Hey Daz I'm moving from Ohio to Pittsburgh this Saturday. It's a great sports town. A very diverse population and resteraunts. It's got the big city vibe without the huge population.
Just moved back to Pittsburgh today. I was born and raised here then spent the last 4 1/2 years living in Virginia due to my husbands job. We’ve missed it so much we knew it was time to return. I’m so happy to be back in Pittsburgh!
Florida has the largest British expat community in the US. There are 600,000 full and part-time residents. You guy's would fit right in. There is a large senior population, but there are plenty of young families, singles and middle age empty nesters. Yes, homeowners insurance and auto insurance can be high , but it depends greatly on where you're at. I recently moved to Palm Coast north of Daytona Beach. My home is new, not in a flood zone and my homeowners insurance is just $820 a year for full coverage. My car insurance is reasonable too. Gas (petrol), electricity, groceries and restaurants are all cheaper than where I lived in California. I'm so happy I moved here last Autumn.
@@davidcosta2244 You don't know me, you don't know how I vote and it's none of your damned business. I will say I love Florida and I didn't move here to change it, I moved here to enjoy it. I'm so sick and tired of B.S. statements by brave internet trolls on social media who wouldn't have the cojones to say it to my face. It's gotten really old.
@@jeffmorse645 Based upon you post 's defensive tone, I know EXACTLY how you tend to vote. Also, name a specific neutral public place to meet, and I'll tell you this to your face. In fact, a healthy debate, especially when the participants are from opposite spectrums is very intellectually stimulating, however, if the other person resorts to name calling, then not so much. Methinks you'd be the latter.
@osta2244 Again, don't know anything me and are playing the game of the small minded and ignorant - generalizing and stereotyping people you've never met or spoken to based on one fragment of information. Do you know that more people voted for Trump in California in both elections (one out of three voters)? More than did in any other state by virtue of how large and diverse California is (over six million votes)? Do you know that east of the coast range that part of California is fairly conservative and oftentimes votes Republican? I guess you don't because you're just assuming all 39 million people there are all the same and vote the same. I'm just fed up with people like you and having to play defensive much of the time when someone reads I'm from California on the internet and has this kneejerk reaction that I must be a liberal Democrat out to ruin any state I move to. Its tedious and stupid. I grew up in the San Joaquin Valley. Home to a large Portuguese community. How would you like it if based on nothing more than your surname that I assume you're Portuguese and start trotting out all the old stereotypes I heard growing up (they're loud, they dumb, their inbred because they're from the Azores and all have a half-wit in their families). Yep, hear all the jokes and slurs growing up from the old folks. But hey, that wouldn't be fair - you may not be that ethnicity at all and even if you were the stereotypes and bigotry shouldn't be repeated.
Well I live in CHARLESTON and we are overrun by people every Summer as it is, so I hope no one else sees this list. It's miserably hot here 7 months a year and the mosquitos! And the traffic, oh the traffic! As for San Diego: I hated it when I was there. We took a trolley and Mexican gangster with a scar that ran from his forehead to under his bottom lip got on the same car and was actively intimidating everyone. The guy was fresh out of prison and very clearly was happy to return. Similarly encountered deranged homeless people in the popular restaurant district and overall found the city pretty from a distance but very inhospitable.
@@hrussell9677Uh no, home prices have never tripled in 15 years like in my city, this unprecedented. 350K in northern Alabama is insane. Maybe climb from under your rock any pay attention.
I’m from Huntsville. It has people from all over the US and 67,000 former New Yorkers. A great and highly educated city. It’s beautiful and new. With a pop. Of 600,000 it has everything you need. That’s my sales pitch. Oh yeah, Forbes named it best city in the US in 2022
I’m from Atlanta, GA and had to live in Columbia, SC for a year or so, that state is a hidden gem. Charleston is amazing too when it comes to food and hospitality. They really have about 4-5 cities that are bubbling into being great cities.
