I think about moving there all the time. I thoroughly enjoyed the time I lived there in the 90's. I lived a year in Rosario, Santa Fe in and around in various suburbs. 5 months in Venado Tuerto, 2 months in Gueleguaychu, Entre Rios, 2 months in a little Villa Hernardarias, 2 months in the Villas in Santa Fe(that was rough), 6 months in Villa Gbr. Galvez(best place ever). The people are what made the stay the best, the food was incredible and so many dogs everywhere!
So true. I lived in Buenos Aires for nearly 10 years and lived in different parts of the city but for me the best neighborhood was Congreso it had everything you needed to live like a local.
If you like mountains and lakes I recommend Bariloche, Villa la Angostura or San Martín de los Andes, they are BEAUTIFUL. I lived in buenos aires all my life, but I always said those are the best places to live (if you dont like big cities). Places in Córdoba are also a very good option
My family with two boys are moving to Canning, near Ezeiza. The wife is a Porteña, now a dual US citizen. My fixed pension, then SS will always be in USD. We bring $20k there every trip, flying in on 2 separate days, to avoid the 50% tariff on cash, and rent a safety deposit box annually at a bank. Western Union transfers your $ to ARP at the blue rate. In addition, anyone with any passport can open a bank account in Montevideo, for electronic transfers from the US. Homes there are only sold in USD, financing is almost impossible without a national credit rating, so cash is the best option for us. We also have her family there, we may maintain a residence here in the USA. January - March are too hot and humid there for us. (We live in frigid Michigan) Her family all have Avocado, Banana, lime, orange trees in their yards. It will be nice to have morning coffee, and pick my breakfast off of trees. We have been to Rosario, Misiones, Ushuaia, and Mar de Plata, but for finding variety and availability in electronics, food, malls, museums, cultural centers, Capital Federal is our source. After 30 trips there, I found the 24 hour city noise, and high rise apartment living as undesireable. Gas is really cheap there, so we can drive 40 minutes into the city, then return to the quiet suburban home in a barrio cerrado. We love Argentina!
@@patricelargilliere4583 It's 2024, screw brining cash over in separate trips, or paying western union fees. There is a reason El Salvador got set up with BTC and Strike. They set up a network of BTC ATMS in the US so people could send remittance payments back fee and tax free almost instantly. The OP could simply buy BTC, and just convert it to cash whenever they needed it.
I lived in Buenos Aires Argentina for nearly 10 years. And I purchased a home in Mar Del Plata. Both cities are close enough you can enjoy both cities without too much difficulty but my preference is Buenos Aires for all its diversity but Mar Del Plata is great just for relaxing 😌.
@Cindy the easiest way is to send yourself money thru Western Union. And when you send money thru Western Union to yourself you will receive the "Blue" rate which will double your purchasing power in Argentina 🇦🇷. The next way is to bring cash you can enter Argentina with up to 10,000 dollars US without any problems and exchange those dollars at the blue rate on the street never use the ATM in Argentina or your debit or credit card you will pay twice as much for everything and there are high transactions fees also.
Amazing story! I plan on living in Argentina (for a year or two at least) when I retire at the end of 2023. I'll definitely be living in Buenos Aires. My employer asked me to work remotely for a year or two after I retire. Since Argentina is one hour ahead of the Bahamas, it is a perfect place for me to work remotely. I've been to Argentina twice in the past, but it was not in this century. So, I plan on vacationing in Argentina for two to three weeks in January to see if it's right for me. Argentina is my retirement Plan B. I originally planned to retire to Italy, but BREXIT threw a spanner into the works of my original plan. BTW, I'm a US/UK dual national and will never return to live in the USA, the UK maybe.
I lived in Argentina for a two years and people would often asked if I was from inglaterra because if I was they were going to hate me due to war over the Las Malvinas and I would tell them i was from alemania and they'd be like "oh your cool then"
@@bonegrubber Eso no es cierto. No he escuchado a ningún inglés que se quejaran los demás por su nacionalidad viviendo en Argentina. Por favor. Menos las generaciones de ahora van a odiar a los nacidos en Reino Unido. El pueblo no tuvo la culpa fueron los gobiernos que planificaron era maldita guerra. Los argentinos no solemos odiar a personas de otros países.
