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Local Finds | by ez Home Search

Podcast de ez Home Search

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Most real estate content wants to sell you something. Local Finds is different — real stories about real places across America, from the team behind ez Home Search. Whether you're actively searching, planning your next chapter, or simply curious about what life looks like somewhere new, Local Finds is built for the way people actually experience real estate. Not the transaction — the discovery. Each episode finds the good in a place and celebrates it: the neighborhoods worth knowing, the hidden gems locals take for granted, the things worth doing right where you already live, and the communities across America that deserve more attention than they get. Think of it as the antidote to real estate content that's either trying to close a deal or go viral. Local Finds covers wealthiest cities and affordable small towns, school districts and lakefront communities, beach towns and mountain neighborhoods — always looking for what makes a place worth planting roots in, and always telling it straight. Periodically, we pull back the curtain on how home search really works — because most platforms are designed to send your contact information to whichever agent paid the most to receive it the moment you show any interest. ez Home Search was built around a different belief: that you deserve to work with one vetted local expert who actually knows your market, on your terms, without your information being treated as inventory — sold to the highest-bidding agent and passed along to a chain of vendors. Local Finds is produced by ez Home Search — a better way to discover real estate. Learn more at ezhomesearch.com

Todos los episodios

15 episodios

episode Barndominium Nation: How America’s Fastest-Growing Home Trend Rose From Obscurity artwork

Barndominium Nation: How America’s Fastest-Growing Home Trend Rose From Obscurity

Picture a Saturday morning in Beaufort, South Carolina, where ancient oaks hang low over quiet streets and an easy walk transports you from coffee shop to corner bakery to fresh market — all without touching your car keys. This episode travels across the country to discover America’s most walkable small towns, exploring why these places are so rare and so deeply sought-after. The conversation goes beyond numbers and walkability scores, diving into the local magic that makes neighborhoods like Beaufort’s historic district, Galena, Illinois’ preserved Main Street, or Stowe, Vermont’s village green intensely desirable. You’ll hear how history, geography, and design have frozen these towns in time, creating communities where the simple pleasure of walking to lunch, the park, or the market is actually possible. Along the way, the episode unpacks why buyers are willing to pay a surprising premium for walkable living, the quirks of regional walkability (from mountain courthouses in Blairsville, Georgia to Port Townsend’s Victorian bluffs), and the real questions home shoppers should ask when evaluating “walkable” neighborhoods. Browse up-to-date listings and photos from real estate across the entire country at https://www.ezhomesearch.com. Local Finds is produced by ez Home Search — a better way to discover real estate. Most platforms are designed to send your contact information to whichever agent paid the most for it the moment you show any interest. ez Home Search operates differently: one vetted local expert, matched to you, on your terms. Visit https://www.ezhomesearch.com to search listings, get an instant home valuation, or set up listing alerts — without your data being sold. Timestamps: 00:00:00 The Daydream of Walkable Living 00:03:51 Beaufort, South Carolina’s Historic Heart 00:05:21 Galena, Illinois — A Main Street Preserved 00:09:56 Blairsville, Georgia and the Southern Courthouse Square 00:11:46 Stowe, Vermont’s Resort-Style Walkability 00:13:28 Discovering Port Townsend, Washington 00:14:47 How to Truly Evaluate Walkability in a Town 00:16:15 Walkability’s Impact at Every Stage of Life Find Beaufort on a map and you’ll discover a compact patchwork of historic streets lined with homes that seem custom-built for Saturday morning strolls. The historic district doesn’t just look walkable — it lives it. Coffee is never more than a few blocks away, the river’s edge park is the town’s social hub, and locals swap the stress of traffic for the simple ritual of waving to neighbors from a shady porch. Homes here, and in similarly walkable small towns, fetch a real premium, sometimes 10 to 20 percent higher than comparable houses in less pedestrian-friendly neighborhoods. That extra cost is the going rate for a life where every errand or outing is an open-air event. Galena, Illinois, offers another version of this dream — its main street winds up a hillside and keeps more than 85% of its original architecture intact. Here, walkability means trading the hassle of circling parking lots for weekends spent roaming from antique shop to bakery to riverside. Unlike towns hollowed out by mid-century highways and bypasses, Galena’s walkable heart was protected by a stroke of luck and a strong sense of local pride. That’s not something new development can replicate, and it shows in the way homes trade fast — sometimes without ever hitting the open market. Further south, Blairsville, Georgia, reimagines walkable living for the mountains, where the classic courthouse square acts as a gravitational center. Walkability here isn’t about density, but about a community worth walking toward. Residents can live on acreage and still have a place to gather, shop, and connect on foot. Meanwhile, Stowe, Vermont, and Port Townsend, Washington, stretch the definition even further: in Stowe, recreation paths expand the radius of pedestrian life; in Port Townsend, layers of uptown and downtown — split by a dramatic bluff and ribboned with preserved Victorian buildings — create an airy, coastal version of the walkable dream. Real walkability can’t be measured by a score alone. It’s about the texture of daily life: do neighbors know each other? Are the places you’d want to go actually within reach? Is the walk not just possible, but inviting at dawn or dusk? As more buyers look to trade car commutes for coffee on the corner, the scarcity of towns built around the human scale becomes all the more stark — and all the more precious to discover.

