Unkwon Malaysian Guy a manager, i.e. salaried professional, i would not consider working class, no. working class would be menial unskilled labor jobs. You think this is incorrect?
Justin Ayers what about strenuous labor jobs? Jobs that could be done anybody, if they had the physical strength, endurance, or agility or whatever specific physical attribute is related. Are they no longer menial labor jobs just because they require a physical attribute?
Bill was his best friend until Lanore left him and he turned into the Bill we know. Bill was an Army vet with stable income I think its more likely he lived with Bill since Boomhauer is a ladies man.
@@AnonymousFREEZEpOp1 yeah Bill would be his roommate like you said Boomhauer is too much of ladies man Hank was basically a married anyway around that time he was in love with Peggy he's not going for that😂
"I'm just a simple businessman, trying to make an honest dollar." -- My Dad. He was always talking about how we were broke, leading to a lot of anxiety on my part while I was growing up. I was actually kind of angry when he showed me his business balance sheet and he was worth millions. Spoiler Alert: My mom spent most of it, so I'm far from rich.
@@joeschembrie9450 Same thing with me. My dad told me we couldn't afford things 24/7 and I took his word for it. For example when I asked if it was possible for us to upgrade our internet and things like that. Most of the time he was just lazy. I would always feel super guilty when I got birthday presents etc.
Honestly Hank has always seemed like the most intelligent cartoon dad, and it makes sense he'd be doing okay financially. He's not the sharpest tool in the shed, but he's never had the level of impulsiveness or lack of common sense that afflict Peter, Stan, Homer and Randy
@@deadseven3474 for all Peggy's faults, I don't recall any evidence from the show that she has extravagant spending habits. She has a dowdy wardrobe, and drives an old car just like Hank. She was raised on a ranch so it's not like she grew up in a fancy lifestyle that would give her champagne tastes. And she seems to have been a bit of a tomboy, a star softball player in high school, not the type to want a fairy tale princess wedding.
@@Middcore Yea, but she's definitely the type to "one up" someone simply because she feels out done, as we've seen throughout the show, but that's just pure speculation on my part. Though, you're right, for all her faults she's not a very extravagant person. I actually live in Texas right now so I just googled some wedding stats and looked at a few local places and since I live near Dallas, the average price is about 28k. doing some very basic adjusting for inflation, I got about 2, 100 dollars. I'm sure my math is probably incorrect since I did it in about 5 minutes, but I think 2k on a wedding for what is likely to include immediate family and friends is absolutely in their ballpark.
There's an episode where Hank claims to have perfect credit, which is later shown to most likely be true when the negative report on his credit is reversed. He also owns a beautiful house, he's able to afford a new truck when his old one dies in season 4 or 5, he has a whole garage full of expensive tools and the Hills never really seem to deal with poverty problems like wondering where their next meal is coming from or what'll happen of Hank's truck shits the bed. I think they're just firmly in the middle class, not rich and flashy but certainly comfortable and not broke. Hank is just responsible, and it's kind of a running gag that he's cheap like when Khan loses his job and Minh wants to sell them Laotian lessons, and Hank says "I suppose we could throw a couple of bucks their way... And by a couple of bucks, I mean TWO bucks."
he owns a nice house in a town with a pig smelting plant my parents come from a town with one of those great people but those people in those towns are living in poverty or just above there is only a few people with money in those towns with money
The thing is too he kind of glossed over it, but he said the New York times average was that. Arlen was still a smaller town, it could have easily been $75 a month or less.
@@sinswithin The NYT was doing a national average there. Still, you're probably right that an apartment in Arlen is cheaper than the national average. Your 75 guess seems reasonable. FWIW: per an inflation calculator, 108 dollars in 1971 = 698 dollars today.
@@airsoftluke17 I believe that, refer back to Richter Sundeen's comment earlier in this reply thread and it seems that your rent has scaled quite nicely with inflation
You should do how broke Is Charlie buckets family from Charlie and the chocolate factory. Apparantly they all chipped in to buy him one chocolate bar lol
At least Hank's wife, Peggy, works and he only has 1 child, Bobby, to raise. Homer Simpson, Peter Griffin, Stan Smith, Bob Belcher, and several other animated television dads can't say the same thing.
The “many stickerprice cars” that car salesmen sold to hank over the years were for Peggy obviously, because hank had his Ford for 20 years before it was totaled
@@xenxander not just that, the first time he was ripped off on that auto lot, he was there buying something before that truck. So we have AT LEAST one car before the truck, the truck, and then any of Peggy's cars (which we know includes a new truck that Hank bought Peggy when she entered that Mrs. Arlen pageant, unless that came later)
Your math doesn't seem to ever include miscellaneous medical expenses such as when Peggy fell out of the plane. Edit: Hank got a nosejob at one point after having his nose broken. He also started sending his dad money at some point after the birth of his brother.
Pretty sure hank specifically said "Dale drives me nuts living next door There's a reason he and I didn't get an apartment together after high school." so toss that out right away
@@Doctor_Odin yes, I'm aware, I actually quoted it directly me saying "pretty sure" may have been misleading I meant absolutely certain but didn't want to sound like a dick if I misquoted slightly and have people talk crap because RUclips
@@Doctor_Odin Why did you even bother to reply like I said that (a month ago, mind you) to be condescending or to attack you. I was telling you I already knew that I was right because I copied it directly I just didn't want to get into the semantics with random youtube people (kinda like I'm doing now) so I didn't use an absolute.
When Mike Judge first was involved in the show he wanted it to be contiguous, for the characters to age, but as he got less involved at a certain point the contract changed and that went out the window.
This is an absolutely amazing break down. So impressed with the time out into this. Great work man. As a lifelong fan, I found this more than riveting,
Now even more so... yay big government here to make everyone poor by taking many healthy workers jobs, that will fix death for all mankind forever and ever, couldn't cause any downsides... Give a man a fish and eats for the day, teach a man to fish and big government will take half of it on a good day then say you're non-essential so it takes away the opportunity for the man to fish. First world problems.
Seem to forget him going out and purchasing the most expensive lawn, a new truck when he needed one, and plenty of other scenarios. He's not broke or poor, he's middle class ALSO with good money management.
I noticed that too since he mentioned a song and I though to myself didnt he mention he was not gonna use pop references and then I saw this comment and I knew them I was not tripping lol
5:18 that’s just his bonus from one year. In the scene where he mentions his $1000 bonus, he mentions it’s not as good as last year’s bonus because people aren’t grilling like they used to.
Yeah. I always thought of his bonus as a cheap commission because a regular commission structure would actually cost Strickland a lot of money. Strickland probably just gave him an amount that made Hank happy depending on his sales but wasn't too much.
how rich is buck strickland? he told a spa worker he makes in a week what that guy makes in a year. Min wage, thats like 15k a year. So 15k a week = 720,000 a year. Nice.
