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    9
    May
    2013
    1:44pm, EDT

    TODAY Chat: Advice for homebuyers and sellers

    By Herb Weisbaum, TODAY contributor

    Ilyce Glink

    It’s a seller’s market in many parts of the country right now. That’s a big change from the past six or seven years. With buyers competing for the same property, home prices are going up. It’s a good thing mortgage interest rates are at historic lows.

    “If you want to get the home of your dreams, you need to be really serious,” advises real estate expert Ilyce Glink, author of the book Buy, Close, Move In. “You've got to get pre-approved, not pre-qualified for your purchase. You have to know what you want and how much you feel comfortable spending (it may be less than what the bank suggests). If you know what you want and how much you want to spend, and you've spent a lot of time in your neighborhood of choice, when the right property comes up, you can pounce.”

    During a TODAY Money web chat on Wednesday, Glink, shared some great advice.

    TODAY: What do you say to all of the people who still find themselves underwater? Will they ever get back to the plus side again and have some equity in their home?

    Ilyce Glink: We're seeing tens of thousands of Americans get back to positive equity every month, as home prices rise. In some places, like Georgia, about 40 percent of all homeowners are underwater. But the national average is now 20 to 23 percent.

    Those who bought in 2005 to 2007 might not go positive for the next 10 years, if they were in the hardest hit areas, but most other people will or they will do short sales and have the debt be forgiven.

    We will get most of America right-side up again and probably by 2015.

    TODAY: What’s the biggest mistake buyers make?

    Ilyce Glink: Buyers often make the mistake of buying in the wrong location. The think they can live somewhere, but don't really take the time to thoroughly investigate the neighborhood. They don't walk by the school or visit local stores or dining establishments.

    They might check out the school district for the age their kids are today, but not the schools they'd go into 5 years from now.

    And, speaking of the future, buyers often forget that they're supposed to live in this house for 5 to 10 years – they think they'll flip it in 24 months and triple their money. NOT!

    TODAY: And what’s the biggest mistake sellers make?

    Ilyce Glink: Most folks think that their home is worth much more than it is – even if it is in great shape. It can really get in the way of selling your home.

    When I tell people that homes values are rolled back to where they were in 2003, a full 10 years ago, they don't fully comprehend what that means. But think back. Your home was probably worth 20% less than it is today – or even less.

    Read the rest of the Q & A below:

     

     

    2 comments

    Um.. Rocky.. this article is about Real Estate. Where the mindless buy as much house as they can afford and then don't have anything left for when they have to make repairs.

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  • 1
    May
    2013
    11:42am, EDT

    Company ink: agents get 15% raise for corporate tattoos

    "We call it brand ambassadorship," said Anthony Lolli, owner and CEO of Rapid Realty, a New York based real estate firm that encourages employees to get a tattoo of the company's logo. In exchange for the tattoo, employees receive a 15 percent commission increase for life. NBC's Joelle Garguilo reports.

    By Amy Langfield, TODAY contributor

    How far would you go for a raise?

    Inking a deal with Rapid Realty has a more permanent feel now that the New York City-based brokerage is giving a 15 percent raise to its workers who get a tattoo of the company’s logo.

    So far, 40 agents are inked and more are lining up, Anthony Lolli, the CEO of Rapid Realty told NBC News.

    One new agent got the tattoo after only a week working for Rapid Realty.

    But isn’t that crazy?

    “I don’t think so,” Lolli said. “Some people fall in love with the opportunity. They fall in love with the brand.”

    It’s actually pretty conservative compared to other people who have tattooed company logos on their person, such as the man who tattooed the web address of a porn site on his face or the woman who auctioned the space on her forehead for $10,000.

    Rapid Realty

    Agents of Rapid Realty in New York City are eligible for a 15 percent increase in commission if they get a tattoo of the company logo.

    But at Rapid Realty, there are no regrets yet and all 40 inked employees are still with the company, Lolli said. Some early adopters are even making plans to touch up their colors. 

    The tattoos can be any size anywhere on the agent’s body to qualify for the bonus. They’re getting the tattoos anywhere they like: on their thighs, biceps, ankles, wrist, behind the ear and elsewhere, Lolli said. Some have only the RR logo, while others have also spelled out Rapid Realty. “They’re allowed to customize it,” he said.

    Since all of Rapid Realty’s 1,100 agents work on commission, the 15 percent boost kicks in each time they complete a deal. Most agents start at a 25 percent commission so a company tattoo will bump them to the 40 percent bracket. Some agents were already maxed out at the 40 percent rate, but still got tattoos even though there was no extra pay in the deal, Lolli said.

    About two years ago, Rapid Realty agent Adam Altman was the first to make the commitment after he closed a deal for a tattoo parlor in Bushwick, Brooklyn. A video on the company website documents the event, as the bespeckled, bearded agent adds the stylized RR logo to his existing tattoo collection. He already had tattoos on his arms, legs, back and mouth.

