Is Palm Springs, California Still Paradise?

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  • Опубликовано: 26 дек 2022
  • Is anywhere in California not getting ruined?
    Palm Springs everyone! Home of the fancy wealthy people. A place to be all cool and hip and cosmopolitan. For a long time, this desert city has been the upscale go-to place for entertainment, dining and the arts. A sunny getaway for the elderly elite!
    It’s still got some mojo, and Palm Springs has a lot of that funky desert charm. But more and more, you see the type of California problems that this place has been immune to. Homelessness, crime, poverty, drug use, jerks.
    I came to Palm Springs on day 12 of my California homecoming tour. I hadn’t been here in 13 years. And what the hell? Is there any place in this state that’s not getting ruined?
    #california #moving
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    This channel is about America!
    The best video on this topic!

Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @NickJohnson
    @NickJohnson  Год назад +46

    Here's my entire California Road Trip playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLq-_cmf3H6yoGM0mmbTCTmMa9zMFvvDeG

    • @whitestudenttransmission7308
      @whitestudenttransmission7308 Год назад +1

      Why do you make antiwhite remarks in your videos ? 🤔🧐

    • @nextup6074
      @nextup6074 Год назад

      @@whitestudenttransmission7308 Better question: why does this sad rightwing child even make "videos"? FreeDUMB of speech I guess...

    • @sharon94503
      @sharon94503 Год назад

      You know, your use of the term "bums" is disrespectful. You don't know their stories and what brought them to homelessness. Perhaps you should learn and show some humility, or maybe you're just entitled.

    • @sharon94503
      @sharon94503 Год назад +1

      ​@@dollygirltwinsyelling isn't necessary.

    • @whitestudenttransmission7308
      @whitestudenttransmission7308 Год назад +1

      @Dolly Girl Twins - statement of “White people” this and that are what’s being referred to. He can clearly make his point without taking swipes at “White people” all the time AND notice he doesn’t point remarks like that at other groups ? There’s a pattern there 🤔🧐

  • @theamericanrubbertramps
    @theamericanrubbertramps Год назад +460

    I live here in Desert Edge ( between Desert Hot Springs and Sky Valley) as a waitress I can tell you that a lot of my fellow employees have become homeless and live out of thier cars since the covid shut down. When I first moved to Palm desert in 99 I paid 750.00 for a 2 bedroom apartment. Now that same apartment goes for 2500.00 a month. Most of the homeless that I see are young. It's truly sad. Not everyone is homeless due to a drug addiction. Some are due to the fact that the cost of living is too high for even a waitress like me. Living in a van down by the river is the new American dream. I love watching your channel and your pretty accurate in your evaluation. ✌️👍

    • @NickJohnson
      @NickJohnson  Год назад +44

      Aww I'm sorry it's so rough for you guys out there 😢

    • @marauderhot
      @marauderhot Год назад

      Most people in California made a better living with covid by getting free money. Why didn't they?

    • @jan22150
      @jan22150 Год назад +19

      What Is the percentage of drug abusers compared to the hard working people living in their cars who are homeless in Palm Springs ?

    • @kikaworld5713
      @kikaworld5713 Год назад +25

      Sky Valley resident here, it's best to buy a mobile home here in Sky Valley. I pray your co-workers situation gets better!!!

    • @nextup6074
      @nextup6074 Год назад +26

      @@NickJohnson How do you spell "douchebag?" A: NICK JOHNSON

  • @sumosupremeking360
    @sumosupremeking360 Год назад +284

    When you said you can’t leave the house without spending $100 in California had me dying because it’s true 😂

    • @jb2._
      @jb2._ Год назад +16

      That’s 100% true what he said

    • @midcenturymodern9330
      @midcenturymodern9330 Год назад +21

      Yes, absolutely. A simple trip to the gas station and the grocery store these days can set you back some $150 in the so called "golden state."

    • @aerofart
      @aerofart Год назад +19

      Actually, in some parts, you don't even have to leave the house to spend $100 in California. Property taxes and utilities will cost you that even when just staying home for the day watching TV.

    • @clifftonicstudios7469
      @clifftonicstudios7469 Год назад +3

      @@midcenturymodern9330 I drive a 59 T bird god knows what it would cost me lol. I was bringing her back home to the states, I LIVE 50S apart from my hidden laptop in the UK.

    • @joejones9520
      @joejones9520 Год назад +5

      @@clifftonicstudios7469 what do you mean "hidden laptop in the UK?"

  • @deepg7084
    @deepg7084 Год назад +37

    I've had family members in Rancho Mirage for over 20 years. It was mentioned in this video a few times as a more upscale area, which it is. But I can tell you even they aren't immune to the degradation. My family members have had their cars damaged by gas thieves, they've had homeless people break into their gated community and bang on their doors in the middle of the night. If you have a pool in the summer time, you WILL find strangers taking a dip in your backyard to cool down. They got their carry permits and have a firearm by their side most of the time. They've moved twice in the last 3 years trying to find a safer neighborhood for their kids after finding feces and needles around their property. Their kids will be moving out for college in a few years and then they plan to pick up and move out of there.

    • @Papa_CJ
      @Papa_CJ Год назад +1

      Why would homeless people be banging on there for in the middle of the night? How strange!

    • @deepg7084
      @deepg7084 Год назад +5

      @@Papa_CJ I have seen the security footage from their camera system. They seem to be people who are either mentally unstable and/or drugged out. Their front door in the last home they moved from was all glass. It's pretty thick glass but still it can be broken with a rock or blunt object. So hearing banging on it in the middle of the night can be pretty scary because you don't know their intentions. They sold that house and found a smaller home on a golf course and so far it's been better.

    • @renewashington791
      @renewashington791 Год назад +1

      Oh mah Gawd, bums in ya pooL 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 is Definitely NOT ha ha funny, but I gotta laugh to keep from cryin.

  • @TheSnerggly
    @TheSnerggly Год назад +272

    Nick, thank you for your videos of California. It's heartbreaking what's happening everywhere in California right now.

    • @TheFrenchPug
      @TheFrenchPug Год назад +17

      I live in Orange County and am afraid to venture out anymore. LA used to be a fun place to go, but now, hell no!!!

    • @davidoetting1551
      @davidoetting1551 Год назад +13

      All the gays moved in. There ya go. Natural evolution.

    • @andyhughes1776
      @andyhughes1776 Год назад +13

      Everywhere in America too!

    • @bansheezs
      @bansheezs Год назад +16

      @@andyhughes1776 TN outlawed public camping, and poof no more homeless.

    • @faroutgolf3650
      @faroutgolf3650 Год назад +1

      It's been the Marxist, Communist plan to destroy America from the inside out! China needs to be held accountable for sending Fentanyl around the world! Block all Chinese goods coming into America. Take Americas factories back! Take away 90% of welfare and make jobs available and training centers around the country...

  • @misterpeppercorn3078
    @misterpeppercorn3078 Год назад +363

    I grew up in California in the 1950's and 60's and it was once such a wonderful state to live and grow up in. It's all gone to pot now. People are leaving in droves. Fortunately I live in a good safe area. I'm very sad to see the utter deterioration.

    • @johnjaco5544
      @johnjaco5544 Год назад +24

      I agree 100%

    • @paulrom446
      @paulrom446 Год назад +15

      Yeah no Truly is sad! I have great 😃 memories of spending parts of my Summer Vacay out there!

