished and will continue to diminish. So what do people with money do? They get solar, battery back ups, second homes, private jets, well water, private security, etc, etc, etc. So why would they not have fireproof houses?
This will triple them out here. Many companies have already left and are probably the only ones celebrating. Ya cant expect a company to do a massive payout like this especially since those same companies tend to give rich folk a break on their accounts if they maintain certain values. Now the insurance companies are gonna have to pay up and or file for bankruptcy. We just saw this in Florida and heading to every coast state in the union. When a Tesla cost 100k to replace and there's a shit ton of them and houses go for hundreds of millions of dollars...??? really? It doesn't take a lawyer to figure this out.
I worked for Owens Corning Fiberglas for decades. We looked into fireproofing houses. Not an easy thing to do and almost impossible at a reasonable cost. Maybe the technology has changed, but my feeling is, If they could, they would. It's an interesting concept.
When I first saw the news about how bad the fire was. I had a thought of Bill B using his rotor wing license and fly out of there. The perfect apocalyptic event to inspire you to get a helicopter. I saw him in Macon Ga. I
Instead of underground bunkers, underground water cistern. Have sprinklers all over the outside of the house in strategic locations. You can have a panic button you hit before you leave or an automatic system like in restaurants. When it gets to a high enough temperature on your wall it sets off the system.
Politicians don’t officially get paid that much compared to private sector, but there’s a lot perks. Not to mention if they play their cards right they can sit on the board of one of the corps or contractors after office. La water dept head getting 750,000 a year???????? That’s a lot more than the president gets!!!!
Not only is Bill Burr the funniest man on earth right now, he's an oracle that no one listened to. Glad to know both these two are safe during these fires.
Insulated concrete form homes are at about a 10% cost increase margin when building than traditional stick built homes. Concrete and steel at least a 5X life expectancy increase than stick builds for 10-20% more money. Idk I think I’d go for the bulletproof house if I had the cash. As a 20 year general carpenter that’s logically the only way to build. It reduces your insurance and heating/cooling costs probably saving you more money in the long run.
This is going to bring in the first wave of 'Autonomous Homes' like tesla is making. Everyone will have an auntonomous RV-esque living situation, that can and will be able to navigate away from disasters. The next stage , is there will be ships that will be able to take these homes into them, and then into space to the space station etc. Just like in the movie Wall E.
Its interesting that there were no fires in Baldwin Hills or Windsor Hills and several other neighborhoods where there's tons of dry brush. I've never seen any tent cities on South La Brea in Baldwin Hills. Its 45 degrees at night and homeless people in tent cities tend to start fires to keep warm or to barbecue. How many houses were barbequed by the homeless?
They have had Monolithic Dome homes for decades. They are fireproof, tornado proof, hurricane proof and bug proof and with the right foundation, earthquake proof. Most residential zones forbid them because they are harder to land grab.
Nothing looks uglier than rectangular windows and doors crammed onto a dome. And if you want circular or curved frames instead, be ready to pay more than the cost of the basic structure and the land it sits on.
@@mindlessconsumer Got me. That's why, if it was me, with all that money, it'd be reinforced concrete walls and floors for the entire structure, and a heavy-gauge metal standing seam roof.
Bill: complete sentences consisting of a variety of words from the English Language, structured in a way that conveys one's thoughts, opinions and current emotions. Tim: Yea...... Right
@@haydncook6503it is a famous photo often used to illustrate the income inequality in Brazil. But you can just take a screenshot and reverse image search any photo.
@@alfonso365 as true as that is, I don't think anyone would be wild about living in a house that they know they could end up buried in if a big one hits. At least with a fire, generally you have time to flee to save your family and pets.
You get in trouble if you ballpark the numbers and tell them what the estimated tax is. Tax is determined by the sale price and you open your broker up for a lawsuit with the client claiming that they were quoted the tax from the real estate agent.
Bravo!. Fire resistive building products & upgrades, been out for decades. I live here in malibu, I even interviewed for building & safety here years ago for the city of malibu, they did not care & passed on me & did not care about fire preventive solutions. How much did they save?. Fire insurance should only cover fire resistive upgraded structures. Did we change anything since woolsey fire?, no only clear around structures it does not work. Oak trees shield the places and help the planet & wildlife around us smart not dumb like this. 95% of brush fires manmade or preventable.
