Friday, November 30, 2012

BBC drama 'The Hour' back to make the 1950s sexy

LONDON (AP) ? The media are under fire, celebrities are under the microscope. Welcome to Britain in 2012 ? or in the 1950s, the setting for the BBC drama "The Hour."

A newsroom drama/political thriller about the staff of a current affairs TV program, "The Hour" gained attention last year when it debuted for its resonant story lines and distinctive retro style. The latter aspect ? all mid-century modern interiors, sensuous silk dresses and slim suits ? prompted the show to be dubbed, inevitably, a British "Mad Men."

The second six-episode season ? in the middle of its run in Britain and starting Wednesday on BBC America ? stays focused on the tempestuous trio of battling producer Bel Rowley (Romola Garai), combative reporter Freddie Lyon (Ben Whishaw, tech-master Q in the Bond film "Skyfall") and smooth anchorman Hector Madden ("The Wire" alumnus Dominic West) as they confront meddling management, murky maneuvers in high places and tensions between work and their private lives.

They also must deal with the consequences of their show's rising profile ? especially the impulsive Hector, who finds that fame comes at a cost.

Series writer Abi Morgan, whose work includes screenplays for "The Iron Lady" and "Shame," said she was drawn to the period's sense of style ? "a certain kind of 'La Dolce Vita' glamour that I really love." She also wanted to explore the birth of modern culture in a decade often seen as staid and conformist.

"What we know about history is inherently, it repeats itself," said Morgan, counting off the show's modern themes: "Immigration, women trying to have it all, the sense of a kind of greater global threat (because of the Cold War) ... the rise of capitalism and consumerism in Britain, the birth of celebrity, and the vulnerability of celebrity."

"The Hour" has been hailed for recasting a time usually remembered in Britain as a gray era of postwar austerity. Prosperity took a long time to arrive in Britain, which emerged from World War II victorious but broke ? wartime food rationing continued until the 1950s.

But by 1957, when the second series of "The Hour" opens, wages were rising, the economy was growing, new consumer goods were available and the tempting devil of rock 'n' roll was washing up on Britain's shores.

The series introduces the BBC's brash rival ITV, which launched in 1955 as Britain's first commercial TV network, and takes excursions to seedy Soho nightclubs, where journalists and politicians mingled with denizens of the London underworld.

Garai, whose television roles include the title role in Jane Austen's "Emma" and an ambitious Victorian prostitute in "The Crimson Petal and the White," said "The Hour" helped correct "the idea that somehow the '60s was the sea-change."

"The '60s was born out of the '50s," she said. "In this series, we talk a bit about Ginsberg and Kerouac. The birth of everything we identify as 'modern' was definitely seeded in the '50s and the Beat Generation."

Like Aaron Sorkin's "The Newsroom," the show is also a love letter to journalism ? a much-needed one in Britain, where the profession's image has plunged after revelations of tabloid phone hacking, and where even the august BBC has been tarred by its bungled response to a sex abuse scandal.

"I still believe in the nobility of journalism," Morgan said. "I still love good journalism, and I wanted to hark back to an age when you didn't instantly tweet and you didn't instantly blog and you didn't videophone an event. The slow burn of building a story and nurturing a story and investigating a story is still fascinating to me."

"The Hour" continues a run of strong female characters for Morgan, who dared to depict the divisive former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in "The Iron Lady."

In Bel, she has created something still too rare on television ? a sympathetic, competent woman in a position of power. Garai said it was a delight to play a strong women who is "not seen as being bossy or controlling."

Her only qualm is the show's luscious costumes, which have made Garai and her co-stars the subject of glossy magazine spreads about '50s fashion.

The real-life Bel, she says, would have worn "a tweed suit and brogues."

"You sort of think, could Bel really afford a silk two-piece on a BBC producer's salary?" Garai said. "And then everyone goes, 'Oh shut up, Romola.' So I say 'OK, OK, yes. I'll wear the beautiful suits. And breathe in.'"

Jill Lawless can be reached at http://Twitter.com/JillLawless

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bbc-drama-hour-back-1950s-sexy-160541018.html

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Inventory Is Low For Seattle Floating Homes? | Seattle Afloat - Blogs

Seattle Houseboats For Sale Right Now ? All Offices & All Houseboat Realtors

Go ahead and browse all Seattle houseboats for sale: Vessels, barges, and Seattle floating homes for sale right now- You can find all houseboat listings from all Seattle real estate companies right now. Seattle houseboats sellers: If you have a floating home you want to sell, please let us know. We have a line of potential buyers and inventory is very low.