    • @thesongbird2383
      @thesongbird2383 Год назад +29

      Me too... Grew up in San Bernardino in 1950s & 60s. Drove down to Palm Springs many times. It was lovely and exciting. Once I was by Louise's Pantry next to the theater, and there was George Hamilton riding his bicycle and then Red Skelton and his wife coming out of the theater. Now we just stay away from the larger cities and it's not bad.
      As for San Bernardino, it's a total disaster now. In late 60s, LA was overpopulated with Welfare recipients, so they started sending them to San Bernardino... it went downhill with high crime after that.

    • @msudoc
      @msudoc Год назад +1

      If you voted Democrat, it’s on you.

    • @kingofkings9
      @kingofkings9 Год назад +9

      Damnnnn you’re old 😂

  • @whyamiheredlb
    @whyamiheredlb Год назад +88

    Can we please just clarify that this infestation of poverty, crime, homelessness and drugs is not just a California problem. Let’s also look at Portland, Seattle, Las Vegas, Phoenix, St.Louis Mo, Philly, Detroit, Houston, Tampa, Indianapolis, NY City and the list goes on. Mismanaged by supposed “Public Servants “ that cater to the NIMBY wealthy, keeping one hand out for kick backs while their cities fall to ruin. God forbid these politicians actually make a difference for the amount of bank we pay them.

    • @user-or6ht4vi6u
      @user-or6ht4vi6u Год назад +16

      No- because hating CA and liberals is the basic underlying premise in all the videos. No matter where they are set. It's his jam. Good videos and tiresome repetitive CA hate on a loop.

    • @mikemiller659
      @mikemiller659 Год назад

      @@user-or6ht4vi6u cant say libs didnt ask for it..there all about appeasing the issues afraid to tell addicts NO

    • @allexxo_
      @allexxo_ Год назад +9

      @@user-or6ht4vi6u hes literally obsessed with california it’s embarrassing

    • @ShubhamMishrabro
      @ShubhamMishrabro Год назад +6

      Sadly many Republican will not realise this until their states starts getting this problem

    • @dh605x
      @dh605x Год назад +1

      While these problems are not unique to California, they are especially acute there. Bad policies come with a price, and California got away with murder in this area for a time. I don't know where this will end, but it seems that CA will continue to decline as their most productive residents flee to other states that aren't pursuing the horrendously bad policies that ruined California.

  • @fredgervinm.p.3315
    @fredgervinm.p.3315 Год назад +15

    I lived in SoCal from 79-83 and loved it.
    From San Diego to LA,
    the beaches to 29 palms...
    Great memories and I would not ruin them by going back for a visit. Palm Springs was quite unique then.

  • @johnsims709
    @johnsims709 Год назад +6

    Wow as someone who has been going out to ‘the desert” for the last 40 years this video has to be the most complete, honest, funny, accurate and sad summary/description I’ve seen…Nick you nailed everything so spot on…

  • @BHarris25
    @BHarris25 Год назад +142

    “These homeless people are doing their best to ruin this place”. Change “homeless people” to “politicians” and you hit the nail on the head.

    • @bobbyhall3949
      @bobbyhall3949 Год назад +5

      Do you mean the non domiciled? That's the first time I've ever heard that.

    • @youtubelicksmytaint7482
      @youtubelicksmytaint7482 Год назад +2

      BOTH

    • @SillyTube9
      @SillyTube9 Год назад +3

      Change it to “slimy Wall St housing speculators” and it would be accurate. They are the reason for BOTH high rents and insane home prices. Combine that with unemployment insurance which won’t even cover basic rent if you lose a job. So people can’t compensate if life throws them a curve ball.

    • @hellsregect
      @hellsregect Год назад

      yeah it must be the politicians not the drug adicts roaming the streets commiting crime

    • @BHarris25
      @BHarris25 Год назад +6

      @@hellsregect Well you see, a big part of the problem is they refuse to actually enforce the law so they allow these lawbreakers to run free.

  • @shutupandlisten4once
    @shutupandlisten4once Год назад +256

    I'm 35 and lived in the palm springs area my whole life and I can confidently say palm springs is mismanaged and is drug and crime infested. Homeless drug addicts everywhere. Inflated housing market. High rent for small areas. They turn a blind eye to the real problems to the city and cater to tourist and anything that's non-family.

    • @curtbilyeu8701
      @curtbilyeu8701 Год назад +4

      the white party

    • @shutupandlisten4once
      @shutupandlisten4once Год назад +1

      @@curtbilyeu8701 when they come to town local parks are not safe for families because insane acts of indecency take place all around town that the police let slide.

    • @jenniferyates8695
      @jenniferyates8695 Год назад

      @@curtbilyeu8701 that it is the white party. Is the 1% that is too control this world that are doing it. The mayor's governor's and senators just been threatened and paid to turn a blind eye and do as told. Soros, Swann, the Clintons, china and a few other that are . That's the things they discuss the bilderburg meeting they have yearly.

    • @craigjorgensen4637
      @craigjorgensen4637 Год назад +1

      It’s called Liberal Leadershp yet the voters will never learn or simply don’t care! California and other states are ruined now.

    • @johnjaco5544
      @johnjaco5544 Год назад +17

      Yes and people better start thinking about lack of water

  • @michellevasquez2131
    @michellevasquez2131 Год назад +16

    I was born in Indio, raised in Thermal, and I've lived in Desert Hot Springs, Cathedral City, Indio, Coachella, and I know Palm Springs pretty well. There are some really beautiful homes tucked away out there. I guess to some it's the place to be, but it's just another city on the map in California. And hot isn't the word to describe summer temperatures here, it's more like scorching. Thanks for the video.

  • @charleshabecker
    @charleshabecker Год назад +41

    As a resident of Palm Springs, I greatly appreciate your video of our fine city, and what we aren't doing about it. Why we are building $700,000 homes, and little to no homes that are affordable, is beyond me. Where are the employees supposed to live who provide the services in restaurants and hotels. Hope that things change soon.

    • @191895
      @191895 Год назад +5

      There are half a million of them at the border....

    • @ag4allgood
      @ag4allgood Год назад +3

      @@191895 Good because many Americans don't want to work many of the jobs here ! Too entitled to work for a wage.

    • @christophergrissom484
      @christophergrissom484 Год назад

      @@ag4allgood where to smart you mean lol

    • @ag4allgood
      @ag4allgood Год назад +3

      @@christophergrissom484 Too smart ? Proving my point.

    • @ronrendon
      @ronrendon 10 месяцев назад +2

      In tents! Duuuuuh.

  • @johnrobbins8093
    @johnrobbins8093 Год назад +53

    I lived in Palm Springs in the fall of 1974. Loved it, back then, when Palm Springs Life (magazine) was in it's hey-days. Worked as a draftsman for a big interior design firm - that job was awesome. Moved to Palm Desert in 1975 to attend Coll of the Desert. Then bounced around San Diego, San Jose and Fresno before exiting CA for good, in 1981. Have only been back to visit. These videos have been reaffirming for my not wanting to return to CA to live there.

    • @243wayne1
      @243wayne1 Год назад +2

      @@exexpatcitizen6582 He went to Washington. Hahahaha!

    • @merrywalsh2809
      @merrywalsh2809 Год назад +1

      You are like Forest Gump: right place, right time. I feel like I had that timing thing down too. I watch Nick, hoping to see the next big thing, before the madding crowd gets there.

    • @johnrobbins8093
      @johnrobbins8093 Год назад +3

      From CA, I went to Ohio, then Maryland. To Iowa in 2011, landing most recently in Illinois. When I lived in PS and PD, I was riding a Kawasaki 125 enduro motorcycle. Spent a lot of time riding around the Indio Hills badlands. That area is now closed off from ORV use, so, yes, it was pretty idyllic in those days.