@rigoelliot115 at best if literally every building around you is built the same then the spread will be stopped, otherwise every other house is just fuel
I love how the opioid graph proves the opposite of what bill said. It basically shows that overdoses where stable for decades then as soon as the CDC crackdown on prescribing, illicit fentanyl entered the scene (that’s the giant red vertical death spike)
Yeah, I don't understand the housing situation in fire-prone areas. We moved to Ecuador where very little, if any wood is used in the structures of houses or as cladding on the outside. I've lived here for 7 years and have yet to see a house that's burned.
In Australia, we see this a lot. "We just want to live away from the city." They check the property in winter time: it is a little cold, foggy, misty and oh so serene. What they forget is that those tall eucalypt trees behave differently in the summer.
Ecuador's capital city, Quito, is literally suffering from multiple wildfires at this moment. Numerous houses have been destroyed. The entire country is in an extended drought and at risk from wildfire. What are you talking about?
I live in Colorado fire zone. My house is fireproof, m building it myself from sand bags and concrete. If I can get a hundred shipping containers I would build a castle.
This drawing of Tim Dillon is extremely accurate 😂
Sunglasses are way too small
Not slouching enough
For a second I thought Bill was talking with Pat McAfee.
Welcome to Best Buy my name is Tim
Not fat enough
The funny thing is -
Bill means that as a satirical cautionary tale.
Tim would 100% invest in a fireproof house company.
that's what we are making.
Just make fire breaks and maintain them. Keep the forest behind you clear of dead trees
He owns 4 (jk love ya Timbo ! :D
This structure could survive in hell!
Over urbanization, ecological devastation, complete sealing of the water table from rain, but oh well let's rebuild the same neighborhoods on the same footprint but now with a fancy, never toxicologically tested chemical spray all over the house. Whatever could go wrong?
in Australia we already have "no flammable exterior construction material" codes built into hire fire danger areas home construction...
American houses are pretty much shoeboxes with matchstick framing. Disposable garbage that lasts like 30 years. Most of the country has it because developers are cheap but i think California building codes actually avoid masonry because of earthquakes
UK houses had flammable cladding that led to the Grenville disaster.
Fire Brigade, not knowing the fire was spreading around the exterior of the building told residents to stay inside, thinking the interior fire doors would be sufficient enough to stop the fire spreading inside. But the exterior was cladded with flammable material that was toxic when burnt.
did you just spell higher as ‘hire’?
sounds like dirty no good socialist crap. ... and that would... help people! despite slightly lower profits for business owners... hey wait a second!
I toured a house in the Santa Barbara when I was in college. It was in the hills above SB. Completely made out of thick concrete. Guy claimed it was fire proof up to certain amount of degrees. That was in 2003. He was ahead of his time.
He wasn't ahead of his time. The rest of the country was so far behind.
Bet you money that house probably burned down.
@j2times2006 doubt it. The walls were like 2 1/2 ft thick
@@blacklionheart6031 the house it probably fine, but everything inside it got cooked
As an Australian, I never understood why Southern California has so many eucalypt trees. Those trees produce greater heat than most trees when set alight.
In N. America there are vast forests of conifers, that have a high resin content that is quite flammable.
I think these were sold to californians way back then by a scammy business man who promised them easy to farm wood trees, only for these to be the opposite, and very flammable
Aussies brought eucalyptus tree seeds to USA during the 1850’s gold rush.
We planted a lot of them for fuel wood back when wood-burning stoves and fireplaces were more common. Then those things died out and we just left the trees standing.
Excellent timber for mine shafts, apparently.
tim Dillon, yea, yea ,yea,right, right, right,yea,yea,yea,right,right,right
Yeah
Yahh
RIGHT
@@DaygoG yeah, right
@@Potato-mu7nu .........right........................yah
Nice nugget. Thank you for the upload.
Yes it’s called “Adobe bricks” made of clay and the Spanish used them many years ago. The oldest building in SF is the mission high school that’s survived both ‘06, and ‘89 Earth quakes and still stands. They also burn like a mug in a kiln. They harden!
the house I grew up in, and many in the neighborhood, survived both EQs. It's not uncommon. I think you mean mission dolores, not mission hs?
@ the mission Dolores high school building yes. Same thing no?