You should checkout Knoxville Tennessee. It's 2.5hrs from Nashville, Charlotte and Atlanta. It's a small to mid sized town located just outside the Smoky Mountains. Home of the University of Tennessee Volunteers and lots of people seems to be moving here for retirement lately.
Talking to lots of friends back in the USA, they have given me some good places to consider for retirement: SOUTH: Charleston/Greenville/Hilton Head [South Carolina], Asheville [North Carolina], Savannah/Athens [Georgia], Port Ste. Lucie/Winter Haven/St. Augustine [Florida], Thibodaux/Houma [Louisiana], Mountain Home [Arkansas]; NORTHEAST: Portland [Maine], Saratoga Springs [New York]; GREAT LAKES REGION: Madison [Wisconsin], Ann Arbor [Michigan], Bloomington [Indiana]; PLAINS: Des Moines [Iowa], Sioux Falls [South Dakota], Branson [Missouri]; WEST: Boise [Idaho], Durango [Colorado], Santa Fe [New Mexico], Yuma/Tucson/Sedona [Arizona], Moab/St. George [Utah], Palm Springs [California], Astoria/Lincoln City/Newport [Oregon].
We've been to Greenville, South Carolina many times, the downtown area is beautiful, lots to do, shops, bars, restaurants. We've lived in the Atlanta, Georgia area too, in several towns, we loved it there too!!!
Moved to Pittsburgh in June after graduating from North Carolina State University (Raleigh). Raleigh and Pittsburgh are two great places to look at! Apples new east coast campus is moving to Raleigh/Cary area as well and Sports in Pittsburgh is top tier. A true Sports city! Great options for both but if weather is a huge factor, Raleigh beats it at the end!
I grew up in Salisbury, graduated from WiHi. I've Only been back there once since I finished High School. Its a shit hole but its 30 miles from the beach so its a push I guess. I also Worked for the ShoreBirds. Still the best job Ive ever had.
I was born in North Carolina (and love it there), but my family moved to Florida over 30 years ago and I absolutely love it here. The only thing I would change is the price of Homeowners insurance (my homeowners insurance is $700 a month). But we can’t have everything we want. 😊
Yeah, I used to live in San Diego it is a beautiful city especially the old town area where you get real authentic yummy Mexican food. La Jolla is also like no other. Getting up in the high prices for homes though and then CA taxes, brutal.
I just can't understand why retired people move to Florida. Please any of y'all are considering this you really have to think about the dangerous weather. I've lived in Corpus Christi, Texas right on the Gulf Coast for more than half of my life, 26 years now. I've lived through many small Hurricanes and Tropical Storms as well as Hurricane Harvey. Here in Texas when the really bad hurricanes are on the way we can easily evacuate because we have adequate roads to get whichever direction we need to go to get away and our choice of major cities or smaller towns to stay in hotels or with relatives. But Florida is not like this at all and it gets direct hits from more bad storms than Texas does. The only way to evacuate Florida is go North on their horrible inadequate highway system and pray you can get out of the way. That might have been fine when I was 20, but I wouldn't do it now at 51. So what about when I'm 81??
You must not have been living in corpus for Harvey then…. Or evacuating for Rita when it took 16 hours to get to San Antonio from Houston. Evacuating is a nightmare here what do you mean?? Lol
@@CynthiaNotG Yes I lived here then. We left for Austin two days before Harvey made landfall. We were advised to go a different route than I-37 so we went up 77 then cut over using the back roads. Once we got off of 37 it was pretty easy going. The traffic did back up some in the smaller towns but that was helped by local PD and DPS that were out in the rain at big intersections to keep the traffic flowing. I moved to Corpus in 2001 and have never regretted my move here. I would never live in Houston because of what you are describing happens during hurricanes, and honestly I never want to live in another huge Texas city again. But even if you're in Houston you'll be a hell of a lot safer than if you were to try to evacuate with two days or less from a storm landfall than if you had to drive from Miami.
Fort Meyers was all but leveled a couple years ago. The median house prices in these places just about gave me heart attacks. The average home price in NY is like $150k.
I live in ohio and I always say when I retire the only two places I would live is in San Diego or Charleston South Carolina. Both are relaxing and beautiful.