    • @petefogel2133
      @petefogel2133 Год назад +1

      Guess what? Most places change over 50 years.

  • @davidnunez5819
    @davidnunez5819 Год назад +99

    Nailed this one. I've been in and out of the Coachella Valley for 10 years. It would be worth noting how many people only live here part time, the "Snowbirds." Your videos, and the comedic factual commentary are great. Thank you for all the different views of California.

    • @petefogel2133
      @petefogel2133 Год назад +4

      What are you talking about? The reason snowbirds don't spend the summer in the Coachella Valley is because it's too hot. "Snowbirds" have enough money to live somewhere else when it's a 110゚ for 4 months out of the year. Why are you trying to make snowbirds into people that hate the Coachella Valley because they only live here part time? It's actually the complete opposite.

    • @mannymm7887
      @mannymm7887 Год назад +3

      @@petefogel2133 born and raised in Palm Springs. snowbirds are one of the biggest reasons why the local community can still afford to live here or in cathedral city which is where most working class live. Hospitality is probably the largest business sector of all of the Desert.

    • @josephaugello1527
      @josephaugello1527 Год назад +1

      ​@Pete Fogel the majority of people don't stay they come and go

  • @patriciachamberlain1135
    @patriciachamberlain1135 Год назад +9

    Rich people shop more at thrift stores than you think. They also contribute to those stores, so a stroll through a thrift store in a rich neighborhood would be wayyyy different than anywhere else.

  • @richardanderson9957
    @richardanderson9957 Год назад +8

    I lived in Palm Springs for 20 years. It was then a calm, quiet, post card like place with the most livable climate in the Western Hemisphere. I could relax in my pool and view the snow capped mountains of San Gorgonio and San Jacinto. And I was just a low wage service worker. Finally my mid-century modern got so valuable that I quit work, sold the house and have lived the past 16 years in retirement living in Asia. Palm Springs was very good to me.
    In the years I lived there I never saw an identifiable homeless person on the streets.

    • @langjr0
      @langjr0 Год назад +3

      What a wise move. Great story.

    • @NadeemAhmad-me7fp
      @NadeemAhmad-me7fp Год назад

      It’s awesome you moved to Asia.

  • @Tonymanero1960
    @Tonymanero1960 Год назад +74

    My girlfriend and I ( we are from Maryland) visited Palm Springs about 5 years ago,...and had a wonderful time.Because it was the summer we were able to get amazingly affordable rates at the smaller motels and resorts.We soaked up all the old Hollywood and Rat Pack vibe.She often talks about going back ...but,...I tell her some moments can't be repeated and are best left alone.And since California has become a filthy crime ridden state that encourages lawlessness,..it was a no brainer.

    • @JamesG1126
      @JamesG1126 Год назад +8

      Summers in Palm Springs are absolutely miserable.

    • @Tonymanero1960
      @Tonymanero1960 Год назад +10

      @@JamesG1126 Maybe,...to locals,..but not coming from the East coast.110 degrees with LOW humidity is comfortable.

    • @ALuDoy
      @ALuDoy Год назад +2

      BULLSEYE! 🎯

    • @hurryandleave9680
      @hurryandleave9680 Год назад +2

      I didn't think I'd get used to the heat, but I did.

  • @davereynolds7472
    @davereynolds7472 Год назад +15

    Dude you did a great job on this. It's uber thorough - much respect.

  • @scrappydoo9
    @scrappydoo9 Год назад

    You do some awesome videos, Nick. Just happened to stumble on a few of yours and they are quite entertaining and informative!

  • @davidarmitage289
    @davidarmitage289 Год назад +5

    Also enjoyed the California series.. very educational thanks Nick!

  • @robertwilliam9558
    @robertwilliam9558 Год назад +92

    Nick, this desert series has been awesome. Keep up the good work.

    • @petefogel2133
      @petefogel2133 Год назад +5

      Yeah Nick.. it's really a great series about California. Listening to you bash the state is like watching Fox News talking about politics.

    • @christopherboada7921
      @christopherboada7921 Год назад +1

      Nick Johnson bashes everywhere he goes. Snarky remarks and unflattering footage are his stock in trade.

  • @deserttamales7694
    @deserttamales7694 Год назад +1

    Rancho Mirage, Palm Springs and now Indio have been my home for so long. Began as a tourist but am here for the long haul now. Thank you for your share

  • @tejastiger61
    @tejastiger61 Год назад

    Thanks NICK for caring to point out what needs to be pointed out. Excellent observations.

  • @creamyspinach8951
    @creamyspinach8951 Год назад +10

    dude ur showing people the true colors of american city’s. Thank you

  • @XxGyromancerXx
    @XxGyromancerXx Год назад +18

    I have a great-uncle who used to ride with Tex Ritter (John Ritter's father) and other Hollywood cowboys at the old Will Rogers Stables in Palm Springs. The place is long gone. It might have been located where the "bad part of town" is located. I have a ton of pictures of my uncle riding with the stars. He was also a trick rider and stunt double prior to WWII.
    It's a shame to see what has become of Palm Springs. The problems plaguing CA and many other places in the country have been ignored for way too long. Because of that, I don't think the problems can be fixed. Ignoring the elephant in the room doesn't make it go away. Unfortunately politicians and other greedy mongrels don't want to acknowledge reality.

    • @showtime951
      @showtime951 Год назад

      I'll bet you have some great shots of your uncle & Frank Bogert, a friend, among others.
      I agree with your dire analysis, and how the people, politics, greed, and lies have so sadly affected California, the once proud, still, without humans, most beautiful place on Earth.

  • @karenkellock
    @karenkellock 2 месяца назад +1

    This was so excellent Nick. I was in this area for 31 years and I saw it go from rich conservative to low down druggie. It was very scary. I relocated to the AZ strip and I'm so much happier around "normals".

  • @greyhoundude6112
    @greyhoundude6112 Год назад +12

    I spent the night at that Motel 6! It was Halloween night, 1999. I was on my way from Oregon to Tucson to spend the winter in Arizona. I had never been to Palm Springs before. I will just say that it was wonderful. The room was clean, the staff was great, the motel was pet-friendly. I remember sitting outside at the nearby Starbucks and enjoying a cup of coffee with my dog and enjoying a beautiful evening in downtown Palm Springs. Everyone seemed to be super friendly. This was back when Oregon was nicer, Tucson was nicer and Palm Springs was delightful...no bums, no drugs, no loud noises. A terrific night spent in Palm Springs. Too bad it has lost some of its rich-folk charm. Oh well....I have the memories.

    • @NickJohnson
      @NickJohnson  Год назад +1

      I wonder if we stayed in the same room!

    • @greyhoundude6112
      @greyhoundude6112 Год назад

      @@NickJohnson - Doubtful. Looks like you were on the 2nd floor. The nice folks there (at the time, anyway) set me up in a ground floor room, as I had my pooch with me.

  • @MySkinnydip
    @MySkinnydip Год назад +6

    Nick cracks me up sometimes! I was watching at work incognito. But I couldn’t stop laughing!😂

  • @wanted-33
    @wanted-33 Год назад +11

    Well there y go. When a neighborhood with houses over 300K becomes the bad part of town, all is truly lost.