    “The company’s been good to me. I don’t see myself going anywhere. If I have it on, it’s gonna force me to keep going and working harder, cuz you know I have that logo on, you know you’re not going to give up. It’s there for life,” Altman says in the video .“Rapid for life.Yo.”

    So far, Lolli himself isn’t inked, but is grateful for his agents’ devotion. “It’s very humbling. I have an attitude of gratitude,” he said.

    He’s considering getting a tattoo when his company hits a big benchmark of 100 offices. Currently Rapid Realty has franchises in New York City, Boston, Philadelphia, Long Island and New Jersey. But with 62 locations, he has some time to consider where he wants his tattoo for the 100th.

    161 comments

    Corporate whore much?

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  • 3
    Apr
    2013
    12:08pm, EDT

    Inside the homes of Jon Bon Jovi, Cheryl Tiegs, Larry David

    TODAY real estate contributor Barbara Corcoran provides a sneak peek inside some of the celebrity homes for sale across the country, including Larry David's 1950s mansion in California and Cheryl Tiegs' Bel Air estate.

    By Barbara Corcoran, TODAY real estate contributor

    This week in celebrity real estate, Jon Bon Jovi lists his Soho penthouse for $42 million and Larry David puts his Pacific Palisades mansion on the market for $14.999 million.

    Jon Bon Jovi
    New York penthouse - $42 million

    Jon Bon Jovi has listed his Soho penthouse for $42 million, almost double the price of the next-highest priced home in the New York neighborhood. The 7,500-square-foot home is in a pre-war, landmark duplex condo in one of Manhattan’s hippest neighborhoods. The home has five bedrooms and 5.5 baths and features an impressive foyer, dining area and a modern chef’s kitchen. The penthouse also has 11-foot ceilings and three landscaped terraces.

    Larry David
    Pacific Palisades, Calif., home - $14.999 million

    “Seinfeld” co-creator Larry David has put his 1950s Pacific Palisades mansion on the market for $14.999 million. The seven-bedroom, 10-bath home is located on nearly an acre of land overlooking the Pacific Ocean. This Tudor-style home resembles something out of the English countryside, with a gated entrance, a long cobblestone pathway and a beautiful pool and guest house out back. The inside features beamed ceilings, wood and tile floors and brick and stone fireplaces.

    Cheryl Tiegs
    Bel Air, Calif., home - $12 million

    Supermodel Cheryl Tiegs has put her Balinese-style home in the Los Angeles community of Bel Air on the market for $12 million. Tiegs has owned the home for 17 years and hired “million dollar decorator” Martyn Lawrence Bullard to do the décor. The five-bedroom, 4.5 bath home features a main living area with dark wood floors, a vaulted ceiling and a kitchen with a farmer’s sink and butcher block island. Located on nearly an acre and a half, the kidney-shaped pool, fountains and lush plantings make this property feel like a tropical getaway in the middle of Los Angeles.

    Joel Schumacher
    Carpinteria, Calif. - $7.25 million

    Legendary film director Joel Schumacher, best known for the 1980s classic “St. Elmo’s Fire” and a trio of “Batman” movies, has his California retreat on the block for $7.25 million. This five-bedroom, 4.5 bath home about an hour and a half north of Los Angeles is all about privacy. The three-bedroom main house and secluded guest house are tucked away on five lush acres overlooking the surrounding hillsides and with distant views of the Pacific Ocean. Designed by Don Nulty and built in 2000, the house is pleasantly rustic and features Diego Rivera-style murals in the entrance hall.

    10 comments

    What the big deal? ... these people make a lot of money ..they deserve to spend it anyway they want! High price homes bring in big tax dollars, employ lots of help, generating income for a broad spectrum of the economy ... Thats what trickle down economic is all about ... Each of us dream of living …

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  • 13
    Mar
    2013
    11:52am, EDT

    Tommy Lee Jones puts Florida ranch on the market

    TODAY real estate contributor Barbara Corcoran provides a sneak peek into some of the celebrity homes that are on sale across the country, including Tommy Lee Jones' Florida ranch and David Hasselhoff's gated mansion in Encino, Calif.

    By Barbara Corcoran, TODAY contributor

    This week in celebrity real estate, Mary Louise Parker puts her Greenwich Village duplex on the market for a third time and Tommy Lee Jones lists his 50-acre polo ranch in Palm Beach, Fla.

    Tommy Lee Jones
    Wellington, Fla.: $26.75 million

    Zillow

    Tommy Lee Jones' 50-acre polo ranch in Palm Springs boasts an 11,000-square-foot home.

    Oscar-winning actor Tommy Lee Jones has put his 50-acre polo ranch on the market for $26.75 million. The ranch is next door to the International Polo Club of Palm Beach and down the street from the location of the winter equestrian festival. The grounds are the real draw for this property, as they include a regulation-size polo field, miles of horse trails, and two barns with a total of 48 stalls.