@@bonegrubber Mira te cuento que Argentina es el pais con mas fan de Rolling Stones y de Beatles. Y los argentinos son tan inteligentes y de buenos modales que saben muy bien separar el conflcto politico de lo cultural.
Great video! Glad you made it because I’m in a similar breaking point where you were in 2020. Wanted to move to Mexico just to see what it’s like and be with my family. Give it a year and hopefully I follow in your footsteps. Side note you’re videos are making me interested in Argentina. Might have to check it out soon!
Which part of México are you pondering? I am trying to visit Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil soon. Too much time will pass if you let others determine your path. Sieze the opportunity if it is possible. I recommend at least a six month stay in each place for a more meaningful experience.
I met my girlfriend online and I went to Argentina for a month, and I fell in love with the country, I plan on living there I just need a way to find a job there or online.
That’s awesome! My dads side of the fam is Argentinean and I just recently visited BA and Argentina in general for the first time. I will say I got a similar feeling like I did when I visited MX and that is being able to notice instantly how life feels slower compared to the states and family time/socializing daily/unity is much more evident and important. It was easy to fall in love with the country for sure. 👍🏽
I have been seriously considering moving to Mendoza. I have been researching the city, along with Argentina's requirements to become a citizen. I have a passport and I plan on visiting to get a feel for the country.
wait you lived in vegas before?? what a coincidence lmao. now i’m considering studying in argentina. i’m visiting right now for the same reason you did
Lord, im 14 and my parents have decided to move to mendoza i have a lot of family here and i don't mind too much but im pretty nervous for the schools and stuff since im still getting used to speaking spanish.
What a cool experience ! I grew up in Sarasota, Florida…home of Ringling Brothers. When I was young, I remember seeing lots of circus people, including acrobats. Go for it !
I love your videos! I lived in MdP for 21 years growing up. I left in 1999. I am thinking of moving back for 6 month or so in the near future if it works out. So much to deal when you have a family and 4 pets. Do you know anything about traveling with pets?
I have a dog in Argentina and I was looking to send her to United States I’ll be moving back to the states soon and wanted to have my dog there before but it was a pretty complicated process and the shipping agent wanted to charge me over $3000 USD I’m still looking for an alternative.
Hey Sito! I am planning on moving to Argentina within the next couple of years. One video idea I hope maybe you can make a reality of is what are the steps or challenges of starting a small business in AR? I realize this may be outside your wheelhouse but wonder if you know any small business owners and their thoughts. Peace and good vibes!✌✌
Of course, right now I’m in the beginning, beginning stages of everything but I may be starting a small business myself. And if I do go through with it, I’ll be documenting the process.
As an Argentinian I will tell you something super basic, if you earn in dollars and live here you will give yourself a life of luxury that you will not be able to afford anywhere else in the world, if you do not have attachment to your country you are wasting time come to Argentina .
Thank you for this video. First one I've seen featuring Mar del Plata that actually showed what the city itself looks like. All the others just show the beach and girls in skimpy swimming suits.
So you did have more of a reason than the young lady. Good for you. The world is your oyster. If you can afford to be there, your family is there and you are happy, I don't know why you would come back to the US. Take care my young friend.
Hi mrfen I hope u get this message, I'm Argentine, and I live in a beautifull all village of around 10.000 habitants, called. La Cumbre, in the mountains, beautifull people and simple life, the surroundings are georgious and the weather is nice, you can Google it. La Cumbre is inside the province of Cordoba. Well it seems a lot of American and Russians are coming to stay here. Hope you can make it to Argentina. Godbless u.
Bienvenido a la tierra del mate, las charlas, las juntadas y la calle !! AR ♥ Es muy loco porque tenes genes Argentinos pero hablas ingles norteamericano fluido jaja Abrazo de un Cordobes !