Side note, Texas didn't and still doesn't have a state income tax. Also, Texas became right to work in 93. Long story short the cost of living there is very low with very minimal gov.
@@IncognitoSprax lmao man he's spitting the truth, born and raised in texas and I've seen my hometowns taxes go from 700$ a year to 650$ a month, even with the growing level of crime. Our job economy is fucked up by the massive amount of people flooding in the main cities like dallas, FW, Houston, San Anton, Austin, even Beaumont is getting expensive for christs sake and they have awful floods. Don't even get me started on McAllen Or Midland, the only cheap places to live here anymore are around amarillo or between presidio and terlingua. At that you need to be a jack of all trades + comfortable with no internet/ running water.
@@pyrrhus6437 Well please go to cally or some shit and leave the rest of us alone, you know, if it's so bad. If these uneducated, barely english-speaking illegals rooming 8-15 per house taking all your minimum wage and mowing jobs are just too much competition man.
Correct, and they didn't come with those headlights until 1993. But the truck can't be that new because it has a carburetor. Fuel injection went on the Ranger in 1985.
@@01Z06guy besides it being fictional I literally drive the same truck, a 94’ Ford Ranger. So seeing him saying he’s drove the truck for 20 Years back in the 90’s is a little wacky.
@@afroize Texas is cheaper than other places to live. My apartment rent right in the middle of Arglinton (Between Dallas and Ft.Worth) was about two to three hundred dollars per month less than an equivalent apartment in Orlando, FL.
I was looking to see if I was the only one that corrected him on Hanks truck being a ranger for the first truck, and then a ford super duty for his second lmao.
and the rest of the cost of living. Lower Rent= Lower commercial rent and Lower commercial rent=lower cost of living. Salaries in Texas are lower but not so low as to negate these differences. He must've not looked too hard at DFW salaries.
Their house absolutely would not have cost $100K in the mid 80s. My guess is that it would've probably been closer to $60K. Homes prices have gone up faster than inflation and having lived through the 80s that's probably what a house that size would've cost in central Oklahoma. I doubt it would've been much different in Arlen, which is a small town and that's going to also keep the price around the same or lower.
My folks paid just over $250k for their house in 1996. This years appraisal as they were looking to move was $790k with the realtor saying should start off at $850k. Wages have not kept up with property values not in the slightest.
Thank you my aunt by a house in Cerritos in ca when it was still farmland she’s 80 years old now she found it when she was in her mid-20s it was only $60,000
I would say that was likely the biggest inflation to Hank's net worth in this video. I don't think there is anyway Buck would have hired him on as an assistant manager right away. There are even episodes where Hank reminisces about when he started as a tank wipe and how Buck taught him how to do things right. I'd guess Hank started out just slightly better than minimum wage and worked his way up offer the years, taking on more responsibility as Buck realized he could slack off and let Hank handle things.
@@Cyborgschatz Yeah I would have had him making like 15-25k for the first couple years and maybe by the time Bobby comes he is Assistant manager and making 45.
Hank also seems to work on a sales commission system some parts of the year. Grillstravaganza is a sales competition between all members of the company other than Buck. Hank regularly works to make big deals with deep pocket customers and regular customers.
I liked the episode where Mr. Stricklin gets his nephew or whoever to run things and he makes all the drivers quit. Then they don't have any drivers because they need HAZMAT licenses but Hank finds out they don't need HAZMAT to tow the trucks with a wrecker.
2 very, VERY big problems with your math here. You forgot that hank and Peggy bought a new motorcycle, and secondly a brand new ford truck in the late 90's would not cost anywhere near $10,000.00 even the most basic model is well over 20k.
When did Hank sell tractors? As a kid he wanted to sell propane and propane accessories, if his grades were good enough... He attended a Mason Mower Focus Group at the mall... He competed in local tractor race for "DGS" diminished gluteals; he came in 7th bc Dale Gribble sabotaged him by popping his left gluteal orthotic... Gordon, the Canadian who stayed at Boomhauers house one summer was a tractor salesman for McCullum Mowers... I don't think Hank ever sold tractors, please correct me if I'm wrong
@@tiffanyroth1066 yes. When hank catches on to what's happening he tests Ted by asking him "what do I sell for a living?" Ted's response is "tractors?" Cut away to the alley where one of the guys says "but you used to sell tractors" and hank replied "yeah, but Ted didnt know that"
I think $400,000 cash. Hermès said something to the effect of “luckily I got the payments down to $100,00 a month but we’ve only got enough money 4 more months.”
Considering Farmsworth often mentions that the crew never charges anybody for their delivery meaning that they have no income whatsoever I would say past bankruptcy
Hank never got an apartment with Dale, Bill or Boomhauer after high school. He mentions that because Dale is "different", that is why he never got a apartment with the guys.
@@Me-mb1ex yea it's been a bit since I've seen it but it definitely was a cubicle job that had something to do with printers can't remember what exactly
I liked this but I literally called B.S. on Hank's 1980 wedding. No way $5000. Maybe $300 and his buddy let him use the VFW hall for free. Boomhauer provided bootlegged booze. Peggy's gown $99 and two rings for $98 (NOT gold since it was $800 an ounce), but they had to drive 18 hours round trip to Houston to get them.
@@fumomofumosarum5893 Yeah, probably not the best baseline for the wedding cost estimate. Dallas is a big city, with a higher-than-average concentration of businessmen, bankers, and so forth. All the well-to-do in the area probably bump up the average wedding cost a bit.
@@leoclay5356 That matches what he says, not the design of the truck. What he says indicates 1983-1992 year range. Design of the truck matches the next generation of the Ranger.
The time line on the show is very inconsistent. In "Luanne Virgin 2.0" Hank states that he married Peggy at age 18 (between 1971-1972). However, Peggy supposedly still lived in Montana in the early 70s.
There were quite a few continuity changes when it comes to Hank and Peggy's younger lives. In Season 2, there's a flashback to her high school years where her mom is depicted as living in Arlen and being an English teacher so prim and proper she doesn't allow people to use contractions in her house. Later they simply said she grew up in Montana, then Season 9 opens with her whole family still living in Montana and the mom, who implies Peggy didn't move away til she was 18, is depicted as a ballsy cattle rancher.
@@KawaiiCat2 maybe Peggy's family moved to Arlen briefly only to move back to Montana sometime after Peggy graduates from High School? That's the only explanation I can think of
Ahhh the 70's and 80's, when a good home cost under 100k, it was easy to get financing, and the minimum wage still sucked but the value of the dollar wasn't miserable. Unless he grew up to be the Stand-Up comic icon he always dreamed of being, I can almost garunteed you Bobby doesn't have a 1/10th of what Hank has. But oh well, if Bobby eventually sells the house at least he'll be able to afford a nice apartment.