    Jones created the ranch -- an 11,000-square-foot home that includes four bedrooms and two baths -- by combining two parcels purchased in 2002 for $4.62 million.

    The veteran actor may be giving up his Florida ranch but not the sport – he’s apparently selling because he spends more time playing polo on an estate in San Saba, Texas, and in California.

    Joe Don Rooney
    Brentwood, Tenn.: $1.68 million

    Zillow

    Rascal Flats guitarist Joe Don Rooney's Tennessee mansion is on the market for $1.68 million.

    Rascal Flats guitarist Joe Don Rooney's Brentwood, Tenn., home is a sprawling 7,900-square-foot mansion that comes with four bedrooms, six baths, a fully equipped home recording studio, an elevator and an in-house beauty salon.

    The interior is all brown and cream with soaring ceilings and lots of dramatic curtains. Also dramatic is a two-story entryway with French doors, wrought iron railings and gleaming wood floors. The open living and dining room has a floor-to-ceiling stone fireplace. The closets in the master bedroom are a clothes lover’s dream.

    Outside is a beautiful, formal pool with a waterfall.

    Mary Louise Parker
    Greenwich Village duplex: $6.99 million 

    Trulia

    Mary Louise Parker's 10-room duplex in Greenwich Village in lower Manhattan is on the market for the third time this year.

    Mary Louise Parker must be hoping the third time’s the charm – her 10-room Greenwich Village duplex has just hit the market for the third time in the past year. She’s now asking $6.99 million, down from her original asking price of $7.25 million a year ago.

    The 3,000-square-foot co-op has five big bedrooms, 4.5 baths and four exposures in a popular pre-war building. The rooms are spacious and well-lit, with beamed ceilings, arched doors and 26 windows. 

    The living / dining area has a wood-burning fireplace. The eat-in kitchen is compact but comes with a Wolf range and Sub-Zero refrigerator. The children’s room has a whimsical wall mural and wacky puppet theater.

    David Hasselhoff
    Encino, Calif.: $3.795 million

    Trulia

    David Hasselhoff is asking $3.795 million for this colonial mansion, which includes two guest cottages, a swimming pool and a tennis court.

    David Hasselhoff bought this Encino home back in 1996 for $1.98 million. Today he's asking $3.795 million for the colonial mansion about 30 miles northeast of Malibu.  

    The five bedroom, 5.5 bath home home is 8,900 square feet. There are two guest houses on the 1.5 acre property, which also includes a swimming pool and spa with a waterfall, a giant exercise room and a tennis court. This home has been on and off the market, and there is a pending offer in now.

     

     

     

    9 comments

    I am just mystified at the money these goofballs have!

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  • 1
    Feb
    2013
    6:45pm, EST

    Touchdown! 10 man caves perfect for watching the Super Bowl

    By Erika Riggs, Zillow

    With tickets to the Super Bowl hitting the $3,000 mark, staying home may make a bit more financial sense. But choosing to watch the big game on the small screen doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll be missing out — especially if you’re catching the game from a man-cave worthy space.

    Barn
    3289 Cr #121 Overton, Texas
    For sale: $925,000

    Zillow

    Head out to the barn to watch the big game. The rustic space is filled with eclectic details, including a sign proclaiming the man cave as “Glenn’s Barn.” The Overton home was custom-built and has four bedrooms and four bathrooms on a 3,292-square-foot floor plan.

    Scream for ice cream
    Address undisclosed, Camden, Maine
    For sale: $4.95 million 

    Zillow

    Prefer ice cream to chips and dip? Catch the big game from the counter of a diner, with soda fountain pull, in this Camden home. The Maine home also includes a four-lane bowling alley and arcade, not to mention home theater and salon. Measuring 16,443 square feet, the home perches on 13 acres above Penobscot Bay.

    Miami man cave
    15770 SW 216th St, Miami
    For sale: $3.299 million

    Zillow

    Whip up some snacks in the gourmet kitchen upstairs, then head down to the man cave, where jerseys and memorabilia give homage to several sports teams. A pool table, bar, overstuffed leather furniture and flat-screen TV round out the rest of the room.

    Trophy room
    28009 N 90th Way, Scottsdale, Ariz.
    For sale: $7.725 million

    Zillow

    Sidle up to the bar in this Scottsdale home. The 3,000-square-foot game room has space for all of your Super Bowl guests, as well as room to display your hunting trophies. The 15,395-square-foot mansion in North Scottsdale also has a movie theater that seats 10, five fireplaces, a putting green, pool, barbecue and smoker.

