LIFE WITH MIKEY

Mikey Taylor

"Life With Mikey" is a dynamic podcast hosted by Mikey Taylor and Michael Michalov. Mikey Taylor, a former professional skateboarder turned real-estate-investing mogul, dives into the world of money, business, and culture. Drawing from his unique journey from skating the streets of LA to managing over $200 million in real estate, Mikey offers insightful discussions on achieving financial freedom and navigating the complexities of modern business. Michael Michalov, COO at COMMUNE boasts a robust 25-year journey in the financial services and real estate sectors.

  1. 4 DAYS AGO

    Is The Housing Market Crashing?

    Everyone is telling you the housing market is about to crash worse than 2008. They’re wrong  but the truth might be harder to hear. In this episode, I break down the numbers behind today’s housing market and compare them to the factors that contributed to the 2008 financial crisis. Topics include subprime mortgages, equity positions, supply dynamics, insurance costs, the lock-in effect. The data says this is not 2008. The structural foundations are different. But that doesn’t mean everything’s fine. The affordability gap is real. The low end is fracturing. Insurance is repricing risk across the country. And millions of homeowners are locked into sub-4% rates creating a “zombie market” where people are not moving. I share my own experience buying a home in 2005 on an adjustable-rate mortgage, watching the value drop, and what I learned about making financial decisions under pressure. I also walk through what I’m seeing in the data right now as someone who owns and buys real estate. This episode covers: subprime mortgage comparison (2006 vs. today), homeowner equity, regional market divergence, the 4-million-unit housing deficit, the lock-in effect, insurance crisis, and how data can inform decision-making. 0:00 The 2008 Crash Fear Is Everywhere 01:13 Markets That Feel Like 2008 03:31 Who Is Predicting the Crash and Why 04:39 What Actually Caused the 2008 Collapse 06:28 The Financial Crisis Numbers 08:15 Mikey’s Personal 2008 Story 09:59 Today’s Market vs 2008 by the Numbers 14:07 The Real Fractures Nobody Is Showing You 17:08 The Zombie Market 23:14 Fear vs Greed The Investor Trap This content is for informational purposes only, is not offered as investment advice and should not be deemed as investment advice, and reflects the opinions and projections of COMMUNE as of the date of publication, which are subject to change without notice at any time subsequent to the date of issue. COMMUNE does not represent or warrant that the information presented in this message is accurate, current, or complete or that the estimates, opinions, projections or assumptions made in the message will prove to be accurate or realized. Certain statements reflect projections or expectations of future financial or economic performance of the project.  Such “forward-looking” statements are based on various assumptions, which assumptions may not prove to be correct.  Accordingly, there can be no assurance that such assumptions and statements will accurately predict future events or the project’s actual performance. Past performance is not an indication of future results. This content does not constitute an offer to invest and such offer will only be made by means of an offering document that should be carefully reviewed before determining whether to invest. As with any investment there is a risk of loss, including up to the amount of investment. Neither this message nor its contents should be construed as legal, tax, investment, or other advice.  Individuals are urged to consult with their own tax, legal, and investment advisers before making any investment decision.

