I stayed at one air bnb, we had the air con on most the day. I didn't notice initially but by the end of the day I realised I'd didn't feel well. We ended up looking inside the air con and found it absolutely covered in mould. When we complained they were so damn rude. We complained to air bnb who could only give us a partial refund but that bnb is still operating. No health regulations at all.
I came across fake airbnb listings twice at the time of my arrival, and airbnb even didn't find a new place for me as they advertised, all they did is to refund me the original amount.
I had the host yell and scream at me and I told Airbnb I felt unsafe. Internet turned off, suddenly phone not working and this was in a foreign country. Airbnb never reimbursed me and in fact they let me get a bad rating when I told them I felt unsafe. Never again.
Airbnb is an actual problem in my city bc there's almost no more affordable living spaces for students or young families, yet some people bought SEVERAL apartments just to put them on Airbnb. There have been cases of hundreds of people coming to the same apartment viewing bc they are desperate at this point. I loved Airbnb for the cheap prices but yeah... I'm going back to hotels.
You mean it doesn't make sense to expel a kid for hitting back when someone started wailing on them? Violence is not the answer, they should have gotten an adult...while they were being brutally beaten...But in all siriusness, that is an EXCELLENT idea, especially nowadays. The extent of "zero tolerance" is absurd.
And Uber is just an unlicensed taxi service. About 15 tears ago, the mechanics union at LA Metro went on strike shutting down the entire Metro system for a week or two. People started driving other people around for cash. The newspapers called them "bandit taxis." Uber is the same thing, only the smart-phone ap makes them legitimate.
killshot kenny Taxis need to be legally accepted to be a taxi driver atleast where I live and Uber doesent require anything but for you to sign up when taxis need to have their criminal record searched, have their location and just be accepted legally Etc. So no a Uber giving you water that barely talks to you isn’t safer at all.
Count Orlok yes he should. I know a way to end homelessness. I just need money to start a non profit organization. There are more vacant houses/homes then there are homeless people
They made it look like they pushed the guy out of a tall building, but then showed in the same shot that the floor outside the other windows was less than a foot down... just noticed that
I stayed in an Airbnb for 2 weeks when I went to Japan in '16. The apartment was turned into a hostel. There were like 10 of us in total. My room alone had 6 of us in it (our beds were stacked like cubicles). The day I was leaving, I noticed the power was out. I just assumed there was a black out... nope! I was told that they were actually kicking out the tenant along with the guests. I then found out Airbnb was illegal in Japan at that time (not sure if it still is). I got lucky that I was already leaving but it sucked for the new guests coming in. Oh, and the host did what Adam mentioned. He rented out multiple apartments and turned them all into hostels.
The housing market is a pretty important part of the economy, and Airbnb is doing a lot of damage in that sector. If anything, raising awareness of the problems with how they do business will be good for the economy.
Another reason why it's terrible for towns: all authenticity is lost. There's no real population left. It's particularly bad in historical European towns. All the people there are tourists plus some people who run the shops but commute every day.
@@hamsandwichindahouse They die because of overtourism wich make the live too expensive for normal people. When normal Gorcerystores are kicked out by touristshops, where could you buy your daily needs?
Why? Just stop Uber and Airbnb. Make hotels and taxis better, rather than risk the safety of the person. Nothing to be scared of there. The quality of hotels and taxis(or the equivalent) was probably nothing compared to this, 200 years ago. Improving on things is normal - it'll happen naturally, dw. Before you know it, Uber and ABnB will become 'random trends we suddenly started in the 2010s' and most people will forget about them.
I stayed at an Airbnb in an one of those illegal airbnb hotel apartment buildings last year and it seemed pretty awesome at first. They had really good AC, nice balcony, a PS3, and then I realized that the sprinklers were about to fall out of the ceiling, and the floors were so dirty that all I had to do was lightly set a paper towel on the ground for it to be covered in dirt and dust. Sure, it was cheap, but I definitely didn’t feel safe. We ended up getting a room at the Omni a block down, which was 3x the price but a much better experience.
As someone who's been homeless, I hope he does makes one on the subject. Not even the people making laws surrounding homelessness know what they're talking about most of the time - because if they didn't have the money to not be sleeping on the streets, they wouldn't be politicians, would they? Like damn, please do that one.
We went to an Airbnb last year and had a leak in the closet of all places. Plus the back yard was a mess...it looked like they'd stored old cars there at one point and there was ruts in the ground and loose nails. We had to make sure our dog didn't step on one. The one my boyfriend used this year had child locks all over the kitchen cabinets. Had more bad experiences than good ones with Airbnbs
When me and my friend's family visited the west coast, the host told us repeatedly to never say anything to the guard outside. When we first arrived we were confused by his instructions, and thought it was okay to ask the guard for basic directions but the host got frightened because of it. Later he asked me several times what exactly I said to the guard. At that point I was pretty sure he kept his Airbnb business away from the landlord.
"Well, everything we know about homelessness is wrong, I can talk about that!" Straight up loved that line. And I want an episode about homelessness now.
paulelunico I dont really think a person would be denied for being ugly. But if they rather had a more common name because they felt unsafe, then yes, possibly. But that doesnt matter. Its a dual contract and safety should come first. If you are somehow intimidating to them, you wouldnt have wanted to sleep there anyway.
@@Predated2 Hope you're a less ignorant person now than you were 3 years ago when you were convinced "having a less common name" was inherently threatening. We all know why you'd think that.
One time I went to an air bnb that had exposed wiring in the shower, didn’t have half the things the listing said it did, and was overall just unsanitary. I quickly got a refund
This is a serious problem in Amsterdam, a friend of mine had his rent tripled because the landlord decided he could use potential Airbnb profits to calculate the value of his apartments. Slowly but surely, all natives are pushed out of the city centre until it's just one big Airbnb.
rented on airbnb, they had spiders, rats, etc. not to mention it was listed as a whole house and when i got there the guy and his gf were living there. also there was no electricity in the bathroom or bedroom.
Bonnie Gomez - You realized that’s not allowed on the platform. You should have called them and they would either put you in a new Airbnb or a hotel. All you need to do is provide proof of the issue. Just because you don’t know how to use the platform doesn’t make it bad.
I worked for airbnb, the second you see that, you call them, and they give you a full refund, find you a new place to stay, pay for it themselves, and if they can't find you a place right away they will literally put you in a hotel for free.
Used to be a manager at an Air BnB, it's mostly true. My bosses never made or asked me to check anything, just to clean and make sure everything looked good and clean. I did eventually check everything on my own and everything was old, told my boss and she replaced everything. But they never asked me to check anything nor did they check anything themselves. There were a lot of shady people there, and I had to bring a knife and pepper spray to work because of these ppl. Edit: I spelled manager wrong lmao
I've used AirBNB and VRBO for years. I love it. Generally though, I only rent whole apartments. When you rent rooms, you have very mixed results. Some people clearly just want your money and don't like you in their space, and others are quite welcoming. I frequently need to work while traveling, and I find that virtually every hotel (even the nice ones) has a really horrible internet connection. These apartments almost always have some great residential internet connection that works great, and I love living in an actual neighborhood when I travel instead of a hotel. Check in/outs have always been super smooth and uneventful. My favorite places are where the owner lives there but is traveling for some time and rents their place out while they are gone.