    Place to party
    330 S Mapleton Dr, Los Angeles
    For sale: $26 million

    Zillow

    You can cheer at the top of your lungs in this party space; it’s detached from the main home. Featuring enormous fish tanks, arcade games and a dance area, the home could host a Super Bowl party to top all parties. Five minutes from Rodeo Drive, the Westwood mansion is 27,816 square feet of over-the-top amenities.

    Indoor/outdoor cave
    17804 Willow Lake Dr, Odessa, Fla.
    For sale: $1.15 million

    Zillow

    Enjoy the game indoors or out: The entertainment room in this home is on ground level with French doors opening out to a patio seating area with an outdoor grill and fire pit. The Odessa home is over 6,000 square feet with four bedrooms and 3.5 baths.

    Amazing arcade
    25085 Ashley Ridge Rd, Hidden Hills, Calif.
    For sale: $8.195 million

    Zillow

    No need to save your quarters for the arcade; this Hidden Hills traditional has an entire room filled with  arcade games. Next door, a full bar area and pool table provide even more man-cave space. Outside, master your swing on the home’s putting green.

    What stays in Vegas
    47 Soaring Bird Ct, Las Vegas
    For sale: $2.999 million

    Zillow

    Follow the action with not one, but two flat-screen TVs in a classy entertainment space with full bar and pool table. This Las Vegas home is in a coveted neighborhood but still a short distance from the lights of the strip.

    Marked-down man cave
    10608 Marine View Dr, Mukilteo, Wash.
    For sale: $2.1 million

    Zillow

    A man cave for a discount! This home overlooking Seattle's Puget Sound is currently being sold as a short sale. Last sold in 2007 for $3.8 million, the 9,163-square-foot house has 5 bedrooms, 6.5 baths and “all the other luxury items one would expect in a modern luxury home.”

    Great garage
    6921 W Emile Zola Ave, Peoria, Ariz.
    For sale: $415,000

    Zillow

    No grease stains here. This sparkling-clean garage has been transformed into a man-cave workshop complete with a TV to catch highlights of the game. The rest of the Peoria house has four bedrooms, four bathrooms and three fireplaces on a 3,128-square-foot floor plan.

     More from Zillow:

    • NFL Stars Score With Super-Size Homes
    • Baltimore Ravens RB Ray Rice Lists Starter Home
    • Football Analyst Michael Strahan Lists Hermosa Beach Home

     

    26 comments

    where are the tvs? half of them don't even have one in the picture.. and the ones that do have them don't look like anywhere i would ever want to watch a football game. man caves? really? who wrote this article a librarian?

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  • 31
    Jan
    2013
    11:49am, EST

    Barry Bonds' estate listed at $25 million

    TODAY real estate contributor Barbara Corcoran provides peeks inside some of the celebrity homes on the market across the country, from Ashton Kutcher's L.A. bachelor pad to Barry Bonds' 17,000-square foot mansion.

    By Barbara Corcoran, TODAY contributor

    This week in celebrity real estate, Barry Bonds looks to unload his Los Angeles estate for $25 million and Ashton Kutcher's former bachelor pad is back on the market for $2.85 million.

    Barry Bonds' estate, Los Angeles
    For sale: $25 million

    Zillow

    Barry Bonds' home features a gourmet kitchen.

    Digs like this make being under house arrest, as Bonds was sentenced to back in 2011 but is fighting, seem pretty appealing. Bonds bought the 17,000-square-foot mansion on 2.56 acres back in 2002 for $8.7 million. Neighbors in this ritzy Beverly Park neighborhood include Denzel Washington and Reba McEntire. The interior has truly soaring ceilings – some as high as 30 feet – travertine tile work, and hand-painted murals. There’s a gourmet kitchen, home theater, home office with leather wall upholstery. The Mediterranean-style estate comes with a guesthouse, pool, spa and cabana and an outdoor kitchen on the massive patio. The seven bedroom, 13 bathroom home is entirely controllable by iPad.

    Ashton Kutcher's former bachelor pad, Los Angeles
    For sale: $2.85 million 

    Trulia

    Ashton Kutcher's former bachelor pad is back on the market. Listing price: $2.85 million.

    Ashton Kutcher’s former bachelor pad has hit the market for $2.85 million. The star of “That '70s Show” owned the home before he married Demi Moore and sold it in 2011, a few years after they wed. Kutcher and his father did extensive renovation work on the property, reportedly expanding the square footage from just over 2,000 square feet to more than 3,400. The two-story, four bedroom, 4.5 bathroom home has an open floor plan with high ceilings, large windows, a professional home theater and a two-story wine tower that accommodates a 210-bottle collection. Sliding glass doors lead to the lush and private backyard with a three-tiered cascading waterfall and infinity edge pool and spa.

    Serena Williams' Los Angeles home
    For sale: $1.85 million

    Trulia

    Tennis superstar Serena Williams has listed her Los Angeles condo at $1.85 million.

