Regina Leader-Post

THE WILD RISE OF ZILLOW GONE WILD

Predicting the next big thing on social media comes easy to Samir Mezrahi

- RACHEL KURZIUS The Washington Post

On a sunny Monday afternoon, Samir Mezrahi is in a windowless room, toggling between his multiple inboxes, when he spots one particular­ly promising subject line: “Boob home in Florida.”

He clicks on the real estate listing, which came from a follower. The geodesic domes that make up the US$500,000 Melbourne, Fla., house do indeed resemble a bosom. But is that enough for Mezrahi to post the home on Zillow Gone Wild?

Since he started the account in December 2020, it has exploded into a social media phenomenon, amassing more than four million followers across major platforms and spinning off an HGTV show that debuts in May with Mezrahi as executive producer. Mezrahi's recipe has remained mostly unchanged: Find the zaniest homes on the market — castle-themed mansions with full drawbridge­s, for example — then blast them out to the internet with a bit of pithy commentary, and watch the clicks, likes and shares pile up. The simplicity of the premise is part of the brilliance; it's the result of the decade-plus that Mezrahi spent charting the Internet's fascinatio­ns as social media director for Buzzfeed.

Zillow Gone Wild doesn't work without the right ingredient­s. And Mezrahi isn't quite convinced the boob house has what it takes.

“I didn't know dome homes were popular until starting this account, so the first couple of ones were interestin­g, but this one is kind of grey inside,” he says. “A dome home isn't so special anymore.”

Then again, it's early March and actress Sydney Sweeney has just hosted Saturday Night Live, somehow triggering a discussion about the political influence of her décolletag­e. So, maybe, the double domes in Florida will actually gain traction as “part of the Sydney Sweeney discourse.”

Mezrahi follows some general guidelines when picking the houses that ultimately get featured on Zillow Gone Wild. For a luxury listing to make it into a “Mansion Monday” post, for instance, “it can't just be a mansion, it has to be a mansion-plus.” One of his most viral picks in recent memory fell into this category — a $20 million Arizona spread with a slew of amenities: a go-kart track, a 6,000-square foot “man cave,” a golf simulator, home theatre, dance studio and video gaming area. It racked up more than 24 million views, mostly within the first 24 hours.

“It's what you say you would do if you're rich,” Mezrahi says. “When you're a kid you would say you want all these things ... they went through with it and did it all.”

Another genre that tends to hit is what Mezrahi dubs, “you never know what's going on inside a home.” These posts are reserved for listings with ordinary-looking exteriors that conceal, say, an extreme enthusiasm for Barbiecore, a pirate ship-themed DJ booth or a 4,400-square-foot replica of an old western town.

At this point, Zillow Gone Wild has enough reach that Mezrahi doesn't have to do much of his own digging for content. He gets 20 to 30 houses sent to him every day, mostly from followers but also from real estate agents angling to get publicity.

He begins each morning in front of the computer screens in the drab office that he refers to as his “bunker,” studying a spreadshee­t that tracks his follower counts, then sifting through his inbox for wildenough houses.

Aside from eye-popping mansions and bizarre interiors, the rural stuff — Dr. Seuss-esque homes on dozens of forested acres, former grain silos turned into residences — is usually a sure bet, too. Really, anything that makes viewers think “let's start a commune,” Mezrahi says.

When Mezrahi, now 41, published his inaugural home — an Instagram post of an idyllic Vermont cottage that contained seven rusty jail cells — much of the world was still quarantini­ng. At the onset of that first, bleakest-of-bleak pandemic winter, Mezrahi saw an opportunit­y to build a new audience. Plus, the real estate market was going haywire, with people bidding six figures over list price and packing open houses. If you didn't have the means to buy a real house, you could at least get your kicks scrolling for fantasy digs on Zillow or Redfin, both of which experience­d major traffic boosts.

Mezrahi's recounting of how he inked the HGTV show is significan­tly less cinematic. The premise entails actor Jack Mcbrayer (Kenneth from 30 Rock), taking viewers inside “non-traditiona­l homes,” per HGTV'S write-up. Each will be ranked before the season finale declares the “wildest” home of all. Reaching this point, Mezrahi says, was a three-year slog that moved in fits and starts. Rather than dwelling on the HGTV thing, Mezrahi is much more interested in finding the next viral sensation.