My dad was always good at liability. He always told me things about the fine print. He also thought me how to drive and made it my responsibility to drive correctly. Because if there’s an accident, you don’t want to be liable because you made one small move. So many people on the road don’t realize how they put themselves to blame for the accident 100% of the time
with airbnb you always feel like an intruder in someone else's property so if you're a polite person you might have a hard time enjoying your time as much as you would do in a hotel.
That's true, but it has nothing to do with safety. That's the deal. Anyone signing up for it should know it beforehand and be ok with it. Otherwise just don't go.
In the example I read, the guest had leased the property for 44 days for an "extended business trip". After you have resided in a property for more than 30 days, you're legally considered a tenant and have rights. They're no longer an intruder, they're your tenant. The guys who did this, a pair of brothers, have perfected this technique and know their rights. The property owner couldn't call the police because they weren't doing anything (technically) illegal. Also, Airbnb didn't help as they did very little to back her up and were super slow with responding to her emails and phone calls. They made sure she was paid for the entire 44 days, but did nothing to help her get rid of her unwanted tenants beyond that time. She had to eventually hire a lawyer and go through the entire eviction process just as if they were renting an apartment. The moral of this story: if you're renting out your place on Airbnb, don't rent for longer than 30 days.
Koss Wilki Agreed, I'm planning to go to Tokyo next year and you could easily find rooms to rent for like a month that costs the same as a hotel room for maybe four days or so
I've used AirBNB 1 each for Tokyo and Seoul mainly because it was cheaper than hotels. But hotels are better as you can leave your luggage there and they'll make your bed everyday. There are also cases where host would install cameras to record you
My grandmother rents out vacation homes and there's a lot of paperwork, laws, and insurance she has to deal with. I've heard her make some of these complaints about AirBnB, how they basically bypass every regulation about renting that people doing it legit have to deal with, and for a lower price. (Since they don't have pay insurance on anything.)
Lmao so? It's your fault if you can't find a decent deal, and they can charge how much they want, the point of this video is what a lot of Air BNB is allowing is straight-up: ILLEGAL. Your hotel overcharging you isn't illegal, it's just you getting a bad deal.
TheRealBitterbub You do realise that what is legal or illegal isn't a commandment imposed from above? The society decides the constituents of these (very fluid) terms
pragya chamoli Yes, I realize that. Despite how biased some American laws are, the ones they pointed out were absolutely relevant, and reasonable. Like checking to make sure a home advertised on Air BNB is safe (as they point out in the video). Getting a rotten price deal is absolutely legal and relevant, as long as the seller doesn't do something preposterous, like change the price from the original listing, or charge you more than you were initially quoted. The seller has the right to charge you what they want. To charge obscenely high isn't illegal, but it's very unethical.
Then why do the same people who want these regs in place and strengthen them turn around and then impose rent controls, subsidized housing, protection of squatters etc. to force homeowners to lower prices and less control over their own property?
idk why you guys removed comments and the like bar with the FASFA video, you didn't actually say anything wrong or controversial but you made people think it was by doing that.
xor sama I can tell you as someone using FASFA to pay for my community college AND on workstudy that it's definitely something everybody should apply for, worse thing that happens is that you don't get it. I haven't done a loan with them, but I know government loans have a low interest rate and a maximum limit so you can't get fucked over (that much).
It was an obvious undisclosed sponsored ad, that's why. The video had nothing to do with ruining anything and was just a long bullshit scripted ad complete with a URL in the description. Backlash is always fierce when we're treated like children.
I've nothing against FAFSA btw, nor doubt they were genuinely trying to help. The issue is they could've disclosed that fact and explained it was intended as positive information rather than disguising it as a series format we all enjoy. The result is viewers feel they're being played, dislike the video, and makes the content look bad when that's not necessarily true.
There is an airbnb in my neighborhood and every single time someone rents the place the cops are called due to noise complaints. This company and the owners should be held responsible for this crap.
I lived in a condo in Thailand that expressly forbid AirBNB and similar services in its bylaws. A big reason for this was security: you had to scan your thumb to enter the building, you needed a key card registered to your name to use the elevator (which only let you to your floor), and you needed to enter a code on a keypad to enter your unit. Despite these bylaws, the scum of the earth still managed to AirBNB some of the units, making silicone imprints of their thumbs for guests. It was like living in a hotel. Then, a string of robberies occurred and it was discovered that the thief used a discarded silicone imprint to get in. That’s when security started to clamp down on it. I remember contacting AirBNB about it and they said something to the effect of not getting involved because they don’t enforce local laws or rules with their hosts. They really are just an app connecting people who need a room with people who have property.
AgusStalking That's not the pint Adam was making. He was saying that even though most of the time airbnb is a good deal, you are potentially sacrificing your safety.
Very true about discriminating based on your race on your Creed. My friend whose Arab experience cancellations many times. I personally don't have a picture attached to my Airbnb account.
I live in the Outer Banks - a vacation hot spot. The upstairs unit is an Air BNB, and rent everywhere is super expensive if you can even find somewhere to rent. Adam is completely right.
My dad and I run an Airbnb on the beach and we’ve had thousands of guests over the years. The worst “incident” we’ve had is someone stole all of our towels. Usually the city taxes us about 4,000 dollars a year just to keep our Airbnb. NOT ONCE have we had a health inspection or anything close to it conducted on our Airbnb. (of course we still keep it 100% sanitary) All we had to do to open our Airbnb was fill out some paperwork.
Same prices and such but in the Bay Area in CA, we clean everything and make sure our gas furnace and Carbon monoxide monitor is working. Best part is that it has a separate door and closed interior so we don’t interact with each other and privacy but we find more and more people stealing towels. Mostly nice people but you get those who stay the night, complain about a lot of things, and want a refund to stay the night free. That’s why we don’t have single night visits and rather a span of days so we know there’s nothing shady or such going on
We're having this problem here in Vancouver. House owners just rent their places on Airbnb. Idk if the city has done anything but I tell you finding place to rent here that's affordable.. is getting hard.