Hey Sito... I was very intrigued when you discussed how your effective rent declined from 218/mo down to 135/mo due to the inflationary pressures Argentina is experiencing right now. It's obvious to me that you maintain your capital in US Dollars as opposed to the Argentine Peso; I guess you only convert as much as you anticipate using over a period of time. Does the banking system there allow for US Dollar denomiated deposits? I've looked on different Expat forums and this seems to be one subject everyone glosses over. Still looking to head your way by the beginning of Summer... thanks for the help.
Correct it stays in a US account until i need it and only use little by little converting when ever i need cash. but never in big amounts. And for your last question as far as i know there are not too many solutions on depositing UDS into a account here. There are so many restrictions for buying and holding on to USD here, but there my be a way for expats but i never looked in to it.
@@sitopoema Just for clarification Sito... you are using a bank back in the States yet when you need local peso's... you go to a local bank in Argentina... Or... do you hit one of the exchanges... but in either case you're pulling funds using bank card from your US bank? Just trying to iron out the mechanics of the whole thing my friend. Thanx for getting back to me.
An Argentine from Mar de Plata that I met in Guadalajara used a crypto credit card. I wish I would have written down which card he uses. Some of my former Argentine coworkers work remotely as software developers for a US company. I should ask them what they recommend.
@@Stoney-g1o Hey Thanks Sito... with the collapse of the crypto market this year, I'm a little leery about that whole thing. I'll just follow your lead. Leave my money in the States for the time being and when I do need peso's I can go to one of the exchanges. I know you don't get the best rate with them as opposed to the "street" exchanges but once I get past the initial 90 day period and I'm settled into a long term lease on a place, I can go across the bay to Uruguay and take advantage of their more sophisticated banking. I guess the only way to find out for sure is to find out for sure once I get down there. Still though I'd be interested in what your former colleagues have to say on the matter.
Yes and no. there are some things that are still hard for me to get used, mostly it’s the Material things that’s harder to get here that drives me crazy lol
Que aprovechen la inflación antes que caiga.Y reconozcan que no hicimos un muro como ellos a los mexicanos. Reforma de politica inmigratoria urgente.🇦🇷
Is it a safe and clean area? I heard things about other countries next to it about being dirty and dog poop everywhere. Is Argentina different? Thanks.
We are American family with two you kids and we know very little Spanish. Do you think it would be a good idea for us to move to Argentina? Thoughts on BA vs further south / rural in the country for our situation ?
Yes, go to Argentina, the people are very friendly and even if you speak English they will try to understand you because many Argentines speak English, besides their cities are very beautiful, you should see Mendoza
As an Argentine I will tell you something super basic, if you earn in dollars and live here you will give yourself a life of luxuries that you will not be able to afford anywhere else in the world, if you are not attached to your country. You are wasting your time, come to Argentina. If you are looking for an inland city, it is much cheaper than Buenos Aires, not to mention the northwest provinces where I live...
Hey, thank you for the comment. Yes, the temperature does get very cold in mardelplata and also Buenos Aires, but Buenos Aires does tend to go more on the warmer side during the winter but it’s still cold.
Generally, and compared to other countries in the area, it is a safe country. In the provinces one can almost live in peace, we don't have that feeling that someone is going to attack us.
Para que tengas una idea, la delincuencia en argentina es menor que la que hay en EEUU.... en EEUU hay 8 homicidios cada 100 mil habitantes, Argentina tiene 4 cada 100 mil.
Me gusta tu programa aunque es evidente que yankee no sos y que tenés "demasiado" acento argento.... Jajaja, te agarré tránsfuga 😂😂😂. Queda evidente cuando pronuncias Mar del Plata
I think about moving there all the time. I thoroughly enjoyed the time I lived there in the 90's. I lived a year in Rosario, Santa Fe in and around in various suburbs. 5 months in Venado Tuerto, 2 months in Gueleguaychu, Entre Rios, 2 months in a little Villa Hernardarias, 2 months in the Villas in Santa Fe(that was rough), 6 months in Villa Gbr. Galvez(best place ever). The people are what made the stay the best, the food was incredible and so many dogs everywhere!
So true. I lived in Buenos Aires for nearly 10 years and lived in different parts of the city but for me the best neighborhood was Congreso it had everything you needed to live like a local.