@@RichV20 right. Millennials don’t understand that with inflation and their low interest rates housing was about the same in small towns. In larger cities where foreigners invest in housing to protect their money from their governments that has skewed the housing market. Make it illegal for non resident foreigners to own property in the US and see housing prices fall fast and hard.
I mean he kind of is. 210,000 dollars is not a huge amount of money for a 50 year old. He likely would need to work until nearly 60 to retire which would put his retiring date mid Great Recession. If any major medical bills pop up he would be kind of fucked
They definitely had the house before Bobby was born because they got Ladybird before Bobby, Bill says so in the episode where Hank wants to breed Ladybird. Hank also got Ladybird for Peggy because of his narrow urethra, it's in a flashback in another episode.
One thing you forgot to take into account was when he had his truck hit by the train that insurance would pay him some cash for it's worth, as he's good about having insurance for every eventuality so he had full replacement coverage
@@JoshuaDomoslai $5.15 minimum wage * 160 hours = $824, 20k-31k MSRP + 20% dealer/fees, $24k-38k. Likely financed, so they made payments. Assumed 7%, 72 months, $356 low end $563 high end. Hank could get the low end model, but the top of the line REQUIRES Hank to make more than minimum wage.
@@bighoss7437 well back in the 90s late and 2000s the cummings were more efficient with better MPG than a 7.3 powerstroke or a 5.4 regular V8 of 90s ford trucks
Rangers are quite cheap to own and maintain, they are small trucks. I have a red 1998 Ranger I put a 5.0 SBF V8 in, check my profile if you want to see it run - it has a 5 speed stick shift as well. I like to imagine it as the ultimate Hank Hill truck.
High school graduates were more common back then compared to today lol but it doesn't matter, most places you apply to don't even ask you about your high school education anyway lol 😅
In the 2002 episode “A Man Without A County Club” near the end when Hank asks Ted what and what accessories he sells for a living, Ted guesses “Tractors?”, in which Dale reminds Hank “to be fair, you used to sell tractors...” So where does that factor into the timeline?
Hank actually drove a Ranger for the first 5 seasons, the truck was originally a 1993 Ranger but later changed to a square body 1983 for that specific episode in season 5 afterwards he's generally seen in his 199x-200x F250 Super Duty
being from the town this show is based on, its so funny seeing how easy it is to calculate the Hills finances because of how accurately the show depicts life here.
This is amazing! A. It shows how much effort the show's creators put into developing the characters that his finances actually work out. B. It's a pretty cool lesson that financial responsibility can have compounding effects!
Small correction: Hank never lived with Dale. Bill and Boomhauer, yes, but he specifically says to Peggy at one point, "this is why Dale and I never got an apartment together"
1) He drives a ranger, not an F150 2) The F250 he bought retailed for nearly $30k. As shown within the episode, it wasn't a basic bitch truck Your math is way way way off.
I feel like Buck is actually paying Hank more than that I feel he’s at least getting 60k minimum cause Buck really respects Hank and knows that he basically runs the joint
Buck "respects" Hank to his face, but it's probably very facile at the end of the day. Buck knows he can get Hank, who is shown to be pretty naive in many respects, to do just about anything for him, so I can't imagine he's compensated especially well.
@@bassmaster867 Buck is super addictive to gambling, Thaterton likely knows just what value hank actually has, and getting him on the cheap for, to them, what likely amounts to *pennies* would be too good a deal to turn down.
@@infjintegrityvsnarcissism7295 all is left to do is calculate how much did he spent on a house, what any other income he made, how much he spends om basic stuff and so on and so on
@@benjamingriswold3408 I think they specifically buy 6 packs, i remember seeing them holding one in the plastic ringlets on multiple occasions, and alamo is definitely something like a Budweiser, since the only other large named beer mentioned in the show is hi brau which is imported.
Hank's yearly bonus changes depending on how much propane he sells. When he says he gets the $1k bonus that it wasn't as high as the previous year, meaning he got more at least the year before. I also think you can glean a lot about their finances from the episode where he adopts the armed forces cat. Their vacation budget is just over $3000.
According to the episode “Yankee Hankee,” Hank was born in New York City on the day that Castro visited Yankee Stadium. this was a real event, and it occurred on April 15, 1959. The show aired in 1997, so that would make Hank about 38 at the start of the show. *But… In the episode where Sauers coaches Bobby’s team, it’s said that the championship game (during which Hank’s ankle snapped) was held in 1974. Hank was a senior for that game. That doesn’t jibe with 1959, because it would mean Hank was only 16 in his senior year. If you go by the year of the game, Hank would have been born about 1961. This would put Hank at 36 when the show starts.
What should I talk about next? Comment it here!
10K Productions do how big norms bar tab is from cheers
Do How Much is Randy Marsh Worth.
Do How Broke Are the Hecks? from The Middle.
Al Bundy from Married With Children.
How rich/broke is Micheal DeSanta/Townly from GTA V?
One is never truly broke if they sale propane and propane accessories.
Especially in Texas lol
damn dirty charcoal
Maybe if it was just propane but them accessories add to hella pay lol
Come sell away, come sell away
"I sell Cocaine and Cocaine accessorize"
There is a difference between broke and everythings paid broke.
Ghetto Grower truth. broke is working class. everything's paid broke is lower middle class.
@@justinayers3589 The structure of your statement made no sense.
Unkwon Malaysian Guy a manager, i.e. salaried professional, i would not consider working class, no. working class would be menial unskilled labor jobs. You think this is incorrect?
Justin Ayers what about strenuous labor jobs? Jobs that could be done anybody, if they had the physical strength, endurance, or agility or whatever specific physical attribute is related. Are they no longer menial labor jobs just because they require a physical attribute?
@@justinayers3589 someone working in a laborers union doing "menial" tasks gets paid a lot more than your average manager, idiot.
One critical calculation you forgot: the lawn/mowers... and beer
And...propane.
@@VchaosTheoryV and propane accessories
also that one computer hank tossed in the trash.
didnt he spend $1000 on that? seems legit for a computer.
Yup
@@condemmend1 yup
Hank actually tells peggy "There's a reason I didn't get an apartment with Dale after high school." So I don't think he ever lived with Dale.
Boomhauer, maybe.
@@andyblanton6570 that would be the most likely scenario.
*Propane Paraphernalia
Bill was his best friend until Lanore left him and he turned into the Bill we know. Bill was an Army vet with stable income I think its more likely he lived with Bill since Boomhauer is a ladies man.
@@AnonymousFREEZEpOp1 yeah Bill would be his roommate like you said Boomhauer is too much of ladies man Hank was basically a married anyway around that time he was in love with Peggy he's not going for that😂
He ain't broke.
He's just like every other Dad, talking bout how he's broke lol.
"I'm just a simple businessman, trying to make an honest dollar." -- My Dad. He was always talking about how we were broke, leading to a lot of anxiety on my part while I was growing up. I was actually kind of angry when he showed me his business balance sheet and he was worth millions. Spoiler Alert: My mom spent most of it, so I'm far from rich.