Short-term rentals are causing a severe housing shortage where I live. A large percentage (close to 35%) of all home purchases right now are by investors looking to use them as short-term rentals. That doesn’t even factor in the number of apartments leased by companies looking to use them as short-term rentals. Property values are out of control and rents have become unaffordable, increasing by 30-40% each year. Even before I knew about how AirBnB was destroying affordability, though, I wouldn’t stay in one. I’ve heard horror stories from friends about how they were given weird, overly restrictive lists of rules they had to follow, or how they were accused of causing damage to their rental, with no way to prove something wasn’t damaged by them. I’ve only stayed in one once, when a relative rented one for a week. It was listed as sleeping 17 in six bedrooms. Well, one of the "bedrooms" was the garage with a futon in it, and another "bedroom" was a hallway with two bunk beds in it. Two of the bedrooms had one king-sized bed each, although the listing said the rooms slept four each. Where was the other bed? In both bedrooms, the other bed was a double bed in the walk-in closet. There was ONE normal bedroom that had a king-sized bed and a twin daybed thing. The final "bedroom" wasn’t a real bedroom but actually a small home office that was off the kitchen. I was lucky enough to get the garage as my room; everyone else was having to share rooms or have people walking through their room to get to where the people were sleeping. It was awful. Never again. I’ll pay for a hotel, thanks.
Its not AirBNB, its the fact you have millions of ILLEGAL aliens and healthy people leeching off of the taxpayers, who live off of government housing assitance, welfare and other socialists services. If you stopped ILLEGAL immigration and stopped giving away freebies to heallthy people who dont want to work, all those peole would either go back to their home countries or scatter away to places with cheaper rent.
JohnnyBoyCali except illegals actually pay taxes - just without any of the benefits of being a standard citizen - and in most cases you can't even get on welfare without having a job. And white citizens are welfare's primary recipients. What are you smoking?
JohnnyBoyCali Nope. Gentrification is making LA really expensive. Landlords are kicking out existing residents and hiking up rents to make rooms for hipsters with money. Also we have a lot of modern apartment complexes being built to attract people with higher income which means higher rent. Since so many people want to live here, rent is increasing to increase profits for landlords. As someone who was born and raised in LA, yes I wish the new coming hipsters would scatter back to where they came from.
It does feel very specifically a list of things that Hotel Chains would like you to believe and\or Govs that are concerned about liability. Like Leasing apartments for rental on AirBnB driving up property prices, well what about speculative investment from overseas investors? happened a lot in the property bubble. We don't need the Nanny state to hold our hand for everything, you need to be a smart consumer.
The mega corporations of the world applaud your promotion of the idea that the one and only recourse any person should ever take for any of their illegal and immoral policies is not to purchase or do business with them. They think it's great if anyone they rip off or lie to believes the best solution is just to shop elsewhere. You're helping the corporate thieves and dishonest business PR department by promoting their lies quite nicely. The more people like you repeating their PR the more money they can make from people like you. Presumably, you're just a dup and believe what you write. By the way. . . They probably own the competition so voting with your dollar by shopping at another store is still just voting with your dollar for their dishonesty.
I wish he would talk about their system of making the renter review the property before getting reviewed by the host. I'm willing to be that that it leads people to give higher reviews than they normally would out of concern they'll get bad reviews and be unable to rent again.
Skier 1228 Not really tho, only know airbnb from TV, but the last video was also sponsored and here you can clearly see who's profiting from this. Just like all these uber bashing video, and then you find out their dad's taxi driver
don't know how things are with airbnb in US, but in europe airbnb is, for me, a much better option than a hotel. you can get a whole apartment for a fraction of the price of a hotel room with complete privacy and some of these apartments are incredibly luxurious for an affordable price. also in EU countries you have to pass certain standards to be able to rent out apartments legally. so for example, in the place where i am from (a touristic mediterranean town) in august you can rent a room in a 5-star hotel for 1000€ next to the city center or you can rent a fully renovated 1 bedroom luxury apartment in a historic building for 120€ inside the historic center. plus the market in renting for tourism is so competitive that none of these guys can afford bad ratings.
LazerFrazer aluminum is actually neurotoxic lol. i mean not if you put it on your head but if you ingest it (drinking from cans is fine though) or breath in the fumes for creating it or something. its really bad for the environment to make so you should recycle your aluminum foil after balling it. Also cellphone radiation increasees longevity in rats
Airbnb in The Bay Area is just as expensive or sometimes even more expensive than a nice hotel room sometimes. My husband and I were looking into it recently and they add in a cleaning fee, occupancy fee and taxes and it ends up being an extra $100.
Not really. I used to have neighbours two doors down who had a 5 star rating on AirBnB. The thing is their guests were often very inconsiderate of the neighbours. They don't live there, they don't care that I had to be at work at 06:45. I asked them nicely once. The second day I went on AirBnB, made screenshots of my neighbours' ad and sent them to the estate corporation they rent from. Yeah turns out they do enforce their 24 hour eviction clause for subletting. An elderly man lives there now, with his son and daughter inlaw who take care of him. He's a very nice man. Perfect neighbour. You should have seen the argument between the guests and the original tenant though. It was insane.
You idiots don't give two fucks when regulations raise the price of housing 25%, then complain when some dares to assert their property rights that may raise property costs 5%. Just say, "I hate property rights. The state owns everything."
It is the cycle of bureaucracy. Landlords and hotels doing the kind of stuff that Airbnb is doing created the need for regulations on housing and hotels. 1. Shitty practices of a few bad people/companies cause the population to demand regulation. 2. Regulation creates a need for a new type of business that avoids the regulations. 3. See step 1.
I wonder when Taxi companies will pay College humour to do a piece on the DANGERS of uber haha. They'l even do an episode on why cars are bad for you if the horse-drawn carriage industry paid them enough. Pathetic
Uber is a pretty shady company for the simple reason that they take an enormous cut from their drivers while leaving them all the responsibilities of gas and maintenance. Not to mention you have to incur additional insurance for using your car as a taxi, or you could get kicked off your policy entirely. A pretty raw deal for most involved.
There HAS to be a creative way to get them to leave before needing a lawyer. Turn off heat, water, and fuse box to room? Change the locks or lock them in until they freak out? Play Celine Dion non-stop? Remove the furniture and curtains. Trash their luggage, or spill bleach on it.
@@TheHergeea you would think, but those tactics are actually against the law in most places. Crazy but the owner has to jump through a lot of hoops or runs the risk of big fines and even jail time.
@@adamlarus1 it varies by state, so I can only speak to the state that I live in, but in my state if they've been in your house for 28 days or more then they have residency, which means you have to take them through a formal eviction process
"I'm not a crook, I'm an artist!"
*two minutes later*
"I don't know you man."
*kills a guy*
*immediately talk about crooks again*
_1_ minute later.
On a phone, you press return (in the bottom right corner) and in a computer you press enter.
@@aaronexists4308 ????
I believe someone had asked how to indent, or something. I don’t know.
Ahem, *criminal...*
I stayed at one air bnb, we had the air con on most the day. I didn't notice initially but by the end of the day I realised I'd didn't feel well. We ended up looking inside the air con and found it absolutely covered in mould. When we complained they were so damn rude. We complained to air bnb who could only give us a partial refund but that bnb is still operating. No health regulations at all.