11 de may de 2026 - 24 min
episode America's Most Walkable Small Towns (And Why They Cost More) artwork

America's Most Walkable Small Towns (And Why They Cost More)

Picture a Saturday morning in Beaufort, South Carolina, where ancient oaks hang low over quiet streets and an easy walk transports you from coffee shop to corner bakery to fresh market — all without touching your car keys. This episode travels across the country to discover America’s most walkable small towns, exploring why these places are so rare and so deeply sought-after. The conversation goes beyond numbers and walkability scores, diving into the local magic that makes neighborhoods like Beaufort’s historic district, Galena, Illinois’ preserved Main Street, or Stowe, Vermont’s village green intensely desirable. You’ll hear how history, geography, and design have frozen these towns in time, creating communities where the simple pleasure of walking to lunch, the park, or the market is actually possible. Along the way, the episode unpacks why buyers are willing to pay a surprising premium for walkable living, the quirks of regional walkability (from mountain courthouses in Blairsville, Georgia to Port Townsend’s Victorian bluffs), and the real questions home shoppers should ask when evaluating “walkable” neighborhoods. Browse up-to-date listings and photos from real estate across the entire country at https://www.ezhomesearch.com. Local Finds is produced by ez Home Search — a better way to discover real estate. Most platforms are designed to send your contact information to whichever agent paid the most for it the moment you show any interest. ez Home Search operates differently: one vetted local expert, matched to you, on your terms. Visit https://www.ezhomesearch.com to search listings, get an instant home valuation, or set up listing alerts — without your data being sold. Timestamps: 00:00:00 The Daydream of Walkable Living 00:03:51 Beaufort, South Carolina’s Historic Heart 00:05:21 Galena, Illinois — A Main Street Preserved 00:09:56 Blairsville, Georgia and the Southern Courthouse Square 00:11:46 Stowe, Vermont’s Resort-Style Walkability 00:13:28 Discovering Port Townsend, Washington 00:14:47 How to Truly Evaluate Walkability in a Town 00:16:15 Walkability’s Impact at Every Stage of Life Find Beaufort on a map and you’ll discover a compact patchwork of historic streets lined with homes that seem custom-built for Saturday morning strolls. The historic district doesn’t just look walkable — it lives it. Coffee is never more than a few blocks away, the river’s edge park is the town’s social hub, and locals swap the stress of traffic for the simple ritual of waving to neighbors from a shady porch. Homes here, and in similarly walkable small towns, fetch a real premium, sometimes 10 to 20 percent higher than comparable houses in less pedestrian-friendly neighborhoods. That extra cost is the going rate for a life where every errand or outing is an open-air event. Galena, Illinois, offers another version of this dream — its main street winds up a hillside and keeps more than 85% of its original architecture intact. Here, walkability means trading the hassle of circling parking lots for weekends spent roaming from antique shop to bakery to riverside. Unlike towns hollowed out by mid-century highways and bypasses, Galena’s walkable heart was protected by a stroke of luck and a strong sense of local pride. That’s not something new development can replicate, and it shows in the way homes trade fast — sometimes without ever hitting the open market. Further south, Blairsville, Georgia, reimagines walkable living for the mountains, where the classic courthouse square acts as a gravitational center. Walkability here isn’t about density, but about a community worth walking toward. Residents can live on acreage and still have a place to gather, shop, and connect on foot. Meanwhile, Stowe, Vermont, and Port Townsend, Washington, stretch the definition even further: in Stowe, recreation paths expand the radius of pedestrian life; in Port Townsend, layers of uptown and downtown — split by a dramatic bluff and ribboned with preserved Victorian buildings — create an airy, coastal version of the walkable dream. Real walkability can’t be measured by a score alone. It’s about the texture of daily life: do neighbors know each other? Are the places you’d want to go actually within reach? Is the walk not just possible, but inviting at dawn or dusk? As more buyers look to trade car commutes for coffee on the corner, the scarcity of towns built around the human scale becomes all the more stark — and all the more precious to discover.