Until you work for 10+ years to have a little extra change you wont understand lol
^ - Hank Hill, probably.
@@joeschembrie9450 Same thing with me. My dad told me we couldn't afford things 24/7 and I took his word for it. For example when I asked if it was possible for us to upgrade our internet and things like that. Most of the time he was just lazy. I would always feel super guilty when I got birthday presents etc.
@@BigmanDogs you ever see the kid with rich parents who know's he's rich? you wanna be that kid? Your parent's did you a favor.
Honestly Hank has always seemed like the most intelligent cartoon dad, and it makes sense he'd be doing okay financially. He's not the sharpest tool in the shed, but he's never had the level of impulsiveness or lack of common sense that afflict Peter, Stan, Homer and Randy
How about Bob from Bob's Burgers? Bob seem well off, especially since he run and own his own restaurant and live above it.
@@deshawnedwards6412 I agree with you on that but a lot of bobs money goes into his own restaurant and he doesn’t get as much customers
Homer is pretty loaded though
@@deshawnedwards6412 I can't comment much on Bob because I have only seen like three episodes of BB
I don't think they're too well off cause they always try to avoid paying rent.
hank would never spend 5k on a wedding, esp in 1980.
that asinine.
He wouldn't, but peggy sure as hell would.
@@deadseven3474 but In 1980?
@@hmmhmm4495 He adjusted for inflation already. Not saying he's right but I could believe that peggy would pressure hank into a big wedding.
@@deadseven3474 for all Peggy's faults, I don't recall any evidence from the show that she has extravagant spending habits. She has a dowdy wardrobe, and drives an old car just like Hank. She was raised on a ranch so it's not like she grew up in a fancy lifestyle that would give her champagne tastes. And she seems to have been a bit of a tomboy, a star softball player in high school, not the type to want a fairy tale princess wedding.
@@Middcore Yea, but she's definitely the type to "one up" someone simply because she feels out done, as we've seen throughout the show, but that's just pure speculation on my part.
Though, you're right, for all her faults she's not a very extravagant person. I actually live in Texas right now so I just googled some wedding stats and looked at a few local places and since I live near Dallas, the average price is about 28k. doing some very basic adjusting for inflation, I got about 2, 100 dollars. I'm sure my math is probably incorrect since I did it in about 5 minutes, but I think 2k on a wedding for what is likely to include immediate family and friends is absolutely in their ballpark.
I really just watched an 11-minute video speculating a cartoon character’s finances.
Me too. Sad cause Hank is doing way better than me.
Mood
I did it on the Toilet
This whole channel is dedicated to it
@@StoryKing294 you shit for 10mintues or you just say there smelling yourself?
There's an episode where Hank claims to have perfect credit, which is later shown to most likely be true when the negative report on his credit is reversed. He also owns a beautiful house, he's able to afford a new truck when his old one dies in season 4 or 5, he has a whole garage full of expensive tools and the Hills never really seem to deal with poverty problems like wondering where their next meal is coming from or what'll happen of Hank's truck shits the bed.
I think they're just firmly in the middle class, not rich and flashy but certainly comfortable and not broke. Hank is just responsible, and it's kind of a running gag that he's cheap like when Khan loses his job and Minh wants to sell them Laotian lessons, and Hank says "I suppose we could throw a couple of bucks their way... And by a couple of bucks, I mean TWO bucks."
😂😂
he owns a nice house in a town with a pig smelting plant my parents come from a town with one of those great people but those people in those towns are living in poverty or just above there is only a few people with money in those towns with money
Hank Hill isn't broke at all. He's doing better than 80% of us.
Actually 70%
Sensible planning, smart budgeting.
Hank strikes me as a dude who lets his wife peg them
“By selling propane and propane accessories”
Peggy said he has never been late on a mortgage payment 😂
I think his truck looks more like a ford Ranger than an f150
This is correct
He had a Ford ranger and bought an f-250 later in the series
alexiz424 yea that’s what I thought too
@@alexiz424 i dont think it was a 250, i think it was a 150. you just gotta realize how much bigger they made 150s in the 00s as opposed to the 90s
@@burpostockings 1994 ranger and a 2002 250 with features from the 2008 model
Hank made $1.40 an hour
me: Jesus Christ
Rent for an apartment was roughly $100 a month
me: JESUS CHRIST!
The thing is too he kind of glossed over it, but he said the New York times average was that. Arlen was still a smaller town, it could have easily been $75 a month or less.
@@sinswithin The NYT was doing a national average there. Still, you're probably right that an apartment in Arlen is cheaper than the national average. Your 75 guess seems reasonable.
FWIW: per an inflation calculator, 108 dollars in 1971 = 698 dollars today.
@@richtersundeen6105 while it's a Nation average, He probably should've done a texas average. Here, housing is much cheaper than many other states
Wtf I pay $700
@@airsoftluke17 I believe that, refer back to Richter Sundeen's comment earlier in this reply thread and it seems that your rent has scaled quite nicely with inflation
You should do how broke Is Charlie buckets family from Charlie and the chocolate factory.
Apparantly they all chipped in to buy him one chocolate bar lol
spunkflunk like they can afford a roof over their head but has to chip in for a 1 dolled chocolate
@@sk8terzane818 was that roof leaky?
@@lancecook7225 nah just a skylight
Damn some Investigation must be done
Not much to work with there. Just 1 movie/book.
At least Hank's wife, Peggy, works and he only has 1 child, Bobby, to raise. Homer Simpson, Peter Griffin, Stan Smith, Bob Belcher, and several other animated television dads can't say the same thing.
Jesse Torres technically linda works at the restaurant. But its hard to determine if she or anyone get paid
Stan ? What show
Blake Davis south park i assume
@@blakedavis2447 american dad - stan smith
hugsxoxokisses ahh ! I was thinking Stan Marsh from South Park but I knew that was wrong
The “many stickerprice cars” that car salesmen sold to hank over the years were for Peggy obviously, because hank had his Ford for 20 years before it was totaled
I was looking for this.
Every new car was for her, for one reason or another.
@@xenxander not just that, the first time he was ripped off on that auto lot, he was there buying something before that truck. So we have AT LEAST one car before the truck, the truck, and then any of Peggy's cars (which we know includes a new truck that Hank bought Peggy when she entered that Mrs. Arlen pageant, unless that came later)
@@FallingSloths he doesnt buy a truck he painted their old one
@@robertesquivel8274 and then it doesn’t stick
I think he started buying cars from him since highschool or early 20s that why it was so easy to rip him off
That boy's finances aint right...
BWAHHH
Bwahhh
Your math doesn't seem to ever include miscellaneous medical expenses such as when Peggy fell out of the plane.
Edit: Hank got a nosejob at one point after having his nose broken. He also started sending his dad money at some point after the birth of his brother.