Yep
Holy shit Airbnb must be a horrible thing
@@PercabethYessss it is
There’s no regulation in about most everything
I came across fake airbnb listings twice at the time of my arrival, and airbnb even didn't find a new place for me as they advertised, all they did is to refund me the original amount.
I wonder if they made him an artist just to make the con-artist joke
they did
And the fire exit.
DUH!
I thought the same thing!
Definitely
I’ve used airbnb 3-4 times and 3 times the owner said pretend you’re a friend and try to avoid the front lobby during business hours. HAHAHAH
Same
This is how my first ever rental treated me lmao
That ain't right to the ppl that live there. Smh
Thats why I dont use airbnb
I had the host yell and scream at me and I told Airbnb I felt unsafe. Internet turned off, suddenly phone not working and this was in a foreign country. Airbnb never reimbursed me and in fact they let me get a bad rating when I told them I felt unsafe. Never again.
I want Adam Ruins CollegeHumour.
There's the American way of spelling it, then there's the right way.
That's how the creators spell it, therefore it's the right way
Collegehumour did not create the word Humour. They just use it.
Wut?
Who said dat?
Sponsored by Trivago.
Hotel?
Trivago.
*HOTEL? TRIVAGO*
Gah I was gonna say hotel trivago
Trivago?
HOTEL
H O T E L ?
Airbnb is an actual problem in my city bc there's almost no more affordable living spaces for students or young families, yet some people bought SEVERAL apartments just to put them on Airbnb. There have been cases of hundreds of people coming to the same apartment viewing bc they are desperate at this point. I loved Airbnb for the cheap prices but yeah... I'm going back to hotels.
Adam looks like jimmy neutron in a normal way.
If Jimmy grow-up.
I can’t imagine jimmy neutron normal
i don't know what that means but it makes me laugh
Time to ruin somethin Jimbo!
Dude I think you mean *s a l t*
I'm watching this while on vacation in a airbnb apartment in a building full of airbnb rooms
Uh oh
We need an update please?
Run
TheEnde124 is he dead?
So spooky.....the twilight zone
THIS GUY IS THE ARTIST WHO SOLD THE PAINTINGS OF EYES IN THE VIDEO WHERE ADAM RUINS THE ART MARKET
Adam ruins everything Extended Universe
Got to my joke first Cameron
Yep I saw that 😂😂😂
Good eyes
“This is my house now!” That was funny.
Britain in a nutshell
She’s also in Brooklyn nine nine
Was actually surprised they fell on that side of the portrayal and not how they are just poor victim with no where else to go.
When
Why would you need a lawyer, doesn't the police help?
You should do why zero tolerance schools don't make people safer
Joshua Dunford that's a good idea actually
Harriet thanks
You mean it doesn't make sense to expel a kid for hitting back when someone started wailing on them? Violence is not the answer, they should have gotten an adult...while they were being brutally beaten...But in all siriusness, that is an EXCELLENT idea, especially nowadays. The extent of "zero tolerance" is absurd.
The whole point of Zero Tolerance isn't to protect kids, but to protect the administrators from parents suing them.
+Jeb Bush well that's one thing for Adam to mention in "Adam Ruins Zero Tolerance" B)
I’m just waiting for “Adam ruins homelessness”
That ain't possible. Homelessness is the best
That doesn’t even make sense
He did on Netflix
He did, sort of. In the exact same episode as this, matter of fact.
Ye
So...AirBnb is like the residential version of Uber.
Nice.
And Uber is just an unlicensed taxi service.
About 15 tears ago, the mechanics union at LA Metro went on strike shutting down the entire Metro system for a week or two.
People started driving other people around for cash. The newspapers called them "bandit taxis."
Uber is the same thing, only the smart-phone ap makes them legitimate.
@killshot kenny taxi are expensive because the driver makes good money, while uber drivers don't.
killshot kenny ITS MORE DANGEROUS TAXI DRIVERS REQUIRE A PERMIT THEY LOOK AT THEIR CRIMINAL RECORD WHILE UBER DRIVERS REQUIRE NOTHING
Spaghet With some sauce lol no its not more dangerous. Quit exaggerating, its just as dangerous as meeting strangers in a grocery store.
killshot kenny Taxis need to be legally accepted to be a taxi driver atleast where I live and Uber doesent require anything but for you to sign up when taxis need to have their criminal record searched, have their location and just be accepted legally Etc. So no a Uber giving you water that barely talks to you isn’t safer at all.
I love learning from Adam. I would really enjoy learning the truth about homelessness.
just go talk to a homeless ppl o.o
and offer them food
He should do a video on homelessness.
Count Orlok This is what he’s doing
Count Orlok yes he should. I know a way to end homelessness. I just need money to start a non profit organization. There are more vacant houses/homes then there are homeless people
I see it now. “How homelessness is ILLEGAL!”
Count Orlok s.p.r.f.i
The hare trigga ya I fuckin reckon thats tru
They made it look like they pushed the guy out of a tall building, but then showed in the same shot that the floor outside the other windows was less than a foot down... just noticed that
RealisticHuman that was a different window
Thank goodness you're here to inform us of that. Otherwise we all would have thought that they actually murdered someone to make this video.
Well, you dont name your account for nothing eh?
Cardin Tran You know he was being sarcastic right?
RealisticHuman ME TOO
adam is such a great actor
like me
P
Please do a homeless episode please!!
they did. it's in the same episode as this clip.
if you watch the full episode on TruTV then he immediately goes on to talk about homelessness
I stayed in an Airbnb for 2 weeks when I went to Japan in '16. The apartment was turned into a hostel. There were like 10 of us in total. My room alone had 6 of us in it (our beds were stacked like cubicles). The day I was leaving, I noticed the power was out. I just assumed there was a black out... nope! I was told that they were actually kicking out the tenant along with the guests. I then found out Airbnb was illegal in Japan at that time (not sure if it still is). I got lucky that I was already leaving but it sucked for the new guests coming in. Oh, and the host did what Adam mentioned. He rented out multiple apartments and turned them all into hostels.
Adam ruins buzzfeed
Don't need Adam for that, they do a great job themselves
They do that everytime they upload.
J M A C does he really need to, they are already ruining themselves
Buzzfeed was ruined from the day it was thought up
Adam ruins cops.
I came here to find out what Airbnb was.
LOL
Mr Videos & Games same lol
Mr Videos & Games same
Mr Videos & Games I did the exact same
same
Adam bouta crash the economy with these
SSM-RIDER-19 economy is already fucked
true
>implying the economy wasn't already fucked before this video dropped
The housing market is a pretty important part of the economy, and Airbnb is doing a lot of damage in that sector. If anything, raising awareness of the problems with how they do business will be good for the economy.
well its called Adam *ruins* every thing for a reason
Another reason why it's terrible for towns: all authenticity is lost. There's no real population left. It's particularly bad in historical European towns. All the people there are tourists plus some people who run the shops but commute every day.