He also has several other real estate accounts: Celebrity Home Shopping, where he reviews the homes of famous people and two Zillow Gone Wild spinoffs — Celebrity Homes, which features stars' houses that are for sale, and Open House, which focuses more on tours. Originally from Tulsa, he went to the University of Oklahoma for a very different type of accounting — the CPA kind. After graduation, he moved to New York City to work for a small firm and then a health-care startup. “I was not a very good accountant,” he says.

In his free time, he derived significan­tly more satisfacti­on from learning about the ebb and flow of the 2010s internet and writing posts for Buzzfeed as an unpaid “community contributo­r.”

Summer Anne Burton, the former head of creative at Buzzfeed, says that among those volunteer writers, Mezrahi was a star. Often, he would find whatever was trending at the top of Reddit and whip it into a post.

In 2012, when Mezrahi was 29, Buzzfeed hired him as an intern. “I definitely felt older (than a lot of colleagues), but I knew what they were doing was good and it was a good place to be,” he says.

Within three years, he worked his way up to director of social media.

Former Buzzfeed writer Rachel Zarrell worked closely with him back then, trying to find “the thing that's going to be the only thing everybody's talking about.” She says she isn't surprised Mezrahi scored with Zillow Gone Wild.

“He's always 10 steps ahead,” she says.

Zillow Gone Wild wasn't his first big hit, either. In 2015, he started another account, Kale Salad, which shares wholesome memes and gives credit to the people who originally made them. Though it's received less mainstream recognitio­n, Kale Salad actually has more Instagram followers than Zillow Gone Wild.

None of this, however, was enough to save Mezrahi at Buzzfeed. The now-struggling company laid him off last spring. He had survived previous cuts, “but eventually you don't last, especially as a strategist kind of person,” Mezrahi says.

Mezrahi declined to talk on the record about family, his own home or life in general outside work. Which is ironic, given that Zillow Gone Wild is built primarily on satisfying a voyeuristi­c curiosity about what's going on behind other people's closed doors.

It's not that he's media shy. He does interviews about real estate and appears in Zillow Gone Wild videos, narrating with his gravelly voice. But unlike other social media influencer­s, he insists that the content isn't about him.

Still, there is one thing that Mezrahi shares in common with the rest of them: He's trying to figure out how to make more money off the internet. Aside from the HGTV executive producer credit, most of Zillow Gone Wild's revenue comes from ads. He did one for The Bachelor, posting what looked like a typical listing but for the show's famed house. But the account still brings in “very little” money. He imagines a future where his newsletter has a paid classified section or where he dedicates more time to growing a Youtube audience because that platform can be the most lucrative.

Eventually, Mezrahi might need to hire some kind of administra­tive assistant. He has mixed feelings about handing over even partial control of the Zillow Gone Wild inbox. Going through the contenders, “is very fun for me.”

Which brings us back to the boob house.

Ultimately, the discourse around Sweeney wins out against the blah interior. Mezrahi posts the home on March 12, with the caption, “Can youuuuu guess what the subject line of the email was when someone submitted this home?” It gets more than 800 reactions on Facebook, 1,500 likes on X and 12,600 likes on Instagram.

Not one of his viral sensations by any stretch, but not a flop, either. On to the next.

 ?? PHOTOS: KELLY MARSHALL/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? A Jeff Bezos mask, second shelf, is from a time he thought it could be funny to record himself doing video reviews of Amazon products as Bezos.
PHOTOS: KELLY MARSHALL/THE WASHINGTON POST A Jeff Bezos mask, second shelf, is from a time he thought it could be funny to record himself doing video reviews of Amazon products as Bezos.
 ?? ?? Mezrahi operates three other real estate accounts. Each day, agents and followers send him dozens of listings to consider featuring.
Mezrahi operates three other real estate accounts. Each day, agents and followers send him dozens of listings to consider featuring.
 ?? ?? More of Mezrahi's props around the office.
More of Mezrahi's props around the office.
 ?? ?? Samir Mezrahi
Samir Mezrahi

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