Seattle WA ? Find Seattle Houseboats For Sale

Want to see these Seattle houseboats or need help with the process of buying a floating home (it?s a bit different)?? courtney@courtneycooper.com 206-850-8841 SeattleAfloat.com Cooper Jacobs Real Estate LLC seattle houseboats realtor

Source: http://blog.seattlepi.com/seattleafloat/2012/11/29/inventory-is-low-for-seattle-floating-homes%E2%80%A6/

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

What is a Straw Buyer? Is it Legal? | Law Office of Peter Cameron ...

If a buyer has poor credit and is unable to obtain financing for a large purchase like a home, ?a ?straw?buyer? is ?sometimes used. ?A ??straw buyer? is a person who makes a purchase on behalf of another person. ?It is not necessarily illegal to use a straw buyer, except when the transaction involves fraud.

The real buyer promises to make all the payments and may pay the straw buyer for the use of his or her credit. Banks dislike the use of straw buyers because the arrangement increases the risk of default on the loan without the bank?s prior knowledge of that risk. The activity is also risky for straw buyers, who may be held legally responsible for the debt they incurred on behalf of others.

Straw buyer schemes are one of many types of California real estate fraud. ? What typically happens is a real estate agent or broker finds an individual with good credit. ?This person is ?known ?as the ?straw?. The Straw Buyer is willing ?to buy a home for another person. This other person may be a friend, family member, stranger, or even a fictitious individual who the agent explains simply cannot acquire a loan because of ?poor credit.

The real estate agent ?or broker might ?offer the ?straw buyer? a large amount of money (sometimes between $5,000 and $10,000) to sign the paperwork using his/her name and other personal information to secure the loan. The straw buyer has no intention of ever living in the home or making payments on the home. Some straw buyers actually ?believe they are ?doing good? by simply helping another less fortunate person (similar to a cosigner).

Straw buying becomes illegal when the agent or broker sells the home to the straw at an inflated price to achieve the goal of increasing his/her commission. ?Or the agent / broker will convince the straw ?buyer that he/she is helping a buyer purchase the home for a great deal. ? This ?deal? will allow the straw buyer ?the opportunity to split the profit when the agent and owner resell the property at a much higher price. This type of scam may also be referred to as illegal property flipping.

Mortgage brokers might also use false documents that allow the straw to purchase the property, even if his/her income wouldn?t otherwise allow him/her to be able to make the purchase. ?The straw buyer then signs paperwork not knowing that even the notary may in in on the scam. ?This allows the notary to answer any questions so that the transaction appears to be legitimate, when an unsuspecting straw has questions.

The result of this scam gives the real estate agent / broker, mortgage broker, notary, and anyone else who was involved the loan proceeds while the straw unknowingly assumes the mortgage. When he/she doesn?t pay, the bank forecloses on the property, and the straw buyer ends up with losing his/her good credit, possibly declare bankruptcy, and faces possible criminal charges.

For questions about California straw buyer schemes or scams, or to discuss your case confidentially do not hesitate to contact us The Law Office of Peter S. Cameron, APC at 877-603-8473. ?? If you prefer, simply fill out the the secure online case review and we will respond without delay.

This article is for educational and marketing purposes only. ?It does not create an attorney-client relationship.

Source: http://sandiegolegaloffice.com/2012/11/what-is-a-straw-buyer-is-it-legal/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=what-is-a-straw-buyer-is-it-legal

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Surrealism & Automatic Writing: The politics of destroying language ...

Back in the 1930s, a French psychoanalyst and philosopher by the name of Jacques Lacan began his life?s work?an attempt to create the framework by which the human psyche could be analyzed within modern civilization. Such was his influence that Lacanian thought not only left a mark on the field of psychoanalysis but found integration in Marxist thought, most notably with Michel Foucault, Jean Baudrillard and Slavoj Zizek.?Like many 19th and 20th century thinkers, Lacan was particularly influenced by George Wilhelm Fredrik Hegel. After failing a physical to enter the French army, Lacan took to studying psychoanalysis. By 1934 Lacan had published ?On Paranoiac Psychosis in its Relations to the Personality.? The work did not cause much of a ripple, except in Parisian Surrealist circles.

