The Search for the Next Mythbuster(s) -
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@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I never liked that show. I mean it was okay, but it wasn't great. It was so formula and cheesy. The two guys did a great job and were good presenters and made it fun in very small doses, but it was like House Hunters, there wasn't any real substance under it.
House Hunters you can summarise with: "I don't like this paint, so let's look at a different house."
And it's all fake. Many of the houses aren't even for sale and the people not buying any house! Like... actually completely fake.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I never liked that show. I mean it was okay, but it wasn't great. It was so formula and cheesy. The two guys did a great job and were good presenters and made it fun in very small doses, but it was like House Hunters, there wasn't any real substance under it.
House Hunters you can summarise with: "I don't like this paint, so let's look at a different house."
And it's all fake. Many of the houses aren't even for sale and the people not buying any house! Like... actually completely fake.
Yes, they already bought it, they just move out the furniture. I actually got a realtor who was on that show for House Hunters International for Russia, she hipped me to the program, I hadn't seen much before that. I never saw the episode(s) she was in, however. Hell, she may have just lied to me.
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@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I never liked that show. I mean it was okay, but it wasn't great. It was so formula and cheesy. The two guys did a great job and were good presenters and made it fun in very small doses, but it was like House Hunters, there wasn't any real substance under it.
House Hunters you can summarise with: "I don't like this paint, so let's look at a different house."
And it's all fake. Many of the houses aren't even for sale and the people not buying any house! Like... actually completely fake.
Yes, they already bought it, they just move out the furniture. I actually got a realtor who was on that show for House Hunters International for Russia, she hipped me to the program, I hadn't seen much before that.
It's neat for the International version only because the US lacks anything like travel television and it provides a very minimal access to that. The locations, at least, are mostly real.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I never liked that show. I mean it was okay, but it wasn't great. It was so formula and cheesy. The two guys did a great job and were good presenters and made it fun in very small doses, but it was like House Hunters, there wasn't any real substance under it.
House Hunters you can summarise with: "I don't like this paint, so let's look at a different house."
And it's all fake. Many of the houses aren't even for sale and the people not buying any house! Like... actually completely fake.
Yes, they already bought it, they just move out the furniture. I actually got a realtor who was on that show for House Hunters International for Russia, she hipped me to the program, I hadn't seen much before that.
It's neat for the International version only because the US lacks anything like travel television and it provides a very minimal access to that. The locations, at least, are mostly real.
I'm the kind of lame person that actually visits places on Travel Channel shows, and No Reservations specifically.
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@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I never liked that show. I mean it was okay, but it wasn't great. It was so formula and cheesy. The two guys did a great job and were good presenters and made it fun in very small doses, but it was like House Hunters, there wasn't any real substance under it.
House Hunters you can summarise with: "I don't like this paint, so let's look at a different house."
And it's all fake. Many of the houses aren't even for sale and the people not buying any house! Like... actually completely fake.
Yes, they already bought it, they just move out the furniture. I actually got a realtor who was on that show for House Hunters International for Russia, she hipped me to the program, I hadn't seen much before that.
It's neat for the International version only because the US lacks anything like travel television and it provides a very minimal access to that. The locations, at least, are mostly real.
I'm the kind of lame person that actually visits places on Travel Channel shows, and No Reservations specifically.
Lame.
I say from my apartment in Sighisoara at the UNESCO World Heritage citadel site
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@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I never liked that show. I mean it was okay, but it wasn't great. It was so formula and cheesy. The two guys did a great job and were good presenters and made it fun in very small doses, but it was like House Hunters, there wasn't any real substance under it.
House Hunters you can summarise with: "I don't like this paint, so let's look at a different house."
And it's all fake. Many of the houses aren't even for sale and the people not buying any house! Like... actually completely fake.
Yes, they already bought it, they just move out the furniture. I actually got a realtor who was on that show for House Hunters International for Russia, she hipped me to the program, I hadn't seen much before that.
It's neat for the International version only because the US lacks anything like travel television and it provides a very minimal access to that. The locations, at least, are mostly real.
I'm the kind of lame person that actually visits places on Travel Channel shows, and No Reservations specifically.
Lame.
