Remember the television classic, Green Acres? Eddie Albert, who portrayed a New York City lawyer, and Eva Gabor, who portrayed his sophisticated spouse, move from the big city to the country – and it’s not quite what they expected.1

Recent retirement migration patterns appear to be producing a real-life version of the show.

The search for warm weather and affordability has driven some people out of Florida and into Appalachia. In May, Cameron McWhirter of The Wall Street Journal reported on the new trend, which was dubbed ‘half-backing.’ Half-backs are:2

“…northern transplants to Florida who are retiring in mountain communities of western North Carolina, northern Georgia, and eastern Tennessee. These retirees are reshaping local economies, boosting everything from tax revenues to restaurant receipts to sales of electric chair lifts for the elderly. Along the way, they are chafing locals who say the migration is pricing them out of homes and bringing in a sort of big-city brusqueness.”

From 2010 to 2017, net migration to counties in the mountainous regions of Georgia, North Carolina, and Tennessee increased 169 percent, while net migration to all U.S. retirement destination counties increased by just 67 percent.2 That hasn’t pushed these states to the top of the list of retiree destinations, but they’re now in the top 10. Smart Asset reported retirees’ favorite places to relocate are:3

1. Florida
2. Arizona
3. North Carolina
4. South Carolina
5. Nevada
6. Texas
7. Oregon
8. Idaho
9. Alabama
10. Georgia

It’s notable that Texas, Georgia, Oregon, North Carolina, Nevada, Florida, and Arizona are also among the top 10 destinations for Millennials!4

If you’re planning to move during retirement – and you are considering one of these states – it’s a good idea to think about the ways current trends are likely to affect property values, home prices, and the cost of living over time.

Ready to Feed a Crowd?
Whether you’re cheering on a favorite team, celebrating a child’s birthday, or going to a potluck, Food Network’s Bacon Cheeseburger Garbage Bread is a crowd pleaser.5

Bacon Cheeseburger Garbage Bread
2 pounds ground beef chuck
12 ounces American cheese slices (about 30 slices)
All-purpose flour, for dusting
1-1/2 pounds store-bought pizza dough, at room temperature (see Cook’s Note below)
5 tablespoons ketchup
2 tablespoons yellow mustard
1 medium red onion, finely chopped
12 strips cooked bacon, broken in half
32-ounce jar dill pickle chips (about 35 to 40 chips; finely chop 2 tablespoons worth; leave the others whole)
Water
Sesame seeds, for garnish
1/2 cup mayonnaise
1 teaspoon dried onion flakes
1 teaspoon sugar
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 teaspoon dill pickle brine (from above jar)

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees; line a baking sheet with parchment paper.

Heat a large skillet over medium heat. Add the beef and cook, stirring to break it up into small crumbles, until cooked through, about 8-10 minutes. Meanwhile, roughly chop half of the cheese, leaving the other half as whole slices. Set aside.

Using a slotted spoon, remove the beef from the skillet and transfer to a large bowl; discard the fat and liquid in the pan. Let the beef cool completely in the bowl, then stir in the chopped cheese. On a lightly floured work surface, roll the dough into a 20” x 14” rectangle. Arrange the beef and cheese mixture evenly on one half of the dough, starting on the shorter end and leaving a 1” border on all sides. Drizzle 2 tablespoons ketchup evenly over the beef mixture and the uncovered half of the dough; repeat with all the mustard, and then the red onion. Lay down the remaining cheese slices evenly over the half of the dough with no beef mixture, leaving a 1” border on all sides. Arrange the bacon pieces and 24 dill pickle chips over the beef mixture.

Working from the short side with the beef mixture, tightly roll up the dough into a log – jelly-roll style. Pinch the open ends together to seal, then tuck them underneath the log. Transfer the log, seam side-down, to the prepared baking sheet. Brush all over the dough with water and sprinkle with sesame seeds. Bake at 400 degrees, rotating the pan 180 degrees halfway through, until the bread is golden brown, about 40 minutes.

While the bread bakes, whisk together the mayonnaise, onion flakes, sugar, a pinch of salt and pepper and the remaining 3 tablespoons ketchup, 2 tablespoons finely chopped dill pickle chips, and 1 teaspoon pickle brine in a small bowl. Taste and season the sauce, and add additional salt if needed.

Let the bread cool for 10 minutes. Slice into 8 servings, and serve warm with the sauce.

Cook’s Note: To make rolling and shaping the dough easy, keep the dough refrigerated until 10 to 15 minutes before you are ready to use it.