    Tennis superstar Serena Williams has put her Wilshire Boulevard pad on the market for $1.85 million. Williams apparently used this light and fresh condo as a pied-a-terre; she bought the 2,400-square-foot home in 2002 for $1.275 million. (Four years later, she plunked down over $6.6 million on a massive, seven-bedroom Bel Air mansion.) This two bedroom, 3.5 bathroom home has an open floor plan, hardwood floors, balconies and walls of windows with sparkling city views. The full-service building offers a concierge, valet, pool/spa, gym, rec room, and wine storage.

    Howie Mandel's Malibu mansion
    For sale: $7.75 million

    Trulia

    Howie Mandel's Malibu mansion has views of the Pacific Ocean.

    The king of game show hosts has put his Malibu manse back on the market for a cool $7.75 million. That’s $500,000 more than he listed it for back in December 2011. Located in the prestigious Point Dume area, this architect-designed, Cape Cod-inspired mini-compound sits on over an acre of land with panoramic Santa Monica ocean views. The main living area includes a double-height formal living and dining rooms, both with French doors. The large open kitchen has a center island. The elegant but comfortable style has a seamless indoor/outdoor flow. The five bedroom, 5.5 bathroom home also a theater, an office, a gym and a guesthouse. The flat lot includes expansive lawns, a huge patio and infinity pool.

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  • 25
    Jan
    2013
    7:58am, EST

    Next big thing in real estate: 300-square-foot apartments

    In response to skyrocketing rents in New York City, Mayor Michael Bloomberg proposed a challenge to the city's best architects: to design a space no bigger than 350 square feet into a comfortable and affordable micro-apartment. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    By Ben Popken, TODAY contributor

    New Yorkers are famous for their teeny apartments, but a new trend in dwelling seeks to transform those tiny spaces into big assets. They're called "micro apartments," and they make a few hundred square feet feel like over a thousand.

    Fold-away beds, moveable walls, and coffee tables that expand to seat 10 for dinner are just a few of the clever touches that transform these shoe boxes into veritable mini-mansions.

    "The main idea is to get double, triple, quadruple use from every space," Graham Hill, founder of the sustainable living site TreeHugger.com and the design company Life Edited, told Fair Companies in a video interview.

    With rising costs of living and a desire to limit one's environmental impact at top of mind, living simpler, and smaller, has taken off in cities around the world, especially ones known for their high rents. San Francisco recently passed an ordinance allowing for apartments to be built to 220 square feet. And "micro units" have also long been a Tokyo and Hong Kong mainstay.

    For his part, Hill bought a 420-square-foot studio in Manhattan's SoHo neighborhood and renovated it into a concept lab for tiny living, with boutique hotel style appointments, a home theater, and a pair of drop-down bunk beds for guests.

    Feeling more like 1,000+ square feet, it boasts a kitchen with top-loading fridge, freezer and dishwasher. The stove top is three induction burners stacked in a drawer. To boil a pot of water for pasta, for example, you pull the burners out and plug them in, then stow them away after the linguine is served.

    Hill's design was one of 34 submitted to New York Mayor Bloomberg's adAPT NYC contest, which tasked teams with coming up with plans for 250-370 square foot apartments designed for 1-2 person households.

    The young professionals who constitute the city's lifeblood often find themselves priced out of New York City altogether or living in an outer-borough garret. One-third of the city's households comprise of just one individual, a number projected to rise to 46 percent in Manhattan, where one-bedrooms routinely rent for north of $2,700 a month.

    New York City Mayor's Office

    A rendering of the "micro unit" apartment design that won New York Mayor Bloomberg's adAPT NYC contest Tuesday.

    The winning design, announced Tuesday, will form the basis for a new apartment complex built in Kip's Bay at East 27th and 1st Avenue in Manhattan with 55 of the micro units. The apartments will be built prefabricated, and then stacked on top of each other and connected - structure, plumbing, electrical, and all - like LEGOs.

    New York City Mayor's Office

    The design is split up into a "toolbox" and "canvas" area, with essential living amenities in the first area, and a customizable living room/bedroom slot in the second.

    Called "My Micro NY," the apartment's bedroom converts into the primary living space, and the hip, 10-foot ceiling design includes a 16-foot-long overhead loft space, Juliette balconies, a full-depth closet, full-height pull-out pantry, fridge and range.

    The complex will include a garden, porch with picnic tables, lounge, laundry room, storage, bike room, and a small gym. Rents will be about $2,000 a month. Eleven of the 55 units will be reserved for households with incomes no greater than 80 percent of the area median income.

    Undoubtedly there will be a waiting list to become one of the first to live in the tiny, mod apartments. If you want to see what one looks like right away though, you can visit the Museum of New York City where a model micro-apartment is currently on display in the exhibit, "Making Room: New Models for Housing New Yorkers." You can walk around inside the unit and even try your hand at folding up and down the various pieces of hide-away furniture.