8 de may de 2026 - 24 min
episode The Great Generational Swap: How Boomers and Millennials Are Trading Houses artwork

The Great Generational Swap: How Boomers and Millennials Are Trading Houses

Imagine walking into a real estate office with rates at nearly 18% and still deciding to become a first-time homebuyer. That was the reality for many baby boomers, and four decades later, they’ve become the dominant force on both sides of the housing market—buying and selling homes across the United States with an unprecedented amount of cash and equity. This episode unpacks the “great generational swap,” where boomers, millennials, and Gen Xers are all trading places in the real estate game, reshaping who moves, who waits, and where opportunity lives. Explore why the stereotype about millennials being priced out only tells half the story, what’s driving the surprising surge in all-cash deals, and how certain cities are giving young buyers a realistic shot at homeownership. The conversation digs deep into how lifestyle preferences, historic equity gains, and quietly shifting demographics are forging new rules about who gets the keys—and when. Whether you’re planning your first purchase, considering a move, or wondering where your local market fits into the national puzzle, this episode offers a candid, data-driven journey through the homes and stories that define 2026. Set up a listing alert at https://www.ezhomesearch.com so you always know what is happening in your local market. Local Finds is produced by ez Home Search — a better way to discover real estate. Most platforms are designed to send your contact information to whichever agent paid the most for it the moment you show any interest. ez Home Search operates differently: one vetted local expert, matched to you, on your terms. Visit https://www.ezhomesearch.com to search listings, get an instant home valuation, or set up listing alerts — without your data being sold. 00:01:08 Three data points that rewrite the housing narrative 00:04:07 Why boomers have the upper hand in today’s market 00:07:05 The myth of the “Silver Tsunami” and what’s actually happening 00:10:17 The millennial split: who’s winning, who’s waiting 00:14:01 Gen X as America’s “sandwich generation” 00:15:50 Where first-time buyers are breaking through 00:17:12 Retiree migration trends and emerging hotspots 00:18:10 The rise of single women buyers—45 years in the making In the shifting landscape of the American housing market, the “generational swap” is more than a headline—it’s a real transformation felt in neighborhoods from Rochester to Greenville. Baby boomers hold nearly half of all U.S. home equity but represent only about a fifth of the population, giving them both staying power and a unique ability to buy and sell on their terms. What many don’t see is how this tilt in equity changes the experience for everyone else: buyers with deep roots can outbid nearly any first-time contender, while those starting fresh face a climb made steeper by higher home prices and longer waits to ownership. Yet, buried in the national averages are vivid stories that upend old assumptions. Not all millennials are priced out. In fact, older millennials—now often in their late 30s and early 40s—are matching or exceeding boomers in income and are buying bigger homes, frequently leveraging equity built during the last boom cycle. At the same time, the youngest millennials and Gen Zers face new barriers, with student debt and rising rents making each step tougher. Cities like Pittsburgh, Syracuse, and Des Moines reveal a different reality: places where buyers under 35 are actually driving the market, thanks to affordable prices and a price-to-income ratio reminiscent of the 1980s. Meanwhile, the urge to downsize that was supposed to send a “Silver Tsunami” of homes onto the market just isn’t materializing at scale. Many boomers, anchored by favorable tax laws and the lack of appealing alternatives, prefer to stay put. Demand is growing for walkable, lower-maintenance living—but outside of a few booming communities in the Sunbelt, the inventory lags behind demographic shifts. Then there’s the quiet revolution: single women making up a quarter of all homebuyers, outpacing single men two-to-one, a trend four decades in motion that’s reshaping who calls the shots in homeownership. Paired with Gen X’s “sandwich generation” balancing care up and down the family tree, the market is defined less by age group than by circumstance, readiness, and location. For anyone eyeing their next move—whether trading up, trading down, or getting started—the data is clear: the path to homeownership is changing, and the best opportunities may be found where the old rules no longer apply. Whether your next chapter is about maximizing equity, finding a forever home, or breaking through as a first-time buyer, the market is sorting itself in new and unexpected ways.

