The vibe in San Jose is totally different. It's mostly suburban with a lot of families with children. Families don't go downtown every friday night to the clubs, so the demographic doesn't fit the vibe. If you want a party spot, most people goto the city (SF) for that. Downtown San Jose has always been a ghost town for the last 30 years, even before the pandemic, for the most part. It gets lively on weekend nights, but that's about it. Nowadays, most people are working from home and are hanging out around their local communities, but if you goto the family friendly areas of San Jose, you will always see activity there every weekend; but it only makes sense if you have kids. Another commenter mentioned Valley Fair & Santana Row, and that's where most of the patrons of San Jose hang out, where it's usually always bustling and crowded--but I have to say that is true for most malls in metro areas in general. If you've ever grown up in suburbia, the only action you will see is at the local mall. You should get footage from the local mall if you want to cover suburban city like San Jose, which has more single family lot homes than San Francisco (aka, mostly suburbia, which San Francisco is not). There are really no skyscrapers in San Jose. All the buildings there have a 15 story limit due to the fact that the downtown area is on the flight path of the airplanes landing in the nearby airport; therefore, I don't consider San Jose having any "skycrapers", as they will never go past 15 stories. Skyscrapers are more prevalent in SF or Oakland, where they don't have the same building height restrictions. I agree there needs to be more housing in San Jose, but the most desirable land in San Jose is not necessarily a condo or townhome; most people who live down here want a house with two yards (front and back) and the white picket fence, a.k.a. suburbia. That's the whole reason to move down in San Jose--there's more land compared to San Francisco.
Homeless in San Jose aren't clustered downtown because San Jose is a massive area. The homeless are in RVs parked wherever they can, often in highway underpasses, parks, anywhere along a creek (which fouls the water), or areas of low density commercial or industrial. They can get away with broken down RVs because code enforcement for things like broken vehicles on public street parking is way down. San Jose is a bit more active in trying to manage its homeless population compared to SF, but let's be real - that's not a high bar to clear.
I would hope every voter in San Jose who voted for the policies which have led to this disaster gets to have a first-hand experience of the violence of the lawlessness they created.
Back in the 90s visited San Jose; went to a failed arcade area which looked like it could have been fun ..you know a beachy summer ...but it was gone & it appeared to me like the city had lost its community, its soul ....sad
San Jose's downtown was never really filled with stores to start with. The presence of Valley Fair and later Santana Row just west of downtown San Jose pretty much sucked away all the potential stores from the city center even in the best of times.
I'd assume that has been the history of SJ for over 30 yrs. However, unlike various metro areas, the indoor mall format in SJ (Valley Fair) at least has remained strong. If SJ's major shopping center were another dead mall (increasingly common throughout the US), that would make the entire SF South Bay look like it was ailing. But Silicon Valley has brought a huge amount of money into the Bay Area, particularly the southern half of it. So, as someone noted, not surprising that Valley Fair is the most profitable (or highest grossing) mall in all of Ca.
When I was a kid in the late 60s/early 70s, downtown was THE place to go. There was a lot of shopping; stores for clothing and shoes both men and women, jewelry, and there were three department stores. On Saturday nights, especially during the warmer months, a whole lot of cruising by young folks with their cars would be going on. As best as I can recall, the mid to late 70s was when the downtown area's retail stores started to trickle away.
I was born and raised in SanJose. The late 80's through the 1990's was the golden time for restaurants, cafe's, comedy clubs and bars. Its true, all the food businesses are gone except for a couple Vietnamese Pho' restaurants. The City of Los Gatos, CA which was once are great place for food and microbrews is all closed up too.
Me also, but actually the Golden Times were even and especially the late 1800s to the 1980s as well (and especially the Post WWII boom of the area and tech industry).
West Valley Mall & Santana Row Valley Fair is the largest mall, by area, in Northern California and has higher sales revenue than all other malls in California, including the two in Southern California which have larger area than Valley Fair. This is not counting Santana Row. Your video is misleading.
There's a big problem with Valley Fair and Santana Row, though: _not enough parking_ . And that's even with plentiful excellent bus service on Stevens Creek Boulevard between the two shopping centers.
What about that mall near Foster City that was huge and vacant since the early 1990s when I was there? Truth is, this out-of-towner has it right. NoCA needs to downsize, convert to residential buildings, take a haircut on real estate prices, bulldoze some commercial stuff. True all over the USA.