Mate live is too short , make a move soon , it seems your passion is in BA
Adelante!!! 👏👏👏
Argentina is intriguing to me. I would want to live in the southern part away from cities if I moved there.
If you like mountains and lakes I recommend Bariloche, Villa la Angostura or San Martín de los Andes, they are BEAUTIFUL. I lived in buenos aires all my life, but I always said those are the best places to live (if you dont like big cities). Places in Córdoba are also a very good option
Spoiler: too much wind
My family with two boys are moving to Canning, near Ezeiza. The wife is a Porteña, now a dual US citizen. My fixed pension, then SS will always be in USD. We bring $20k there every trip, flying in on 2 separate days, to avoid the 50% tariff on cash, and rent a safety deposit box annually at a bank. Western Union transfers your $ to ARP at the blue rate. In addition, anyone with any passport can open a bank account in Montevideo, for electronic transfers from the US. Homes there are only sold in USD, financing is almost impossible without a national credit rating, so cash is the best option for us. We also have her family there, we may maintain a residence here in the USA. January - March are too hot and humid there for us. (We live in frigid Michigan) Her family all have Avocado, Banana, lime, orange trees in their yards. It will be nice to have morning coffee, and pick my breakfast off of trees. We have been to Rosario, Misiones, Ushuaia, and Mar de Plata, but for finding variety and availability in electronics, food, malls, museums, cultural centers, Capital Federal is our source. After 30 trips there, I found the 24 hour city noise, and high rise apartment living as undesireable. Gas is really cheap there, so we can drive 40 minutes into the city, then return to the quiet suburban home in a barrio cerrado. We love Argentina!
Dude, use BTC and save all that headache.
Jajaja i used to do something like that 30 years ago.Not the western unión thing😅
@@patricelargilliere4583 It's 2024, screw brining cash over in separate trips, or paying western union fees. There is a reason El Salvador got set up with BTC and Strike. They set up a network of BTC ATMS in the US so people could send remittance payments back fee and tax free almost instantly. The OP could simply buy BTC, and just convert it to cash whenever they needed it.
He felt in love with the country 😂😂not with her ( Firstly)
I lived in Buenos Aires Argentina for nearly 10 years. And I purchased a home in Mar Del Plata. Both cities are close enough you can enjoy both cities without too much difficulty but my preference is Buenos Aires for all its diversity but Mar Del Plata is great just for relaxing 😌.
Nice!
How did you manage to bring $ from US to Argentina
@Cindy the easiest way is to send yourself money thru Western Union. And when you send money thru Western Union to yourself you will receive the "Blue" rate which will double your purchasing power in Argentina 🇦🇷. The next way is to bring cash you can enter Argentina with up to 10,000 dollars US without any problems and exchange those dollars at the blue rate on the street never use the ATM in Argentina or your debit or credit card you will pay twice as much for everything and there are high transactions fees also.
Amazing story! I plan on living in Argentina (for a year or two at least) when I retire at the end of 2023. I'll definitely be living in Buenos Aires. My employer asked me to work remotely for a year or two after I retire. Since Argentina is one hour ahead of the Bahamas, it is a perfect place for me to work remotely. I've been to Argentina twice in the past, but it was not in this century. So, I plan on vacationing in Argentina for two to three weeks in January to see if it's right for me. Argentina is my retirement Plan B. I originally planned to retire to Italy, but BREXIT threw a spanner into the works of my original plan. BTW, I'm a US/UK dual national and will never return to live in the USA, the UK maybe.
I lived in Argentina for a two years and people would often asked if I was from inglaterra because if I was they were going to hate me due to war over the Las Malvinas and I would tell them i was from alemania and they'd be like "oh your cool then"
@@bonegrubber Eso no es cierto. No he escuchado a ningún inglés que se quejaran los demás por su nacionalidad viviendo en Argentina. Por favor. Menos las generaciones de ahora van a odiar a los nacidos en Reino Unido. El pueblo no tuvo la culpa fueron los gobiernos que planificaron era maldita guerra. Los argentinos no solemos odiar a personas de otros países.