4 de may de 2026 - 17 min
episode The Great Generational Swap: How Boomers and Millennials Are Trading Houses artwork

The Great Generational Swap: How Boomers and Millennials Are Trading Houses

Imagine walking into a real estate office with rates at nearly 18% and still deciding to become a first-time homebuyer. That was the reality for many baby boomers, and four decades later, they’ve become the dominant force on both sides of the housing market—buying and selling homes across the United States with an unprecedented amount of cash and equity. This episode unpacks the “great generational swap,” where boomers, millennials, and Gen Xers are all trading places in the real estate game, reshaping who moves, who waits, and where opportunity lives. Explore why the stereotype about millennials being priced out only tells half the story, what’s driving the surprising surge in all-cash deals, and how certain cities are giving young buyers a realistic shot at homeownership. The conversation digs deep into how lifestyle preferences, historic equity gains, and quietly shifting demographics are forging new rules about who gets the keys—and when. Whether you’re planning your first purchase, considering a move, or wondering where your local market fits into the national puzzle, this episode offers a candid, data-driven journey through the homes and stories that define 2026. Set up a listing alert at https://www.ezhomesearch.com [https://www.ezhomesearch.com/] so you always know what is happening in your local market. Local Finds is produced by ez Home Search — a better way to discover real estate. Most platforms are designed to send your contact information to whichever agent paid the most for it the moment you show any interest. ez Home Search operates differently: one vetted local expert, matched to you, on your terms. Visit https://www.ezhomesearch.com [https://www.ezhomesearch.com/] to search listings, get an instant home valuation, or set up listing alerts — without your data being sold. 00:01:08 Three data points that rewrite the housing narrative 00:04:07 Why boomers have the upper hand in today’s market 00:07:05 The myth of the “Silver Tsunami” and what’s actually happening 00:10:17 The millennial split: who’s winning, who’s waiting 00:14:01 Gen X as America’s “sandwich generation” 00:15:50 Where first-time buyers are breaking through 00:17:12 Retiree migration trends and emerging hotspots 00:18:10 The rise of single women buyers—45 years in the making In the shifting landscape of the American housing market, the “generational swap” is more than a headline—it’s a real transformation felt in neighborhoods from Rochester to Greenville. Baby boomers hold nearly half of all U.S. home equity but represent only about a fifth of the population, giving them both staying power and a unique ability to buy and sell on their terms. What many don’t see is how this tilt in equity changes the experience for everyone else: buyers with deep roots can outbid nearly any first-time contender, while those starting fresh face a climb made steeper by higher home prices and longer waits to ownership. Yet, buried in the national averages are vivid stories that upend old assumptions. Not all millennials are priced out. In fact, older millennials—now often in their late 30s and early 40s—are matching or exceeding boomers in income and are buying bigger homes, frequently leveraging equity built during the last boom cycle. At the same time, the youngest millennials and Gen Zers face new barriers, with student debt and rising rents making each step tougher. Cities like Pittsburgh, Syracuse, and Des Moines reveal a different reality: places where buyers under 35 are actually driving the market, thanks to affordable prices and a price-to-income ratio reminiscent of the 1980s. Meanwhile, the urge to downsize that was supposed to send a “Silver Tsunami” of homes onto the market just isn’t materializing at scale. Many boomers, anchored by favorable tax laws and the lack of appealing alternatives, prefer to stay put. Demand is growing for walkable, lower-maintenance living—but outside of a few booming communities in the Sunbelt, the inventory lags behind demographic shifts. Then there’s the quiet revolution: single women making up a quarter of all homebuyers, outpacing single men two-to-one, a trend four decades in motion that’s reshaping who calls the shots in homeownership. Paired with Gen X’s “sandwich generation” balancing care up and down the family tree, the market is defined less by age group than by circumstance, readiness, and location. For anyone eyeing their next move—whether trading up, trading down, or getting started—the data is clear: the path to homeownership is changing, and the best opportunities may be found where the old rules no longer apply. Whether your next chapter is about maximizing equity, finding a forever home, or breaking through as a first-time buyer, the market is sorting itself in new and unexpected ways.