Airnb is so cheap people could use it for housing. They should buy their own carbon monoxide detectors
@@hamsandwichindahouse They die because of overtourism wich make the live too expensive for normal people. When normal Gorcerystores are kicked out by touristshops, where could you buy your daily needs?
Venice has entered the chat...
Don't be an american IT colony
My hometown just banned new vacation rentals because they’re at least 20% of the housing out there now and it’s hollowing out the town
You're not a real tech start-up until your product kills somebody.
*Valve*
Lol there was an airbnb ad before the video
(X) DOUBT
Cynthia Villegas that face though
Press [X] to doubt
X to doubt
X
This and Uber are making me very scared of the future of travel and housing.
Why? Just stop Uber and Airbnb. Make hotels and taxis better, rather than risk the safety of the person. Nothing to be scared of there. The quality of hotels and taxis(or the equivalent) was probably nothing compared to this, 200 years ago. Improving on things is normal - it'll happen naturally, dw. Before you know it, Uber and ABnB will become 'random trends we suddenly started in the 2010s' and most people will forget about them.
Ethan Zeccola Man, it's not like I said 'make hotels and taxis better', or anything. No, absurd. Certainly not my second line. :P
Use your brain and you will be fine,
Wtf are you guys on...never have had an issue with either airbnb or Uber. Taxis suck btw
Yeah, because having more choice is scary.
I stayed at an Airbnb in an one of those illegal airbnb hotel apartment buildings last year and it seemed pretty awesome at first. They had really good AC, nice balcony, a PS3, and then I realized that the sprinklers were about to fall out of the ceiling, and the floors were so dirty that all I had to do was lightly set a paper towel on the ground for it to be covered in dirt and dust. Sure, it was cheap, but I definitely didn’t feel safe. We ended up getting a room at the Omni a block down, which was 3x the price but a much better experience.
Wait so am I the only one who is surprised about the corncob as toilet paper thing
The Klefki Authority It seems so.
I grew up with my great grandmother telling me that all the time
I learned that decades ago.
And thats why they call it the cornhole!
I thought most people read books.
Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Everything
He did that with the FAFSA ad.
Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Everything
I applied for FAFSA and was NOT eligible, Adam Ruins everything is wrong.
Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Everything
Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Adam Ruins Everything
As someone who's been homeless, I hope he does makes one on the subject. Not even the people making laws surrounding homelessness know what they're talking about most of the time - because if they didn't have the money to not be sleeping on the streets, they wouldn't be politicians, would they? Like damn, please do that one.
See the full episode this is an excerpt from. It is all about unreasonable expensive housing in America, and the homeless crisis.
In the full episode he says that the only way to solve homelessness is surpise surpise, GIVE THEM HOMES!
We went to an Airbnb last year and had a leak in the closet of all places. Plus the back yard was a mess...it looked like they'd stored old cars there at one point and there was ruts in the ground and loose nails. We had to make sure our dog didn't step on one. The one my boyfriend used this year had child locks all over the kitchen cabinets. Had more bad experiences than good ones with Airbnbs
When me and my friend's family visited the west coast, the host told us repeatedly to never say anything to the guard outside. When we first arrived we were confused by his instructions, and thought it was okay to ask the guard for basic directions but the host got frightened because of it. Later he asked me several times what exactly I said to the guard. At that point I was pretty sure he kept his Airbnb business away from the landlord.
"Well, everything we know about homelessness is wrong, I can talk about that!"
Straight up loved that line. And I want an episode about homelessness now.
That is precisely what this led into. See the full episode.
The Airbnb I booked months ago canceled my reservation because of carbon monoxide issues, so I guess that validates it.
Or they found a better looking person they you and gave it to them.
paulelunico I dont really think a person would be denied for being ugly. But if they rather had a more common name because they felt unsafe, then yes, possibly. But that doesnt matter. Its a dual contract and safety should come first. If you are somehow intimidating to them, you wouldnt have wanted to sleep there anyway.
Well in AU they tried collecting "carbon tax" the world is so full of rulz gone nuts
@@Predated2 Hope you're a less ignorant person now than you were 3 years ago when you were convinced "having a less common name" was inherently threatening. We all know why you'd think that.
better safe than sorry.
One time I went to an air bnb that had exposed wiring in the shower, didn’t have half the things the listing said it did, and was overall just unsanitary. I quickly got a refund
This is a serious problem in Amsterdam, a friend of mine had his rent tripled because the landlord decided he could use potential Airbnb profits to calculate the value of his apartments. Slowly but surely, all natives are pushed out of the city centre until it's just one big Airbnb.
rented on airbnb, they had spiders, rats, etc. not to mention it was listed as a whole house and when i got there the guy and his gf were living there. also there was no electricity in the bathroom or bedroom.
Did you read reviews of the place?
you could just put a lock on the basement door?
candiedscroll 30 You could of bought a lock.
Bonnie Gomez - You realized that’s not allowed on the platform. You should have called them and they would either put you in a new Airbnb or a hotel. All you need to do is provide proof of the issue.
Just because you don’t know how to use the platform doesn’t make it bad.
I worked for airbnb, the second you see that, you call them, and they give you a full refund, find you a new place to stay, pay for it themselves, and if they can't find you a place right away they will literally put you in a hotel for free.
Adam was probably the most popular kid in school.
Prince Poochalind nah, people probably thought he was annoying
Gezi5 the joke
You’re head
@@MrHappySadSir **your
- punctuation & spelling
- your head
Gezi5 r/woosh
Yeah and he was the only male cheerleader
Used to be a manager at an Air BnB, it's mostly true. My bosses never made or asked me to check anything, just to clean and make sure everything looked good and clean. I did eventually check everything on my own and everything was old, told my boss and she replaced everything. But they never asked me to check anything nor did they check anything themselves. There were a lot of shady people there, and I had to bring a knife and pepper spray to work because of these ppl.
Edit: I spelled manager wrong lmao
Am I the only one who had no idea what airbnb was before this video?
Adams hair is fabulous. I'm just saying that right now.
As in, gay?
What? No,just because he has nice hair doesn't mean he is gay. I'm just saying it's fabulous.
Oh, I thought you meant fabulous as in "gay" l0l
Oh! No I just mean I like his hair a lot. But thanks for letting me clear that up!
You made me realize how perfect his hair is...
I've used AirBNB and VRBO for years. I love it. Generally though, I only rent whole apartments. When you rent rooms, you have very mixed results. Some people clearly just want your money and don't like you in their space, and others are quite welcoming. I frequently need to work while traveling, and I find that virtually every hotel (even the nice ones) has a really horrible internet connection. These apartments almost always have some great residential internet connection that works great, and I love living in an actual neighborhood when I travel instead of a hotel. Check in/outs have always been super smooth and uneventful. My favorite places are where the owner lives there but is traveling for some time and rents their place out while they are gone.