    New York Mayor Bloomberg said Friday on WOR radio that he lived in an apartment for 10 years as small as the micro-units the city plans to build. His bed was a convertible couch, and he recalled it was a "pain" removing the pillows and making the bed, and not nearly as convenient as the sleek Murphy bed used in the design for the new units.

    "New York’s ability to adapt with changing times is what made us the world’s greatest city – and it’s going to be what keeps us strong in the 21st Century," said Mayor Bloomberg in a press release.

    The AP contributed to this report.

    186 comments

    Hmmm and they make fun of southern people living in double wides!

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  • 28
    Sep
    2012
    10:21am, EDT

    As seen on TV: Homes where shows were shot

    Zillow

    "The Beverly Hillbillies" was one of the first shows that took place inside a home with a physical address, rather than in a studio. This enormous 21,523-square-foot estate hosted the series throughout its nine-year run. The 10-bed, 12-bath home was built in 1933.

    By Erika Riggs, Zillow

    From its magical debut in 1950s households to today's 3-D, Internet-connected and thin-screened versions, television has firmly planted itself into American culture and daily life. We all have favorite shows — the ones we currently DVR and the ones that went off the air nearly 50 years ago.

    As fall gets under way and new programs are added to the evening lineup, we're paying homage to television shows — old and new — with a real estate tour. While many shows, especially in the early days, were never shot outside the studio set, a goodly handful of them took place in real homes that still look exactly as they did on the small screen.

    1960s

    "Batman"
    380 S San Rafael Ave., Pasadena, Calif.

    Zillow

    Holy mansion, Batman! The 1960s TV series featured a property in Pasadena as Wayne Manor. The 1928 home has 10 bedrooms, six bathrooms and measures 16,599 square feet — not including the Batcave, of course.

    "The Beverly Hillbillies"
    750 Bel Air Road, Los Angeles, Calif. 

    See photo at top.

    1970s

    "Happy Days"
    565 N. Cahuenga Blvd., Los Angeles, Calif.  

    Zillow

    Although "Happy Days" took place in Milwaukee, like most TV shows, it was actually filmed in Los Angeles. The white-columned house that played home for the Cunninghams was built in 1923 and has six bedrooms, two baths and measures 3,904 square feet.

    "The Brady Bunch"
    11222 Dilling St., North Hollywood, Calif.

    Zillow

    The midcentury home that hosted the blended Brady clan looks unchanged from its days on the small screen. Built in 1959, the North Hollywood home would be rather small for the Brady family of eight, which is why interior scenes of the show were shot on a studio set.

    1980s

    "Dallas"
    3700 Hogge Drive, Allen, Texas

    Zillow

    The sprawling Southfork Ranch just outside Plano was the home for J.R. Ewing and his squabbling family during the original run of TV's "Dallas" (the show was recently rebooted by TNT). The home is currently an event center with a special area dedicated to the show, complete with "Dallas" memorabilia, although many of the show's interior scenes were shot on a studio set.

    "The Golden Girls"
    245 N. Saltair Ave., Los Angeles Calif.

    Zillow

    "The Golden Girls" characters were living in retiree-friendly Miami on the show, but the home used for the exterior was in Los Angeles. The classic 1955 home has four bedrooms and measures 2,901 square feet.

    1990s

    "Beverly Hills 90210"
    1675 E. Altadena Drive, Altadena, Calif.

    Zillow

    The "90210" house is not actually located in the fabled ZIP code but 23 miles northeast in the town of Altadena. The four-bed, four-bath house played the home of twins Brandon and Brenda Walsh, and unlike many other TV homes had scenes that were filmed in the interior of the house, rather than on a studio set.

    "Charmed"
    1329 Carroll Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.  

    Zillow

    Peaked roofs, gingerbread trim and other Victorian details made this Los Angeles-area home perfect for three beautiful witches in the TV show "Charmed." The five-bedroom, one-bath home was built in 1903.

    2000–present

    "The O.C."
    6205 Ocean Breeze, Malibu, Calif.

    Zillow

    Newport Beach of "The O.C." isn't a far cry from Malibu where the TV mansion was located. The stately 6,376-square-foot house was home base for the Cohen family and Ryan Atwood, the troubled teen they took in.

    "Grey's Anatomy"
    303 W. Comstock St., Seattle, Wash.

    Zillow

    While there's no such thing as Seattle Grace Hospital, the house from the hit medical series is real and located in Seattle's Queen Anne neighborhood. The turn-of-the-century charmer has four bedrooms, 2.5 baths and a view of the Space Needle.

    "Mad Men"
    675 Arden Road, Pasadena, Calif.

    Zillow

    The Los Angeles area is a decent fit for 1960s New York City on AMC's drama "Mad Men." The first home of Betty and Don Draper, fictionally set in Ossining, N.Y., is actually located in Pasadena on a quiet tree-lined street. The traditional four-bedroom, three-bath home measures 2,654 square feet.