@@bonegrubber Mira te cuento que Argentina es el pais con mas fan de Rolling Stones y de Beatles. Y los argentinos son tan inteligentes y de buenos modales que saben muy bien separar el conflcto politico de lo cultural.
@@bonegrubber Hey Matt, have you ever been to an AA meeting?
@@crazyyoutuberguy An Argentina is Awesome meeting?! I think I'm in one now
Welcome bros
bienvenidos a Argentina 🇦🇷🇦🇷
Great video! Glad you made it because I’m in a similar breaking point where you were in 2020. Wanted to move to Mexico just to see what it’s like and be with my family. Give it a year and hopefully I follow in your footsteps. Side note you’re videos are making me interested in Argentina. Might have to check it out soon!
Which part of México are you pondering? I am trying to visit Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil soon. Too much time will pass if you let others determine your path. Sieze the opportunity if it is possible. I recommend at least a six month stay in each place for a more meaningful experience.
I met my girlfriend online and I went to Argentina for a month, and I fell in love with the country, I plan on living there I just need a way to find a job there or online.
come to argentina, you speak english, you will get a grat job, compañi always need people than know speak english!
I'm telling you as an Argentinian, the best thing you can do is work remotely and get paid in dollars, it's much better at the moment.
@@Braianeq 🙏 thank u
Que linda historia! Que bueno que estes en Mar del Plata y que ayudes a otros con tus consejos y con tu historia de vida! Buena vida!
That’s awesome! My dads side of the fam is Argentinean and I just recently visited BA and Argentina in general for the first time. I will say I got a similar feeling like I did when I visited MX and that is being able to notice instantly how life feels slower compared to the states and family time/socializing daily/unity is much more evident and important. It was easy to fall in love with the country for sure. 👍🏽
no tenemos la cultura mexicana..eso por favor no es asi
I have been seriously considering moving to Mendoza. I have been researching the city, along with Argentina's requirements to become a citizen. I have a passport and I plan on visiting to get a feel for the country.
Got priced out of the States as soon as I lived on my SS alone, years ago.
Got to hop on the same boat soon or later.. see ya there..
Mar del Plata!!! 🇦🇷💪🏻 Mí Ciudad!!!!!!!! 🙌🏻🫶🏻
wait you lived in vegas before?? what a coincidence lmao. now i’m considering studying in argentina. i’m visiting right now for the same reason you did
Lord, im 14 and my parents have decided to move to mendoza i have a lot of family here and i don't mind too much but im pretty nervous for the schools and stuff since im still getting used to speaking spanish.
Good luck1 Have you moved yet? Wish you best of lucks
Don't worry, people here always will try to accommodate you and make you feel welcome.
You will be accepted don't worry. ❤
Hope you're doing well in Argentina! Any updates?
Beautiful. This is inspiring.
What a cool experience !
I grew up in Sarasota, Florida…home of Ringling Brothers. When I was young, I remember seeing lots of circus people, including acrobats.
Go for it !
Thank you for sharing your personal story.
I love your videos! I lived in MdP for 21 years growing up. I left in 1999. I am thinking of moving back for 6 month or so in the near future if it works out. So much to deal when you have a family and 4 pets. Do you know anything about traveling with pets?
I have a dog in Argentina and I was looking to send her to United States I’ll be moving back to the states soon and wanted to have my dog there before but it was a pretty complicated process and the shipping agent wanted to charge me over $3000 USD I’m still looking for an alternative.
i got a crib in Cordoba :) love Argentina, plan is to move there long term within the next few years
Hey Sito! I am planning on moving to Argentina within the next couple of years. One video idea I hope maybe you can make a reality of is what are the steps or challenges of starting a small business in AR? I realize this may be outside your wheelhouse but wonder if you know any small business owners and their thoughts. Peace and good vibes!✌✌
Of course, right now I’m in the beginning, beginning stages of everything but I may be starting a small business myself. And if I do go through with it, I’ll be documenting the process.
As an Argentinian I will tell you something super basic, if you earn in dollars and live here you will give yourself a life of luxury that you will not be able to afford anywhere else in the world, if you do not have attachment to your country you are wasting time come to Argentina .