    27 min
  2. 31 MAR

    Buy vs. Build: The Decision Behind Growing Wealth

    Most people think real estate development is just construction. It’s not. The real game starts years before a shovel hits the ground and that’s where fortunes are made or lost. In this episode, Mikey Taylor and Michael Michalov break down the complete development cycle from raw land to stabilized asset. They cover how to assess whether buying or building makes sense for your situation, the entitlement process that can take years and cost hundreds of thousands before you build anything, how to work with cities to avoid expensive dead ends, the capital stack breakdown on a real development deal, and why they believe Southern California’s difficulty is potentially an investment advantage. They also get into a heated debate about when value is actually “realized” in development  and share the real numbers on a North Hollywood project tracking from a targeted $9.5M cost to $17M projected stabilized value. Whether you’re considering your first development deal or deciding between buying stabilized assets and building from scratch, this episode gives you the operator-level framework. #RealEstateDevelopment #WealthBuilding #RealEstateInvesting Timestamps: 0:00 — Buy vs. Build: Two completely different paths 01:47 — When buying beats building (and vice versa) 03:35 — The biggest mistake beginner developers make? 06:08 — How to gauge city appetite before you could risk capital 08:12 — Tying up property under contract during entitlements 10:45 — Architects, engineers, and the entitlement process 14:26 — Capital stack breakdown: the $10M example 17:06 — The “realized value” debate (heated) 21:11 — Why Southern California may be one of the hardest markets 25:14 — The single greatest risk in real estate development? 28:13 — Final framework: when to buy, when to build, when to wait This content is for informational purposes only, is not offered as investment advice and should not be deemed as investment advice, and reflects the opinions and projections of COMMUNE as of the date of publication, which are subject to change without notice at any time subsequent to the date of issue. COMMUNE does not represent or warrant that the information presented in this message is accurate, current, or complete or that the estimates, opinions, projections or assumptions made in the message will prove to be accurate or realized. Certain statements reflect projections or expectations of future financial or economic performance of the project.  Such “forward-looking” statements are based on various assumptions, which assumptions may not prove to be correct.  Accordingly, there can be no assurance that such assumptions and statements will accurately predict future events or the project’s actual performance. Past performance is not an indication of future results. This content does not constitute an offer to invest and such offer will only be made by means of an offering document that should be carefully reviewed before determining whether to invest. As with any investment there is a risk of loss, including up to the amount of investment. Neither this message nor its contents should be construed as legal, tax, investment, or other advice.  Individuals are urged to consult with their own tax, legal, and investment advisers before making any investment decision.

    33 min
  3. 28 MAR

    How We're Analyzing a $18M Multifamily Building (Step by Step)

    Most people will never buy a piece of real estate not because they don't have the money, but because nobody ever sat them down and walked them through every single step of the process. In this episode, we pull back the curtain on a real deal: a 37-unit multifamily building in North Hollywood, California. From the first back-of-the-napkin math to the moment the title transfers, we break down the entire acquisition step by step, number by number, decision by decision. We cover the pre-offer analysis, how to build credibility with brokers when new to investing, the four pillars of due diligence often overlooked, two real financing scenarios comparing the trade-off between leverage and margin, and why operating the asset rather than only finding it can influence potential returns. Whether you're evaluating your first deal or refining your process on your tenth, this episode provides an educational perspective. This content is for informational purposes only, is not offered as investment advice and should not be deemed as investment advice, and reflects the opinions and projections of COMMUNE as of the date of publication, which are subject to change without notice at any time subsequent to the date of issue. COMMUNE does not represent or warrant that the information presented in this message is accurate, current, or complete or that the estimates, opinions, projections or assumptions made in the message will prove to be accurate or realized. Certain statements reflect projections or expectations of future financial or economic performance of the project.  Such “forward-looking” statements are based on various assumptions, which assumptions may not prove to be correct.  Accordingly, there can be no assurance that such assumptions and statements will accurately predict future events or the project’s actual performance. Past performance is not an indication of future results. This content does not constitute an offer to invest and such offer will only be made by means of an offering document that should be carefully reviewed before determining whether to invest. As with any investment there is a risk of loss, including up to the amount of investment. Neither this message nor its contents should be construed as legal, tax, investment, or other advice.  Individuals are urged to consult with their own tax, legal, and investment advisers before making any investment decision.