@@raylopez99Its fair to say there's a few bad areas in a city. But when someone says a whole city is bad because of the few bad areas then it sounds ridiculous.
@@12321goofball I said nothing about 'bad areas' like for crime. I'm saying all of NoCA is ruined because there's too much commercial areas and not enough residential. And zoning is messed up. Google "Missing Middle" which is trying to change zoning laws (and succeeding) so YIMBYs can build more high-density residential.
Oh, there are homeless people, but most of them are living along the Guadalupe River. And if you do see homeless in downtown San Jose, they are in Saint James Park.
San Jose’s downtown has been lackluster as of late. It was actually cool from about 2000-2015 but more business keep shuttering, which continued to accelerate during and after covid
I think you nailed it. You have a combined problem of high residential rent and low commercial occupancy (no office workers). Working people can't afford to live there and rich people don't want to live there. Gotta bring the artists back, the small businesses back, the restaurants back. Its possible. The banks will have to take a hit for a good decade but its fixable. Detroit, I heard, is on the up and up.
As a native to San Jose I would love this place a lot since I was raised here and most people don’t really live in San Jose downtown, they mostly live at least The western of San Jose
I just finished a trip to see some MLB ballparks. Cincinnati, Cleveland, and Pittsburgh we’re about the same. Nice clean streets, but almost no people. You could jaywalk everywhere without looking for traffic. There wasn’t any traffic.
San Jose is the 10th largest city in US, don't confuse downtown San Jose with City of San Jose. San Jose has a population of 1 million people and very very few people lives in downtown San Jose. Saying San Jose is the most empty city is simply wrong.
you didnt drive by the area where more people would have been around first street and santa clara ? its been 25 been 25 years since i was hanging out there
"...even the homeless don't want to go there..." ??? Why, when there aren't enough (working?) people from whom to hustle for money? The homeless go where people with money go, and yes... even in Santa Clara County (San José, etc) the homeless are headed for the suburbs. "There's money in them there 'burbs!"
Downtown has always been like this, i actually never really know why...unless you have business in those places you really never go down there. Theres too much to do in san jose, and people are usually at valley fair, or oakridge, or santana row...or heck they go to SF. Downtown has never been a real hangout spot, theres nothing to do down there, maybe a few restaurants here and there but yeah no reason to ever go there
You take 25 marbles and place them in a 5 in diameter bowl, then compare that to a 50 marbles and place them in a 15 in diameter bowl, most people would say there are more marbles in the smaller bowl. Quite simple. The design of this city was screwed up royally in the 1950's and has never recovered due to planning, and it will never recover. As for no homeless? I wish that was the case, you can't throw a sandwich without hitting one of those bastards. Nothing but closed stores? Have you ever visited other CA cities and towns, have you been to SF lately? Looks like a zombie apocalypse with all the tweaked out burnouts and boarded up stores. Oakland is no better, only difference is you replace most of the zombies with roving band of thugs. "fun areas" indeed.
Those of us old enough to remember...in the seventy's and eighty's, San Jose had a huge rate of crime, one of the worst in the state. It was awful, people began leaving back then, crime increased, drugs and robbrries. All yhise businesses are long gone, and decades later, this is the result. Democrat policies in action. Eventually, this is how all democrat run cities end up.
it's pretty simple why there aren't that many stores in downtown san jose. it is fairly close to East Ridge Mall and Valley Fair Mall so stores don't need to establish a footprint there. as for lack of restaurants, you can blame the high inflation for that. restaurants that want to charge $50-$75 person just can't survive in this environment unless they have something special.
You are talking about downtown San jo which is not all the city. There is a whole lot more to San jo then downtown! Google, Apple, and all the tech companies are located in Santa Clara which is part of San jo but not located in downtown.
I was living in a shity one-bedroom over on Williams and Saratoga on the west side I left there it was 975 3 months later it was $1,200 glad I left San Jose a long time ago my cousin always wanted to go downtown there was always something to do there was a club called tunes that had been around for many many years or they had music in the park you won't see that anymore and yes San Jose is bad watch you drive your car over to the east side of San Jose story road in White road
I visited in November and I loved it. I was in Santana Row. I’m from Miami, and I’m willing to relocate for the right cause. The Westfield Valley Fair is beautiful and well-kept.