  • @juancarloslugo954
    @juancarloslugo954 Год назад +7

    I’m 23 I lived in the Coachella Valley my whole life and work two jobs in Palm Springs. You pretty much got all of it on point. If you’re still interested about Palm Springs Im totally down to give you my input

  • @vladmira
    @vladmira Год назад +3

    Thanks for all of your videos and insight. I was recently in Florida and it was nothing compared to the Southwest and West Coast.

  • @Ann-tl9mc
    @Ann-tl9mc Год назад +9

    Great meals at the senior center (reasonable price) and cool library and park near by. Roy built a nice shelter for the homeless.

  • @ginas.6656
    @ginas.6656 Год назад +56

    It's heartbreaking to see California going downhill. I loved living there back im the 60's, 70's. Can you do a video on Indian Wells and the nicer areas?

    • @petefogel2133
      @petefogel2133 Год назад +5

      Heart breaking? Oh my... what a revelation. Places and cities actually change over 50 years. What a shock!

    • @collentreefelling9142
      @collentreefelling9142 Год назад

      How can a city sustain homosexuality, drugs, crime and Liberalism? Those are symptoms of a decaying and collapsing society!

    • @deepg7084
      @deepg7084 Год назад +6

      @@petefogel2133 "change" isn't always good. In this case it's a downfall.

    • @user-or6ht4vi6u
      @user-or6ht4vi6u Год назад +5

      @@petefogel2133 This dude HATES Ca. Even in video on the midwest he'll talk about CA. Funny how these haters all talk about CA so much. I don't care for FL, but I can go years without needing to make an attack on that mess.

    • @doloresm7396
      @doloresm7396 Год назад +4

      @@petefogel2133 Yeah, I had to move out of my house where I was born & raised after 50 years. It changed dramatically, everything ebb & flows. Now I live in rural America. My area is so bad where I left there are literal shootouts 3 blocks from my old house & if they're not sure you're dead they run you over to finish the job. I was ambivalent for a time when I moved 'cause I missed my house, now not so much. Like I said today, I would be a prisoner in my own house.

  • @SammLloy481
    @SammLloy481 Год назад +1

    After I left Huntington beach in 1984 I moved to yucca Valley I had secured contracts with the city of Palm Springs to start hooking up all the homes on city septic lines, so my company dug the trenches in the middle of the streets then ran the lateral lines from the houses to the lateral lines in the street. I worked on Jack Warners house and his sons house next door to him and we became friends. Jack's Wie would always make ice tea for us and after work they would invite me over for dinner and a swim in the huge beautiful pool they had. They were very nice people. I really enjoyed their friendship and their many great stories of all the movie stars they knew and some of the stories about those movie stars. Great times man. Great times. Great video too.

  • @RedBud315
    @RedBud315 Год назад +5

    I no longer live in SoCal but, I have a friend from the high school days whose father used to be Frank Sinatra's personal chef in Palm Springs. He opened his own restaurant in the 70's called Johhny Costas that is now run by my friend after his father retired. I took a group of 25 people there one time and no one ordered the same item from the menu and not one person had any complaints. They close during the summer months but, go check them out any other time and you won't be disappointed.

  • @christinebutler7630
    @christinebutler7630 Год назад +7

    It's so arid and brown. Thanks, I'll stay in the lush green Blue Ridge.

    • @Tonymanero1960
      @Tonymanero1960 Год назад +6

      I agree,....I live in Western Maryland. The Mid-Atlantic and the Carolina/Virginia mountains are paradises.

  • @siouxfalls100
    @siouxfalls100 Год назад +68

    Thank you for all the work you put into these videos. Social problems should bring us all together.

    • @Ndw1995
      @Ndw1995 Год назад +11

      Kinda hard to do when the people causing most of the problems all have a common denominator

    • @Moto_Bizzario
      @Moto_Bizzario Год назад +7

      Nope. Segregation is The Way. Keep those scumbags away from the non scumbags.

    • @JohnSmith-su3ze
      @JohnSmith-su3ze Год назад

      The Democrats weaponize social problems by using them to destroy society so they can transfer power to themselves. Its the epitome of evil.

    • @showtime951
      @showtime951 Год назад +2

      @Glenn Cookinham -
      Divergent social values forced in to the same space is a main factor of what is tearing us apart. Then it's everybody's job/cost to fix the "problem(s)"? Many people don't care to or can't see when there is a problem.
      This is where education, family, religion (a belief in something grander than yourself), charity, and personal responsibility come in to play. A public solution (government) is never the solution, only the problem. The smiling, promising, lying, cheating, stealing, over-promising, under-delivering, inadequately delivering, and sometimes killing problem.

    • @siouxfalls100
      @siouxfalls100 Год назад +1

      @@showtime951 The extreme cost of living in California makes clean and sober people homeless. And neighbors 😑 say "hell no" to section 8 housing. Also called Hud. You will not put that kind of housing in my neighborhood. I don't want any clean, sober, and poor people around me. Keep low income scum away from me. Poverty does not always mean drug abuse issues. Mental health is also a common cause of homeless.

  • @rochelleesser7961
    @rochelleesser7961 Год назад +34

    So this is part two of my comments:
    I lived in the Coachella Valley for 24.5 years, and during this time the worst places to live for me were the “snooty rich” areas.
    Not being very well off financially, I felt most welcomed and cared for in Indio and even more so in Desert Hot Springs, which had a population of about 19k when I moved there.
    About the temperatures:
    Being tourist areas, I discovered that the powers that be in places like Palm Springs seem to scrub the actual temperatures out of searchable records.
    I lived in Palm Springs in 1994 when the temperature reached 135 degrees in the summer and it was 138 degrees further East around Indio or Coachella, but I’ve had online arguments with people who say that they looked it up and that I’m just exaggerating.
    I LIVED AND WORKED THROUGH IT; experiencing what it was like; bolting from my air conditioned house to my car and burning the hell out of my hands and butt getting in to get the air conditioning going before I could drive to work, and then parking my car and bolting into the air conditioned office; praying that by the time I left at the end of the day, it had cooled down enough that the door handles and seat of my car wouldn’t burn as much and the air conditioning would cool everything down sooner than it had in preparing for getting there.
    The average temperatures in Palm Springs during the hottest summer month of August are highs around 120 degrees in mid-afternoon and lows around 95 degrees at around 2am.
    Desert Hot Springs is on average about 10 degrees cooler than Palm Springs, and farther down valley, it’s on average between five and 10 degrees hotter the farther east you go.
    Fun fact:
    During the summer of 1994 it was cooler in Death Valley. It was quite a conversation piece at the time, but good luck finding that little tidbit of information now 🙄

    • @KarlsLabReport
      @KarlsLabReport Год назад +3

      I too have worked in 120 degree heat in the “inland empire”. Those temps are no joke!

    • @rochelleesser7961
      @rochelleesser7961 Год назад +2

      @@KarlsLabReport Wow, it was actually that hot there, too?
      I remember the first summer I spent in the Inland Empire; relocating to the San Bernardino area from the South Bay area near Redondo Beach back in the mid-1980s.
      It was 106 degrees and I was absolutely miserable, considering I was used to 90 degrees being a heatwave.
      I had my grandma’s 1967 Pontiac that I had purchased from her a few years beforehand. It didn’t have AC and my kids were very young, so yeah, that was fun 🙄
      Then I ended up relocating to the Coachella Valley where the 120 degree temperatures were “normal” 😆💯😖🙄

    • @lucythecat12
      @lucythecat12 Год назад +3

      You picked the two cities with the highest murder rate funny enough. Indio and Desert Hot Springs are leading in those numbers. I use to visit the Palm Springs area. It's not so great. It's hot, too many homeless and drugs. Old people driving slow causing traffic jams. I'd tell you where I now visit but I don't want to blow up that spot 😂😅👀

    • @rochelleesser7961
      @rochelleesser7961 Год назад +1

      @@lucythecat12 I’m sure that they’re much different now than they were when I lived there between 10 and 30 years ago.