My dad was always good at liability. He always told me things about the fine print. He also thought me how to drive and made it my responsibility to drive correctly. Because if there’s an accident, you don’t want to be liable because you made one small move. So many people on the road don’t realize how they put themselves to blame for the accident 100% of the time
with airbnb you always feel like an intruder in someone else's property so if you're a polite person you might have a hard time enjoying your time as much as you would do in a hotel.
Not if you rent a whole house.
OstseeLiebe true
That's true, but it has nothing to do with safety. That's the deal. Anyone signing up for it should know it beforehand and be ok with it. Otherwise just don't go.
@@ktmcgoogle7927 you have to clean the house. Hotels have cleaning service
If you have a squatter why can't you just call the police and say there's an intruder on you're property
Blu BoX in some states if you allow someone to stay in your house for more than 30 days, you can't legally throw him/her out.
There isn't.
Because the laws are usually made to protect tenants
In the example I read, the guest had leased the property for 44 days for an "extended business trip". After you have resided in a property for more than 30 days, you're legally considered a tenant and have rights. They're no longer an intruder, they're your tenant. The guys who did this, a pair of brothers, have perfected this technique and know their rights. The property owner couldn't call the police because they weren't doing anything (technically) illegal. Also, Airbnb didn't help as they did very little to back her up and were super slow with responding to her emails and phone calls. They made sure she was paid for the entire 44 days, but did nothing to help her get rid of her unwanted tenants beyond that time. She had to eventually hire a lawyer and go through the entire eviction process just as if they were renting an apartment.
The moral of this story: if you're renting out your place on Airbnb, don't rent for longer than 30 days.
In some states, if a person is invited or allowed in the home, and has as little as a change of clothes in the home they may be considered a resident.
I used Airbnb for a Japan stay, man it was awesome! Japanese are the most hospitable hosts I've ever stayed with :)
Koss Wilki Agreed, I'm planning to go to Tokyo next year and you could easily find rooms to rent for like a month that costs the same as a hotel room for maybe four days or so
Air BNB for Japan is 100% illegal
@@Oban2006 americans dont care. They just want to support american companies.
I've used AirBNB 1 each for Tokyo and Seoul mainly because it was cheaper than hotels. But hotels are better as you can leave your luggage there and they'll make your bed everyday. There are also cases where host would install cameras to record you
My grandmother rents out vacation homes and there's a lot of paperwork, laws, and insurance she has to deal with. I've heard her make some of these complaints about AirBnB, how they basically bypass every regulation about renting that people doing it legit have to deal with, and for a lower price. (Since they don't have pay insurance on anything.)
What is the point of this series it's interesting but there is something wrong with literally everything!!! It's just ruining all things for me
So would you say that Adam Ruins Everything is... ruining everything?
😂😂😂😂😂
That's its purpose
Perhaps you should try to change some of the awfulness you see in the world around you rather than just complain when somebody points it out.
he usually gives a solution at the end but you have to watch the whole episode
As if the hotel industry is any better. When I was traveling I remember paying $441 for a single room in the middle of South fucking Dakota.
GunQuickie they'res deal online for cheaper hotels
Lmao so? It's your fault if you can't find a decent deal, and they can charge how much they want, the point of this video is what a lot of Air BNB is allowing is straight-up: ILLEGAL. Your hotel overcharging you isn't illegal, it's just you getting a bad deal.
TheRealBitterbub You do realise that what is legal or illegal isn't a commandment imposed from above? The society decides the constituents of these (very fluid) terms
pragya chamoli Yes, I realize that. Despite how biased some American laws are, the ones they pointed out were absolutely relevant, and reasonable. Like checking to make sure a home advertised on Air BNB is safe (as they point out in the video). Getting a rotten price deal is absolutely legal and relevant, as long as the seller doesn't do something preposterous, like change the price from the original listing, or charge you more than you were initially quoted. The seller has the right to charge you what they want. To charge obscenely high isn't illegal, but it's very unethical.
Then why do the same people who want these regs in place and strengthen them turn around and then impose rent controls, subsidized housing, protection of squatters etc. to force homeowners to lower prices and less control over their own property?
Is no one gonna talk about basket lady
I dont know man, seems like a real...... basket case u.u
"Was there no emergency yoga retreat?"
Now that was a work of art(unlike whatever that dude was putting on his walls)
idk why you guys removed comments and the like bar with the FASFA video, you didn't actually say anything wrong or controversial but you made people think it was by doing that.
yea felt like that too ..idk anything about fafsa but that move made me think they were hiding soomething
xor sama I can tell you as someone using FASFA to pay for my community college AND on workstudy that it's definitely something everybody should apply for, worse thing that happens is that you don't get it.
I haven't done a loan with them, but I know government loans have a low interest rate and a maximum limit so you can't get fucked over (that much).
It was an obvious undisclosed sponsored ad, that's why. The video had nothing to do with ruining anything and was just a long bullshit scripted ad complete with a URL in the description. Backlash is always fierce when we're treated like children.
Tiki Omzee i see thats good then^^
I've nothing against FAFSA btw, nor doubt they were genuinely trying to help. The issue is they could've disclosed that fact and explained it was intended as positive information rather than disguising it as a series format we all enjoy. The result is viewers feel they're being played, dislike the video, and makes the content look bad when that's not necessarily true.
There is an airbnb in my neighborhood and every single time someone rents the place the cops are called due to noise complaints. This company and the owners should be held responsible for this crap.
I lived in a condo in Thailand that expressly forbid AirBNB and similar services in its bylaws. A big reason for this was security: you had to scan your thumb to enter the building, you needed a key card registered to your name to use the elevator (which only let you to your floor), and you needed to enter a code on a keypad to enter your unit. Despite these bylaws, the scum of the earth still managed to AirBNB some of the units, making silicone imprints of their thumbs for guests. It was like living in a hotel. Then, a string of robberies occurred and it was discovered that the thief used a discarded silicone imprint to get in. That’s when security started to clamp down on it. I remember contacting AirBNB about it and they said something to the effect of not getting involved because they don’t enforce local laws or rules with their hosts. They really are just an app connecting people who need a room with people who have property.
"I'm not a criminal, I'm an artist" *murders man 30 seconds later*
Adam physically can't lose. If you like his show, he wins, if you don't it furthers his show "Adam Ruins Everything" and how everyone hates him.
Baconeater5000 Craddock winning isn’t physics
I like that Mental Floss was cited (0:18)
TH-cam's ad selection is impeccable. You'll never guess what company was advertised before this video for me...
I love Adam Ruins Everything.
watching this from an airbnb lol
you get what you pay for: and it is worth it
AgusStalking Your point is entirely irrelevant to the video as a whole. And Airbnb is cheap as all fuck compared to any decent resort/hotel.
so, cheap af "hotel" for cheap af service.
Sometimes.
Erik. I mean airbnb is worth the money BECAUSE it is so cheap.
Calm down.
AgusStalking That's not the pint Adam was making. He was saying that even though most of the time airbnb is a good deal, you are potentially sacrificing your safety.