    46 min
  4. 17 MAR

    He Went From Poverty to a $25M portfolio in Real Estate by 31

    Michael Mnatsakanian grew up in poverty as a first-generation American raised by a single mom. He got an engineering degree from UCSD, commissioned as a U.S. Army officer, and started investing in real estate from a barracks in Fairbanks, Alaska with little money. Five years later, he’s built a $25M+ real estate portfolio, raised over $10M in capital, and completely abandoned the Airbnb model for something many investors may not be familiar with: co-living. In this conversation, Mikey and Michael break down the mechanics of how he went from a VA loan on a duplex to buying 20 rental cabins with zero dollars out of pocket, why he believes co-living is the most overlooked strategy in real estate right now, and how his approach to financing allows him to acquire properties in various market conditions. They also get into the psychology of coming from nothing, why poverty created both paralysis and an unfair advantage for him, why analysis paralysis nearly killed his investing career, and the ultimatum he gave himself that changed everything. This is one of the most tactically dense episodes Life With Mikey has ever done. Whether you’re an active investor, considering your first deal, or sitting on capital you haven’t deployed, this one will offer perspectives of how to think about real estate. Topics Covered VA loans, house hacking, seller financing, subject-to acquisitions, bird dogging vs. wholesaling, co-living strategy, capital raising, affordable housing, creative deal structuring, building wealth from zero, and why the smartest investors are leaving short-term rentals behind. Chapters:  0:15 - VA loans and military investing 04:14 - Childhood poverty and the fear of financial mistakes 4:52 - The ultimatum that broke analysis paralysis 06:42 - Why real estate is a cheat code for wealth 12:42 - Buying 20 rental cabins with zero money down 17:00 - Co-living strategy explained 25:36 - Why $200/month rentals trap investors 31:34 - Affordable housing and why the government fails 42:11- Raising capital with your back against the wall 48:17 - Balancing wealth building with family time This content is for informational purposes only, is not offered as investment advice and should not be deemed as investment advice, and reflects the opinions and projections of COMMUNE as of the date of publication, which are subject to change without notice at any time subsequent to the date of issue. COMMUNE does not represent or warrant that the information presented in this message is accurate, current, or complete or that the estimates, opinions, projections or assumptions made in the message will prove to be accurate or realized. This content does not constitute an offer to invest. As with any investment there is a risk of loss, including up to the amount of investment. Certain statements reflect projections or expectations of future financial or economic performance of the project.  Such “forward-looking” statements are based on various assumptions, which assumptions may not prove to be correct.  Accordingly, there can be no assurance that such assumptions and statements will accurately predict future events or the project’s actual performance. Past performance is not an indication of future results. Neither this message nor its contents should be construed as legal, tax, investment, or other advice.  Individuals are urged to consult with their own tax, legal, and investment advisers before making any investment decision. Certain information contained herein may be derived from third party sources and has not been independently verified. COMMUNE has not and will not independently verify this information. Where such sources include opinions and projections, such opinions and projections should be ascribed only to the applicable third party source and not to COMMUNE.

    57 min
  5. 3 MAR

    Why Your Salary Might Not Build Long-Term Wealth

    If all your income stopped tomorrow, how long would you last? Many people can't answer that question and  that's part of the problem. In this episode, Mikey and Michael discuss why society often prioritizes income titles, salaries, and promotions, while ownership remains an underexplored strategy for building long-term financial security.. They explore the difference between being rich and being wealthy, why income tends to be linear while ownership has the potential to compound over time, and ways to begin building an ownership position without leaving your job. Michael also shares his personal journey of transitioning from a six-figure banking career to starting from scratch, and the lessons he learned along the way. If you're earning good money but still feel stuck, this episode offers a fresh perspective. TIMESTAMPS 0:00 If all your income stopped tomorrow, how long do you have? 1:08 The difference between being rich and being wealthy 2:53 "What do you want to be when you grow up?" How the programming starts 4:32 Michael's story: conditioned to “follow the rules” until his wife said “quit” 7:51 The achievement loop: grades, titles, promotions, repeat - this this cycle might not lead to long-term wealth 11:12 Dopamine and income: why earning feels good but doesn’t compound over time.  14:59 How ownership changes the math: working the same hours, unlimited potential upside 17:03 C suite salary vs. equity owner: same stress, vastly different outcome 22:10 Michael’s story of walking away from banking at 31 and making $0 for 18 months 31:34 How W2 employees can start building ownership today, without quitting their jobThis content is for informational purposes only, is not offered as investment advice and should not be deemed as investment advice, and reflects the opinions and projections of COMMUNE as of the date of publication, which are subject to change without notice at any time subsequent to the date of issue. COMMUNE does not represent or warrant that the information presented in this message is accurate, current, or complete or that the estimates, opinions, projections or assumptions made in the message will prove to be accurate or realized. This content does not constitute an offer to invest. As with any investment there is a risk of loss, including up to the amount of investment. Certain statements reflect projections or expectations of future financial or economic performance of the project.  Such “forward-looking” statements are based on various assumptions, which assumptions may not prove to be correct.  Accordingly, there can be no assurance that such assumptions and statements will accurately predict future events or the project’s actual performance. Past performance is not an indication of future results. Neither this message nor its contents should be construed as legal, tax, investment, or other advice.  Individuals are urged to consult with their own tax, legal, and investment advisers before making any investment decision.