@ does not make those homes fire proofs like Adobe is because they took a shake. Are they pinned in on both sides with zero side yards? That probably helped the shaking and not falling lots. This is a stand alone and very tall structure
We build fireproof houses all the time with CelBlox.
There's ENTIRE SUBURBS here in Australia that are fireproof. They have like 18 inches between houses and there's a fence IN THAT 18 inches. They sell more blocks that way but because the fire brigade can't get between the houses they have to make them fireproof. Brick with concrete slab and steel frame. Only the carpet and crap inside and maybe wiring and any plastic pipes are flammable
Oh Tim Dillon! One of the few ways you can get me to listen to bill these days
The shot at Jim Carrey was hilarious 🤣 knowing Jim would still not do a stand up for Netflix 🤣
The polo symbol on the shirt is the chefs kiss lol
The sunglasses arent big enough
a fireproof house is an awesome premise. As a matter of fact, I have a friend out in Malibu and he built a nice home in the hills knowing that every year or two years, the hills will be ravaged by fires.He used exterior concrete wall panels, and roofing materials, but most interestingly he built with a interior and exterior fire suppression system(sprinklers). The exteriors almost remind me of the systems on the football sidelines, or in outdoor seating areas in Palm Springs restaurants. Higher pressure but he house has survived through the last two wildfires (so far). Nice thing is, he saves so much on his water bill from not having 35 acres of grass and trees to maintain, he used drought resistant landscaping, he doesn't get freaked out about a tremendous water bill should a fire run through there. I lived in Malibu in the 80's and in 85 and 87 experienced terrible fires, the 87 burned a corner of my home after it jumped PCH and burned down to the colony. I haven't experienced another wildfire evacuation again. I moved to San Clemente and now Montana. How many times do you have to watch your neighborhood burn or be stressed out that it might burn, before you say, move to Rancho Mirage or Santa Barbara? I know you get it Bill. How long would it take to fly in your Helicopter from the desert to Santa Monica or Van Nuys airport? 1 1/2 hours. That's about the same drive time from Point Dume..
So a lot of other countries have some form of fireproof
weird this conversation is from 2 years ago but nobody has done anything about the fires and nobody is even selling fireproofing
We build fireproof houses all the time at CelBlox.
It would make a lot of sense to even subsidize building corridors of homes that have a much higher fire resistance rating. You wouldn't have to use coercion. Just pay part of the cost municipally and the lower insurance costs and higher resale value would take care of the rest. It could help reduce the risks of major neighbourhood fires and improve safety for firefighters dramatically. But incompetent people who just don't care are in charge and almost always are.
We build fireproof House in 3rd world country like Dominican Republic, it's called concrete, the house burns out, you remove the shit, paint it, do new electric writing and its good to go again.
It will be over soon.
There are companies making fireproof homes, they are made from ICF(Insulated Concrete Forms) and with steel roofs. It’s just not cheap, and hard to modify once it’s in place.
It’s the way we all blatantly know what the problems are and they keep going right in our faces..
Maybe we need to acknowledge that 20 million people is about 18 million more people than the Los Angeles area can realistically house and support
How so? Is it the infrastructure?
@jameschauvet3140 housing, water, providing government services, ability to evacuate, ability to govern given the tax base. Mostly just cramming that many people between mountain,desert and salt water
Love him! He’s so on point.
There is a type of construction that uses foam panels covered in cement not only for the walls but the roofs also everything is one piece when it's finished. Habitat for Humanity built several of them in Homestead FL a few months before Hurricane Andrew hit and they withstood the hurricane fine.
Fireproof houses were once the traditional way of building in the Southwestern US. They regulated temperature and moisture content inside better than modern houses do today because they built their houses out of mud bricks called adobe. It's just moist compacted dirt, sand, clay for compressive strength and straw/manure to give it some tensile strength. You leave the blocks out to dry in the sun and when they're dry, you use a mortar to bind them together which is exactly the same components used for the bricks, minus the fiber, and a little bit more water in it.
A well built monolithic structure made from adobe bricks will become even stronger after a wildfire goes over it because it works like firing clay in a kiln. Your entire house becomes what's essentially a giant brick. With 4-5 ft thick exterior walls, you can ram it with a truck, you're not going to hurt it. If hit with an earthquake, which are quite common in CA, they're so heavy that they move in frequency with the ground instead of being shaken by it like the popsicle stick houses you guys live in.