27 de abr de 2026 - 20 min
episode Why We Browse Houses We'll Never Buy (And Why That's Perfectly Normal) artwork

Why We Browse Houses We'll Never Buy (And Why That's Perfectly Normal)

Ever found yourself wide awake, toggling through photo after photo of stunning homes in towns you might never visit? You’re in good company. Dream scrolling—browsing houses online with no intention to buy—has quietly become one of America’s favorite late-night rituals. This episode looks at why 91% of people admit to routinely scanning real estate listings, how “open house tourism” became a mainstream pastime, and what psychologists say is actually happening in our brains during these nightly tours. More than just casual curiosity, dream scrolling blends entertainment, inspiration, and even a hint of personal growth, revealing why these digital house hunts can leave us feeling hopeful—or, sometimes, a little wistful. The conversation digs into new consumer research showing most real estate site traffic isn’t from buyers or sellers—but from people imagining future lives, gathering design ideas, or looking for a mental escape. Expect surprising numbers: from how much time Americans spend dream scrolling each year, to how often they browse far above their budgets, to the emotional trade-offs of this modern pastime. There’s insight into the dopamine science behind browsing, the psychological theory of “possible selves,” and the cultural phenomenon that makes home search feel like entertainment as much as research. The episode explores when this hobby is healthy, when it’s not, and smart ways to use real estate listings to motivate improvements—without losing touch with reality. Looking for inspiration, a sense of connection, or just a fresh way to unwind? This episode reframes what it means to window shop for homes in the digital age—and why there’s nothing frivolous about imagining what’s possible. Browse up-to-date listings and photos from real estate across the entire country at https://www.ezhomesearch.com. 00:01:14 The surprising truth about who is actually browsing real estate websites 00:03:40 Why hundreds of millions browse, but only a tiny fraction buy 00:04:39 Dream scrolling: browsing above your budget and what it means 00:05:40 When design inspiration and mental escape drive the search 00:06:33 Open house tourism and the cultural pull of peeking inside 00:08:01 How real estate browsing became a pop-culture phenomenon 00:09:19 The psychology behind dreaming through listings 00:15:35 The double-edged sword: inspiration versus insecurity Dream scrolling isn’t just idle browsing; it’s a perspective shift on how millions interact with real estate websites. Most people approach listings not as buyers-in-waiting, but as seekers of inspiration, glimpsing kitchen remodels or imagining the lives that might unfold in a Vermont farmhouse, a Savannah bungalow, or a downtown loft. The practice is validated by recent studies: three hours a week, on average, are spent exploring these digital front doors—translating to an entire workweek per year. It’s a pattern echoed by the way cable networks and social media have capitalized on our fascination with home tours and unusual listings. What’s eye-opening is how much of this behavior is about entertainment and escapism. Over half of Americans have visited an open house with zero intention to buy—just to peek inside and enjoy the adventure. Psychologists call it “trying on possible selves.” Browsing homes helps people imagine different lives, release a burst of anticipation-driven dopamine, and even motivates practical steps toward change—like saving for a first home or gathering renovation ideas. The emotional impact is generally positive, with more people feeling inspired than discouraged, and those who do feel a twinge of envy or anxiety usually see it balanced by hope or enhanced motivation. Still, dream scrolling isn’t entirely without its challenges. Around half of users acknowledge it can make them feel insecure about their own homes, and a notable percentage report feeling financially stretched or anxious after a scroll session. Clinical experts advise keeping the hobby healthy: use it as a way to imagine your future, not escape your present, and be mindful if the activity starts interfering with real-life obligations or relationships. Ultimately, dream scrolling is as much about curiosity and imagination as it is about homes themselves. For many, it’s the digital equivalent of flipping through magazines, watching home design shows, or circling open houses for the thrill of possibility. With privacy-focused platforms like ez Home Search, users can indulge their sense of wonder—collect as many kitchen screenshots and renovation ideas as they want—without the risk of their data fueling sales calls. This gentle, human approach to home discovery reframes online browsing as a practice grounded in hope, creativity, and connection.

24 de abr de 2026 - 20 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Fantástica aplicación. Yo solo uso los podcast. Por un precio módico los tienes variados y cada vez más.
Me encanta la app, concentra los mejores podcast y bueno ya era ora de pagarles a todos estos creadores de contenido

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