I say from my apartment in Sighisoara at the UNESCO World Heritage citadel site
I should clarify it's largely because I don't like researching things because I don't have time, but the second wife does so actually I don't really do that much these days, but when I first started travelling I just sort of matched up with what was close to family at first and branched out. My travel plans also go along the lines of what places let me avoid visas with my Bosnian passport or my now-expired Israeli passport, and my frequently-formaly-seized in Serbia Kosovar passport, which nowadays they also just stamp over the stamp for Kosovo with one for Serbia on my Bosnian one.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I never liked that show. I mean it was okay, but it wasn't great. It was so formula and cheesy. The two guys did a great job and were good presenters and made it fun in very small doses, but it was like House Hunters, there wasn't any real substance under it.
House Hunters you can summarise with: "I don't like this paint, so let's look at a different house."
And it's all fake. Many of the houses aren't even for sale and the people not buying any house! Like... actually completely fake.
Yes, they already bought it, they just move out the furniture. I actually got a realtor who was on that show for House Hunters International for Russia, she hipped me to the program, I hadn't seen much before that.
It's neat for the International version only because the US lacks anything like travel television and it provides a very minimal access to that. The locations, at least, are mostly real.
I'm the kind of lame person that actually visits places on Travel Channel shows, and No Reservations specifically.
Lame.
I say from my apartment in Sighisoara at the UNESCO World Heritage citadel site
Do you only have America citizenship, or what's up with that? Do American passports have visa-free travel in the EU or nation specific or whatever? I have no idea. I assume it's visa free across the board but I do get BS at border crossings sometimes in the west, so...
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@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I never liked that show. I mean it was okay, but it wasn't great. It was so formula and cheesy. The two guys did a great job and were good presenters and made it fun in very small doses, but it was like House Hunters, there wasn't any real substance under it.
House Hunters you can summarise with: "I don't like this paint, so let's look at a different house."
And it's all fake. Many of the houses aren't even for sale and the people not buying any house! Like... actually completely fake.
Yes, they already bought it, they just move out the furniture. I actually got a realtor who was on that show for House Hunters International for Russia, she hipped me to the program, I hadn't seen much before that.
It's neat for the International version only because the US lacks anything like travel television and it provides a very minimal access to that. The locations, at least, are mostly real.
I'm the kind of lame person that actually visits places on Travel Channel shows, and No Reservations specifically.
Lame.
I say from my apartment in Sighisoara at the UNESCO World Heritage citadel site
Do you only have America citizenship, or what's up with that? Do American passports have visa-free travel in the EU or nation specific or whatever? I have no idea.
That's complex. Technically I'm a dual citizen but currently can only get one passport, US. So for travel purposes I'm just American. The US has visa free travel to a huge portion of the world (EU especially.) I get all of the UE, Balkan states, Central America, most of South America and a huge portion around the rest of the world visa free or "visa on arrival" like Turkey. US citizens, like EU citizens, more or less get to just grab backpacks and go, no forethought needed.
As an American I get six months, no questions asked, in Panama, Canada and the UK and one year in Albania!
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I've got school friends in Kosovo, hoping to get to visit them soon.
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@scottalanmiller said:
I've got school friends in Kosovo, hoping to get to visit them soon.
Albanians?
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@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I've got school friends in Kosovo, hoping to get to visit them soon.
Albanians?
Yes, they work for the government there. In Pristina.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I've got school friends in Kosovo, hoping to get to visit them soon.
Albanians?
Yes, they work for the government there. In Pristina.
I've had a thing for Albanian women in the past, it was ... well like I said I am remarried
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We are hoping to make it to Albania proper while we are in the region as well. It's on the distant side of where we are, so is the hardest place for us to get to from here.
Our Schengen visa is maxed out, so we can't cross into Hungary or Greece so we are trapped in the Balkans
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@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I never liked that show. I mean it was okay, but it wasn't great. It was so formula and cheesy. The two guys did a great job and were good presenters and made it fun in very small doses, but it was like House Hunters, there wasn't any real substance under it.
House Hunters you can summarise with: "I don't like this paint, so let's look at a different house."
And it's all fake. Many of the houses aren't even for sale and the people not buying any house! Like... actually completely fake.
Yes, they already bought it, they just move out the furniture. I actually got a realtor who was on that show for House Hunters International for Russia, she hipped me to the program, I hadn't seen much before that.
It's neat for the International version only because the US lacks anything like travel television and it provides a very minimal access to that. The locations, at least, are mostly real.
I'm the kind of lame person that actually visits places on Travel Channel shows, and No Reservations specifically.
Lame.
I say from my apartment in Sighisoara at the UNESCO World Heritage citadel site
Do you only have America citizenship, or what's up with that? Do American passports have visa-free travel in the EU or nation specific or whatever? I have no idea.