A nice town to consider is Asheville, North Carolina, Not too big, but lots of culture, and they have a university, so you can figure it's not too small either.
Florida has become expensive because so many people are moving here they are building constantly housing and apartments so there's more accidents that's why car insurance is high and a lot of insurance companies have left the state because of payouts from hurricanes. My house insurance last year was $5000 and this year it went down to $3000. Building supplies are expensive everywhere.
I think this guy from North Carolina doing the list. North Carolina is not good guys too cold in the winter. Tampa bay florida is the place . and we don't get hurricanes haven't had a hurricane over a hundred years
Texas has reduced their property tax a lot recently. Great place to retire if you can handle the heat. Stick with the Carolina's. I think you would be happy there........
There's a reason the Carolinas stay under the radar. Not as much crazy sh!t going on here as the rest of the states. In fact people in NC tend to dress properly when going to Walmart. Yes, it's true.
The Carolinas are beautiful. I think sports wise, you’d be more interested in living in North Carolina. Franklin, TN is a great town, but real estate is ridiculously high as many wealthy musicians and actors live in Franklin or nearby Brentwood. Pittsburgh is supposed to be an interesting city but the winters are snowy and cold. Florida is a hell hole in the summer. Beautiful beaches, but the heat and humidity is intolerable outside. San Diego is wonderful but real estate is too expensive in any of the nice areas of California. What about Arizona? It is hot in the summer, but drier than the humid south. And Tempe and Scottsdale are nice areas near Phoenix. There are sports, and golf. Plus lots of interesting places to travel to in Arizona as well as neighboring Utah and Colorado. Flagstaff is a nice small town, but far from Phoenix and no sports. It is higher up so summers are cooler and there is some snow in the winter.
San Diego !!!!!!!!!!!!! However, homes are expensive. Great downtown with bars and great beaches as Carlsbad, La Jolla etc. Many great areas from more East to the Coast. You guys are hip, sharp and real, very San Diego ! Check out Carlsbad. If you can afford it, San Diego is the place. If Aiden is single, good amount of "Fit" attractive woman there ! Weather is perfect "most" of the time. Sunny yet cool.
Do not waste your time going to Pittsburgh. Yes it's a big sports town and there are some and I emphasize some nice big city type things to do and see like museums, arts and restaurants, but overall it's not good . The economy is stagnant and the population is not growing. Crime is bad in certain areas along with graffiti and trash just about everywhere you look. The weather is also dreadful at times . For being a small city by American standards, the traffic is surprisingly horrible at certain times of the day and this is made worse because of all the tunnels and bridges. Also the topography is very hilly. A lot of small towns close by that used to be huge steel manufactures and when the mills shutdown have become absolute $hit and EXTREMELY DANGEROUS. Now if your travels in America bring you close, yes it's worth visiting , but if you're visiting America, don't go out of your way to visit Pittsburgh.
Out of all the places i never thought Alabama would have made the list. Dont get me wrong i live in Alabama (and love it) BUT thats because i dont like city life or crowds 😅
It gets hot here in NC for sure. I feel like you would like NC better than SC. I think we've got the major pro sports covered here except MLB. I live in Durham and the Durham Bulls games are fun & I don't even care for baseball. We also have some great college teams here. You'll be forced to pick a side! 😂
I would say a lot of people are going to move to Brisbane here in Queensland Australia heading towards the 2032 Olympics because the Olympics will be here in Brisbane in 2032.
SC is backwoods 😂 only a couple of cities that aren't. Please don't move here, we can't take anymore 🙅🏾♀️🙅🏾♀️🤣 San Diego is perfect, beautiful weather. Our summers in SC are unbearable 😭
Here is the ACTUAL top ten in the USA, starting from #1: The Villages, Florida. Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. Ocala, Florida. Asheville, North Carolina. Summerville, South Carolina. Dillon, Colorado. Greenville, South Carolina. Saint Augustine, Florida. Franklin, Tennessee. Wilmington, North Carolina
@@Marcus-p5i5sYOU'RE still choosing to use that stat to label it "top 10" you dingus. That is what makes it an opinion. There is no factual "top 10" for anything because whoever makes the list chooses their own criteria. Use your head for once.