They can't lower the rents for political reasons. If it's lowered and they slap on rent controls then they're stuck. Another reason rent controls are counter productive.
School starts next week and there will be 10,000 college students walking around downtown. Maybe some Boba shops will open so students won’t have to drive to Cupertino for lunch.
Downtown isn't San Jose lmao. Downtown definitely having issues with the rise of work from home, but it's always had issues attracting smaller businesses like restaurants. But if you think Downtown San Jose IS San Jose, you've never actually been to San Jose.
The pandemic has closed down a lot of businesses all around the country dude! Downtown sections of major cities such as San Jose and San Francisco are stagnant because businesses aren’t renting offices and people aren’t renting the apartments, who could afford them!!
Trust me there are a lot of homeless in San Jose. Go to the Guadalupe River by the Shark Tank or off of 280, where The Jungle encampment is located. Most of the homeless on DT San Jose hang out in front of City Hall, smoking weed out in the open. San Jose is and always was a bit of a $hithole.
Just a side note: I'm here in Vegas for a few days. They don't fk around with shoplifters, lol. And I haven't seen one tent, not one, and I've been on and off the Strip.
I mean, that makes sense. Vegas only exists because of tourism and having blight or aggressive pan handlers would threaten tourism. The casinos aren't going to stand for that.
@@markjpascual I should have added it's the entire state, not just Vegas. You shoplift here, you go to jail and pay restitution. Commiefornians tolerate it.
Come sit on hiway 101 in the morning for a hour and half and tell me nobody lives in San jose. This looks like Sunday morning driving around. I can tell you every shopping center has a pho noodles or taco restaurant.
I would say Nextdoor is a better barometer, even with the PC police doing all they can to prevent negative perceptions. if they see the word "homeless" in a post they immediately send a warning with a link to approved messages on homelessness. But you can still look at the number of people posting about assaults, vandalism, car break ins, porch pirates, etc. Look at what people are posting about in what used to be enviable suburban neighborhoods in Almaden and Santa Teresa and places like Oak Ridge Mall - where the Home Depot burned down to distract people from a theft. The nextdoor pet hospital was evacuated in time because concerned people acted without thinking.
The vibe in San Jose is totally different. It's mostly suburban with a lot of families with children. Families don't go downtown every friday night to the clubs, so the demographic doesn't fit the vibe. If you want a party spot, most people goto the city (SF) for that. Downtown San Jose has always been a ghost town for the last 30 years, even before the pandemic, for the most part. It gets lively on weekend nights, but that's about it. Nowadays, most people are working from home and are hanging out around their local communities, but if you goto the family friendly areas of San Jose, you will always see activity there every weekend; but it only makes sense if you have kids. Another commenter mentioned Valley Fair & Santana Row, and that's where most of the patrons of San Jose hang out, where it's usually always bustling and crowded--but I have to say that is true for most malls in metro areas in general. If you've ever grown up in suburbia, the only action you will see is at the local mall. You should get footage from the local mall if you want to cover suburban city like San Jose, which has more single family lot homes than San Francisco (aka, mostly suburbia, which San Francisco is not).
There are really no skyscrapers in San Jose. All the buildings there have a 15 story limit due to the fact that the downtown area is on the flight path of the airplanes landing in the nearby airport; therefore, I don't consider San Jose having any "skycrapers", as they will never go past 15 stories. Skyscrapers are more prevalent in SF or Oakland, where they don't have the same building height restrictions. I agree there needs to be more housing in San Jose, but the most desirable land in San Jose is not necessarily a condo or townhome; most people who live down here want a house with two yards (front and back) and the white picket fence, a.k.a. suburbia. That's the whole reason to move down in San Jose--there's more land compared to San Francisco.
This guy has no idea what he's talking about. I live in San Jose and the city is really spread out. Downtown San Jose never ever had many pedestrians.
Who would have thunk it? Legalize theft and all the stores close. I wonder why that happened? Oh well.
Don't forget raise taxes through the roof.
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u never been to sj im guessing
Homeless in San Jose aren't clustered downtown because San Jose is a massive area. The homeless are in RVs parked wherever they can, often in highway underpasses, parks, anywhere along a creek (which fouls the water), or areas of low density commercial or industrial. They can get away with broken down RVs because code enforcement for things like broken vehicles on public street parking is way down. San Jose is a bit more active in trying to manage its homeless population compared to SF, but let's be real - that's not a high bar to clear.