The psychoanalytical umbilicus between Lacanian psychoanalysis and Surrealism is fairly-well established. A young Lacan published work in the Surrealist review Minotaur, and associated with Andre Breton and the radically-influential novelist and philosopher Georges Bataille (author of ?The Story of the Eye?). Lacan, inspired by the Surrealists and their automatic writing, went on to create work that inspired philosophers like Gilles Deleuze (?Capitalism and Schizophrenia, co-written with Felix Guatarri), Foucault (especially his panoptic?disciplinary?consciousness) and Baudrillard (simulated reality); whose work in turn has helped us better understand the modern, media-driven political world in which we live.

It is true that the Surrealists, only a few years after coalescing, abandoned the idea of pure automatic writing, with Breton, Bataille, Louis Aragon and Phillipe Souppault, amongst others, writing critical Surrealist novels. But the efforts in automatism were vital. Language, ossified by the upper classes and imposed on all throughout history, needed to be liberated by ?pure psychic automatism.? Breton may have been the ?high priest of Surrealism,? ex-communicating members for trivial transgressions, but he was right about language.

At this moment, I, the writer, and you, the reader, are partaking at a banquet of language that we did not create?a system superimposed on our consciousness. The raw material of our minds is rendered by the symbolic aspect of language, and there is no escaping it; unless one takes psychedelics, descends into madness, attains a hightened non-symbolic spiritual state, or disrupts the historical, psychological superstructure of language.

Breton and the other Surrealists realized that language, its traditional structure (syntax, morphology, semantics and phonology, to varying degrees) and expectations, needed to be destroyed and rebuilt. While the group?s efforts in automatic writing never produced writing as famous as T.S. Elliot ?The Wasteland,? for instance, automatism accomplished something far more important: it struck a blow to the politics of language.

By politics of language, it should be taken to mean the inherited system thought and communication. We are defined by the words we use, yet we had no part in the construction of the system. This word means such and such. This is how one writes a sentence, a paragraph, an essay, a poem, a novel, a letter, etc. What we think is heavily influenced by the signs and signifiers we use in the form of words (to say nothing of visual cues), and when we attempt to express a thought verbally or through the written word, we must again revert to an imposed system to do so.

It?s helpful to think about language in this way through William S. Burroughs and Brion Gysin?s popularization of the cut-up theory, itself derived from Tristan Tzara?s Dada experiments. Like automatic writing, it was an acknowledgment that traditional language (speaking, writing) were systems of control.??My basic theory is that the written word was actually a virus,? Burroughs once said, ?that made the spoken word possible. The word has not been recognized as a virus because it has achieved a state of stable symbiosis with the host?? In other words, the language virus infects and becomes symbiotic with the human mind. Or to adopt a more Freudian perspective: the conscious mind places the unconscious self under its boot heel.

If language, in a very real way, imposes an order on our thought, then it necessarily limits the way we think about and debate politics. One can see this in the facility with which political operatives (propagandists) use campaign ads to influence voters. In fact, propaganda is the cynical acknowledgment and use of language?s power on the human psyche.

A clever conservative operative and ad agency can craft an ad with one or many sound bytes that paint a liberal as the dread ?socialist? or whatever type of ?other? is popular at the time. Indeed, ?socialist? and ?communist? were two of the most popular propagandistic words rising out of the 2012 election cycle?s conservative base. A liberal, on the other hand, can frame a conservative as a selfish brute, when the reality is that a good deal of partisans simply wants government out of their life; they?re manipulated by conservative monied elites into assuming aggressive rhetorical postures.

Many people are rhetorically, psychologically, emotionally and intellectually conditioned to perceive such words and imagery as the quintessence of reality. The world must be a reduction. It must have contours, a shape that is easily visible and defined. We must at all costs be able to make sense of the world as we experience it. Nowhere is this more true than in the world of politics.

Popular fiction, while not propaganda (in most cases), is a function of an established order: something quantifiable and acceptable. How else could James Joyce?s ?Ulysses? have precipitated an obscenity trial when its kaleidoscopic vision gave an immense cinematic, poetic and, one might say, very real vision of a day in the life of Dublin, its characters and environs? The same goes for Comte de Lautreamont?s ?Maldoror? and William S. Burroughs?s ?Naked Lunch.? Their words create a derangement of the senses (to borrow Rimbaud?s idea), and of the status quo, because the traditional order of language, of the written word, has been almost completely eviscerated.

This, of course, was what the Surrealists were after with automatic writing, with varying degrees of success.?To find this deranged destruction of language, look to Andre Breton and Phillipe Soupault?s ?The Magnetic Fields,? the Surrealist poetry of its members, as well as the short stories and novels of Benjamin Peret, Michel Leiris, Robert Desnos (the king of automatism) and George Limbour.