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    12 comments

    11222 Dilling St., (Brady Bunch exterior shots) looks unchanged? Looks a bit different to me. Since the series, a fence has been added, trees and shrubs were planted, and the fake window added to suggest a 2nd floor has, of course, been removed.

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  • 17
    Aug
    2012
    12:58pm, EDT

    Housing economist: Good time to get a bargain

    By NBC News staff

    David Crowe, chief economist at the National Association of Home Builders, a non-profit trade association, joined us for a live web chat Thursday to answer your questions about the housing market.

    Here’s one of David’s answers to questions from the live chat. (See below for the full Q&A.)

    Emily asked:

    “Has there ever been a better time to buy a home? Seems with rates so low, it’s a great time.”

    David Crowe replied:

    “Emily - I think so, but I am an optimist. Seriously, home prices have probably bottomed in most markets (but as I noted earlier, that is universally true). Mortgage rates are not likely to go down much further and will eventually rise as the economy recovers. Home builders are hungry and while you will still have to pay a fair price, you may not get a better bargain than now before all the rest of the demand comes back.”

    Here’s the full chat archive:

    5 comments

    "chief economist at the National Association of Home Builders," Gee, I wonder if the "chief economist" at the National Rifle Association will say its a great time to buy guns? Thanks for lowering the journalistic bar yet again NBC. We know you write for liberals but this type of marketing-as-news ha …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: economy, real-estate
  • 8
    Jul
    2012
    11:34am, EDT

    High rents, tight credit put many at the mercy of the market

    Jessica Rinaldi / Reuters

    World War II veteran Howard McGowan, 88, is facing a 50 percent rent hike on the one-bedroom apartment in Malden, Mass., he and his wife have shared for 25 years.

    By Michelle Conlin and Ilaina Jonas, Reuters

    One night last spring, David Hall returned home to his studio apartment outside Boston to learn that his monthly rent had spiked from $725 to $995.

    It would be much cheaper for the maintenance manager to buy a nearby starter house than to stay put. But his mortgage broker told him that while his credit score was good, it was not high enough to meet banks' tough standards, he said.

    "I know if I walk into a bank, they are just going to laugh at me," Hall says. "So I'm stuck."

    He is not alone.

    Five years after the housing bubble burst, the United States is in the midst of a housing affordability crisis. Home prices have fallen a third from their peaks, but many Americans cannot benefit because they cannot get a mortgage.

    With credit tight, many consumers have no choice but to rent. Others who can afford to buy are also renting, because they view real estate as a lousy investment. With this increased demand, rents in some cities have jumped by double-digit percentage rates.

    In the 12 months ended in May, rents rose 14 percent in San Francisco and 11 percent in San Jose, California, according to real estate data provider Zillow. Last year in Minneapolis, they spiked 11 percent even as home values sank 8 percent.

    Apartment rent sticker shock gets worse 

    People with lower incomes have long struggled to find affordable housing, but many in the middle class are now hurting, too.

    Most personal finance experts recommend allocating no more of 30 percent of family income to housing, but nearly 40 percent of Americans are paying more than a third, according to the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey.

    In New York City, one-third of households are spending more than half their pay on rent.

    "We have falling incomes, rising rents and nothing but substantial upward pressure on those rents," says Chris Herbert, director of Harvard University's Joint Center for Housing Studies. "And nothing in the cards suggests it will turn around anytime soon."

    Today's housing market is a buyer's paradise.

    It is now cheaper to buy a home than it is to rent in virtually every major city in the United States, according to John Burns Real Estate Consulting.

    But for many in the renter class, buying even a modest home is impossible because financing is so hard to secure.

    Lending for home purchases hit a 12-year low of $404 billion last year, down from $1.4 trillion in 2006, according to trade publication Inside Mortgage Finance. That means mortgage credit is tighter than it was even before the housing boom.

    This year, lending is expected to drop even more, according to Inside Mortgage Finance.

    A recent Morgan Stanley research report states that the average credit score is 762 for a consumer securing a mortgage backed by government-sponsored enterprises like Fannie Mae . But 65 percent of Americans have scores below 750.

    In other words, a disproportionate number of mortgages are going to people with unusually good credit. A perfect score is 850, and anything below 660 is considered subprime.

    "Basically, access to credit for borrowers with less than spotless credit is severely limited," the Morgan Stanley report states. "A good chunk" of U.S. households are "cut off from mortgage credit on this count alone."

    For people who can get mortgages, rates are at their lowest levels in several generations. Add that to the cheap home prices, and houses are at their most affordable since at least 1970, when the National Association of Realtors began tracking this metric.

    Normally, high affordability translates into higher sales. And the housing market is showing some signs of recovery -- the S&P/Case Shiller index of home prices had its third consecutive monthly gain in April. Last week, the NAR said pending home sales had matched a two-year high in May.