    • @rosewoodsteel6656
      @rosewoodsteel6656 Год назад +1

      The highest temperature ever recorded in the United States, the whopping 134 degrees Fahrenheit that sent the mercury soaring in Death Valley on July 10, 1913.

  • @_warsp1te760
    @_warsp1te760 Год назад +6

    I live in Palm Springs (w/ family, I moved here a year ago) and can say it is not bad in the right areas. I work in the Kitchen at a big restaurant here off Indian Canyon. Sucks that the other problems are coming here - the guy you interviewed said 3 people came up and asked him for money at Target. As of not too long ago, a few weeks maybe, there was a row of tents that went up right behind the Wal-Mart, which is right over by Target as well and the two events could possibly be related. There are more homeless people now but not as many as in other places in California. It gets too hot here for a good 7 months of the year, and then during the cool season our population triples, along with the traffic (I live here year-round), and during those times I notice more vagabonds, and more people with negative energy - but it is nice to see you look at the positive Nick because that's what I do and that's what I have been doing since I got here. It's really not that bad here. But it is during those tourist seasons that I am able to make more money, get more hours, and save for the Summer.
    Also, a number of construction projects have been lasting for years, but I saw a plot of land get sold and a gas station was built within 10 months, so there is some thieving going on all over politically and that's just one thing.

  • @bcastle2397
    @bcastle2397 Год назад

    Great job!--informative, funny, realistic, eye-opening. Definitely following your site!

  • @LearnExploreAdventure
    @LearnExploreAdventure Год назад +16

    Love your content. Dude, the vid from San BernaGhetto, that was shocking. Same for Diego. I lived in Diego a few years back and the last time I was in SB was in 2019. Shocking...

  • @milessampson3942
    @milessampson3942 Год назад +9

    House at 10:25 “I Support The Current Thing!” 🤩

  • @rochelleesser7961
    @rochelleesser7961 Год назад +7

    I lived in Southern California my whole life; from the South Bay, to the Coachella Valley, and many places in between.
    I was very active in many of the communities I called home; serving on various boards and commissions, running for public office, writing for local publications, and even working for a residential recovery center.
    I care very deeply for the communities I call home. However I left California behind because I was no longer able to deal with the stress and extreme expense of living there.
    I joined the Great California Exodus a few years ago, and my quality of life has improved immensely ever since.
    I watch your videos about many of the places I’ve called home, and it truly saddens me to see them deteriorating so badly, and my heart breaks for my former fellow community members who are suffering through it and cannot escape from it; showing me just how lucky I am to have had the opportunity to get the heck out of Dodge when I did.
    I’ve always considered myself to be a hopeless optimist, but my experiences are turning me into a stark realist who understands that unless extremely drastic changes happen in my birth state, I don’t see it ever being my home again; I’ve adopted the state I’ve escaped to as my new permanent home state.

  • @bitemenow609
    @bitemenow609 11 месяцев назад +1

    I knew an Old buddy that was around Palm Springs in the 1960s. He said he would see celebrities all the time. Steve McQueen loved the city. He rode Motorcycles in the desert. Everyone was very nice and the city was spotless.

  • @Gizathecat2
    @Gizathecat2 Год назад +33

    An old boyfriend of mine grew up in Palm Springs in the 1950s. . He lived there during its heyday. I visited him at his old family home in the early spring of 1996 while he was getting it ready to sell. His old neighborhood was upscale, and the 1950s vintage homes were already looking tired. Other parts of Palm Springs still showed evidence of an earthquake that hit a few years earlier. So sad to see Palm Springs has gone downhill since then. I really liked the open air restaurants with shade canopies and cooling mist sprinkled on your head. The food was also great!

    • @armynavymarine2
      @armynavymarine2 Год назад

      Like holy moly you people really love to exaggerate. I live near Palm Springs and its still a very nice city despite the increase in homelessness. Rather live there than 'safe' and 'clean' bumfudge Nebraska. It's better than it was when I was a kid.

  • @LuckyGuu
    @LuckyGuu Год назад +10

    Nick Johnson America's #1 Narrator! 🎤 = Educational and entertaining all wrapped up in one! 💥💪👍

    • @kristis4571
      @kristis4571 Год назад +3

      I love his snarky monotone. Lol he can get away with it. So funny 😂

  • @godfreygoodson6215
    @godfreygoodson6215 Год назад +18

    I love the desert cities, it's my favorite pass-thru stay when I visit between Las Vegas and friends in Southern California. Being someone from a third-world country, I moved from the city to a rural setting on an island that requires ferrying to get to, people are impoverished financially, but the simple living and agriculturally diverse food resources keep people content with their lot, without excessive government welfare there is no incentive to not take care of oneself or each other out here.

  • @davel7014
    @davel7014 Год назад +10

    God has this place changed. I remember going there in the 1970's. It was so much smaller and laid back. I loved it and even considered moving there, despite the extreme heat in the summer.
    Last time I was there, it had gotten so expensive it was ridiculous. Even the main drag on Palm Canyon had changed a lot of old, cool buildings had been knocked down to build huge maga hotel resorts, totally ruining the feel of downtown. And property flippers drove the home prices up to rival Los Angeles. Seems it started to take a dive after Sony Bono died.

  • @fatmanchew909
    @fatmanchew909 Год назад +33

    Palm Springs is like traveling to Baja California. It's still a paradise as long as you stay inside the resorts and enjoy the "utopia" while walling off reality.

    • @mimi1o8
      @mimi1o8 Год назад +2

      @@joem3502 exactly.

    • @fatmanchew909
      @fatmanchew909 Год назад

      @@exexpatcitizen6582 Do they still offer the shuttle that drops off and picks up from downtown Tijuana? Haven't been down there since COVID.

  • @ericar8162
    @ericar8162 Год назад +33

    Great video Nick, I can tell it's changed alot. I graduated from Palm Desert HS in 94. In those days, Palm Desert was really the ritzy ish area, Palm Springs had its bad and good parts but what surprised me the most was when you talked about the wealthy of today. My first apartment experience was in Bermuda Dunes in the 90s, it was pretty empty except for the fairly cheap apartment complexes, now I guess it's become ritzy? The kids from La Quinta also went to Palm Desert but it was considered a less nice area. It was pretty lower middle class. Indio has just always been bad lol, it was bad then, its bad now. I experienced alot of it, from the ritzy ness of Palm Desert to trying to be on my own in the crap of Cathedral (Cat) City. I giggled a little about the gay community because in the 90s, Palm Springs had a "famous to us" club called Daddy Warbucks, but all the a holes in HS called it Daddy Sorebutts. It was truly hot and expensive and that caused me to leave, but there is also seedy sides to the city you never see if your not in cat city and dhs. Get mixed up with the wrong people, time to leave.

    • @georgesboutz8080
      @georgesboutz8080 Год назад

      I also remember the GAF club do you?

    • @NickJohnson
      @NickJohnson  Год назад +7

      Erica we both graduated in '94!!

    • @carolynw3602
      @carolynw3602 Год назад

      Back in the day (the 80's), we called it "Daddy Warbutts", lol

    • @petefogel2133
      @petefogel2133 Год назад +1

      Guess what? Places change over 50 years. You need to get out some more.