In Breton and Soupault?s ?The Magnetic Fields,? automatic writing yields passages such as:

?The elephant tusks lean on the star-rise steps so that the princess can descend and the bands of musicians step out of the sea. There is nobody but me now on this sonorous scale-platform, the equivocal wavering of which is my harmony. Ah! to descend with one?s hair down and limbs in disarray in the whiteness of the rapids. What cordials do you have at your disposal? I need a third hand, like a bird that the others cannot send to sleep. I need to hear dizzy gallopings in the pampas. I have so much sand in my ears, moreover, that I do not know how I shall learn your language. At least, the contact-rings are threaded well enough away under women?s skins, and do not too many innocent little waves weep over the softness of beds? ? Reduce speed. So long as I don?t lose courage at the last moment.?

There, Breton and Soupault unleash a virus into the existing virus of language. All personal history with language is destroyed as we grasp for meaning. Our conscious, filter-obsessed mind wants clarity, but there is none to be had?or very little at least.

Leiris explored the unconscious in his 1928 novel ?Aurora,? and the result is fantastically surreal prose like the following:

?in order to see the whole history of the world reflected in its absolute reality on the frosted glass, the pure and bare inner surface, when the woman, rising with a sudden but graceful movement, having smoothed out the creases in her crumpled skirt with little touches of her slender hand, took three steps in the direction of a lawn and solemnly greeted the grape harvests of the future which were coming towards her in the form of hailstones. Then I heard the word ?Aurora,? whispered in a gentle voice softer than despairing flesh?

Leiris tantalizes the reader with moments of clarity to serve as a foothold for reality, but then pulls the rug out from under us. It?s automatic writing infused with more traditional prose, but just as capable of causing derangement of the senses.

In this world of constant media bombardment, automatic writing takes on a new form of urgency. For the Surrealists it was an answer to the absurd chaos of World War I and the failure of rationalism. Automatic writing, like Dada, was at bottom political?an acknowledgment that bourgeois democratic politics were incredibly destructive. The Surrealists may have failed in creating a new and sustained subversive reality with automatic writing, but they provided for all subsequent generations a blueprint of how to liberate the mind.

Almost a century on we are circling back to something like the Surrealists? post-WWI reality. The collective hallucination is now broken and everyone is trying desperately to reconstitute reality through politics, media and capitalism (in its perverse form). Order is again being imposed with the word.

A little writing and reading of automatic texts might be just the cure. A nice mental palette cleanser.

Source: http://www.deathandtaxesmag.com/181227/surrealism-automatic-writing-the-politics-of-destroying-language/

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Cheaper iPhone may be released to tap into markets like India, China

The iPhone 5's success is undeniable as five million handsets were sold in the first weekend of its launch. The handset has been selling pretty well in India too and the initial batch had sold out almost immediately. However, India is a tiny market for the Apple iPhone as it is priced considerably higher than its rivals. A report by analyst Gene Munster has now put forward a claim that in order to tackle markets like India and China, where Apple?s user base is not very large, and the brand will launch a cheaper handset that will be ideal for these markets.

A report by Business Insider explains that in the US, if one wants an iPhone 5, they pay $200 as the carrier pays the rest of the cost. The report states, ?You pay $200, but Apple collects ~$600. That carrier covers that $400 gap, and hopes to make the money on your data charges.?

Cheaper iPhone may be coming in 2014

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However, these subsidized plans are not in place in markets like India and China, where a consumer foots the entire cost of the device.

The report notes that if Apple does not want to lose out on 3 billion potential smartphone buyers, it needs to solve this problem.

Munster believes that a less expensive version of the iPhone, roughly in the region of $200 will be launched by Apple in 2014.

The report goes on to state, ?He doesn't elaborate too much on this phone, but we'd posit that it should not just be a last-generation iPhone. We think Apple should make a unique phone that it sells for less.?

The iPhone 5 has already been launched in India but the device is not easily available. If one does manages to get their hands on the device, then it will most likely be the 16GB version as some stores have this variant in stock.

Apple does sell cheaper handsets than the iPhone 5 in India, but they are previous generation models and the price of the iPhone 4S is at par with flagship devices from other brands.

If Apple does intend to stay competitive in the Indian market, the brand will need to launch a budget handset and not an older handset with a lower price tag.

However, Apple does not sell budget products and has never succumbed to the pressure of lowering its prices to match that of the competition.

An ideal example is the iPad mini. This 7.9-inch tablet was expected to debut at a price point of around $200 to $250. But this did not materialise and they launched a product that is significantly costlier than the Nexus 7 and the Amazon Kindle Fire.

