
11 January 2011 | 9 replies
After a few moments, the door is opened by a 10 year-old boy, stark naked, rock&roll music blaring in the background, holding a lit cigar in one hand and a glass of bourbon in the other.The salesman asks, "Uh, excuse me young man... is your mother home?"

22 December 2010 | 22 replies
hey scott, i've being sued right now because one of my tenants plays their music too loud at night, and so another one of my tenants has trouble sleeping...free legal aid will take any case it seems...it probably won't be as bad as you think...most judges aren't total idiots (at least here in charlotte)...have you talked to the mother?

24 January 2011 | 22 replies
As for my 220$ million dollars, I plan to retire my entire immediate family, purchase more real estate for business and personal, finance my music business as I'm also a singer-songwriter, and create a charitable organization for causes near and dear to my heart.

17 September 2013 | 40 replies
From a tenant standpoint there is a bit more privacy and you don't have someone living on top of you or next door to you blasting away their favorite genre of music.

15 January 2011 | 6 replies
Make sure you are on the same sheet of music when talking about a "fixed rate mortgage".

19 April 2011 | 29 replies
It even has nice on hold music for that extra level of credibility. :)Disclaimer: I am in no way being compensated by ring central, I just like them :)
8 February 2011 | 18 replies
Lol.All joking aside, if you do drive by late at night, I would be on the lookout for adiquate street lighting, people just hanging around aimlessly, loud music, etc.
9 February 2011 | 25 replies
Originally posted by John Whitmore:... connect the guitars ...COOL, it's a musical house!

10 February 2011 | 24 replies
I think some people may have glossed over the part where it said that some people in certain actually WANT more licensing requirements:[i]Tell that to the cat groomers, tattoo artists, tree trimmers and about a dozen other specialists across the country who are clamoring for more rules governing small businesses.They're asking to become state-licensed professionals, which would mean anyone wanting to be, say, a music therapist or a locksmith, would have to pay fees, apply for a license and in some cases, take classes and pass exams.

6 February 2010 | 18 replies
If you really know your area, and you know both the real estate and the economy of your investment area, you will know when prices are over-heated, and you either stop buying, hunt harder for extreme bargains, or you fix and flip really darn fast, hoping you don't get caught without a chair when the music stops.