And before you go "Hurr durr, houses in Japan are made of wood too and they can take earthquakes just fine!" Well, houses in Japan cost 10x less to buy compared to the US or Europe.
As someone who lives in Europe, I couldn't even fathom living in a house that cost a million bucks that you could break into by cutting into it with a Sawzall. You better bring a sledgehammer with you around here.
Those cheap Japanese homes are in dying villages and are so old they no longer meet modern standards or codes. Most don't even have central heating.
@@fazole Central heating in Japan is a very recent phenomenon, only the more recently built housing has central heating.
Traditionally, the Japanese built houses that were comfortable during the summer (which is extremely humid in Japan) with a lot of air transfer between the outside and the inside and in the winter, they wear more clothes, eat more hot meals and drink more hot drinks to compensate for the cold temperatures.
You can find houses at very reasonable prices even in Tokyo today, they do need some work, but any house that's been built 40 years ago will need work, whether you want to or not.
You can't expect to eat lobster tail when you're only paying for a bowl of rice, that's just unrealistic.
Cement fiberboard siding and trim with same materials to close in soffits and metal roofs would go a long way.
Maybe terra cotta roof over adobe home.
Ok but then they can't swoop in to buy it cheap when it's dust.
Utility prices going up also benefits the owners and stone/metal don't help that. It's rigged imo
Would be awesome if bill had some of these opinions when he’s on fallon
The c'nt who was supposed to make sure the fire hydrants were filled got payed $750k per year. How is that underpayed?
Tim Dillon wishes the people in the fires well.
Chimneys left standing from the fires - and why are the home not built out of bricks? Let’s make them of the most flammable material we have.
Well for one, earthquakes.
@ good point. Maybe some type of geometric structure like a dome that can withstand earthquakes and fires. Perhaps build under ground in the earth -instead of on top of it
If this a Patreon episode? I don't see this episode on Spotify...
I fucking love these guys! They are both insanely funny on their own just ranting so to hear them together ranting is a dream come true! Lol
Look into geoship, they are building with composite materials that won't burn and are futuristic and energy efficient. Also because they are domes they can withstand high winds and earthquakes. If the rich people decide to rebuild in Cali after the fires they should invest in geoship and build with a new futuristic and efficient way with geoship. With the eco friendly culture of California it is definitely something the people of California should push for.
I can't believe that Bill Burr's half-brother is the smashing pumpkins guy. 😂
1:46 Joy Taylor 😂
You mean the hairdresser? Joy gave up the nanni and kept her mouth shut. You can't even pick low hanging fruit.
Great timing of that message 😂
I always stay for Billy DJ...
It’s simple. Government services and infrastructure have diminished and will continue to diminish. So what do people with money do? They get solar, battery back ups, second homes, private jets, well water, private security, etc, etc, etc. So why would they not have fireproof houses?
Fires in Canada have doubled insurance prices. It's wild.
This will triple them out here. Many companies have already left and are probably the only ones celebrating. Ya cant expect a company to do a massive payout like this especially since those same companies tend to give rich folk a break on their accounts if they maintain certain values. Now the insurance companies are gonna have to pay up and or file for bankruptcy. We just saw this in Florida and heading to every coast state in the union. When a Tesla cost 100k to replace and there's a shit ton of them and houses go for hundreds of millions of dollars...??? really? It doesn't take a lawyer to figure this out.
when was this recorded ?
Lmao...this was hilarious! Tim Dillon needs bigger glasses, and the polo design needs to be bigger as well.
I can’t find the full episode?
They have made fire proof homes for a decade. Basically cement homes when it comes down to it. Expensive but totally doable.
I worked for Owens Corning Fiberglas for decades. We looked into fireproofing houses. Not an easy thing to do and almost impossible at a reasonable cost. Maybe the technology has changed, but my feeling is, If they could, they would. It's an interesting concept.
Concrete is so very expensive, I guess.
That's incorrect. We build fireproof houses all the time at CelBlox.
I want to see/listen to the full episode. How can I get it please?
I think this is 2 years old. Bill is 56 now
Where is the original pod for this clip lol
Take that outro out and see this channel on bull burr recaps just explode in subs
Where can this episode be found??