    • @JB-sg1vy
      @JB-sg1vy Год назад

      @@petefogel2133 Does not seem like you have changed your underwear PETER! You say the same comment over and over. Places change but your comments don't I guess hahahahaha. And well of COURSE places change! The problem is SO many are changing to SHIT! Just like the people in the White House currently! But I am sure you voted for them! At least no more mean tweets tho right?!!!

  • @yodservant
    @yodservant Год назад +1

    My mom lived in Palm Desert and then Indio back in 2015-17...she really liked it Indio esp. We have relatives in La Quinta....used to visit every couple months driving down from Big Sur area. We ended up leaving California in 2019 for Arizona....miss our old California.

  • @Biteme221
    @Biteme221 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you Nick for all your work and for getting the truth out there

  • @slyguyaction
    @slyguyaction Год назад +49

    I live in Indio and there's only a few places we frequent in Palm Springs. There are some very beautiful architecture and nice places in parts of Palm Springs but blight, crime and homelessness is creeping in. Winter is best cause we roast eight months of the year. Great video. The one you made about San Bernardino intrigued me because that's my hometown.

    • @califdad4
      @califdad4 Год назад +2

      Always crack's me up, Palm Springs newspaper always goes on about the crime in Desert Hot Springs and theirs is actually worse

    • @TheFrenchPug
      @TheFrenchPug Год назад +8

      I recently went out San Bernardino. It was super scary. I used to hang out at Central City Mall. Was the place to go. Section 8 housing killed most all of the areas in San Bernardino County. Brought everyone from East L.A. in.

    • @califdad4
      @califdad4 Год назад +5

      @@TheFrenchPug my Aunt used to live there, 1960-1983 and then moved back closer to family in NorCal, she said it was going downhill then. Originally San Bernardino was working class/middle class and not a bad place

    • @TheFrenchPug
      @TheFrenchPug Год назад +5

      @califdad4 My Aunt still lives there. Down the street (4 houses) from where Rodney King lived before he was found dead in his pool. Fun fact as we never knew he moved from LA to Rialto until that happened.

    • @califdad4
      @califdad4 Год назад +2

      @@TheFrenchPug I remember my aunt's eastern star friends lived in Rialto and they were Realtors and their neighborhood went downhill so fast they didn't have time to sell. I have heard Realto has actually gotten better

  • @jasonjames4254
    @jasonjames4254 Год назад +10

    I'm sure the homeless will keep those porta potties spotlessly clean. 🤣

  • @jillberryhill9014
    @jillberryhill9014 10 месяцев назад +2

    I grew up in so cal and moved to NC in 1999 and never looked back. If I would have stayed in Cali I would probably have to have 3 jobs just to live there. Thank you for your great videos!!

    • @jamescalifornia2964
      @jamescalifornia2964 10 месяцев назад

      😮‍💨 I should have followed you ...

    • @brianarnold4368
      @brianarnold4368 9 месяцев назад +1

      And forced to learn a foreign language - just to communicate ..

  • @lindsayf8688
    @lindsayf8688 Год назад +5

    I live in palm springs and I can say I am nowhere close to wealthy 😂😂 . Palm springs is a resort town but pretty soon the locals who work the hotels and restaurants won't be able to afford the Coachella valley.

  • @chrisexperience7
    @chrisexperience7 Год назад +24

    What people don’t talk about is how many homeless folks are on the east coast. From Florida to North Carolina. And they are aggressive in asking for money. Going up to your window and knocking on your window. Or following you into stores and begging.
    But yeah, let’s listen to what’s popular; California has a big problem. 😒

    • @KaliAndy2
      @KaliAndy2 Год назад +15

      Hah yup. Its the popular topic among conservatives. I have traveled lots all over US. Drive through states like Mississippi or really any bible belt states, Appalachia, etc. In parts it feels like driving through poor areas in Mexico. People living in half fallen over buildings, broken roofs covered with tarps, etc. Stop at store/gas station and half the people have hardly any teeth left. As far as drug use, CA is not even anywhere close to top 10 and is not even in top half. Wonder why these people don't talk about places like West Virginia or Arkansas. I am sure it has nothing to do with those places being red states. Got to fit the bias and narrative.

    • @carmshlotsky5447
      @carmshlotsky5447 Год назад +6

      I love to read all the rethuglicon comments.

    • @NickJohnson
      @NickJohnson  Год назад +2

      Uh we don't have many homeless in NC

    • @chrisexperience7
      @chrisexperience7 Год назад +5

      @@NickJohnson come with a better argument Nick. As someone who does “research” I’d expect more from you.
      Every Highway exit has a homeless waiting for you to hand them a dollar, or two.

    • @KaliAndy2
      @KaliAndy2 Год назад +5

      @@NickJohnson NY is #2 FL #3 and NC #15 in nation for homeless per capita. Homelessness is not a state or coast specific problem. Many states with low homelessness rates criminalize it by locking up people for illegal camping, loitering and do messed up stuff like buying tickets and put homeless on buses to move them to other states. It is a complex issue without easy solutions. Judging does not solve or help with anything but does put $ in your pocket from YT views. Congrats.

  • @bodhisattva7188
    @bodhisattva7188 Год назад +7

    R.I.P Huell Howser the O.G. California Vloger.

  • @edwardgomez3633
    @edwardgomez3633 Год назад +5

    Your right on. I “was” a Vendor selling at Village Fest on Thursday night. The classy clientele enjoying their Thursday night and shopping from the Vendors has been replaced with a new set that have ruined the vibe and like me have been unable to continue as a Vendor do to it being unprofitable.

  • @rickcramer7892
    @rickcramer7892 Год назад +7

    I visited PS on a regular basis when my parents lived there. I live in LA and have considered moving there myself, but the homeless situation is just out of control. That being said, you just crack me up with some of your commentary. It is dead on

  • @fuji4202
    @fuji4202 Год назад +7

    Spring Break in the 80s was a 💣 .

  • @rjhemedes
    @rjhemedes Год назад +44

    During Winter time, Palm Springs is one of the most beautiful places in the USA to visit. It's definitely a pretty city compared to most other parts of the country.

    • @jim-ce5kt
      @jim-ce5kt Год назад +6

      You need to do some traveling. SO MANY better places to live/visit.

    • @rjhemedes
      @rjhemedes Год назад +10

      @@jim-ce5kt I'm guessing you have never visited Palm Springs during Winter time. I have traveled all over the USA. I don't care for cold/snowy places, nor do I care for overly humid places. Palm Springs is near perfect to visit during Winter time, which is why so many snowbirds from Canada and the colder states flock there for several months each year. I wouldn't want to live/visit there when the temperature goes above 95 degrees though.

    • @petefogel2133
      @petefogel2133 Год назад +1

      It's a Fox News talking point to hate all of California. And you can tell by these threads that most of these people are trumpers

    • @CosmicTarantula115
      @CosmicTarantula115 Год назад

      I live near palm springs and go there every week. Place is ghetto asf. Apple valley is much nicer of a place.

    • @josephaugello1527
      @josephaugello1527 Год назад

      ​@rjhemedes the whole valley is terrible. Hot and humid now from late June into Sept. Alot of crime and shootigs

  • @mattanderson6672
    @mattanderson6672 Год назад

    Thanks Nick

  • @QueenOfTheNorth65
    @QueenOfTheNorth65 Год назад +1

    I visited Palm Springs 3 years ago before COVID hit. My sister has a condo there. I thought it was beautiful. I’m going back in a couple of months.