I think the parachute company would probably pay that expense becuase it was there parachute that didn’t work
Lol omg I remember that
I need to see that one ❤️
would be hard to go episode-by-episode tbh.
@@ashleyashley6396 It's a 2 part episode, really funny
I've never seen someone do so much work about something that doesn't matter at all, and I respect it!
Pretty sure hank specifically said "Dale drives me nuts living next door There's a reason he and I didn't get an apartment together after high school." so toss that out right away
Velox He did say that.
@@Doctor_Odin yes, I'm aware, I actually quoted it directly me saying "pretty sure" may have been misleading I meant absolutely certain but didn't want to sound like a dick if I misquoted slightly and have people talk crap because RUclips
THANK YOU
Velox OK dude was just confirming it
@@Doctor_Odin Why did you even bother to reply like I said that (a month ago, mind you) to be condescending or to attack you. I was telling you I already knew that I was right because I copied it directly I just didn't want to get into the semantics with random youtube people (kinda like I'm doing now) so I didn't use an absolute.
I came here expecting a YTP, however this information is relevant to my interests.
Shut up Dale
😂😂
Why did I read that in dale’s voice ahaha
You dont go by rusty shakleford?
@@karsynj1858 ikr 😆
When Mike Judge first was involved in the show he wanted it to be contiguous, for the characters to age, but as he got less involved at a certain point the contract changed and that went out the window.
Answer: Less broke than a charcoal salesman
Charcoal and charcoal accessories*
BURN
@@jonbovimalkovich1474 not good enough, just like me
*Does it look like i know what a jpeg is i just want a picture of a god dang hotdog*
*got dang hot, dog Hank would never say that
*do i look like
I just wanna grill for gods sake
This is an absolutely amazing break down. So impressed with the time out into this. Great work man. As a lifelong fan, I found this more than riveting,
He wasn’t even that broke at all. He was doing way better than most people nowadays.
Because of his good money management.
*Budgeting better than most people nowadays.
Now even more so... yay big government here to make everyone poor by taking many healthy workers jobs, that will fix death for all mankind forever and ever, couldn't cause any downsides...
Give a man a fish and eats for the day, teach a man to fish and big government will take half of it on a good day then say you're non-essential so it takes away the opportunity for the man to fish. First world problems.
People these days are idiots in financial management. All they want to do is party hard and waste it all for short term happiness.
Seem to forget him going out and purchasing the most expensive lawn, a new truck when he needed one, and plenty of other scenarios. He's not broke or poor, he's middle class ALSO with good money management.
“I’m going to ignore pop culture references”
“This song means it was 1980”
haha you caught that just realized
I noticed that too since he mentioned a song and I though to myself didnt he mention he was not gonna use pop references and then I saw this comment and I knew them I was not tripping lol
Well he said during the series. that was before
Said he wasn't gonna use them to determine the timeline of the seasons, not the past
@@robertcunningham1695 Those were his exact words. Good ear.
5:18 that’s just his bonus from one year. In the scene where he mentions his $1000 bonus, he mentions it’s not as good as last year’s bonus because people aren’t grilling like they used to.
Yeah. I always thought of his bonus as a cheap commission because a regular commission structure would actually cost Strickland a lot of money. Strickland probably just gave him an amount that made Hank happy depending on his sales but wasn't too much.
Yeah this guy is an idiot none of his math makes sense.
how rich is buck strickland?
he told a spa worker he makes in a week what that guy makes in a year.
Min wage, thats like 15k a year.
So 15k a week = 720,000 a year.
Nice.
Are Dub I think he would probably make more
Buck is also a liar, as they say in Texas he's all hat and no cattle!
He also runs a business so a lot of what he makes is probably put right back into Strickland.
Buck does own several businesses. He owns 4 or 5 Strickland Propanes and Sugarfoots. There might be more but I can't remember.
But that's just a theroy,
*A FILM THERORY*
Side note, Texas didn't and still doesn't have a state income tax. Also, Texas became right to work in 93. Long story short the cost of living there is very low with very minimal gov.
Conrad Gifford great place to live
wolf12king agree. Any place with major industries and low cost of living is a great place to live.
@Shadow Man
Talk about being full of shit
@@IncognitoSprax lmao man he's spitting the truth, born and raised in texas and I've seen my hometowns taxes go from 700$ a year to 650$ a month, even with the growing level of crime.
Our job economy is fucked up by the massive amount of people flooding in the main cities like dallas, FW, Houston, San Anton, Austin, even Beaumont is getting expensive for christs sake and they have awful floods. Don't even get me started on McAllen Or Midland, the only cheap places to live here anymore are around amarillo or between presidio and terlingua. At that you need to be a jack of all trades + comfortable with no internet/ running water.
@@pyrrhus6437 Well please go to cally or some shit and leave the rest of us alone, you know, if it's so bad.
If these uneducated, barely english-speaking illegals rooming 8-15 per house taking all your minimum wage and mowing jobs are just too much competition man.
His truck was a Ford ranger not an f150
Ford super duty not either of them trucks .. lol
@@Antihero-4132 He's talking about his first truck at 7:01, not the second one at 9:20
@@yoster77 oh my bad didn't finish the video haha
Correct, and they didn't come with those headlights until 1993. But the truck can't be that new because it has a carburetor. Fuel injection went on the Ranger in 1985.
@@01Z06guy besides it being fictional I literally drive the same truck, a 94’ Ford Ranger. So seeing him saying he’s drove the truck for 20
Years back in the 90’s is a little wacky.
We all know the Hill family is loaded remember hanks "oil records"
hussguy1990 no.... when did they talk about that?
I’m dead serious LOL I remember now !!! That was a funny episode
You mean his bonus? LOL.
hussguy1990 ~ duh they've got a "Hillo Copter"
@@tiffanyroth1066 tell you hwhat Bobby how about we tally-ho it over to the money room 😅
Hank drives a ranger for a majority of the series and his bonus isn’t always $1000
I was looking for this.
also the cost of rent and house prices were off, considering Texas is pretty cheap to live in, especially in the 80s
@@afroize Texas is cheaper than other places to live.
My apartment rent right in the middle of Arglinton (Between Dallas and Ft.Worth) was about two to three hundred dollars per month less than an equivalent apartment in Orlando, FL.
@@xenxander yeah that's what I was trying to say, my bad if I didn't make it clear lol
I was looking to see if I was the only one that corrected him on Hanks truck being a ranger for the first truck, and then a ford super duty for his second lmao.
"Hank hill, everybody's friend man, dang ol richest man in the world" -Boomhaur
You forget that in Texas especially in Arlington Texas housing is dirt cheap
Yea when he said that much i waa ok you can get more for less depending on the area and thats including close to a city and a good area
That'd be great if Texas weren't so full of idiots, bigots, Bible thumpers, gun nuts, and rattlesnakes.