When I first saw the news about how bad the fire was. I had a thought of Bill B using his rotor wing license and fly out of there. The perfect apocalyptic event to inspire you to get a helicopter. I saw him in Macon Ga. I
Instead of underground bunkers, underground water cistern. Have sprinklers all over the outside of the house in strategic locations. You can have a panic button you hit before you leave or an automatic system like in restaurants. When it gets to a high enough temperature on your wall it sets off the system.
No water in California
They turned the water off though
Politicians don’t officially get paid that much compared to private sector, but there’s a lot perks. Not to mention if they play their cards right they can sit on the board of one of the corps or contractors after office. La water dept head getting 750,000 a year???????? That’s a lot more than the president gets!!!!
He's a real yeah man.
He's hilariously GAY, though...
Singapore Airlines, smoke show
Original air date ?
Not only is Bill Burr the funniest man on earth right now, he's an oracle that no one listened to. Glad to know both these two are safe during these fires.
Fr
He's a democrat shill.
Good timing
the clips of jim carry 😂 🍻
I am not able tk find the entire video. Can you tell me what I should search?
😂 Where is the Bill Burr EDM audio at the end from?
❤
Tim after every bill point: “yahhh. Yahh. Yahhhh.”
Houses in LA are about to double in price because it's going to take these people at least 5 years to rebuild - if they are allowed to rebuild at all.
Insulated concrete form homes are at about a 10% cost increase margin when building than traditional stick built homes. Concrete and steel at least a 5X life expectancy increase than stick builds for 10-20% more money. Idk I think I’d go for the bulletproof house if I had the cash. As a 20 year general carpenter that’s logically the only way to build. It reduces your insurance and heating/cooling costs probably saving you more money in the long run.
L.a burns to the ground, people in Jersey are like we got drones. …..
This is going to bring in the first wave of 'Autonomous Homes' like tesla is making. Everyone will have an auntonomous RV-esque living situation, that can and will be able to navigate away from disasters. The next stage , is there will be ships that will be able to take these homes into them, and then into space to the space station etc. Just like in the movie Wall E.
The only fireproof houses have sprinklers........ you need water for sprinklers🤣🤣🤣
what is this from?? link??
Its interesting that there were no fires in Baldwin Hills or Windsor Hills and several other neighborhoods where there's tons of dry brush. I've never seen any tent cities on South La Brea in Baldwin Hills. Its 45 degrees at night and homeless people in tent cities tend to start fires to keep warm or to barbecue.
How many houses were barbequed by the homeless?
Because homeless people know to go where the white liberals live since they tolerate them more and get more money out of them.
I mean...Florida has hurricane proof homes.
They have had Monolithic Dome homes for decades. They are fireproof, tornado proof, hurricane proof and bug proof and with the right foundation, earthquake proof. Most residential zones forbid them because they are harder to land grab.
you better have some serious AC, cause it is going to get hot in there.
Nothing looks uglier than rectangular windows and doors crammed onto a dome. And if you want circular or curved frames instead, be ready to pay more than the cost of the basic structure and the land it sits on.
@@thzzzt A house burned to the ground is uglier.
@@mindlessconsumer Got me. That's why, if it was me, with all that money, it'd be reinforced concrete walls and floors for the entire structure, and a heavy-gauge metal standing seam roof.
@robertplant2059 yeah, but you can leave and come back.
Where is the entire episode?
Tim Dillon show
My 2 favorite people are together
they could also build massive water towers within communities prone to dry heat …& pour that relief into critical zones …
Which series episode of orange county is bol talking about here
Building with Cob or Adobe is fire proof. That's the way of the past, and the future.
Can fireproof houses with ceramic coating system since there will be no fire insurance. Already talking tech spray system.
1:08 I'll be God damned if that's not Corey Chase with a little bit of AI work in the face
these two are unstoppable together
Bill: complete sentences consisting of a variety of words from the English Language, structured in a way that conveys one's thoughts, opinions and current emotions.
Tim: Yea...... Right
Bill talks over everyone brotha, and other comedians respect him and agree and say yes with alot of what he says
They have them already, ICF homes with steel roofs. Living through 2 wildfires has taught me to look into this stuff already.
Lead siding, lead paint problem fixed!
Tim Dillon doing his best straightface here
The drawing of Tim Dillon still looks like Brian Thompson.
There is a reason many buildings on the east coast and England have brick buildings
Where abouts is that apartment building on the right at 3:40??
Yeah, my jaw dropped a little with that picture, too. Looks real, but I’m questioning if it is because it’s so striking.