Managing is exactly what they do. The RVs mostly just play musical chairs; the problem is not moving toward any kind of solution.
shit, why it takes me 40 min every morning to drive through San Jose, staying in traffic, where all those "missing" people coming from
I would hope every voter in San Jose who voted for the policies which have led to this disaster gets to have a first-hand experience of the violence of the lawlessness they created.
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Back in the 90s visited San Jose; went to a failed arcade area which looked like it could have been fun ..you know a beachy summer ...but it was gone & it appeared to me like the city had lost its community, its soul ....sad
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San Jose's downtown was never really filled with stores to start with. The presence of Valley Fair and later Santana Row just west of downtown San Jose pretty much sucked away all the potential stores from the city center even in the best of times.
I'd assume that has been the history of SJ for over 30 yrs. However, unlike various metro areas, the indoor mall format in SJ (Valley Fair) at least has remained strong. If SJ's major shopping center were another dead mall (increasingly common throughout the US), that would make the entire SF South Bay look like it was ailing. But Silicon Valley has brought a huge amount of money into the Bay Area, particularly the southern half of it. So, as someone noted, not surprising that Valley Fair is the most profitable (or highest grossing) mall in all of Ca.
When I was a kid in the late 60s/early 70s, downtown was THE place to go. There was a lot of shopping; stores for clothing and shoes both men and women, jewelry, and there were three department stores. On Saturday nights, especially during the warmer months, a whole lot of cruising by young folks with their cars would be going on. As best as I can recall, the mid to late 70s was when the downtown area's retail stores started to trickle away.
East and west side of San Jose is where the families with kids live the North and Downtown area is where the houseless roam around peace ✌️💯
I was born and raised in SanJose. The late 80's through the 1990's was the golden time for restaurants, cafe's, comedy clubs and bars. Its true, all the food businesses are gone except for a couple Vietnamese Pho' restaurants. The City of Los Gatos, CA which was once are great place for food and microbrews is all closed up too.
so whats the best places in cali?
Me also, but actually the Golden Times were even and especially the late 1800s to the 1980s as well (and especially the Post WWII boom of the area and tech industry).
@@repentandbelieveinjesus33 Most non-chain privately owned places except chinese.
West Valley Mall & Santana Row
Valley Fair is the largest mall, by area, in Northern California and has higher sales revenue than all other malls in California, including the two in Southern California which have larger area than Valley Fair. This is not counting Santana Row. Your video is misleading.
Don't think this guy lives in the bay area. He just likes making videos catastrophizing.
There's a big problem with Valley Fair and Santana Row, though: _not enough parking_ . And that's even with plentiful excellent bus service on Stevens Creek Boulevard between the two shopping centers.
What about that mall near Foster City that was huge and vacant since the early 1990s when I was there? Truth is, this out-of-towner has it right. NoCA needs to downsize, convert to residential buildings, take a haircut on real estate prices, bulldoze some commercial stuff. True all over the USA.
@@raylopez99Its fair to say there's a few bad areas in a city. But when someone says a whole city is bad because of the few bad areas then it sounds ridiculous.
@@12321goofball I said nothing about 'bad areas' like for crime. I'm saying all of NoCA is ruined because there's too much commercial areas and not enough residential. And zoning is messed up. Google "Missing Middle" which is trying to change zoning laws (and succeeding) so YIMBYs can build more high-density residential.
Most tech people work from home. Apartment and houses are still very expensive in San Jose. But, how long it will last?
the bay area will go the way of Sodom and Gomorrah
downtown san jose was dead in the 90s unless an event was going on or some clubbing on weekends
Oh, there are homeless people, but most of them are living along the Guadalupe River. And if you do see homeless in downtown San Jose, they are in Saint James Park.
Get what you vote for!
what a beautiful town. No joke it's like the rapture happened or something, I love it!
"Like GTA5 without a single NPC" - classic quote!
San Jose’s downtown has been lackluster as of late. It was actually cool from about 2000-2015 but more business keep shuttering, which continued to accelerate during and after covid
A lot of people are still working from home. It’s more busy down by San Pedro square on a Friday.
1:23 okay I’m on my phone and my eye vision is not the best but am I seeing that right, a big pile of shit 💩 statue?😂
The City wasted like $2 Million taxpayer dollars on that pile lol. People were pissed off.