Thanks for the video
Thanks for great videos …… honest advice
Thank you for this video. First one I've seen featuring Mar del Plata that actually showed what the city itself looks like. All the others just show the beach and girls in skimpy swimming suits.
So you did have more of a reason than the young lady. Good for you. The world is your oyster. If you can afford to be there, your family is there and you are happy, I don't know why you would come back to the US. Take care my young friend.
I like small towns. I'm a farmer in the US and I'm sick of it. What are the small towns like?
Did you go?
You ll love them. Quiet, peaceful and filled Witherspoon nice and warm People.
Very peacefull
Hi mrfen I hope u get this message, I'm Argentine, and I live in a beautifull all village of around 10.000 habitants, called. La Cumbre, in the mountains, beautifull people and simple life, the surroundings are georgious and the weather is nice, you can Google it. La Cumbre is inside the province of Cordoba. Well it seems a lot of American and Russians are coming to stay here. Hope you can make it to Argentina. Godbless u.
nice video good luck god bless john miami
Bienvenido a la tierra del mate, las charlas, las juntadas y la calle !! AR ♥ Es muy loco porque tenes genes Argentinos pero hablas ingles norteamericano fluido jaja Abrazo de un Cordobes !
Awesome channel!
Hey Sito... I was very intrigued when you discussed how your effective rent declined from 218/mo down to 135/mo due to the inflationary pressures Argentina is experiencing right now. It's obvious to me that you maintain your capital in US Dollars as opposed to the Argentine Peso; I guess you only convert as much as you anticipate using over a period of time. Does the banking system there allow for US Dollar denomiated deposits? I've looked on different Expat forums and this seems to be one subject everyone glosses over. Still looking to head your way by the beginning of Summer... thanks for the help.
Correct it stays in a US account until i need it and only use little by little converting when ever i need cash. but never in big amounts. And for your last question as far as i know there are not too many solutions on depositing UDS into a account here. There are so many restrictions for buying and holding on to USD here, but there my be a way for expats but i never looked in to it.
@@sitopoema Just for clarification Sito... you are using a bank back in the States yet when you need local peso's... you go to a local bank in Argentina... Or... do you hit one of the exchanges... but in either case you're pulling funds using bank card from your US bank? Just trying to iron out the mechanics of the whole thing my friend. Thanx for getting back to me.
An Argentine from Mar de Plata that I met in Guadalajara used a crypto credit card. I wish I would have written down which card he uses. Some of my former Argentine coworkers work remotely as software developers for a US company. I should ask them what they recommend.
@@Stoney-g1o Hey Thanks Sito... with the collapse of the crypto market this year, I'm a little leery about that whole thing. I'll just follow your lead. Leave my money in the States for the time being and when I do need peso's I can go to one of the exchanges. I know you don't get the best rate with them as opposed to the "street" exchanges but once I get past the initial 90 day period and I'm settled into a long term lease on a place, I can go across the bay to Uruguay and take advantage of their more sophisticated banking. I guess the only way to find out for sure is to find out for sure once I get down there. Still though I'd be interested in what your former colleagues have to say on the matter.
OOOOPPPS! Sorry Stoney... its Sunday morning and I haven't had my cup of mental clarity / motivation yet. Thank you for your reply!
Where are you originally from and for how long did you live in the US?
Amazing video, Nice country Argentina ,greetings
Glad you enjoyed it
Great video! what visa did you get to come to argentina? how was the process to get it??
Thanks for video.
Welcome ⭐⭐⭐🇦🇷
Bienvenidos todos los humanos de buena voluntad, de cualquier color o credo.
Gracias!
Did you moved from Vegas ? Thats where I will be moving from…😊
Cool to know the why behind why you moved. Question is did you apply for citizenship/residency so you can stay indefinitely?
I’ve been needing to apply for it, but I’ve been putting it off. As of now, I’ve been leaving every three months in order to not over do my stay.
Why would you go back? If you had cash flow from america would you consider staying ?
Yes and no. there are some things that are still hard for me to get used, mostly it’s the Material things that’s harder to get here that drives me crazy lol
Ojalá puedas tener tu propio circo en mar del plata. Tienes un enorme potencial!!
