Hosted by Suzanne Whang, the show takes viewers behind the scenes as individuals, couples and families learn what to look for and decide whether or not a home is meant for them.Hosted by Suzanne Whang, the show takes viewers behind the scenes as individuals, couples and families learn what to look for and decide whether or not a home is meant for them.Hosted by Suzanne Whang, the show takes viewers behind the scenes as individuals, couples and families learn what to look for and decide whether or not a home is meant for them.
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Sometimes good, sometimes not so much and sometimes its downright dumb.. I have lived in several cities in america and can say from experience, some of these prices are highly inflated.. and yeah we know "its a sellers market".. "its a hot market right now".. "be quick with your offer" etc etc blah blah yawny yawn yawn n please
So whenever I'm traveling I always end up running into this show as I don't have a normal television set at home. I really like this show I think when I watched it I thought it was the lottery show about building your own house but it wasn't. I really like this show the episode that I originally saw was a good one and then I watched the marathon and one thing I noticed around the 3rd episode a lot of people don't know what they're talking about on this show. I'm not talking about the real estate sales people. I'm talking about the people who think they know what they want. It kind of makes the show a little bit hard to watch or a bit hard to swallow or a bit bitter or sour or whatever you want to call it it kind of sours it a little bit. A lot of the people in there say really nasty things about some of the homes that they walk into. There's really nothing that bad about the home but the way they tear down The house's character I feel is unnecessary. We get it you don't like the house it's your money it's your dream and all of that but sometimes the house just isn't for you I feel like it's really tasteless and distasteful how they speak about some of these properties if you don't like it just don't buy it. Also a lot of these houses are good and they don't seem to see it. They just want something that they can't afford and they just can't accept the fact that they can't afford what they want. A lot of people have really bad taste on this show. But because the real estate sales people are good they're not going to have them walk away with something that bad. Which is refreshing on my end because if I were to buy a house and someone showed me houses and my own budget and a lot of them had that look to it you know I'd be happy about that. These people seem more on the ungrateful side and I think that irritates me. But the show is very good at some things just to see what houses are on the market maybe put yourself in the position that you might get to look at some homes.every once in awhile by the way, someone with a good taste comes along. On the episode I'm watching this one person's mother is really trying to tell their kids right and they're just not listening and a lot of times average people don't know anything about stuff but this mom really knows what she's talking about she's trying to look out for a kid and he's just so ungrateful.
I agree with a lot of the other reviews. I love seeing all the different homes and places. But I can not stand the people. Complain about everything. I am not using that bathtub cause it has a gold faucet and so on. I am getting to where I turn it a lot. I cant handle all the negativity through the whole show. I understand there are things you may not like but these people just acting ungrateful!
"House Hunters" is a great show on HGTV with a simple concept - house hunters look at three homes and choose one, discussing the pros and cons in between. Hosted by the lovely Suzanne Wong, there is something very involving about this show and some other HGTV offerings, such as Designed to Sell, Buy Me, and How Much is My House Worth.
I think it's the couch potato aspect combined with fantasy that works well for this show and others on the network. We can pick our own favorite house and then say things like, "I knew they'd pick that one," or "They're idiots" when they choose, and we can also discuss how much money we think they have while asking the age-old question, "What is the big deal with hardwood floors and granite countertops?" (Without them, your house may as well go into foreclosure.) And we can listen to them carp about the color of the rooms - as if they aren't willing to paint. When the home owners are revisited in the new place later, we are able to analyze their taste. This all easily replaces looking out the window while the new neighbors are moving in.
The house hunters themselves are usually delightful people with whom the audience identifies, though not only. Many of them have pets, and if they don't, they usually acquire them once they move. So one can ooh and ah over babies and puppies. HGTV is onto a good thing.
I think it's the couch potato aspect combined with fantasy that works well for this show and others on the network. We can pick our own favorite house and then say things like, "I knew they'd pick that one," or "They're idiots" when they choose, and we can also discuss how much money we think they have while asking the age-old question, "What is the big deal with hardwood floors and granite countertops?" (Without them, your house may as well go into foreclosure.) And we can listen to them carp about the color of the rooms - as if they aren't willing to paint. When the home owners are revisited in the new place later, we are able to analyze their taste. This all easily replaces looking out the window while the new neighbors are moving in.
The house hunters themselves are usually delightful people with whom the audience identifies, though not only. Many of them have pets, and if they don't, they usually acquire them once they move. So one can ooh and ah over babies and puppies. HGTV is onto a good thing.
In general, is anyone else sick and tired of all these WHINEY rich kids whose Mommy and Daddy are obviously paying for the houses these spoiled brats are "buying" on this show?
My husband and I are both professionals raising two children, and BARELY getting by, while these snotty twenty-somethings are on the show "buying" houses that they cannot possibly afford. Does House Hunters have something against real, working families, or are these spoiled kids all part of the House Hunters extended family (producers, writers, executives etc):
In closing, please put some real people with real incomes on your show to at least give it a modicum of reality. Enough is enough of couples who are "musicians" or "artists" or "party planners" or other such nonsense.
Join the REAL world!!!
My husband and I are both professionals raising two children, and BARELY getting by, while these snotty twenty-somethings are on the show "buying" houses that they cannot possibly afford. Does House Hunters have something against real, working families, or are these spoiled kids all part of the House Hunters extended family (producers, writers, executives etc):
In closing, please put some real people with real incomes on your show to at least give it a modicum of reality. Enough is enough of couples who are "musicians" or "artists" or "party planners" or other such nonsense.
Join the REAL world!!!
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Did you know
- TriviaThe homeowners chosen for the show actually already own or are in the process of buying the house they are shown choosing before production begins. The other two houses shown are ones the homeowners did consider.
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