Very true about discriminating based on your race on your Creed. My friend whose Arab experience cancellations many times. I personally don't have a picture attached to my Airbnb account.
But arabs don't want you in their spaces, isn't that racist too
People have the right to choose. Thats called preference.
When you buy Pepsi, you discriminated against Coca Cola.
@@mstrikesback168You're literally defending racial discrimination and you think you're the rational one here. People aren't objects.
I'm surprised it is only 16%
I live in the Outer Banks - a vacation hot spot. The upstairs unit is an Air BNB, and rent everywhere is super expensive if you can even find somewhere to rent. Adam is completely right.
My dad and I run an Airbnb on the beach and we’ve had thousands of guests over the years. The worst “incident” we’ve had is someone stole all of our towels. Usually the city taxes us about 4,000 dollars a year just to keep our Airbnb. NOT ONCE have we had a health inspection or anything close to it conducted on our Airbnb. (of course we still keep it 100% sanitary) All we had to do to open our Airbnb was fill out some paperwork.
Swedish Doggy How much money did you guys make from it? I’m interested in starting an AirBnB as well.
CitrusEscape we make about 16,000 a year without the 4,000 tax. We charge 80 for one person and 90 for two or more plus 20 for any pets brought.
@@ayymie355 What city is that ?
AsmodianLeader Pensacola Florida
Same prices and such but in the Bay Area in CA, we clean everything and make sure our gas furnace and Carbon monoxide monitor is working. Best part is that it has a separate door and closed interior so we don’t interact with each other and privacy but we find more and more people stealing towels. Mostly nice people but you get those who stay the night, complain about a lot of things, and want a refund to stay the night free. That’s why we don’t have single night visits and rather a span of days so we know there’s nothing shady or such going on
We're having this problem here in Vancouver. House owners just rent their places on Airbnb. Idk if the city has done anything but I tell you finding place to rent here that's affordable.. is getting hard.
Wait, one hour ago.... why was this reuploaded? I saw this like a couple days ago.
was looking for this comment, weird that you're almost the only one talking about this.
yeah but this is a longer version, I skipped half way through and didn't remember it.
I guess this is the full version, last one get cutted.
Short-term rentals are causing a severe housing shortage where I live. A large percentage (close to 35%) of all home purchases right now are by investors looking to use them as short-term rentals. That doesn’t even factor in the number of apartments leased by companies looking to use them as short-term rentals. Property values are out of control and rents have become unaffordable, increasing by 30-40% each year.
Even before I knew about how AirBnB was destroying affordability, though, I wouldn’t stay in one. I’ve heard horror stories from friends about how they were given weird, overly restrictive lists of rules they had to follow, or how they were accused of causing damage to their rental, with no way to prove something wasn’t damaged by them.
I’ve only stayed in one once, when a relative rented one for a week. It was listed as sleeping 17 in six bedrooms. Well, one of the "bedrooms" was the garage with a futon in it, and another "bedroom" was a hallway with two bunk beds in it. Two of the bedrooms had one king-sized bed each, although the listing said the rooms slept four each. Where was the other bed? In both bedrooms, the other bed was a double bed in the walk-in closet. There was ONE normal bedroom that had a king-sized bed and a twin daybed thing. The final "bedroom" wasn’t a real bedroom but actually a small home office that was off the kitchen. I was lucky enough to get the garage as my room; everyone else was having to share rooms or have people walking through their room to get to where the people were sleeping. It was awful. Never again. I’ll pay for a hotel, thanks.
Why are the comments disabled on their last video about FAFSA?
The liberal agenda.
That's a really good question that they'll never answer.
probably because they know anything sponsored / supported will get hate regardless?
It was a government sponsored video
That is a very good question. One that needs an answer.
Now I want to hear what Adam has to say about the homeless
How the fuck does Adam get his hair like that?!
Lots of semen.
Anne Frank o
guess you give him the hand job
He has mentioned in a video before his body is made up of 33% hair gel or somthing like that, so I assume one truck load of gel a day.
Probably a shit ton of hairspray, he is probably the cause for Global Warming now that I think about it.
I never even wanted to rent an Airbnb to begin with, let alone this video reaffirmed my reasonings for not wanting to do so!
Airbnb is ruining Los Angeles. Rentals are getting crazy expensive.
Its not AirBNB, its the fact you have millions of ILLEGAL aliens and healthy people leeching off of the taxpayers, who live off of government housing assitance, welfare and other socialists services. If you stopped ILLEGAL immigration and stopped giving away freebies to heallthy people who dont want to work, all those peole would either go back to their home countries or scatter away to places with cheaper rent.
JohnnyBoyCali except illegals actually pay taxes - just without any of the benefits of being a standard citizen - and in most cases you can't even get on welfare without having a job. And white citizens are welfare's primary recipients. What are you smoking?
Most Illiegal Aliens do have jobs, most of them take the most lower-end, hectic jobs with shite pay. But they do work their asses off nontheless.
JohnnyBoyCali Nope. Gentrification is making LA really expensive. Landlords are kicking out existing residents and hiking up rents to make rooms for hipsters with money. Also we have a lot of modern apartment complexes being built to attract people with higher income which means higher rent. Since so many people want to live here, rent is increasing to increase profits for landlords. As someone who was born and raised in LA, yes I wish the new coming hipsters would scatter back to where they came from.
Los Angeles is ruining Los Angeles.
Why is viewing ratings and comments disabled on the FASFA video?
It does feel very specifically a list of things that Hotel Chains would like you to believe and\or Govs that are concerned about liability. Like Leasing apartments for rental on AirBnB driving up property prices, well what about speculative investment from overseas investors? happened a lot in the property bubble. We don't need the Nanny state to hold our hand for everything, you need to be a smart consumer.
The mega corporations of the world applaud your promotion of the idea that the one and only recourse any person should ever take for any of their illegal and immoral policies is not to purchase or do business with them. They think it's great if anyone they rip off or lie to believes the best solution is just to shop elsewhere. You're helping the corporate thieves and dishonest business PR department by promoting their lies quite nicely. The more people like you repeating their PR the more money they can make from people like you. Presumably, you're just a dup and believe what you write.
By the way. . . They probably own the competition so voting with your dollar by shopping at another store is still just voting with your dollar for their dishonesty.
?
Because a lot of his "facts" were unfounded and made up.
Greg Grady What facts?
Damn, people are so salty, I never noticed how much people hated Adam so much. Guess they can't handle facts
they also can't handle not watching him
nothing better to do i suppose...
Yup, Adam "ruins" them
Stupid Commenter dude remember when college humor was actualy funny
This video wasn't supposed to be funny, and yes, I remember
The problem is more, some of these aren't facts, the cat one for instance was mainly opinion and the facts in it are heavily disputed.
I wish he would talk about their system of making the renter review the property before getting reviewed by the host. I'm willing to be that that it leads people to give higher reviews than they normally would out of concern they'll get bad reviews and be unable to rent again.