I think you nailed it. You have a combined problem of high residential rent and low commercial occupancy (no office workers). Working people can't afford to live there and rich people don't want to live there. Gotta bring the artists back, the small businesses back, the restaurants back. Its possible. The banks will have to take a hit for a good decade but its fixable. Detroit, I heard, is on the up and up.
A huge residential project called Nabr in the works for years also gave up in San Jose.
1:24 is that a giant 💩 sculpture?!
🤣🤣🤣🤣
The City wasted like $2 Million taxpayer dollars on that pile lol. People were pissed off.
As a native to San Jose I would love this place a lot since I was raised here and most people don’t really live in San Jose downtown, they mostly live at least The western of San Jose
Do you know the way to San Jose?
Great Work.
I just finished a trip to see some MLB ballparks. Cincinnati, Cleveland, and Pittsburgh we’re about the same. Nice clean streets, but almost no people. You could jaywalk everywhere without looking for traffic. There wasn’t any traffic.
San Jose is the 10th largest city in US, don't confuse downtown San Jose with City of San Jose. San Jose has a population of 1 million people and very very few people lives in downtown San Jose. Saying San Jose is the most empty city is simply wrong.
you didnt drive by the area where more people would have been around first street and santa clara ? its been 25 been 25 years since i was hanging out there
"...even the homeless don't want to go there..." ??? Why, when there aren't enough (working?) people
from whom to hustle for money? The homeless go where people with money go, and yes... even in
Santa Clara County (San José, etc) the homeless are headed for the suburbs. "There's money in them
there 'burbs!"
The saving grace is that large block of San Jose State is very close to downtown SJ. State money still flows to their core.
Bro has never been to San Jose 😂
let them have what they voted for
Errrr... I live in Downtown San Jose and pay $3300/mo for a 1bdrm apartment and my building is full. We live here and want to live here for sure
no store no robbery Hight taxes
as a bay area native hearing this dude say the peninsula is the last good part of the bay is like nails on a chalkboard
Why? I think there are other "good areas" like parts of the East Bay/ Contra Costa County, North Bay/ Marin, etc.
I would bet that rent reductions are coming. They have to reduce the taxable value of this property or lose it to the city.
OMG! That's the solution to homelessness Close all the stores.
Downtown has always been like this, i actually never really know why...unless you have business in those places you really never go down there. Theres too much to do in san jose, and people are usually at valley fair, or oakridge, or santana row...or heck they go to SF. Downtown has never been a real hangout spot, theres nothing to do down there, maybe a few restaurants here and there but yeah no reason to ever go there
You take 25 marbles and place them in a 5 in diameter bowl, then compare that to a 50 marbles and place them in a 15 in diameter bowl, most people would say there are more marbles in the smaller bowl. Quite simple. The design of this city was screwed up royally in the 1950's and has never recovered due to planning, and it will never recover. As for no homeless? I wish that was the case, you can't throw a sandwich without hitting one of those bastards. Nothing but closed stores? Have you ever visited other CA cities and towns, have you been to SF lately? Looks like a zombie apocalypse with all the tweaked out burnouts and boarded up stores. Oakland is no better, only difference is you replace most of the zombies with roving band of thugs. "fun areas" indeed.
Those of us old enough to remember...in the seventy's and eighty's, San Jose had a huge rate of crime, one of the worst in the state.
It was awful, people began leaving back then, crime increased, drugs and robbrries. All yhise businesses are long gone, and decades later, this is the result.
Democrat policies in action.
Eventually, this is how all democrat run cities end up.
it's pretty simple why there aren't that many stores in downtown san jose. it is fairly close to East Ridge Mall and Valley Fair Mall so stores don't need to establish a footprint there. as for lack of restaurants, you can blame the high inflation for that. restaurants that want to charge $50-$75 person just can't survive in this environment unless they have something special.
The neutron bomb effect
i.e. Democrat "Leadership".
As someone who played city skylines they should add more residential zoning
You are talking about downtown San jo which is not all the city. There is a whole lot more to San jo then downtown! Google, Apple, and all the tech companies are located in Santa Clara which is part of San jo but not located in downtown.
It's always been like this during the day. Also, forgot to mention, Google hasn't fully taken over yet.