  • @bonnieblenders4606
    @bonnieblenders4606 Год назад +6

    I live in California. Halfway thru you were talking about the trash problem. I blame this, like so much else in the 'leadership' back in the day all your trash could go to the curb and away would it go to the dump. These days you have to pay by the barrel and anything else like couches say, would cost you more than your 70 bucks a month. I see so much everywhere that looks like hoarders, but honestly they probably can't afford the extra fees. Yuma has a great idea. Twice a year everyone puts out what they don't want at the curb. Everyone has a couple weeks to 'shop' everyone else's trash and at the end trash pick up takes the rest to the dump

  • @winterking2510
    @winterking2510 Год назад +77

    I visited Palm Springs a few years ago and was amazed at how the homeless folks have completely taken over the parks and common areas. Drugs were every where and crime was pretty bad. I have no desire to ever go back.

    • @asrr62
      @asrr62 Год назад +10

      hmm i visited about 5 years ago and i diddnt see one homeless person.

    • @alexcarter8807
      @alexcarter8807 Год назад +11

      Gavin Newsom is talking about committing at least the crazier ones, and as we have tons of land in California, we can set up Happy Fun Camps(tm) with housing, junk food, trash TV, and all the drugs they like, where a zombie can be a zombie (and leave us working folks the hell alone!!)

    • @metalmike570
      @metalmike570 Год назад +4

      Looks like the homeless go where they could sponge off others and the first rule is
      tolerable weather. Seems like this area would be tough in the summer.

    • @marthalacomba3306
      @marthalacomba3306 Год назад +7

      @@alexcarter8807 where a zombie is a zombie that's around the Salton Sea

    • @ktmdad8078
      @ktmdad8078 Год назад +1

      Drugs are everywhere sweetiez even in the richest neighborhoods usually house the biggest dealers supplying the poorer neighborhoods lol so quit the shyt moron lol smh

  • @franklopez3616
    @franklopez3616 Год назад

    My favorite passing through san jacinto
    Tramway up there ride is Nice in the winter Time snow scenario.
    Love my town southbay corner Torrance and Redondo Beach

  • @RGSoCal
    @RGSoCal Год назад +4

    My wife and I vacationed in Palm Springs about 2 weeks ago and had an awesome time. Awesome hikes, friendly people, good food. Every city in the nation has good areas and bad.

  • @survivingthetimes
    @survivingthetimes Год назад +5

    Mental health is like that everywhere.

  • @milo007pop
    @milo007pop Год назад +6

    Hey Nick , How are you doing man? .... Damn those pictures are real .. Never visited the place but now l am happy that l don't need to visit Palm Springs..... But be safe and keep showing us the real stuffs.... Keep doing 👍

  • @Minionmoto529
    @Minionmoto529 Год назад +6

    growing up here and still living here, my town has changed a lot. it doesn't feel like home anymore in some ways. so many people moving here from L.A. and San Diego. I ride dirt bikes and it sucks that some places are getting shut down but the worst part is for sure all the trash being dumped in the desert and the (homeless) people living in R.V'S and tent cities out there.

  • @robinshepard4571
    @robinshepard4571 Год назад

    Appreciate it 🌅👓 🇺🇸 Great information ℹ️

  • @roystroble3354
    @roystroble3354 Год назад +11

    Someone painted there garage Ukraine colors 😂😂😂, what a joke

  • @tallulahbeaverhausen4382
    @tallulahbeaverhausen4382 Год назад +29

    You know what, Nick ? Actually, for once, I'd like to see a video about a city or town where ONLY "rich old timer" live. I'm pretty sure there would be no druggies yelling, defecating and ODing in the streets, no miles of tarp, tents and stolen goods, no filth and litter spread all over the place, no crime...
    Thanks for your awesome videos and insight - and happy new year !

    • @NickJohnson
      @NickJohnson  Год назад +9

      I do those videos and no one clicks on them.

    • @nicklane1897
      @nicklane1897 Год назад

      @@NickJohnson "if it bleeds it leads" I guess? "que the waterskiing squirrel puff piece!"

    • @Tonymanero1960
      @Tonymanero1960 Год назад +5

      I think the reason Nick doesn't get as many views on great towns is because(in my opinion) to most people they are unaffordable and already ''discovered''.Why waste your time,....whereas a place sucks video is a caution for places to stay away from,...which is more important.

    • @sumgai2585
      @sumgai2585 Год назад +6

      Ketchum Idaho

    • @l.plzsavethebeez485
      @l.plzsavethebeez485 Год назад +4

      ​@@elultimo102Hey, kid... guess what ? If you're lucky you'll be one someday! Can you just imagine trying to navigate your walker around a pile of poo? Or can you imagine living down the hall from party goers in & out all times of the night? We don't want to be isolated, still like to eat and drink ( a little) but if we exercise during the day we expect a decent, quiet bedtime and a clean neighborhood to live in!

  • @palmtrees2420
    @palmtrees2420 Год назад +2

    Vacation ideas for Palm Desert. The Marriot is a fun hotel with a lot of pools and the best hibachi restaurant I've ever been to called Mikado. My family goes once a year and we always have a great time.

  • @Tkauf
    @Tkauf 10 месяцев назад +1

    I early 70’s Palm Springs was so nice.

  • @GlitchPG3D
    @GlitchPG3D Год назад +18

    Used to live near palm springs for a couple years, for collage i moved there now i live down in miami. lots of homeless people here and there, warm too!

    • @monroefuches2707
      @monroefuches2707 Год назад +7

      Must’ve been some *collage* you went to

    • @MarlinAmada
      @MarlinAmada Год назад +5

      Go back it’s called college. Not collage

    • @cmthumboldt6896
      @cmthumboldt6896 Год назад

      ​@@MarlinAmada maybe they were talking about art? Commas are important! 😆

    • @mikehobson711
      @mikehobson711 Год назад

      @@MarlinAmada collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage collage

    • @jwwalker688
      @jwwalker688 Год назад +3

      Public education

  • @Victoria-ie2wi
    @Victoria-ie2wi Год назад +5

    Why do people hate on the well to do over 60 people. We worked hard for what we have. No one gave us hand outs that the people now want. We worked 7 days a week 10-12 hrs a day to fulfill are needs. We didn’t ask or expect to be given anything, we worked hard for it all, we didn’t feel entitled. These people who feel entitled are in for a rude awakening when they realize what “entitlement truly means…socialism.

  • @youtubeplumbing
    @youtubeplumbing 11 месяцев назад

    Your voice relaxes me

  • @beachstreet101
    @beachstreet101 Год назад +1

    This was a good video. I used to frequent Palm Springs years ago and it was always beautiful and amazing. Haven’t been lately but the way you describe it doesn’t sound any different than many parts of the United States and Los Angeles. Palm Springs seems more on a lower scale compared to that.

  • @TorgoLives
    @TorgoLives Год назад +15

    I know a few 60ish couples who moved to Palm Springs years ago. They're not rich at all by California standards but were able to afford an average home there because they worked hard for decades. I find it interesting that it's ok to call people like them pompous and snobby but the 'non-domiciled' should not be disrespected by labeling them the 'H' word.

    • @243wayne1
      @243wayne1 Год назад +3

      Homeless is the perfect word.

  • @theusa395
    @theusa395 Год назад +5

    Palm Springs goes back to the 60s. It was a good place to live even though it’s WARM all year long (almost).

  • @kristencardani6631
    @kristencardani6631 Год назад +2

    The aerial tramway is cool!

