(upbeat music) - [Mikey] Sometimes I'll
just think about like, at what point in my life
did I make a decision that has cascaded into other decisions that have led me to where
I am at this exact moment. - This is that moment.
(Mikey chuckles) Since we started this channel, we have tried to do everything can to bring you all the best content. - Come on. - But this week we thought
we would get outta LA and try something a little bit different. (upbeat music) We just arrived to the Rapid City, two hours away from the bunkers. It's gonna be a really interesting trip. It is so cold outside. Look at me, how many layers I have. Mikey is picking up the rental car. It's a little bit chaotic as usual. Let's get started. - We're going somewhere that
I never thought I would go to. We're going to Arby's right now. Enes is a big Arby's guy. He always talks about it. He loves that melted
nacho cheese they have. - I just love that everybody
watches our channel and they think like we
eat like $300 dinners and like fast foods. - We argue about whether to
go to Arby's or Taco Bell. - To Taco Bell. (paper rustles)
(upbeat music) - Honestly, I should've
got it without cheese. Dude, I think it would've been better. (upbeat music) We're at the Cowboy Inn. (upbeat music) So we drove from Rapid
City to the Cowboy Inn. - It's a small motel, and guys have been
getting comfortable lately staying at good places. This is a bit of a change. Granted, the lady at the
reception was so nice that she looked at us and she's like, "You guys are big guys. You guys can use an extra room," so we got two rooms. Let's check it out. Are we ready for this? - [Erman] Yeah, I wanna see it. - Let's see. Oh, oh from '70s. Holy shit, well, this is no room.
- It smells good. It smells like downy. - Actually, can I say
something, it's clean. - Yeah.
- Like it feels. It's just--
- Yeah. - I like the CRT TV. ♪ Tell me more, tell me more ♪ - [Enes] Who doesn't like a good ole John Travolta over here? - I mean, John Travolta
was a good looking dude back in the day, look at him. He's got, he had moves. It was a long day, we
flew all the way here. We drove all the way to, I don't even know what town this is, we're
in this little motel. It's nice, but we got some work to do. Erman, we gotta plan the
shoot tomorrow, let's go. - [Erman] Let's go.
(upbeat music) - The next morning we were all set to meet our host, Dante Vicino, a San Diego architect turned bunker guru. Dante has spent the last five years working to turn these desolate bunkers into a community of like-minded people. So we just finished our
breakfast with Dante. I'm so excited for today. I know we're used to touring some of the most expensive
properties in the world, but something about today's story. The fact that we're
checking out this bunker, the whole story, conversion,
I'm literally so excited. And tonight we're staying there. It's a little cold, we can barely talk, but enthusiasm is definitely there. (classical instrumental music) In 2016, Vivos acquired a U.S Army base, formerly known as the
Black Hills Ordinance Depot with 575 concrete and
steel underground bunkers that were originally built
as a military fortress that stored explosives and munitions. Vivos has repurposed to base into the largest private
shelter community on Earth for as many as 5,000 people to survive virtually any catastrophic
event and its aftermath. There's really nowhere quite
like it in the entire world. (classical instrumental music) - What is Vivos xPoint? - It is our new name for something that's
been around for 80 years. This was originally called the
Black Hills Ordinance Depot. And when the military built
this for World War II, they had everything from the production, the manufacturing end,
the distribution end, and then the storage, even testing for bombs, weapons, munitions, artillery, you name it. What we have turned this into is now the ultimate
off-grid survival community. And it is the only place like it, not only in the country, but in the world. - [Enes] And it is the largest one also. - It is also the largest. This is the highest point on our property. And I just love it because
it's a vantage point. We can see the entire property, all of the hundreds upon
hundreds of bunkers. - Not to mention you'll
literally see anybody coming in. - Yeah.
- So you have a really good sense of the area and control of the area. - Yeah, exactly, from
a security standpoint, this is a very strategic location as well. - Amazing. I want you to explain
it in your own words. How does it feel to be here? Because, first off, I love it. It's so quiet. - I still get the novelty of being here, from the first time I ever
stepped foot on the property. And that was, geez, back in 2016, 2017, I wanna say. I always tell people you have to really, you can see it on pictures, video, you can see it on YouTube, you can see it on cable TV, but then it's different
when you're actually here. The connection to nature. We haven't been on a paved road in about an hour of driving now. And there's something
that's just kind of raw and for lack of a better
word, it's just cool. (gentle music) - [Enes] Let's do that one. - [Dante] I've made an
excuse through this. Okay, I've...