IDK what yall are looking for but moving to the Carolina's would be a nice family area but theres just nothing to do... like how unfortunate it will be for yall to just go to Panthers games. The most fun yall would get outside of the basic things is going to college basketball games. If the whole fam is going esp with Aiden... i think Florida and Texas would be better bc of the many things to do as well as having amazing family homes and areas to live in. You have a plethora of sports and if your in Florida you'll have many amusement parks to explore and have fun at. Also Messi is in Miami so thats a plus. But regardless im sure when/if yall move back to the US yall would have trips planned to do more exploring so im guessing how close leisure is probably isnt important to yall. Daz and Aiden are going to sports games regardless of where they live lol.
North Carolina has professional football, basketball, soccer, hockey, NASCAR, and PGA events also with the NASCAR Hall of Fame and the PGA Hall of Fame moving here. The only sport missing is MLB but there are several minor league teams. By the way, Charlotte FC won against Miami and Messi last season.
Nah, not AI. He has a moderate Pittsburgh/Baltimore/Mid-Atlantic accent. I can't quite place exactly where, but definitely somewhere around there. I grew up in Pennsylvania, between Pittsburgh and Baltimore
Hey Daz I'm moving from Ohio to Pittsburgh this Saturday. It's a great sports town. A very diverse population and resteraunts. It's got the big city vibe without the huge population.
Just moved back to Pittsburgh today. I was born and raised here then spent the last 4 1/2 years living in Virginia due to my husbands job. We’ve missed it so much we knew it was time to return. I’m so happy to be back in Pittsburgh!
Florida has the largest British expat community in the US. There are 600,000 full and part-time residents. You guy's would fit right in. There is a large senior population, but there are plenty of young families, singles and middle age empty nesters. Yes, homeowners insurance and auto insurance can be high , but it depends greatly on where you're at. I recently moved to Palm Coast north of Daytona Beach. My home is new, not in a flood zone and my homeowners insurance is just $820 a year for full coverage. My car insurance is reasonable too. Gas (petrol), electricity, groceries and restaurants are all cheaper than where I lived in California. I'm so happy I moved here last Autumn.
Hopefully your California voting habits don't change it to California.
@@davidcosta2244 You don't know me, you don't know how I vote and it's none of your damned business. I will say I love Florida and I didn't move here to change it, I moved here to enjoy it. I'm so sick and tired of B.S. statements by brave internet trolls on social media who wouldn't have the cojones to say it to my face. It's gotten really old.
@@jeffmorse645 Based upon you post 's defensive tone, I know EXACTLY how you tend to vote.
Also, name a specific neutral public place to meet, and I'll tell you this to your face. In fact, a healthy debate, especially when the participants are from opposite spectrums is very intellectually stimulating, however, if the other person resorts to name calling, then not so much. Methinks you'd be the latter.
@osta2244 Again, don't know anything me and are playing the game of the small minded and ignorant - generalizing and stereotyping people you've never met or spoken to based on one fragment of information. Do you know that more people voted for Trump in California in both elections (one out of three voters)? More than did in any other state by virtue of how large and diverse California is (over six million votes)? Do you know that east of the coast range that part of California is fairly conservative and oftentimes votes Republican? I guess you don't because you're just assuming all 39 million people there are all the same and vote the same. I'm just fed up with people like you and having to play defensive much of the time when someone reads I'm from California on the internet and has this kneejerk reaction that I must be a liberal Democrat out to ruin any state I move to. Its tedious and stupid. I grew up in the San Joaquin Valley. Home to a large Portuguese community. How would you like it if based on nothing more than your surname that I assume you're Portuguese and start trotting out all the old stereotypes I heard growing up (they're loud, they dumb, their inbred because they're from the Azores and all have a half-wit in their families). Yep, hear all the jokes and slurs growing up from the old folks. But hey, that wouldn't be fair - you may not be that ethnicity at all and even if you were the stereotypes and bigotry shouldn't be repeated.