    37 min
  6. 24 FEB

    2026 Potential Wealth-Building Opportunities Amid Market Shifts

    In today's market, access to capital has become more restricted, with banks lending less than in previous years. The real estate market may feel stagnant, and stock prices appear high relative to historical norms. However, periods of market uncertainty can often create opportunities for those who are well-positioned to act strategically. In this episode, we examine six investment strategies that some investors are exploring in the current environment along with two strategies that we, as long-term investors, are considering. Here’s what we cover: The rise of service businesses (HVAC, plumbing, electrical) as resilient industries in uncertain times The role of private credit in offering potential returns for qualified investors A shift toward fundamental investing strategies in public markets Real estate opportunities in times of market correction The potential for alternative real estate models like boutique hotels Understanding government incentives in housing markets We also break down: Active vs passive investing PE rollups and what it could mean for consumers Evaluating risk tolerance vs risk capacity If you’ve felt “reluctantly optimistic” about this market… this episode is for you. The right move at the wrong time is the wrong move. This content is for informational purposes only, is not offered as investment advice and should not be deemed as investment advice, and reflects the opinions and projections of COMMUNE as of the date of publication, which are subject to change without notice at any time subsequent to the date of issue. COMMUNE does not represent or warrant that the information presented in this message is accurate, current, or complete or that the estimates, opinions, projections or assumptions made in the message will prove to be accurate or realized. This content does not constitute an offer to invest. As with any investment there is a risk of loss, including up to the amount of investment. Certain statements reflect projections or expectations of future financial or economic performance of the project.  Such “forward-looking” statements are based on various assumptions, which assumptions may not prove to be correct.  Accordingly, there can be no assurance that such assumptions and statements will accurately predict future events or the project’s actual performance. Past performance is not an indication of future results. Neither this message nor its contents should be construed as legal, tax, investment, or other advice.  Individuals are urged to consult with their own tax, legal, and investment advisers before making any investment decision.

    53 min
  7. 10 FEB

    Everyone Says “Wait.” Here’s Why That Could Cost You Seven Figures

    Are current conditions in the self-storage market creating opportunities that resemble past cycles? AJ Osborne shares how he evaluates today’s self-storage environment, including comparisons to post-2009 pricing, differences in asset quality, and factors that may influence supply and demand over time. The conversation explores concepts such as replacement cost, barriers to entry, interest rate dynamics, and how oversupply has affected certain markets historically. What you’ll learn• The simple test to evaluate oversupplied storage markets• How interest rate environments can influence development and financing decisions• The distinction between price and value across different facility types• Where multifamily distress is signaling pain and potential opportunity for storage buyers• Evaluating replacement cost in places like DFW and what to consider Timestamps0:00 Why today’s storage market may be relative to prior cycles3:10 Price vs. value and the small-market considerations7:25 The “rate runway” that may keep new supply out10:40 Barriers to entry and their role in market stability15:20 Multifamily maturities, defaults, and what it could imply for storage29:15 Markets AJ is buying now, including Dallas Fort Worth below replacement43:05 Why regulation can raise costs and could skew supply long term About our guestAJ Osborne is a self storage operator and investor with facilities across multiple states. His operator lens makes this a must-watch. The content of this video (“Video”) is for informational purposes only, is not offered as investment advice and should not be deemed as investment advice, and reflects the opinions and projections of COMMUNE as of the date of publication, which are subject to change without notice at any time subsequent to the date of issue. COMMUNE does not represent or warrant that the information presented in this Video is accurate, current, or complete or that the estimates, opinions, projections or assumptions made in the Video will prove to be accurate or realized.   Certain statements may reflect projections or expectations of future financial or economic performance.  Any “forward-looking” statements are based on various assumptions, which assumptions may not prove to be correct.  Accordingly, there can be no assurance that such assumptions and statements will accurately predict future events or actual performance of the subject. Past performance is not an indication of future results.   Certain information contained herein may be derived from third party sources and has not been independently verified. COMMUNE has not and will not independently verify this information. Where such sources include opinions and projections, such opinions and projections should be ascribed only to the applicable third party source and not to COMMUNE.   Neither this message nor its contents should be construed as legal, tax, investment, or other advice.  Individuals are urged to consult with their own tax, legal, and investment advisers before making any investment decision.

    57 min

Trailers

About

"Life With Mikey" is a dynamic podcast hosted by Mikey Taylor and Michael Michalov. Mikey Taylor, a former professional skateboarder turned real-estate-investing mogul, dives into the world of money, business, and culture. Drawing from his unique journey from skating the streets of LA to managing over $200 million in real estate, Mikey offers insightful discussions on achieving financial freedom and navigating the complexities of modern business. Michael Michalov, COO at COMMUNE boasts a robust 25-year journey in the financial services and real estate sectors.

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