    But any recovery has been tepid. The NAR said existing home sales had declined 1.5 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.55 million in May from 4.62 million in April. That is 34.2 percent above the July 2010 bottom of 3.39 million, but far short of the 5.5 million pace that the NAR considers healthy.

    "Home sales have just barely picked up from their cyclical lows, and that's because there are still constraints to borrowing," said Moody's Analytics economist Celia Chen.

    Part of the lender pullback has to do with the stringent regulations Washington put in place after the housing crash, says Michael Fratantoni, vice president of the Mortgage Bankers Association. These rules put more of the losses from bad mortgages onto lenders, instead of investors or government-sponsored enterprises.

    Then there is the climate of unstable home prices and a shaky labor market: "There's a risk that even a borrower with moderately good credit may fall behind," Fratantoni says.

    Consumers who cannot buy must rent, and that is where many Americans are feeling the pressure. A rent index from Zillow shows year-over-year gains for 70 percent of the U.S. metropolitan areas, while its home value index rose in only 7.3 percent.

    Only a few years ago, landlords in cities like San Francisco and New York were tossing in a month or two of free rent, sometimes with parking, to lure tenants into signing leases.

    Today, applicants are showing up at apartment viewings with copies of their unblemished credit reports and letters of recommendation from bosses and prominent friends, in the hopes of snatching up a place to rent.

    Equity Residential, one of the biggest apartment owners in the United States, has more renters with high credit scores than ever, Vice President of Operations David Santee said on an April conference call with analysts.

    Demand for apartments is also higher because many potential buyers in their 20s and 30s want to stay flexible - home ownership is not as attractive as it was to earlier generations.

    Still, plenty of people would prefer entry into the ownership class.

    Last spring Rosemary Wynder, a physician order specialist, found her rent shooting up. She decided to buy a house.

    But a bank glitch in February had caused one late car loan payment, dinging her credit score. The Utica, New York, resident has been unable to straighten out the mistake, and five banks have rejected her for a mortgage.

    "I've been crying," says Wynder. "I've been praying." 

    More money and business news:

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    532 comments

    Coming soon to a suburb near you?!? Shanty towns

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  • 27
    Jun
    2012
    3:49pm, EDT

    Chat transcript: Housing recovery is long way off

    Courtesy of Zillow

    By Eve Tahmincioglu

      For those of you lamenting the heydays of the housing market, it may be time to leave the past behind.

    It’s going to be a long time before we’re going to real-estate party like it’s 2005, according to real estate website Zillow’s chief economist Stan Humphries, who was on hand to take questions Wednesday during our live web chat on the housing market.

    One question he took from a reader named Bob seemed to be on more than one person’s mind.

    “Being in the middle class a.k.a. the new working poor, many of us felt better when our homes were worth more and some a lot more. Do you see the real estate market ever approaching the 2005/2006 price range?”

    To that, Humphries offered a real estate reality check:

    “In real terms, after considering inflation, it will be a considerable time (e.g., decades) before we reach those levels. Even in nominal terms, the prices you see on things everyday, we're likely looking at 10 to 20 years before some of the hardest hit markets return to peak levels.”

    But it wasn’t all bad news.

    Reader Charles asked: “Will the home values continue dropping?”

    Humphries answered:

    “Nationally we've had three months of increasing home values as of May. We've been expecting some modest declines nationally by year end but a lot of the larger markets are seeing stronger stabilization at this point than we'd previously expected.”

    But, he added, it “really depends on the market as real estate is, as always, super local. Markets like Atlanta and Chicago are still seeing some declines in home values while markets like Phoenix and Miami are seeing real price spikes.”

    You can see the entire Q&A with Humphries here:

     

    9 comments

    Yeah, and gasoline will be five bucks a gallon by this summer. Maybe he should go to the Zillow website and see how accurate his housing values are in my neighborhood. Their information is such a joke, it's useless.

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  • 20
    Jun
    2012
    11:35am, EDT

    Inside Jim Carrey's, Sandra Bullock's homes for sale

    .

    TODAY real estate contributor Barbara Corcoran provides an insider's look at some of the celebrity homes currently on the market, including Jim Carrey's Malibu mansion and Sandra Bullock's Austin, Texas, getaway.

    Also, in more down to earth real estate news, Corcoran looks at what home buyers can get for $400,000 around the U.S.

    3 comments

    I always loved Sandra Bullock.

    Show more
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Eve Tahmincioglu

Eve Tahmincioglu writes the popular "Your Career" column for MSNBC.com and her blog www.careerdiva.net, covers a broad range of career and labor issues. Her blog was named one of the top ten career blogs by Forbes, US News & World Report and CareerBuilder. Last year, she was named one of the top online business columnist in the country by the Society of American Business Editors and Writers. She's al …

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