Apple has proved in the past that it can be successful with its devices even if it is pricier than the competition. But with the competition offering great products at cheaper costs, how long will Apple be able to keep this up. Hence, a cheaper new iPhone could be a good solution for users in India and China.

Source: http://tech2.com.feedsportal.com/c/34190/f/619587/s/2609eb1b/l/0Ltech20Bin0N0Cnews0Csmartphones0Ccheaper0Eiphone0Emay0Ebe0Ereleased0Eto0Etap0Einto0Emarkets0Elike0Eindia0Echina0C60A6842/story01.htm

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

A DIY Raspberry Pi Hack Lets You Build The Smallest Gaming Cabinet In The World

A hacker called [Sprite_tm] AKA Jeroen Domburg built his own teeny, tiny Raspberry Pi-based MAME cabinet using some laser cut plexiglass, some custom controls, and a eeny, weenie 2.4-inch TFT display. The best part? The cabinet even has a small OLED marquee at the top that shows the current game in play.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/ilORlewHDYQ/

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Leading U.S. Democrat Durbin embraces future Medicare reforms

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Assistant Senate Democratic Leader Dick Durbin, one of U.S. President Barack Obama's leading allies, urged fellow liberals on Tuesday to consider reforming the Medicare and Medicaid healthcare programs that they have long fought to shield from cuts.

"Progressives should be willing to talk about ways to ensure the long-term viability of Medicare and Medicaid" programs for the elderly and poor, Durbin said in excerpts of a speech he is to deliver later in the day.

Most Democrats have avoided talking about cutting these two "entitlement" programs, which have been adding to U.S. budget deficits because of the growing numbers of participants and escalating healthcare costs.

Instead, Obama and Democrats in Congress mostly have stressed the need to raise income taxes on the wealthy as part of renewed efforts to reduce budget deficits that have topped $1 trillion in each of the past four years.

Lately, Durbin has made high-profile remarks about eventually reducing Medicare and Medicaid costs, just as Republicans have begun talking about raising revenues as part of a tax overhaul effort next year.

On Sunday, Durbin raised the possibility of Democrats accepting Medicare reforms to make higher-income seniors pay more for their care. He made his remarks on ABC's "This Week" program.

The Illinois senator said, however, that the debate over Medicare and Medicaid should not be part of the more immediate negotiations on averting the "fiscal cliff" of steep tax hikes and spending cuts.

"Meaningful reforms can protect the vulnerable and improve care and efficiency, leaving the programs stronger for future generations," Durbin said in excerpts of the speech he is to deliver at the Center for American Progress, a liberal think tank.

Durbin's remarks sought to foster productive talks aimed at averting on January 1 the fiscal cliff, the start of about $600 billion worth of tax hikes and automatic spending cuts that could shove the nation into a recession early next year if allowed to go forward.

The key battle pits Republican demands for deep spending cuts against Democrats' insistence on tax hikes for the wealthiest Americans.

"We can and we should avoid 'the fiscal cliff' by acting now - before January 1st - to extend middle class tax cuts for 98 percent of the American people and allow the tax cuts to expire for those earning over $250,000 a year," Durbin said.

Republicans could block any bill that does not extend all tax cuts. But after January 1, with all tax cuts expired, Democrats could draft a bill that cuts taxes only for those earning up to $250,000, cranking up pressure on Republicans to go along.

Durbin said decisions on Medicare and Medicaid should not be put off too long.

"Putting the discussions off indefinitely makes our choices harder, our success less likely and negative effects on current beneficiaries a near certainty," he said.

(Reporting by Thomas Ferraro; Editing by Jackie Frank)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/leading-u-democrat-durbin-embraces-future-medicare-reforms-123803964.html

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First-time buyers shut out of housing recovery

2 hrs.

Current homeowners are finally moving up, and distressed sales are making up less of the overall market?all signs of much-needed improvement in housing.

Current homeowners accounted for 54 percent of October?s non-distressed market, up from 50 percent in June, according to a new survey by Campbell/Inside Mortgage Finance.

This as the share of non-distressed sales surged to 64.7 percent, up from 55.7 percent as recently as February.

Unfortunately, first-time home buyers are seeing just the opposite, largely left out of this surge in sales and prices. Their share of the market, usually up in the 40 percent range historically, fell to 34.7 percent in October, the lowest in the Campbell/IMF survey?s three-year history.

The National Association of Realtors put their share even lower, at 31 percent.