  • @MsRobinL
    @MsRobinL Год назад +14

    I was born and raised in California. Sad truth though, I have lived away for 40 years and you couldn't pay me to move back there! The expense, crime and politics has made California a failed state

    • @tinafoos8018
      @tinafoos8018 Год назад +1

      @ Robin L-I very much agree!-I was also born and raised in California, and have been away for 40+ years, and since visiting family there this past summer, I can clearly see that, although pleasant and fun to visit, the ridiculous expense and UNCHECKED crime would totally prevent my wanting to live there!!

  • @eatmyshortsman926
    @eatmyshortsman926 Год назад +7

    Palm Springs sucks stopped there in January when I was looking at houses in Arizona. Born and raised in California and embarrassed what has become of this state. California sucks

  • @whiplash4427
    @whiplash4427 Год назад +13

    I have lived in the Palm Springs area for over 40 years. Yes it has changed A LOT. Its sad.

    • @supersnapp
      @supersnapp Год назад +1

      I travel all ove the country -- and this "sadness" directly corresponds to cities that go from being nearly entirely white to being non-white.

    • @whiplash4427
      @whiplash4427 Год назад +1

      @@supersnapp The problem with Palm Springs has nothing to do with Race although the city council would argue against that since they like to cover up for those that give them money. When the city of Palm Springs voted to change, thats what they did, Changed what was at one time a vacation home to the stars to an embarrassment to the state.

    • @supersnapp
      @supersnapp Год назад

      @@whiplash4427 I don't follow. What was the change again? And you know that this issue is responsible for 100% of the reason, even though all places that become non-white go downhill? How would you know it has nothing to do with race? I have stopped going to CA. CA has next level diversity. So you are also proposing that CA's decline from the 1960s, where the state was largely white -- to now where it is a third world cornocopia has nothing to do with race?

  • @robertfenn3672
    @robertfenn3672 Год назад

    I love the positive attitude a beautiful day with a high roller.

  • @kbVACArestatecarsnrvs
    @kbVACArestatecarsnrvs Год назад +3

    I lived there in 1990, in an Alexander Mid Century I could have purchased for $110K then, near it all. But I moved to Palm Desert since I started working in Indio (top notch car line) and the homeless problem wasn't like it is now. Drugs a little bit but not out in the open. Politics get in the way and city officials don't do what is really best for "All" people with tax revenue that is collected for "All" people. San Diego, I had lived before moving to PS/PD, and also afterwards. That was already experiencing a lot of homelessness and drug problems, but that lovely place I still truly love, has really gone down hill as well. But what amazes me is that real estate keeps going up, and they think that is going to keep out "unwanted" types. It only does the opposite. Thanks for putting this info out there, even if some of us left years ago. I'd come back, but I couldn't afford it nor would I want to live around such pitiful conditions if I could.

  • @johnboy4025
    @johnboy4025 Год назад +3

    We used to go there every summer. It was nice, relaxing, and they had a cool water park (then: Oasis/now: Knotts Soak City). Cool restaurants, it was nice. It look’s unrecognizable now

  • @bravobravoh1344
    @bravobravoh1344 Год назад +1

    I haven't been to Palm Springs in a long time, it was really nice. I also remember Twentynine Palms, which also wasn't too bad back in the day.

  • @annatyreman794
    @annatyreman794 Год назад

    "snob hoods" haha, enjoyed this vid merci

  • @aerofart
    @aerofart Год назад +14

    I remember back in my high school days we would all head out to Palm Springs for “Spring’s Break.” What a party atmosphere that was. The main strip was a parking lot from end to end filled with fast bikes, fancy cars, hot babes in thong bikinis (tops optional) and cold beer. Add to that the searing heat and warm nights and the remoteness of a desert oasis at the base of a towering mountain, and the experience is psychedelic magic, with or without medicinal intoxicants. I still get that feeling every time I visit and watching this video reminds me it’s time for another visit.

  • @l.plzsavethebeez485
    @l.plzsavethebeez485 Год назад +3

    This was fun and hilarious at times.. thank you! We actually spent 6 months living n Palm Springs between 2010 and 2016? We had a great time! We walked all over or took the bus up to the taverns and restaurants on the North end which have improved from earlier times! My husband grew up visiting there, his mother lived there too! We miss it terribly but do not like what has happened ,in general ,to California! We hiked everywhere too!

    • @NickJohnson
      @NickJohnson  Год назад

      It's still lovely in its own way.

  • @anfboi08
    @anfboi08 Год назад

    Thanks a lot newsom

  • @ChristopherArnell
    @ChristopherArnell Год назад +2

    Great (albeit kind of sad) videos, Nick!
    I grew up on the Bay Area Peninsula in a town called Millbrae.
    Couldn’t handle the cost of living and moved to Austin TX in 2013.
    Best move I’ve ever made. Currently living right outside the city limits and it’s very affordable compared to California, esp the Bay Area.
    Lots of people moving here from SoCal.

    • @tewkewl
      @tewkewl Год назад

      yeah, but did you bring your cali voting record? don't cali texas. the same thing will happen there. Az, Virginia, etc. all falling to shit since the libs moved in and kept voting for the policies that made them leave their original state.

  • @harryyarrow4110
    @harryyarrow4110 Год назад +16

    Welcome to California.The real estate prices and taxes are making it very difficult for almost everyone.🧡

  • @teresaaljayyousi8447
    @teresaaljayyousi8447 Год назад +5

    I live in Indio as well. If I couldn’t live in the Coachella Valley I would not want to live in California. I love the views we have regardless of your income. We get to share such a gorgeous place to live. Yes homelessness is getting bad. They are how ever opening up a large mental health facility as mandated by the state in Indio. Palm Springs also has the only methadone clinic in the entire valley. People have to travel there every day. I had a friend who’s son would pan handle in Palm Springs every day to get gas money every day

    • @victorc8804
      @victorc8804 Год назад +1

      Vista and oceanside are nice in North County 760

  • @davel7014
    @davel7014 Год назад

    I stayed at the same Motel 6. It was during a spring break and it was party central there, and yeah, it was definitely low budget.

  • @MsUrsy
    @MsUrsy Год назад +7

    Just moved away from desert edge. We have lived in Palm Springs, Yucca and desert edge. The heat is overwhelming!! The trash is over whelming. I grew up in Hemet and that turned into a huge trash can too! Makes me incredibly sad to see how sad California has become. We moved to Colorado again. We lived here for about 7 years and moved back to California for about 12. To say it is just California affected by high cost of living and all the crud going on….yikes, it’s everywhere anymore. The homeless here is out of control and they are trying to do rent control because it has changed dramatically here as well! The world has gone crazy! So many mentally ill folks floating around. Drugs are rampant and out of control. Graffiti and trash all over. Super sad. I am just grateful to live back in Colorado so there is seasonal weather not just hot and hotter! That was above anything taking a toll on my own mental health!

    • @noxion4625
      @noxion4625 10 месяцев назад +1

      I'm from Hemet also and I moved out to Oklahoma years ago. Came back to Hemet for a funeral 2 years ago, and I saw a homeless man naked and vomiting right on Florida Avenue at 5pm! Broad daylight. Couldn't imagine as a kid that my hometown would collapse into such a shithole. Lived in Oklahoma for the better part of a decade and I have yet to see a scene like that here.

    • @MsUrsy
      @MsUrsy 10 месяцев назад

      @@noxion4625 I have family there still and have been there quite a few times and can never get used to how bad it has become there. When my family moved there, there was 20000 people there now it’s over 80k. I have seen some pretty crazy things there too. It was such a wonderful place to grow up. So sad!