@@aaronsmith1023 We have people who move from California, Ohio, New York, Florida, and more, its not that bad.
and the rest of the cost of living. Lower Rent= Lower commercial rent and Lower commercial rent=lower cost of living. Salaries in Texas are lower but not so low as to negate these differences. He must've not looked too hard at DFW salaries.
Aaron Smith Bruh have you actually ever been to DFW?
You also didn’t account that he changes his oil every 2-3 thousand miles or when he gets bored
Oil changes are like 30 bucks
Whichever comes 1st.
Xale he paid full price for the car I feel like he pays for the high priced oil for his car
Xale probably imported, America oil is top notch as well as its price. Not to mention the oil filter and he certainly isn’t re using the washers.
Would changes now are around 45- and so
7:54 - I know this is probably a shifting house just like The Simpsons house, but the Den has to have a window to the outside.
Very true so does the family bathroom
Their house absolutely would not have cost $100K in the mid 80s. My guess is that it would've probably been closer to $60K. Homes prices have gone up faster than inflation and having lived through the 80s that's probably what a house that size would've cost in central Oklahoma. I doubt it would've been much different in Arlen, which is a small town and that's going to also keep the price around the same or lower.
My folks paid just over $250k for their house in 1996. This years appraisal as they were looking to move was $790k with the realtor saying should start off at $850k.
Wages have not kept up with property values not in the slightest.
Yeah, my parents bought their 2,500 sq ft home in 1999 for $120k. And the home hard a much larger lawn, a garage and 2 floors and a basement.
Boomer
Thank you my aunt by a house in Cerritos in ca when it was still farmland she’s 80 years old now she found it when she was in her mid-20s it was only $60,000
Yeah also interest on home loans even with good credit was like 10-15% back than so there is your difference.
Hank is rich in propane and propane accessories, so he is never broke.
He’s the god of propane (excluding the accessories)
I never pictured Hank being broke. He always seemed in the average category in my eyes.
It’s 5:30am, I’m drunk, and this was in my recommended. Watched the whole thing and didn’t follow anything. 10/10 subscribed
Justin Henning I’m coked out
Jalisco me too
Drunk at 5:30? Damn boi
If Hank Hill was making $45000 a year in 1980 he was loaded.
I would say that was likely the biggest inflation to Hank's net worth in this video. I don't think there is anyway Buck would have hired him on as an assistant manager right away. There are even episodes where Hank reminisces about when he started as a tank wipe and how Buck taught him how to do things right. I'd guess Hank started out just slightly better than minimum wage and worked his way up offer the years, taking on more responsibility as Buck realized he could slack off and let Hank handle things.
@@Cyborgschatz Yeah I would have had him making like 15-25k for the first couple years and maybe by the time Bobby comes he is Assistant manager and making 45.
When he mentions salaries he always adds “adjusting for inflation” meaning he accounts for what that money would equal in the year it’s relevant.
Hank also seems to work on a sales commission system some parts of the year. Grillstravaganza is a sales competition between all members of the company other than Buck. Hank regularly works to make big deals with deep pocket customers and regular customers.
I liked the episode where Mr. Stricklin gets his nephew or whoever to run things and he makes all the drivers quit.
Then they don't have any drivers because they need HAZMAT licenses but Hank finds out they don't need HAZMAT to tow the trucks with a wrecker.
Peggy was not fired as a substitute teacher, she was fired as a newspaper journalist.
2 very, VERY big problems with your math here. You forgot that hank and Peggy bought a new motorcycle, and secondly a brand new ford truck in the late 90's would not cost anywhere near $10,000.00 even the most basic model is well over 20k.
The early truck was a ranger the later one was some sort of f250 or f350 1998-2003
@@FordBronco-pz4lv are you a ford expert?
@@kg41k I just know too much about their trucks :)
@@kg41k His name is "2007 Ford Explorer," thus I will assume he is at least a little well-versed in Ford Fun Facts
@@duhjooner i got a 07 explorer and a 96 f150 :)
You didn’t factor in his time as a tractor salesman
Belletaina he’s covering the jeans at the beginning with jeans west in the background at the mall lol
When did Hank sell tractors?
As a kid he wanted to sell propane and propane accessories, if his grades were good enough...
He attended a Mason Mower Focus Group at the mall...
He competed in local tractor race for "DGS" diminished gluteals; he came in 7th bc Dale Gribble sabotaged him by popping his left gluteal orthotic...
Gordon, the Canadian who stayed at Boomhauers house one summer was a tractor salesman for McCullum Mowers...
I don't think Hank ever sold tractors, please correct me if I'm wrong
@@tiffanyroth1066 I mentioned it in a comment earlier aswell. He says he did in the PGA nine rivers episode
Jordan Constantine ~ is that the episode where Ted Wisonison convinces Hank to join nine rivers bc they need more diversity?
@@tiffanyroth1066 yes. When hank catches on to what's happening he tests Ted by asking him "what do I sell for a living?" Ted's response is "tractors?" Cut away to the alley where one of the guys says "but you used to sell tractors" and hank replied "yeah, but Ted didnt know that"
I think we could all be happy having what Hank has.
How broke is planet express. Thats what I wanna know
I think $400,000 cash. Hermès said something to the effect of “luckily I got the payments down to $100,00 a month but we’ve only got enough money 4 more months.”
I'm not sure if it's cash or not but if Hermes said "that they only have 400k left to pay" then that sounds right.
Considering Farmsworth often mentions that the crew never charges anybody for their delivery meaning that they have no income whatsoever I would say past bankruptcy
@@Handlelesswithme Farnsworth cannot be trusted.
Yes!! That would great
Hank never got an apartment with Dale, Bill or Boomhauer after high school. He mentions that because Dale is "different", that is why he never got a apartment with the guys.
Jermster_91 you can still assume he had roommates he’s just using them as examples of roommates
There's also an episode where he and Peggy get an apartment, so we can assume that gap is with Peggy.
He married Peggy at 18 so there for he moved in with her. He never lived with the guys.
Hanks first truck is actually a Ford Ranger but still a good vid.
I came to the comments to see if anyone else noticed.
You should do "How broke is Malcom in the Middle's family"
That's a good one
Did they ever say what Hal actually did or how much he made?
@@Me-mb1ex yea it's been a bit since I've seen it but it definitely was a cubicle job that had something to do with printers can't remember what exactly
At the end Hal is trying to borrow 8k and says he'll probably never be able to pay it off. Must be pretty broke if paying 8k would take his whole life
My financial problems are non of your concerns! Jk good video👍🏻
ThePark 627 or that tears it! I’m kicking your ass! Classic hank hill quote
Hank Hill do you know Tom Anderson of Highland, TX? 😉
Princess Marlena that’s that man who had them 2 jiblet heads whacking in his tool shed. Poor fella, them boys weren’t right I tell ya hwat.