Either way, they are the only group of buyers that have not seen their share of non-distressed home purchases rise over the past five months. The mortgage of choice for these buyers, FHA-insured loans, are increasingly tough to obtain. (Read More: Yes, Housing Starts Surge, but Rentals Are the Drivers)

?Financing of first-time homebuyers with low down payments threatens to become a significant problem in the U.S. housing market,? wrote Thomas Popik, research director for Campbell Surveys. ?Fifty percent of first-time homebuyers use FHA financing, but FHA insurance premiums are increasing and underwriting is becoming more strict. Private mortgage insurance has started to fill the gap, but the long-term status of private mortgage insurance is in question pending the publication of the Qualified Residential Mortgage regulation resulting from Dodd-Frank.? (Read More: Builders Bump Up Thanks to Drop in Existing Home Supply)

Real estate agents answering this latest survey also noted that the recent hike in FHA mortgage insurance premiums is hitting first-time buyers harder because some sellers are refusing to accept offers that include FHA financing. Adding insult to injury, the FHA, after reporting a major shortfall in its insurance reserve funds, announced it would raise premiums yet again, another 10 basis points early next year. (Read More: To Stem Losses, FHA Mortgages Get More Expensive)

Lower priced, distressed properties, like foreclosures and short sales, would seem like the best answer for first time buyers, but hungry, all-cash investors are proving to be too much competition. Investors purchased one fifth of all homes that sold in October, up from 18 percent the previous month, and all-cash buyers (largely investors) made up 29 percent of all sales, according to the Realtors. (Read More: How 'Fiscal Cliff' Could Affect Mortgage Interest Deduction)

This is why, despite increasing household formation, rental occupancies continue to fall and rents to rise. Would-be first time home buyers are either choosing or are forced to rent.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/housing-recovery-leaving-behind-first-time-buyers-1C7266178

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?Better Than 55? Hertiage of Hawk Ridge Ranch for Sale | Saint ...

?Better Than 55? Hertiage of Hawk Ridge Ranch for Sale

?Better Than 55? Hertiage of Hawk Ridge Ranch for Sale

Check out all the Great Amenities

2177 Hawks Landing Dr, Lake St Louis 63367-1850

Welcome Home to your beautiful Aster model in the ?Better than 55? Heritage of Hawk Ridge community. The active lifestyle & incredible amenities ? gorgeous & expansive clubhouse, seasonal heated swimming pool, tennis & bocce & pickleball courts, and a 9-hole golf course. Words to describe this villa: pristine, bright & spacious. From your private and covered Front Porch, the Entry Room welcomes you to a large LivRm/DinRm separated w/ impressive columns and vaults. The half wall to the LL is a popular feature since it allows more DinRm furniture arranging. The Kitchen/Breakfast are open & roomy, adding to this main floor entertainer?s delight. In this separated BR floorplan, the 2nd BR can double as an office/den. The spacious Master BR Suite has huge walk-in closet and the Master Bath has a Shower/Tub combo. What sets this deluxe home apart from the rest: dramatic vaulted Dining/Living Rooms, plus, a spacious Deck and large Patio with a tranquil view of Heritage Lake. Welcome home!

Listing Price: $154,900


Check out St. Charles County! The county is conveniently located just outside the city. You can experience all the joys of the city, but be able to drive home to a quiet suburban lifestyle when you?re finished. In St. Charles County, you?re sure to find your white-picket-fence dream come true!
Learn More about St. Charles County


For questions or to set up a tour of this home call:

314.802.0797

For a 24 Hour toll free Recorded message about this home call:

866-993-2410 Home ID #1096

Larry Kruse: My forty year financial career and a lifelong passion for the real estate industry has prepared me to provide the best service to sellers and buyers in today?s high energy, competitive, and tech savvy real estate marketplace. Since I have become licensed, my seller and buyer clients have come to know me to provide the utmost thorough analysis, organized approach, excellent communication skills, professionalism in all transactions. I pride myself in having become a trusted and dependable friend to every one of my clients


Search for more Saint Louis Homes:

If you are trying to sell your home or if you are looking to purchase a new home , contact one of our professional agents. Visit Hermann London for the latest MLS listings and search homes in your area. You can also find helpful information on Foreclosure Listings, information on Preventing Foreclosure and Short Sales. Please contact us at 314.802.0797 if our agents can be of any assistance.


Source: http://www.hermannlondon.com/blog/better-than-55-hertiage-of-hawk-ridge-ranch-for-sale/

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