(timer beeping) (vehicle engine revving) - In this video today, we'll be exploring the whole site and visiting three different bunkers in different stages of their development. We will start with an abandoned bunker as it would've been when
the military left the base in the 1960s, and we'll finish with a
completed bunker ready to live in where we'll be staying the night. (upbeat music) All right, so we just
arrived to the first bunker. This is an empty one. Dante is gonna show us around. Tell us what we have in front of us. - So, this is an original bunker. Before we do anything to it, this is what they will look like. And then you'll see as we
progress throughout the day, what we're turning them into. And all of those improvements
are really done on the inside. So at the end of the day, every single one we walk up to today, it'll look just like that. Once we go inside, that's where it really starts to change. But this is 80 years of
history just stuck in time, just stuck to right there.
- Amazing. - Yeah.
- Dante, let's go check it out.
- We gotta see it. - We gotta see it, let's go.
(Dante chuckles) Wow, okay, I know you mentioned it to me. - Yeah.
- You have two lengths, 60 foot and 80 foot, is
this the 80 foot one? - These are all 80 foot, yeah. - 80 foot, okay.
- Yes. - Everything I'm gonna show you today is gonna be in 80 foot. - You can see the lines or forms that they've used.
- Right. - To kind of frame the concrete. - And as an architect, I love that. I think it is so cool when the structure and the engineering of a building, of anything we have
here is fully indicated and displayed in the
final part of the design, and you don't see that a lot. You see in standard development. Now, these were not meant
architecture masterpieces, but there's something
that's so cool about them being now used for architecture, in that, yeah, you can see perfectly they have the foundation and then they come up with this block. This particular section
goes about six feet out. And it's like an anchor underneath the dirt that they put over. So right now if we were to see
daylight again through here, it would be through about eight feet of concrete and dirt combined. - Amazing, and we have to
address this echo in here. It's crazy.
(Dante chuckles) I mean, like Dante said, this is as raw as it gets.
- Yeah. - And keep in mind these
weren't built to be homes. - No.
- These were built to be storage units, safe storage units. - Exactly, the safest storage
that we had in the country probably at the time next to Fort Knox. - We've talked about it with waterproofing and proper maintenance. I genuinely think these will last forever. Dante, this is super interesting. I love that we saw it at raw, but I wanna go to construction site. I wanna see how you guys frame the walls. - Yeah.
- Frame the floors, and just kind of run the utilities. - You are gonna be amazed
at how normal that looks. If this is such a different
thing for you to see, we're gonna walk into the next
one and you're gonna be like, this looks like a normal house. - Normal house.
- And that's the whole point. - Let's go check it out.
- Let's go do it. (classical instrumental music) - The sheer scale of Vivos
xPoint is staggering, and covers a total land
area around 18 square miles. Everywhere you look you can see bunkers as far as the eye can see. With the peace and solitude, I can really understand why
people like it out here. Before we head to that second bunker, I wanna thank this week's
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for sponsoring this video. And now, let's get back to the bunker. (upbeat music) - This is kind of the halfway done bunker. This is one that we've
really taken our time with. You get a really good sense of like, this is really gonna start
looking like a house to you. (upbeat music) - And you've explained
this to us in the car, a lot of people here actually
leave their bunker door open. - Yeah.
- And actually have a regular exterior door like a house.
- Yeah, because really from this threshold back is your condition space. What we have here is
gonna be fuel storage. This is the water room. You'll see the PEX lines are kind of ready to go there.
- Yeah. - It's insulated. We have the polypro there, so that the water lines
don't get any frost. They don't freeze.
- Wow. - This right here will be where we'll have some fuel storage as well as that thing that I really like. That is a nuclear, biological, and chemical air filtration unit. It has a one way check valve. So it can only let air
in, but can't let it out. And it filters it, and then we can push that air out into the bunker through a dehumidifier. - Some of the people that buys in here, they're buying this place
because they feel safe and they feel like if something happens in the outside world, they can always come back here, right? - Yeah, this is the
perfect off grid location. South Dakota in general
is an amazing place to just get away from
the major urban centers that we have across the country, to get away from the coastlines, potentially targeted areas. And a lot of people just
really do feel safe here. I think it's a massive alternative to what you might be used to. - [Enes] It's a nice little escape. - Yeah, it's totally an escape. - Absolutely, Dante, take us in. - Sure.
- This looks like a house. - Yeah, it's like I said, really standard, just drywall construction. We have a vinyl flooring
that we laid down here. This is gonna be your
kitchen with the built-ins. Only in the main room, do we really use the full
height of the ceiling, minus the raised floor. We really don't need that
full height in the bedroom. So, you get an eight foot ceiling height, and then everything else on top of that, well, that's where your food storage goes. That's where your pantry items can go. So, as you can see, the floors,
it's a work in progress. So now we have the vinyl
flooring that we roll out over top of the plywood subfloor, that's now on top of a grid
of studs laid on their edge. - Uh-huh. - And again, that raised
flooring in this case was able to get us room for the plumbing to
come through underneath. So, we'll just keep on going. There's gonna be bedrooms
or multipurpose rooms. You could have an exercise room, you could have an office,
you could have a craft room. As we get to the back
here, this is the master. So the master is gonna
take up the full width. It has an on suite bathroom. So you have your own
private bathroom in here, which is nice. We'll probably do, you could probably easily put a California
king size bed in here and have more than enough
room to move around. Nice big closet space and everything. So up there in the middle, that is another blast valve. Just like what we have on the front, that's gonna be an air outlet
that goes to the chimneys. If you've seen the little kind of, stacks that come out the back, yep. You can run exhaust out of there. You can run coaxial. If you have a satellite dish on top, you can run coax out through that. If you wanna put in a wood burning stove. And next to that, yep,
this is one of my babies. I personally designed this. This is an escape door. In a perfect world, no emergency, nothing bad is happening.