Hank Hill Tom Anderson likes to use butane, didn’t you say that’s “a bastard gas”?
Oh come on Hank. We know you're loaded. You make a $1000 week.
Don't forget Hank sold tractors and tractor accessories before he worked at Strickland.
I liked this but I literally called B.S. on Hank's 1980 wedding. No way $5000. Maybe $300 and his buddy let him use the VFW hall for free. Boomhauer provided bootlegged booze. Peggy's gown $99 and two rings for $98 (NOT gold since it was $800 an ounce), but they had to drive 18 hours round trip to Houston to get them.
the idea of weddings costing up to 20 k is simply ridiculous.
how rich are people?
@@fumomofumosarum5893 ...i spent 20k in vegas for a week...now i feel attacked.
@@fumomofumosarum5893 Yeah, probably not the best baseline for the wedding cost estimate. Dallas is a big city, with a higher-than-average concentration of businessmen, bankers, and so forth. All the well-to-do in the area probably bump up the average wedding cost a bit.
Who drives 18 hours round trip to Houston from anywhere in the DFW area? Arlen, TX (which is actually Garland, TX) is only about 4 hours from Houston.
@@CLEdwards1982 Someone doing it on a lawnmower? That's about the only way I can think of.
Me: doesn't understand most of what he's saying
Also me: still watches
Yep.
Hank isn't broke. He picked a career he loves and it's enough to support his family. He's rich where it matters.
Hank must have graduated in 1975, not 1971. They reference the football season of 1974 practically 100 times throughout the series.
How dare you talk about another mans finances!
loved the vid, i tell you h'what
Dangol man
Is Dale paranoid yet?
Wow this is crazy in-depth and interesting!! Holy cow you put some work into this!!
Damn 50 years ago rent was 100-150 a month, god I wish that could be now
Due to circumstantial happenstance my mortgage is £176 a month!
Would still feel like paying rent today when you only make like 30$ a week
@@ghettogrower3499 at full time you'd be making 60+, and higher paying jobs were more plentiful
I think Hank's first truck was a Ranger and then later he had an F-250
83 ford ranger 2.3
2003-F250 5.4 Triton V8
gaming which means it's not in the time line that is a 2003 red super cab f250
The design of the Ranger is that of a 1993-1997. The timelines are never consistant, and the cars never match what anyone usually says.
@@Jaguarmaserati 84-92
@@leoclay5356 That matches what he says, not the design of the truck. What he says indicates 1983-1992 year range. Design of the truck matches the next generation of the Ranger.
The time line on the show is very inconsistent. In "Luanne Virgin 2.0" Hank states that he married Peggy at age 18 (between 1971-1972). However, Peggy supposedly still lived in Montana in the early 70s.
There were quite a few continuity changes when it comes to Hank and Peggy's younger lives. In Season 2, there's a flashback to her high school years where her mom is depicted as living in Arlen and being an English teacher so prim and proper she doesn't allow people to use contractions in her house. Later they simply said she grew up in Montana, then Season 9 opens with her whole family still living in Montana and the mom, who implies Peggy didn't move away til she was 18, is depicted as a ballsy cattle rancher.
So if Peggy lived in Montana and Hank lived in Texas, how did they end up dating in high school?
@@KawaiiCat2 like I said, continuity changes.
@@KawaiiCat2 maybe Peggy's family moved to Arlen briefly only to move back to Montana sometime after Peggy graduates from High School? That's the only explanation I can think of
Having one kid and a jerk of a boss doesn't sound like the American dream.
IrelandVonVicious I’m personally aiming for 2.5 kids
@@AnimalMother60 I hate it when it comes out missing legs.
@@AnimalMother60 Good luck with that .5. Maybe round up?
Right, having 0 kids is definitely the dream. They're loud, messy, and expensive.
SpunkySpade if their short a limb or twi find someone to sue and make them pay for the bionic replacements
DO HOW BROKE IS AL BUNDY!! CMON!!
Al is the kind of broke you can't quantify.
A fat woman walked into the store today...
@@Tenkai917 and what happened
Go watch seasons 1-11 of Married with Children and find out.
Ahhh the 70's and 80's, when a good home cost under 100k, it was easy to get financing, and the minimum wage still sucked but the value of the dollar wasn't miserable.
Unless he grew up to be the Stand-Up comic icon he always dreamed of being, I can almost garunteed you Bobby doesn't have a 1/10th of what Hank has.
But oh well, if Bobby eventually sells the house at least he'll be able to afford a nice apartment.
Honestly I think Bobby probably succeeded
We'll see how he did in the reboot
Mortgage rates around 1982 were 17%
@@RichV20 right. Millennials don’t understand that with inflation and their low interest rates housing was about the same in small towns. In larger cities where foreigners invest in housing to protect their money from their governments that has skewed the housing market. Make it illegal for non resident foreigners to own property in the US and see housing prices fall fast and hard.
How broke is Hank Hill?
He’s not.
I mean he kind of is. 210,000 dollars is not a huge amount of money for a 50 year old. He likely would need to work until nearly 60 to retire which would put his retiring date mid Great Recession.
If any major medical bills pop up he would be kind of fucked
Adam Nelson insurance???
@@nikballs979 doesn't cover anywhere close to everything.
Considering that he's thus far bought all but at least one of his and Peggy's cars for sticker price, he's definitely wasted thousands of dollars.
Hank Hill seems to be middle-middle class so pretty average
They definitely had the house before Bobby was born because they got Ladybird before Bobby, Bill says so in the episode where Hank wants to breed Ladybird. Hank also got Ladybird for Peggy because of his narrow urethra, it's in a flashback in another episode.
You missed the part where he sold tractors & tractor accessories 🤷♂️ "a man without a country club" episode mentions it at the end
Yep
The Formans from That 70s Show
Pre or post season 3-ish?
@@sweatyskeleton7390 The whole show. The timeline doesn't make sence being it took place during a 3.5 year period over 8 seasons.
I'd love to see that!!
@@benn255b3 so would I
You don't need to THEY'RE ALL ALRIGHT!
Hank isn’t broke in love of propane and propane accessories. He’s rich in love there.
One thing you forgot to take into account was when he had his truck hit by the train that insurance would pay him some cash for it's worth, as he's good about having insurance for every eventuality so he had full replacement coverage
But he also only said his brand new 1999 or 2000 pick up truck was only $10,000, a truck like that would've cost almost $30,000 in 1999-2000ish
Hank's got a work ethic and only seems to take major expense due to helping or supporting others.
Hank’s first truck is a ranger. By the end of the series he’s driving an F250
Mike Hunt which he pays full sticker price for lol
@@JoshuaDomoslai $5.15 minimum wage * 160 hours = $824, 20k-31k MSRP + 20% dealer/fees, $24k-38k. Likely financed, so they made payments. Assumed 7%, 72 months, $356 low end $563 high end. Hank could get the low end model, but the top of the line REQUIRES Hank to make more than minimum wage.
Hanks a pussy should have got Cummings
@@bighoss7437 well back in the 90s late and 2000s the cummings were more efficient with better MPG than a 7.3 powerstroke or a 5.4 regular V8 of 90s ford trucks
Rangers are quite cheap to own and maintain, they are small trucks. I have a red 1998 Ranger I put a 5.0 SBF V8 in, check my profile if you want to see it run - it has a 5 speed stick shift as well. I like to imagine it as the ultimate Hank Hill truck.
Hank is from the gen that thought graduating high school was an accomplishment.
High school graduates were more common back then compared to today lol but it doesn't matter, most places you apply to don't even ask you about your high school education anyway lol 😅
@@josephalvarez9920
Yea but they do ask about college education
Now being smart enough to NOT go into college is a better sign of potential. Outside of stem
@@bonnevillebagger9147 so I'm dumb for getting an associates while only paying for books?
@@mrprimor227 On average, yes, if it’s not in a stem field.
The effort you put in to this is astounding. Also I believe Hank kept the jet ski
He supposedly only kept it for less than a year because the resale value is already the same, you never see it again in the series after that episode.
In the 2002 episode “A Man Without A County Club” near the end when Hank asks Ted what and what accessories he sells for a living, Ted guesses “Tractors?”, in which Dale reminds Hank “to be fair, you used to sell tractors...”
So where does that factor into the timeline?
Dale is clearly schizophrenic. Don't put too much stock in what he says having any connection to reality.
Hank actually drove a Ranger for the first 5 seasons, the truck was originally a 1993 Ranger but later changed to a square body 1983 for that specific episode in season 5 afterwards he's generally seen in his 199x-200x F250 Super Duty
Do How Broke is Al Bundy?
4 bucks in one pocket!
Yes
Tang sandwich broke
Toaster leavins'
Sometimes he makes a Tang wipe when he has one piece of bread.
I laughed because there is king of the hill analysis and theory, but now I’m listening intently lmao
being from the town this show is based on, its so funny seeing how easy it is to calculate the Hills finances because of how accurately the show depicts life here.
Arlington or Richardson?
@@Dead_Again1313 Garland
@@omarvazquez2359 garland is gettho af ain’t no way hank lives there lol 😂
Gotta remember Hank got his "special deal" on all the cars he bought from a certain car salesman
This is amazing!
A. It shows how much effort the show's creators put into developing the characters that his finances actually work out.
B. It's a pretty cool lesson that financial responsibility can have compounding effects!
Hank's face when hes being shown his 45k a year w 1k a year bonus is so appropriate hahaha
I think there’s an error in this because in one episode Hank says, “There’s a reason Dale and I never got an apartment after high school.”
Right!!!
@TopSavage No it was Dale AND Hank. Watch Season 7 episode 7.
I still dont see why hank didnt just 2jz swap his dying truck
Bc it's not an American product lol
@Matt Wrath oh i dont maybe when he found out the engine was shit so he could keep driving it
For real
Loyalty.
He wouldn't swap anything but an LS, this is Hank "America" Hill were talking about
Small correction: Hank never lived with Dale. Bill and Boomhauer, yes, but he specifically says to Peggy at one point, "this is why Dale and I never got an apartment together"
6:55 that's actually a ford ranger and hank bought a late 90s or early 2000s ford f250 after the ranger
1) He drives a ranger, not an F150
2) The F250 he bought retailed for nearly $30k. As shown within the episode, it wasn't a basic bitch truck
Your math is way way way off.
Something tells me Hank's credit score is excellent
@Squealer Pig solid call back
I can barely budget myself, and this guy has the time to budget cartoon characters. Mad props, bro.
I feel like Buck is actually paying Hank more than that I feel he’s at least getting 60k minimum cause Buck really respects Hank and knows that he basically runs the joint
Yeah but he's a greedy bastard though.
Buck "respects" Hank to his face, but it's probably very facile at the end of the day. Buck knows he can get Hank, who is shown to be pretty naive in many respects, to do just about anything for him, so I can't imagine he's compensated especially well.
If he respected hank he wouldn't have tried to make him take the blame for debbies murder just saying.
One episode Buck gamble's Hank's Labor and loses him to Thatherton, the cash value was tiny
@@bassmaster867 Buck is super addictive to gambling, Thaterton likely knows just what value hank actually has, and getting him on the cheap for, to them, what likely amounts to *pennies* would be too good a deal to turn down.
A sugestion to the video: how broke is Al Bundy (Married with children)
Al Bundy was so poor, if riverboats were selling for 10 cents, all he could afford to do is stand on the riverbank yelling "ain't that cheap".
I remember him saying in an episode in the early 90s that he made 12,000 a year
@@infjintegrityvsnarcissism7295 all is left to do is calculate how much did he spent on a house, what any other income he made, how much he spends om basic stuff and so on and so on
Hank might've moved in with Boomhauer but in the episode where he cut off Dale's finger he said he chose not to get a place with Dale.
Congrats on 30k sub won’t surprise me when you hit 1 million
Hank also used to sell tractors mentioned in the golf with Tiger Woods episode
He wastes all his money on a damn beer every episode 😭
TopSavage if they drink every day thats still at least once a week though
@@chey6073 Yeah but they're drinking the equivalent of Budwieser so that's like $8 for a 6 pack give or maybe even a 12 pack. Hardly bank breaking.
The american dream
@@benjamingriswold3408 I think they specifically buy 6 packs, i remember seeing them holding one in the plastic ringlets on multiple occasions, and alamo is definitely something like a Budweiser, since the only other large named beer mentioned in the show is hi brau which is imported.
King of the Hill still is a classic. It did what the Simpsons absolutely refuses to do. Ride off into the sunset on a high note.
Hank's yearly bonus changes depending on how much propane he sells. When he says he gets the $1k bonus that it wasn't as high as the previous year, meaning he got more at least the year before.
I also think you can glean a lot about their finances from the episode where he adopts the armed forces cat. Their vacation budget is just over $3000.
He didn't mention ladybird. 🥺
Aw
There isn't a day that goes past that I don't miss this show.
I miss Cotton
Hulu has every episode
I don't have Hulu... I wish they were back on Netflix...
Are you there tiffany? Want to watch episodes?
According to the episode “Yankee Hankee,” Hank was born in New York City on the day that Castro visited Yankee Stadium. this was a real event, and it occurred on April 15, 1959. The show aired in 1997, so that would make Hank about 38 at the start of the show.
*But…
In the episode where Sauers coaches Bobby’s team, it’s said that the championship game (during which Hank’s ankle snapped) was held in 1974. Hank was a senior for that game. That doesn’t jibe with 1959, because it would mean Hank was only 16 in his senior year. If you go by the year of the game, Hank would have been born about 1961. This would put Hank at 36 when the show starts.