I live in Jacksonville and my homeowners insurance is $700 a month. I wish it was $800 a year. Good for you!!! I’m jealous 😅
2:50 i KNOW Daz is thinking "I'll NEVER be one of THOSE old people"
😂 yep
Well I live in CHARLESTON and we are overrun by people every Summer as it is, so I hope no one else sees this list. It's miserably hot here 7 months a year and the mosquitos! And the traffic, oh the traffic!
As for San Diego: I hated it when I was there. We took a trolley and Mexican gangster with a scar that ran from his forehead to under his bottom lip got on the same car and was actively intimidating everyone. The guy was fresh out of prison and very clearly was happy to return. Similarly encountered deranged homeless people in the popular restaurant district and overall found the city pretty from a distance but very inhospitable.
The only guaranteed way to get Aidan on a video is if there's food.
Food and sports lmfaoo
The last proposal we need to wake up and fix humanity of its faults and decrease suffering as much as possible.
$350K for a house in Huntsville, Alabama? Oh man our country is falling apart smh
It’s called inflation. It’s been happening since the 1700s.
@@hrussell9677Uh no, home prices have never tripled in 15 years like in my city, this unprecedented. 350K in northern Alabama is insane. Maybe climb from under your rock any pay attention.
I’m from Huntsville. It has people from all over the US and 67,000 former New Yorkers. A great and highly educated city. It’s beautiful and new. With a pop. Of 600,000 it has everything you need. That’s my sales pitch. Oh yeah, Forbes named it best city in the US in 2022
Home insurance has gotten crazy expensive in Florida the past few years
I’m from Atlanta, GA and had to live in Columbia, SC for a year or so, that state is a hidden gem. Charleston is amazing too when it comes to food and hospitality.
They really have about 4-5 cities that are bubbling into being great cities.
You should checkout Knoxville Tennessee. It's 2.5hrs from Nashville, Charlotte and Atlanta. It's a small to mid sized town located just outside the Smoky Mountains. Home of the University of Tennessee Volunteers and lots of people seems to be moving here for retirement lately.
Charleston, South Carolina is beautiful. Hilton Head is a nice spot to retire if you like to golf.
Talking to lots of friends back in the USA, they have given me some good places to consider for retirement: SOUTH: Charleston/Greenville/Hilton Head [South Carolina], Asheville [North Carolina], Savannah/Athens [Georgia], Port Ste. Lucie/Winter Haven/St. Augustine [Florida], Thibodaux/Houma [Louisiana], Mountain Home [Arkansas]; NORTHEAST: Portland [Maine], Saratoga Springs [New York]; GREAT LAKES REGION: Madison [Wisconsin], Ann Arbor [Michigan], Bloomington [Indiana]; PLAINS: Des Moines [Iowa], Sioux Falls [South Dakota], Branson [Missouri]; WEST: Boise [Idaho], Durango [Colorado], Santa Fe [New Mexico], Yuma/Tucson/Sedona [Arizona], Moab/St. George [Utah], Palm Springs [California], Astoria/Lincoln City/Newport [Oregon].
Sadly, Ft. Myers is still trashed from the 2022 hurricane. Ft. Myers Beach was almost wiped of the map.
seattle puget sound area... big city small town vibes, huge sports area, tons to do and the weather is perfect for you.
We've been to Greenville, South Carolina many times, the downtown area is beautiful, lots to do, shops, bars, restaurants. We've lived in the Atlanta, Georgia area too, in several towns, we loved it there too!!!
Not surprised South Carolina is ranked high, my aunt and uncle just moved to South Carolina and my cousin and her husband just moved there as well
Carolinas are humid.
True but much better than down here by the gulf by far. Our air is hot soup 5 months a year
Not like Florida, especially in July, and August.
I live in Raleigh, NC and love it.
Greenville, SC born and raised! City is growing fast.
Moved to Pittsburgh in June after graduating from North Carolina State University (Raleigh). Raleigh and Pittsburgh are two great places to look at! Apples new east coast campus is moving to Raleigh/Cary area as well and Sports in Pittsburgh is top tier. A true Sports city! Great options for both but if weather is a huge factor, Raleigh beats it at the end!
I've lived in San Diego before. It is really nice there, but had to move back to IL where most of my relatives and family members are located.
My cousin moved to Boise and loves it. I've been to Idaho, its beautiful, but not sold on wanting to live there.
Boise Idaho is awesome!
Why aren't you sold?
I live 45 miles East of Raleigh, NC. You will love it here.
I live 60 miles NNE of Raleigh. Only 2 grocery stores and no walmart in my county. I love it.
San Antonio here we’d love to have you….
I grew up in Salisbury, graduated from WiHi. I've Only been back there once since I finished High School. Its a shit hole but its 30 miles from the beach so its a push I guess. I also Worked for the ShoreBirds. Still the best job Ive ever had.
American Airlines is not based out of Charlotte but the Dallas/Ft. Worth area.
I was born in North Carolina (and love it there), but my family moved to Florida over 30 years ago and I absolutely love it here. The only thing I would change is the price of Homeowners insurance (my homeowners insurance is $700 a month). But we can’t have everything we want. 😊
If you move to north or South Carolina if you are outside of town 8-10 miles it’s cheap low taxes low cost ground
Charlottes skyline @3:44 sure looks a lot like Toronto! I guess Charlotte has built a twin Toronto Tower in the last few days? :)
Yeah, I used to live in San Diego it is a beautiful city especially the old town area where you get real authentic yummy Mexican food. La Jolla is also like no other. Getting up in the high prices for homes though and then CA taxes, brutal.
I live in SC and love it as far as climate culture and scenic beauty it is hard to beat.
The running joke is that the easiest job in America is weather man in San Diego. As Lewis Black said, "How's the weather? Nice. Back to you."
Salisbury, MD? LOL
Myrtle Beach, South Carolina is only 97 miles from Charleston which is a medium to large city with a lot of history
i dont recommend Pittsburgh, lots of boarded up factories and houses it's called a rust belt for a reason everything is rusting in that city.
I just can't understand why retired people move to Florida.
Please any of y'all are considering this you really have to think about the dangerous weather.
I've lived in Corpus Christi, Texas right on the Gulf Coast for more than half of my life, 26 years now.
I've lived through many small Hurricanes and Tropical Storms as well as Hurricane Harvey.
Here in Texas when the really bad hurricanes are on the way we can easily evacuate because we have adequate roads to get whichever direction we need to go to get away and our choice of major cities or smaller towns to stay in hotels or with relatives.
But Florida is not like this at all and it gets direct hits from more bad storms than Texas does.
The only way to evacuate Florida is go North on their horrible inadequate highway system and pray you can get out of the way.
That might have been fine when I was 20, but I wouldn't do it now at 51.
So what about when I'm 81??
Its better in Texas than Florida in hurricane season. Florida gets it on all 4 sides. while Texas only gets it from the south east.
You must not have been living in corpus for Harvey then…. Or evacuating for Rita when it took 16 hours to get to San Antonio from Houston. Evacuating is a nightmare here what do you mean?? Lol
@@CynthiaNotG Yes I lived here then.
We left for Austin two days before Harvey made landfall.
We were advised to go a different route than I-37 so we went up 77 then cut over using the back roads.
Once we got off of 37 it was pretty easy going.
The traffic did back up some in the smaller towns but that was helped by local PD and DPS that were out in the rain at big intersections to keep the traffic flowing.
I moved to Corpus in 2001 and have never regretted my move here.
I would never live in Houston because of what you are describing happens during hurricanes, and honestly I never want to live in another huge Texas city again.
But even if you're in Houston you'll be a hell of a lot safer than if you were to try to evacuate with two days or less from a storm landfall than if you had to drive from Miami.
Fort Meyers was all but leveled a couple years ago.
The median house prices in these places just about gave me heart attacks. The average home price in NY is like $150k.
Only the Beach area was "leveled". LMAO. You missed the boat in Florida unless you came here 6 years ago.
I'm gonna assume you made a typo when you wrote NY has an avg home price of $150K when it's more like 3 times that amt....
Yes, the avg NY state home price is $450,000 @@Vendrix86
I live in ohio and I always say when I retire the only two places I would live is in San Diego or Charleston South Carolina. Both are relaxing and beautiful.
San Diego is a crime pit now. Streets full of homeless and human feces
I like Charlotte. it’s a pretty nice city
A nice town to consider is Asheville, North Carolina, Not too big, but lots of culture, and they have a university, so you can figure it's not too small either.
Florida has become expensive because so many people are moving here they are building constantly housing and apartments so there's more accidents that's why car insurance is high and a lot of insurance companies have left the state because of payouts from hurricanes. My house insurance last year was $5000 and this year it went down to $3000. Building supplies are expensive everywhere.
I think this guy from North Carolina doing the list. North Carolina is not good guys too cold in the winter. Tampa bay florida is the place . and we don't get hurricanes haven't had a hurricane over a hundred years
Well, a direct hurricane hit, because there have been many skirting through.
Texas has reduced their property tax a lot recently. Great place to retire if you can handle the heat. Stick with the Carolina's. I think you would be happy there........
There's a reason the Carolinas stay under the radar. Not as much crazy sh!t going on here as the rest of the states. In fact people in NC tend to dress properly when going to Walmart. Yes, it's true.
I drove by them one year and went to a Walmart and saw two people wearing overalls and covered in sh*t so I wouldn't go that far
@@noelramirez1551 I doubt it. They would not have made it past the greeter.
@@oldcodger4371 not all Walmarts have greeters they were covered in horse or cow manure
@@noelramirez1551 I dunno, but sounds like someone is full of horse manure.
The Carolinas are beautiful. I think sports wise, you’d be more interested in living in North Carolina. Franklin, TN is a great town, but real estate is ridiculously high as many wealthy musicians and actors live in Franklin or nearby Brentwood. Pittsburgh is supposed to be an interesting city but the winters are snowy and cold. Florida is a hell hole in the summer. Beautiful beaches, but the heat and humidity is intolerable outside. San Diego is wonderful but real estate is too expensive in any of the nice areas of California. What about Arizona? It is hot in the summer, but drier than the humid south. And Tempe and Scottsdale are nice areas near Phoenix. There are sports, and golf. Plus lots of interesting places to travel to in Arizona as well as neighboring Utah and Colorado. Flagstaff is a nice small town, but far from Phoenix and no sports. It is higher up so summers are cooler and there is some snow in the winter.
San Diego !!!!!!!!!!!!! However, homes are expensive. Great downtown with bars and great beaches as Carlsbad, La Jolla etc. Many great areas from more East to the Coast. You guys are hip, sharp and real, very San Diego ! Check out Carlsbad. If you can afford it, San Diego is the place. If Aiden is single, good amount of "Fit" attractive woman there ! Weather is perfect "most" of the time. Sunny yet cool.
New York, Illinois and California are the 3 most liberal states. Big surprise everyone is moving 😂❤😂
Do not waste your time going to Pittsburgh. Yes it's a big sports town and there are some and I emphasize some nice big city type things to do and see like museums, arts and restaurants, but overall it's not good . The economy is stagnant and the population is not growing. Crime is bad in certain areas along with graffiti and trash just about everywhere you look. The weather is also dreadful at times . For being a small city by American standards, the traffic is surprisingly horrible at certain times of the day and this is made worse because of all the tunnels and bridges. Also the topography is very hilly. A lot of small towns close by that used to be huge steel manufactures and when the mills shutdown have become absolute $hit and EXTREMELY DANGEROUS. Now if your travels in America bring you close, yes it's worth visiting , but if you're visiting America, don't go out of your way to visit Pittsburgh.