- You good. - Ingress and ingress out the
one main door and you're fine. But what happens if there's a fire? What happens if that door got
frozen in place or blocked? So now we're able to use
this as a secondary escape only in case of emergency, obviously you're not gonna
be crawling up and down this thing to get in.
- Yeah. - And all you would do
is you throw the latches, you pull the door open, even the hinges are
specked to be way overbuilt so that you can just
move this with a finger. - And I also love that even the other additions and accessories
that you guys brought here. - Yeah.
- Kind of matches that concrete, steel--
- Yeah. - Bolting systems that
we're seeing throughout, they're also heavy duty. And to everyone, I mean, once you get your floors done
and have your rough utilities, it's just like building a house. - Yeah.
- Granted, you guys been doing it for so long that you've now figured out the best ways to like attach things on the walls, and like just optimize the overall construction phase of these bunkers. - Exactly. - Awesome, so that's it for this one. Where are we going next? - So now the next one is
gonna be my personal bunker, which is also our showroom units. It's gonna be real nice. You'll see exactly how cozy and how livable these
places can really be. - We'll be also staying with you. So that means we are really gonna see it. (Dante laughs)
I have no idea. I have Mikey smiling behind the camera. (Dante laughs) We're gonna stay tonight
at Dante's bunker. - Yep.
- It's gonna be interesting. Let's go check it out. Before we go look at the final bunker, Dante gave us an opportunity to experience a small part of the
culture of South Dakota. (classical instrumental music) All right, we're truly getting
out of our comfort zone. Not only we came to South Dakota, we're about to shoot some guns. Dante is gonna lead us. I'm excited, but I kind of have
no idea what I'm doing, so. (Dante chuckles) - I think I'll start out. I'll just get a few rounds off for both the AR and then the pistol. - Okay.
- And I'll show you guys how it's done. Get the target down range, and then I'll hand it over to you, how's does that sound? - It sounds good, I
mean, that's awfully far. I don't know how precise I am. My hands shake a little bit,
so we'll see how it goes. (Dante laughs) - You're on safe, so put it onto fire. Usually use your right
thumb for that, okay? - Yeah.
- Okay, just pull it back. There you go, so now shoulder it. - [Mikey] Get that stance, Enes, front foot forward, yeah.
- Okay, through the target. Sorry, look through the scope. And when you're ready, you put your finger on the trigger. - Why can't I see it all
the way through the scope? - Well, don't, you have to find the
eye relief on it, okay? - [Mikey] Enes, move your
eye back a little bit or you're gonna-- - Pull your eye back a little bit. - Oh, there you go.
- There you go. Aim for the orange. (gunshot blasting)
There you go. - Oh, that was fun.
- One more. (missile buzzing) - That's a lot of fun, yeah. - [Dante] There you go. (gunshots blasting) - [Mikey] It feels good. (gentle music) - Shooting rifles in the
middle of South Dakota was definitely an interesting experience. Since the day began and
we've been touring the site, we have seen an empty bunker, a bunker under construction
that is partially complete, and finally, we'll be
finishing with a completed one, where we'll spend the night and experience what it's like to sleep and
live in one of these bunkers. (upbeat music) Is this it? - This is it, man. This is the fully built, fully stocked, fully furnished, turnkey, you walk right in, turn
everything on and you can survive. So this one we have, the first thing you'll
notice is kind of this snorkel system that we've designed. That's what the NBC
filtration hooks up to. So that's where it's pulling air from. On top of that I have my 4G cell booster, so I get full bars inside
and full cell data. - Awesome, let's go inside, I'm excited. - Let's do it. (upbeat music) The doors just get easier.
- Yeah, just like a volt opens into another vault basically.
- Yeah, uh-huh, uh-huh. - All right, let's go inside. - All right.
- You go first. - You guys are the absolute first on the planet to get to
see this in this capacity. - And stay in it, so. - That's right.
- Okay, let's get started. Oh, wow.
(Dante laughs) - It's a little different.
- It feels so much more spacious. - If you had just the empty one, you could see where all the walls were, and you could see the back end, right? - