I was at the dentist, waiting in the lobby with Camille for a 5pm (WTF?) appointment for some X-rays and a cleaning, and the television was on up in the corner of the room.
When I'm there in my own, I usually read in their outdated magazines and ignore the H&G Network shows they air in perpetuity. (Everybody else is on their phone, obviously.)
This time Camille was goofing around in my lap and paying half-attention to the show, and we caught some of the premise. It was a show about "winning the lottery" on getting a house. Cool, I thought, people won a house?
The host is a slender gay Asian man, highly tattooed, and he approaches the 'winners' and makes a scene where they all celebrate and show off for the camera, and the 'winners' are couples. At the end of the celebrating, he asks, "So...how much money are you giving me to find your new house?"
So...these 'winners' really just won the chance to have a TV show follow them as they shop for a new home? And have this cool personality do the legwork for them? Right? That's what I could gather in the few minutes this first episode aired.
So, the tattooed Asian guy is asking how much will you give me, the music crescendos and then cuts out, and the couple announces: "One-hundred thousand."
Um...okay...besides 15 months in Austin and 6 months in Sacramento, I've spent the last 26 years living in San Luis Obispo, New York City, and Southern California, three places that have more cars in the $100k price range than houses.
$100k? For a house? IS THIS EVEN POSSIBLE IN AMERICA TODAY?
The answer is, yes, absolutely this is possible. In fact, the specific episode of this show was filmed in Cincinnati, where, as per the show's structure, the host finds three places that fit their desires and budget, and he did this exact thing. One cost $110k, one cost $87k, and the last cost $84k.
Two houses that cost less than one-hundred-thousand dollars.