Yes nice place to retire on east coast is the Carolinas and couple New England states
Out of all the places i never thought Alabama would have made the list. Dont get me wrong i live in Alabama (and love it) BUT thats because i dont like city life or crowds 😅
It gets hot here in NC for sure. I feel like you would like NC better than SC. I think we've got the major pro sports covered here except MLB. I live in Durham and the Durham Bulls games are fun & I don't even care for baseball. We also have some great college teams here. You'll be forced to pick a side! 😂
American Airlines is based out of Dallas, TX…not Charlotte.
Can you please try Tims Horton s
I would say a lot of people are going to move to Brisbane here in Queensland Australia heading towards the 2032 Olympics because the Olympics will be here in Brisbane in 2032.
Boise is not too far from Seattle. Seahawks, football, Mariners baseball, , Kraken hockey.
Taxes are cheap in Carolina’s. Property taxes
As someone who has lived there, why Boise of all places? Wouldn't have pegged either of you as having an interest in the area.
SC is backwoods 😂 only a couple of cities that aren't. Please don't move here, we can't take anymore 🙅🏾♀️🙅🏾♀️🤣 San Diego is perfect, beautiful weather. Our summers in SC are unbearable 😭
California is where communism has a foot hold.
I’m from Boise, Boise sucks! Over crowded and Idaho is a crack head state! Not joking!
Here is the ACTUAL top ten in the USA, starting from #1: The Villages, Florida. Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. Ocala, Florida. Asheville, North Carolina. Summerville, South Carolina. Dillon, Colorado. Greenville, South Carolina. Saint Augustine, Florida. Franklin, Tennessee. Wilmington, North Carolina
I sense a biased theme here...
facts are biased. AND, the market is ALWAYS right.@@Vendrix86
@@Marcus-p5i5syou don't know what a fact is. Your list isn't a fact, it's opinion lol. Someday maybe you'll learn the difference
@@Vendrix86No, this is a list of FACTS based on the ratio of number moving in vs OUT in each area. Compiled by the Gov't. Rent IQ
@@Marcus-p5i5sYOU'RE still choosing to use that stat to label it "top 10" you dingus. That is what makes it an opinion. There is no factual "top 10" for anything because whoever makes the list chooses their own criteria. Use your head for once.
IDK what yall are looking for but moving to the Carolina's would be a nice family area but theres just nothing to do... like how unfortunate it will be for yall to just go to Panthers games. The most fun yall would get outside of the basic things is going to college basketball games. If the whole fam is going esp with Aiden... i think Florida and Texas would be better bc of the many things to do as well as having amazing family homes and areas to live in. You have a plethora of sports and if your in Florida you'll have many amusement parks to explore and have fun at. Also Messi is in Miami so thats a plus. But regardless im sure when/if yall move back to the US yall would have trips planned to do more exploring so im guessing how close leisure is probably isnt important to yall. Daz and Aiden are going to sports games regardless of where they live lol.
North Carolina has professional football, basketball, soccer, hockey, NASCAR, and PGA events also with the NASCAR Hall of Fame and the PGA Hall of Fame moving here. The only sport missing is MLB but there are several minor league teams. By the way, Charlotte FC won against Miami and Messi last season.
UA-cam keeps unsubscribing me every time I subscribe to your channel.
THANK GOD Austin is no longer on that list!!!!!!
That is not true California has seen an increase in people moving here especially from Texas. Do your research!!
No need to guess what region this guy lives in...
😂😂 I have a theory too, but what are you getting at first?
👍👍
Look into local politics religion race relations...
Nothing made it more apparent that we are 50 individual states than the pandemic.
Watch this video
top 10 cities to move to if you love donald trump and his rabid followers.
I wonder if this narrator is AI. There's a weird pause every few words he says.
Nah, not AI. He has a moderate Pittsburgh/Baltimore/Mid-Atlantic accent. I can't quite place exactly where, but definitely somewhere around there. I grew up in Pennsylvania, between Pittsburgh and Baltimore
The Carolinas are not exciting but it's got everything on a small scale
4:25 Ore-a-gone? Pronounced Ory-gun