That's complex. Technically I'm a dual citizen but currently can only get one passport, US. So for travel purposes I'm just American. The US has visa free travel to a huge portion of the world (EU especially.) I get all of the UE, Balkan states, Central America, most of South America and a huge portion around the rest of the world visa free or "visa on arrival" like Turkey. US citizens, like EU citizens, more or less get to just grab backpacks and go, no forethought needed.
As an American I get six months, no questions asked, in Panama, Canada and the UK and one year in Albania!
With my Bosnian passport I only need a visa to go to Kosovo or America, hence the alternate passport, and while I technically get visa free access to the EU, like I said at border crossings I get a lot of BS sometimes, I'm not sure why exactly. I also do not require a visa for most of the CIS states, but most importantly Russia, so it allows me to easily go from the EU to the CIS without a bunch of problems my western friends have had, or my younger brother who has Turkish citizenship (long story) he basically can't go anywhere without tons of paperwork
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@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I never liked that show. I mean it was okay, but it wasn't great. It was so formula and cheesy. The two guys did a great job and were good presenters and made it fun in very small doses, but it was like House Hunters, there wasn't any real substance under it.
House Hunters you can summarise with: "I don't like this paint, so let's look at a different house."
And it's all fake. Many of the houses aren't even for sale and the people not buying any house! Like... actually completely fake.
Yes, they already bought it, they just move out the furniture. I actually got a realtor who was on that show for House Hunters International for Russia, she hipped me to the program, I hadn't seen much before that.
It's neat for the International version only because the US lacks anything like travel television and it provides a very minimal access to that. The locations, at least, are mostly real.
I'm the kind of lame person that actually visits places on Travel Channel shows, and No Reservations specifically.
Lame.
I say from my apartment in Sighisoara at the UNESCO World Heritage citadel site
Do you only have America citizenship, or what's up with that? Do American passports have visa-free travel in the EU or nation specific or whatever? I have no idea.
That's complex. Technically I'm a dual citizen but currently can only get one passport, US. So for travel purposes I'm just American. The US has visa free travel to a huge portion of the world (EU especially.) I get all of the UE, Balkan states, Central America, most of South America and a huge portion around the rest of the world visa free or "visa on arrival" like Turkey. US citizens, like EU citizens, more or less get to just grab backpacks and go, no forethought needed.
As an American I get six months, no questions asked, in Panama, Canada and the UK and one year in Albania!
With my Bosnian passport I only need a visa to go to Kosovo or America, hence the alternate passport, and while I technically get visa free access to the EU, like I said at border crossings I get a lot of BS sometimes, I'm not sure why exactly. I also do not require a visa for most of the CIS states, but most importantly Russia, so it allows me to easily go from the EU to the CIS without a bunch of problems my western friends have had, or my younger brother who has Turkish citizenship (long story) he basically can't go anywhere without tons of paperwork
Yeah, it's sad that we can't cross into the CIS (except Moldova) without complications. Not that we can't, but we have to prep for it and can't do it casually. We are living just off the CIS border so it curtails out travel options a lot. Although our car can't cross into the CIS on the current insurance so we'd have to have other transport options.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I never liked that show. I mean it was okay, but it wasn't great. It was so formula and cheesy. The two guys did a great job and were good presenters and made it fun in very small doses, but it was like House Hunters, there wasn't any real substance under it.
House Hunters you can summarise with: "I don't like this paint, so let's look at a different house."
And it's all fake. Many of the houses aren't even for sale and the people not buying any house! Like... actually completely fake.
Yes, they already bought it, they just move out the furniture. I actually got a realtor who was on that show for House Hunters International for Russia, she hipped me to the program, I hadn't seen much before that.
It's neat for the International version only because the US lacks anything like travel television and it provides a very minimal access to that. The locations, at least, are mostly real.
I'm the kind of lame person that actually visits places on Travel Channel shows, and No Reservations specifically.
Lame.
I say from my apartment in Sighisoara at the UNESCO World Heritage citadel site
Do you only have America citizenship, or what's up with that? Do American passports have visa-free travel in the EU or nation specific or whatever? I have no idea.
That's complex. Technically I'm a dual citizen but currently can only get one passport, US. So for travel purposes I'm just American. The US has visa free travel to a huge portion of the world (EU especially.) I get all of the UE, Balkan states, Central America, most of South America and a huge portion around the rest of the world visa free or "visa on arrival" like Turkey. US citizens, like EU citizens, more or less get to just grab backpacks and go, no forethought needed.