Great video. What’s the price of two bedrooms in your complex?
I believe my neighbors are paying about double what I’m paying
@@sitopoema That’s great. Thanks
Que aprovechen la inflación antes que caiga.Y reconozcan que no hicimos un muro como ellos a los mexicanos. Reforma de politica inmigratoria urgente.🇦🇷
Great video! I do have 1 question, how do you deal with taxes? I mean, how do expats deal with income tax?
I couldn’t give you an honest answer because I file my taxes in the United States
Do you know any hand to hand acrobats in BA? Also why are you definitely moving back to the US?
Which is safer
Mar del plata or buenos aires
Is it a safe and clean area? I heard things about other countries next to it about being dirty and dog poop everywhere. Is Argentina different? Thanks.
depende la ciudad. en bs son más permisivos con las mascotas... pero en Mendoza no. si ensucias debes limpiar.
We are American family with two you kids and we know very little Spanish. Do you think it would be a good idea for us to move to Argentina? Thoughts on BA vs further south / rural in the country for our situation ?
Yes, go to Argentina, the people are very friendly and even if you speak English they will try to understand you because many Argentines speak English, besides their cities are very beautiful, you should see Mendoza
@@matiascassola8024 thanks I will plan a trip in the spring to see the country a bit more.
As an Argentine I will tell you something super basic, if you earn in dollars and live here you will give yourself a life of luxuries that you will not be able to afford anywhere else in the world, if you are not attached to your country. You are wasting your time, come to Argentina. If you are looking for an inland city, it is much cheaper than Buenos Aires, not to mention the northwest provinces where I live...
the fact that half your family is from here makes so much sense, you just look like a lot of people here you didnt seem american to me
You from Vegas bro?
Many Italians there, and Brazil.
How much prescription glasses cost there?
😍
Do you still do the trapeze for work??? Amazing! What does you wife do?
hey, as of right now no but maybe again some day for now i just stick to trampoline
hey sito, i wanna to know whats the climate is like there in mar del plata , buenos aires , does it get too cold as i have problems with cold temp.
Hey, thank you for the comment. Yes, the temperature does get very cold in mardelplata and also Buenos Aires, but Buenos Aires does tend to go more on the warmer side during the winter but it’s still cold.
@@sitopoema thanks for the reply.
How you do your yearly US taxes while in Argentina?
How long is the trip from your hometown to Argentina?
its almost 24 hrs
Why no more upload wonder what happened
I’ll be more uploading soon!
bad ass, teach some of the progressions for trapeze
makes sense. las vegas is so gross. i've only been to the airport there and would never go to the actual city.
Bro stop talking about the trapeze and tell me what song that is tho
You sound like an Argentine that grew up abroad and moved back cuz of your accent
Romperla
i'm straight and all but damn, this guy is good looking.
what's your rent?
why do u want to move back to US? 🤔
I want to move there only thing that scares me is crime
Generally, and compared to other countries in the area, it is a safe country. In the provinces one can almost live in peace, we don't have that feeling that someone is going to attack us.
Para que tengas una idea, la delincuencia en argentina es menor que la que hay en EEUU.... en EEUU hay 8 homicidios cada 100 mil habitantes, Argentina tiene 4 cada 100 mil.
A Argentina podem comprar o Brasil nunca 🇧🇷💪
Que comentario estúpido 🤦🏽
The U.S. has lost its splendor. Ppl in the cities are super rude. No public transportation, no siestas, etc 🤣
Entonces no sos o argentino vos? O si?
Me gusta tu programa aunque es evidente que yankee no sos y que tenés "demasiado" acento argento.... Jajaja, te agarré tránsfuga 😂😂😂. Queda evidente cuando pronuncias Mar del Plata
Interesting! I thought the reason you moved there was the wife…I didn’t know you were in the circus. You still do trapeze?
Thank you for watching, no I don’t do trapeze anymore but I I do still do some acrobat stuff !
🤝🇨🇦🤲🍋🍊 Are you from Argentina
Hello, no I’m from the United States
Los nombres de las ciudades ya te salen con acento porteño 🤣. Bienvenido !