Wow, im not watching an ad today???
You are, it's from the hotel industry.
@Adam Exactly.
we found the airbnb representative guys
I mean, if you had gotten to the point that your were expecting one, then should you really be watching?
Skier 1228 Not really tho, only know airbnb from TV, but the last video was also sponsored and here you can clearly see who's profiting from this. Just like all these uber bashing video, and then you find out their dad's taxi driver
This is the first time I heard of airbnb. Think I'll use it now, thanks.
murder =/= illegally renting a home
Ricardo Hernandez
are you sure?
there is ≠
>///
but they are still crimes which is the point dumbass
@@agirlwithdreams15 So was being gay until relatively recently, and still is in some parts of the world.
Love Adam Ruins Everything! Keep up the good work!
who's watching without socks? ;)
haha actually
heared before
meee :P
lost faith in our youth haha
lol
As if a budget hotel is any cheaper, safer, or nicer.
don't know how things are with airbnb in US, but in europe airbnb is, for me, a much better option than a hotel. you can get a whole apartment for a fraction of the price of a hotel room with complete privacy and some of these apartments are incredibly luxurious for an affordable price. also in EU countries you have to pass certain standards to be able to rent out apartments legally. so for example, in the place where i am from (a touristic mediterranean town) in august you can rent a room in a 5-star hotel for 1000€ next to the city center or you can rent a fully renovated 1 bedroom luxury apartment in a historic building for 120€ inside the historic center. plus the market in renting for tourism is so competitive that none of these guys can afford bad ratings.
youtube is the best thing happened on internet, Adam videos are the best thing happened on youtube.
why are comments disabled for fafsa
* Puts tinfoil hat on *
+Anonymous -- It was a Public Service Announcement (PSA). Not one of his normal rants.
FASTFA!
I think people were commenting too much about how the girl in it is black.
LazerFrazer aluminum is actually neurotoxic lol. i mean not if you put it on your head but if you ingest it (drinking from cans is fine though) or breath in the fumes for creating it or something. its really bad for the environment to make so you should recycle your aluminum foil after balling it. Also cellphone radiation increasees longevity in rats
Airbnb in The Bay Area is just as expensive or sometimes even more expensive than a nice hotel room sometimes. My husband and I were looking into it recently and they add in a cleaning fee, occupancy fee and taxes and it ends up being an extra $100.
Well, where do I go if I don't wanna pay $500 for a hotel room if I wanna go to ultra music festival?
he's not saying never use it. just pointing out problems
Be live me and live within 30 mins of nyc
True. Hotels brought this on themselves because of no competition. Still I don't quite like the idea actually.
***** well, afaik ultra doesn't really have any camping spots :p
The irony is that I had an Air BnB ad before this video
I feel like most of these hazards can be avoided by just choosing hosts with high ratings
Not really. I used to have neighbours two doors down who had a 5 star rating on AirBnB. The thing is their guests were often very inconsiderate of the neighbours. They don't live there, they don't care that I had to be at work at 06:45. I asked them nicely once. The second day I went on AirBnB, made screenshots of my neighbours' ad and sent them to the estate corporation they rent from. Yeah turns out they do enforce their 24 hour eviction clause for subletting.
An elderly man lives there now, with his son and daughter inlaw who take care of him. He's a very nice man. Perfect neighbour.
You should have seen the argument between the guests and the original tenant though. It was insane.
@@fermitupoupon1754 That's a really nice username- Fermitu Poupon
I could give a shit about other people’s neighbors while staying in an Airbnb. Not my problem.
@@yelraf10 That was their entire point.
**gasp** "WAS THERE NO EMERGENCY YOGURT RETREAT????" 😂😂😂
It was the regulations on housing and hotels that created the need for Airbnb...
You idiots don't give two fucks when regulations raise the price of housing 25%, then complain when some dares to assert their property rights that may raise property costs 5%.
Just say, "I hate property rights. The state owns everything."
It is the cycle of bureaucracy. Landlords and hotels doing the kind of stuff that Airbnb is doing created the need for regulations on housing and hotels.
1. Shitty practices of a few bad people/companies cause the population to demand regulation.
2. Regulation creates a need for a new type of business that avoids the regulations.
3. See step 1.
4. People start to realize regulations don't make services better. Competition does. They eventually start to demand deregulations.
5. ???
6. PROFIT
bingo
Could you elaborate on how regulations created the need for Airbnb in the first place?
WHAT A TIME to have this in Recommended!
This video sponsored by Hilton
I wonder when Taxi companies will pay College humour to do a piece on the DANGERS of uber haha. They'l even do an episode on why cars are bad for you if the horse-drawn carriage industry paid them enough. Pathetic
the ads... they are getting smarter..
Uber is a pretty shady company for the simple reason that they take an enormous cut from their drivers while leaving them all the responsibilities of gas and maintenance. Not to mention you have to incur additional insurance for using your car as a taxi, or you could get kicked off your policy entirely. A pretty raw deal for most involved.
It actually sponsored by AirBnb. I saw an Airbnb commercial before the video.
Solo Lay that's not how the ads work, they are placed randomly by TH-cam.
I actually have no idea what Airbnb is
CJ Nicosia same
same i scearched it up on u tube and google
same
CJ Nicosia Air bed and breakfast .
A place were you can rent a room in a privat home . Mostly one room with a bathroom and free breakfast.
It's okay f#*% Airbnb
I've only had one experience with Airbnb but it was wonderful. The house was safe and clean, I'd definitely rent it again
I thought he was putting on a KKK hat 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Me too! 😂
M1keyAjax lol
For a split second
M1keyAjax same lol
Icebergspaz same! LMAO
If someone refused to leave my house I will kick his house not hire a lawyer.
There HAS to be a creative way to get them to leave before needing a lawyer. Turn off heat, water, and fuse box to room? Change the locks or lock them in until they freak out? Play Celine Dion non-stop? Remove the furniture and curtains. Trash their luggage, or spill bleach on it.
@@TheHergeea you would think, but those tactics are actually against the law in most places. Crazy but the owner has to jump through a lot of hoops or runs the risk of big fines and even jail time.
"had to hire an expensive lawyer" anyone who has even a remotely close idea of how evictions work know you don't need an expensive lawyer
Last eviction lawyer i worked with did it all for $700...cheapest lawyer ever....
Can you not just call the police and show them that you own the house?
@@adamlarus1 it varies by state, so I can only speak to the state that I live in, but in my state if they've been in your house for 28 days or more then they have residency, which means you have to take them through a formal eviction process
@@smolenskkid Interesting. I do not know how it his here.
yeah well airbnb is all around the world. where i'm from, eviction is not an easy task.
I have a feeling that the art on the wall at 1:43 is some of the same eye art from “Adam ruins the fine art market” video.
It's okay if you got kicked out Adam. You have magic TV powers.
Iowa Class he said in another video that his contract says he can only use them for learning purposes