As an American I get six months, no questions asked, in Panama, Canada and the UK and one year in Albania!
With my Bosnian passport I only need a visa to go to Kosovo or America, hence the alternate passport, and while I technically get visa free access to the EU, like I said at border crossings I get a lot of BS sometimes, I'm not sure why exactly. I also do not require a visa for most of the CIS states, but most importantly Russia, so it allows me to easily go from the EU to the CIS without a bunch of problems my western friends have had, or my younger brother who has Turkish citizenship (long story) he basically can't go anywhere without tons of paperwork
Yeah, it's sad that we can't cross into the CIS (except Moldova) without complications. Not that we can't, but we have to prep for it and can't do it casually. We are living just off the CIS border so it curtails out travel options a lot. Although our car can't cross into the CIS on the current insurance so we'd have to have other transport options.
Well if you ever wan to visit Russia I can probably help you out with dealing about the "invitation" garbage for westerners. Or we meet in the middle in Moldova or Western Moldov.. I mean Romania
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@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
I never liked that show. I mean it was okay, but it wasn't great. It was so formula and cheesy. The two guys did a great job and were good presenters and made it fun in very small doses, but it was like House Hunters, there wasn't any real substance under it.
House Hunters you can summarise with: "I don't like this paint, so let's look at a different house."
And it's all fake. Many of the houses aren't even for sale and the people not buying any house! Like... actually completely fake.
Yes, they already bought it, they just move out the furniture. I actually got a realtor who was on that show for House Hunters International for Russia, she hipped me to the program, I hadn't seen much before that.
It's neat for the International version only because the US lacks anything like travel television and it provides a very minimal access to that. The locations, at least, are mostly real.
I'm the kind of lame person that actually visits places on Travel Channel shows, and No Reservations specifically.
Lame.
I say from my apartment in Sighisoara at the UNESCO World Heritage citadel site
Do you only have America citizenship, or what's up with that? Do American passports have visa-free travel in the EU or nation specific or whatever? I have no idea.
That's complex. Technically I'm a dual citizen but currently can only get one passport, US. So for travel purposes I'm just American. The US has visa free travel to a huge portion of the world (EU especially.) I get all of the UE, Balkan states, Central America, most of South America and a huge portion around the rest of the world visa free or "visa on arrival" like Turkey. US citizens, like EU citizens, more or less get to just grab backpacks and go, no forethought needed.
As an American I get six months, no questions asked, in Panama, Canada and the UK and one year in Albania!
With my Bosnian passport I only need a visa to go to Kosovo or America, hence the alternate passport, and while I technically get visa free access to the EU, like I said at border crossings I get a lot of BS sometimes, I'm not sure why exactly. I also do not require a visa for most of the CIS states, but most importantly Russia, so it allows me to easily go from the EU to the CIS without a bunch of problems my western friends have had, or my younger brother who has Turkish citizenship (long story) he basically can't go anywhere without tons of paperwork
Yeah, it's sad that we can't cross into the CIS (except Moldova) without complications. Not that we can't, but we have to prep for it and can't do it casually. We are living just off the CIS border so it curtails out travel options a lot. Although our car can't cross into the CIS on the current insurance so we'd have to have other transport options.
Well if you ever wan to visit Russia I can probably help you out with dealing about the "invitation" garbage for westerners. Or we meet in the middle in Moldova or Western Moldov.. I mean Romania
Russia is definitely on my "must see" list. Would love to get up there. Need time to tour around the country, so much to see!!
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Will be visiting Moldova soon, how long is the flight for you down to Chisinau?
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@scottalanmiller said:
Will be visiting Moldova soon, how long is the flight for you down to Chisinau?
I have a fear of flying, so I mostly drive or take boats (Queen Elizabeth II, et al). However, it's only a few hours or so by plane.
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@tonyshowoff said:
@scottalanmiller said:
Will be visiting Moldova soon, how long is the flight for you down to Chisinau?
I have a fear of flying, so I mostly drive or take boats (Queen Elizabeth II, et al). However, it's only a few hours or so by plane.
Thankfully I enjoy flying, other than the tight seats for my fat ass. Doesn't bother me at all. Athens to Bucharest was only 90 minutes! But I prefer ferries and trains whenever possible. I like the slow movement and getting to see the world go by. Helps me to connect to places.
Is there a Chisinau to Moscow express line?