I was living in a shity one-bedroom over on Williams and Saratoga on the west side I left there it was 975 3 months later it was $1,200 glad I left San Jose a long time ago my cousin always wanted to go downtown there was always something to do there was a club called tunes that had been around for many many years or they had music in the park you won't see that anymore and yes San Jose is bad watch you drive your car over to the east side of San Jose story road in White road
Is this a joke? I live in San Jose. Trust me, there's no shortage of businesses or restaurants or anything.
I visited in November and I loved it. I was in Santana Row. I’m from Miami, and I’m willing to relocate for the right cause. The Westfield Valley Fair is beautiful and well-kept.
They can't lower the rents for political reasons. If it's lowered and they slap on rent controls then they're stuck. Another reason rent controls are counter productive.
so tech companies are mainly in sunnyvale, cupertino and mountain view..... not down town san jose
Normally on the work week peoples weekends its pretty empty. sketchy peoples about too.
Downtown San Jose not much shop and store. 99 %. Is office after 5. O’clock. They all home already of cause. No People
A year ago I moved to San Jose, I keep telling everyone, where are the people, it’s the most boring city I have ever been to.
School starts next week and there will be 10,000 college students walking around downtown. Maybe some Boba shops will open so students won’t have to drive to Cupertino for lunch.
Downtown isn't San Jose lmao. Downtown definitely having issues with the rise of work from home, but it's always had issues attracting smaller businesses like restaurants.
But if you think Downtown San Jose IS San Jose, you've never actually been to San Jose.
The pandemic has closed down a lot of businesses all around the country dude! Downtown sections of major cities such as San Jose and San Francisco are stagnant because businesses aren’t renting offices and people aren’t renting the apartments, who could afford them!!
Trust me there are a lot of homeless in San Jose. Go to the Guadalupe River by the Shark Tank or off of 280, where The Jungle encampment is located. Most of the homeless on DT San Jose hang out in front of City Hall, smoking weed out in the open. San Jose is and always was a bit of a $hithole.
This UA-camr probably hasn’t visited too many cities.
Just a side note: I'm here in Vegas for a few days. They don't fk around with shoplifters, lol. And I haven't seen one tent, not one, and I've been on and off the Strip.
I mean, that makes sense. Vegas only exists because of tourism and having blight or aggressive pan handlers would threaten tourism. The casinos aren't going to stand for that.
@@markjpascual No one should stand for it, but the dems love it.
@@markjpascual I should have added it's the entire state, not just Vegas. You shoplift here, you go to jail and pay restitution. Commiefornians tolerate it.
What amazes me about the US is where does the money come from to build these ghost cities?
Retirement Plan Money Managers
Come sit on hiway 101 in the morning for a hour and half and tell me nobody lives in San jose. This looks like Sunday morning driving around. I can tell you every shopping center has a pho noodles or taco restaurant.
I see a lot of cars parked on the street so there must be people around. Also, they must have confidence their cars won't be broken into?
Decoy car? To entrap the one car thief still in business? LOL
@@raylopez99 The streets are lined with intact looking parked cars.
No one voted for COVID and the resulting “Remote workplace”. Quit blaming it on the voters.
Let the entire Frisco area implode!!!
$4000 mo rent happened
That's a beautiful city! Could we rename your channel? Dead Cities of America.
First of all, there are no area in Frisco that would be considered good!!!
Larry Elder wanted to help. Governor?
Looks ZOmbie land now . SAN JOSE ITS dying
The suburbs are next.
Most miss leading video I've ever seen
I would say Nextdoor is a better barometer, even with the PC police doing all they can to prevent negative perceptions. if they see the word "homeless" in a post they immediately send a warning with a link to approved messages on homelessness. But you can still look at the number of people posting about assaults, vandalism, car break ins, porch pirates, etc. Look at what people are posting about in what used to be enviable suburban neighborhoods in Almaden and Santa Teresa and places like Oak Ridge Mall - where the Home Depot burned down to distract people from a theft. The nextdoor pet hospital was evacuated in time because concerned people acted without thinking.
Remote work
I lived in dtsj 2017 and it was so vibrant and bustling. Great nightlife too smh
sweet! LOWER THE RENT! :D
😥
🐶I call b*******🤖worst freaking traffic ⚡ ever go down there in 🍀person 😅✌️
This video lies. This is a pointless video.
go to Louisville 😂
Empty??? Lol
So crazy.
Do you know the way to San Jose?