Found it, “Paraisopolis, a favela in San Paulo, next to its wealthy neighbour Morumbi” this was in The Guardian, 29 Nov 2017.
@@urbanstarshipgood job, Carmen Sandiego 😂😂😂
@@urbanstarship Mate... are you a magician?! Haha How did you do that?! :) Thank you!
@@haydncook6503it is a famous photo often used to illustrate the income inequality in Brazil.
But you can just take a screenshot and reverse image search any photo.
Bill Burr using a Troyboi song as his intro is the last thing I expected to see in 2025 but I LOVE IT
Some of them are weathered. -that Dillion bupkiss there
How do you post a Burr clip and have it censored?
It puzzles me how gringos keep building houses with flammable materials, while people in poorer countries use bricks, cement, cinderblocks and metal.
Ever seen what a 6.8 earthquake does to brick, cinderblock and cement construction?
@PacificSword Yes... but I think these fires are getting way more common than 6.8 earthquakes.
@@alfonso365 as true as that is, I don't think anyone would be wild about living in a house that they know they could end up buried in if a big one hits. At least with a fire, generally you have time to flee to save your family and pets.
@@PacificSword False dichotomy
Home builders care only about maximum profit in California. 2x4s, paper, and a thin layer of stucco are the cheapest way to build a home.
You can look just look away before anyone notices or gets uncomfortable.
Yes
Best statement of 2025 at the end
I had to laugh when he said the stewardesses nowadays look "weathered"
You get in trouble if you ballpark the numbers and tell them what the estimated tax is. Tax is determined by the sale price and you open your broker up for a lawsuit with the client claiming that they were quoted the tax from the real estate agent.
I can already write the script for tomorrow. Grandma storms right into Ali home and wakes them up LOUDLY AND MEAN. ANYONE WSNT TO BET?
Brick walls tile or slate roof. Timber sideing asphalt shingles what could go wrong with hot embers blowind around.🤔🤫
Bravo!. Fire resistive building products & upgrades, been out for decades. I live here in malibu, I even interviewed for building & safety here years ago for the city of malibu, they did not care & passed on me & did not care about fire preventive solutions. How much did they save?. Fire insurance should only cover fire resistive upgraded structures. Did we change anything since woolsey fire?, no only clear around structures it does not work. Oak trees shield the places and help the planet & wildlife around us smart not dumb like this. 95% of brush fires manmade or preventable.
Guy just left his sprinklers running.
we have those in mexico since for ever with bricks and concrete.
You know what is a "fireproof" house an oven, it will still be standing but nothing inside will be
Exactly what I was thinking.
@rigoelliot115 at best if literally every building around you is built the same then the spread will be stopped, otherwise every other house is just fuel
I don't think Blackstone, the guys that make outdoor propane griddles, are buying up all the land.😂 It's Blackrock.
even if you have a sprinkler system the city shuts the water off but not the gas lines
Imagine buying a fireproof house and then it gets destroyed by a flood or earthquake 😂
I love how the opioid graph proves the opposite of what bill said. It basically shows that overdoses where stable for decades then as soon as the CDC crackdown on prescribing, illicit fentanyl entered the scene (that’s the giant red vertical death spike)
Yeah, I don't understand the housing situation in fire-prone areas. We moved to Ecuador where very little, if any wood is used in the structures of houses or as cladding on the outside. I've lived here for 7 years and have yet to see a house that's burned.
in california we can't use really brittle stuff like brick or our houses will collapse in earthquakes and kill us
In Australia, we see this a lot. "We just want to live away from the city." They check the property in winter time: it is a little cold, foggy, misty and oh so serene.
What they forget is that those tall eucalypt trees behave differently in the summer.
Cost. Wood is cheap, and the timber industry is a big lobby.
Ecuador's capital city, Quito, is literally suffering from multiple wildfires at this moment. Numerous houses have been destroyed. The entire country is in an extended drought and at risk from wildfire. What are you talking about?
@@somethingsock6707 The same in Vancouver, Canada; unreinforced masonry turns into shrapnel in an earthquake.
hemp bricks. it fits the california quid pro quo.
Please what episode is this from
I live in Colorado fire zone.
My house is fireproof, m building it myself from sand bags and concrete.
If I can get a hundred shipping containers I would build a castle.
I like the animation.