What Do You Know About Museums?
There are all types of museums – art museums, field museums, children’s museums, and more – around the world. See what you know about museums and installations by taking this quiz.

1. Which museum has a ‘fatberg’? It’s an object described as a “… chunk of congealed grease and garbage [that] changes color, sweats, and even produces broods of freshly hatched flies.”6
a. Museum of Science and Industry (Chicago)
b. Museum of Modern Art (New York)
c. Museum of London (United Kingdom)
d. None of the above

2. Which of the following is a real headline about a museum?7
a. A Man Fell Into a Giant Black Hole at Anish Kapoor’s Latest Art Installation
b. Vans and the Van Gogh Museum Want to Turn Your Sneakers Into Works of Art
c. Slice of History: A Pizza Museum is Coming to Chicago
d. All of the above

3. Which museum has the Burke Brise Soleil, a ‘moveable, wing-like sunscreen?’8
a. Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum
b. Milwaukee Art Museum
c. San Diego Air & Space Museum
d. Musée d’Orsay (France)

4. Where can you find Frida Kahlo’s Self-Portrait Dedicated To Leon Trotsky?9
a. National Museum of Women in the Arts (Washington, DC)
b. Frida Kahlo Museum (Mexico)
c. The Louvre (France)
d. Hermitage Museum (Russia)

The Evolution of Language
If you’ve ever seen a performance of one of Shakespeare’s plays in the language in which it was originally written, you might have had doubts the language was English. In Measure for Measure, Duke Vincento says:10

“Of government the properties to unfold,
Would seem in me t’ affect speech and discourse;
Since I am put to know that your own science
Exceeds, in that, the lists of all advice
My strength can give you.”

The passage is as clear to many Americans as one of the latest 840 additions to Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary: TL;DR (a.k.a. tldr or TLDR). The dictionary describes TL;DR as an abbreviation or noun. It means, ‘Too long; didn’t read.’11

Other new additions to the dictionary included terms related to technology and what we do with it – such as haptics, airplane mode, force quit, Instagramming, biohacking, and Fintech – and food terms like hophead, zoodles, mocktail, and hangry.12

As Merriam Webster’s ‘Words At Play’ concluded, “…the TL;DR of all this is that the dictionary can also be a bingeable time suck with a lot to say about life itself.”12

Quiz Answers:
1. C – Museum of London (United Kingdom)
2. D – All of the above
3. B – Milwaukee Art Museum
4. A – National Museum of Women in the Arts (Washington, DC)

Sources:
1 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_Acres
2 https://www.wsj.com/articles/forget-florida-more-northern-retirees-head-to-appalachia-1526388500?platform=hootsuite (or go to https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/peakcontent/Peak+Documents/LN_4th_Qtr_2018_WSJ-Forget_Florida-More_Northern_Retirees_Head_to_Appalachia-Footnote_2.pdf)
3 https://smartasset.com/retirement/where-are-retirees-moving-2018-edition
4 https://smartasset.com/mortgage/where-are-millennials-moving-2018-edition
5 https://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/food-network-kitchen/bacon-cheeseburger-garbage-bread-3885966
6 http://mentalfloss.com/article/554403/museum-of-london-whitechapel-fatberg-livestream
7 http://mentalfloss.com/section/museums
8 https://mam.org/visit/burke-brise-soleil.php
9 https://nmwa.org/works/self-portrait-dedicated-leon-trotsky
10 https://books.google.com/books?id=bOdBAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA36&lpg=PA36&dq=But+that+to+your+sufficiency+as+your+Worth+is+able,++And+let+them+work&source=bl&ots=Q3z5yTy5cX&sig=5BhF6BxPV62tP4Q9eJcH8g1Dn0A&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiA96KJkqTdAhVCOK0KHQP_D5kQ6AEwAnoECAgQAQ#v=onepage&q=But%20that%20to%20your%20sufficiency%20as%20your%20Worth%20is%20able%2C%20%20And%20let%20them%20work&f=false (or go to https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/peakcontent/Peak+Documents/LN_4th_Qtr_2018_Shakespeare_Play-Measure_for_Measure-Footnote_10.pdf)
11 https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/TL%3BDR
12 https://www.merriam-webster.com/words-at-play/new-words-in-the-dictionary-september-2018
This material was prepared by Carson Group Coaching. Carson Group Coaching is not affiliated with the named broker/dealer.

Get in touch

Have a question?

    FREE CONSULTATION

    Need a second opinion on your portfolio?
    Get your free financial consultation today: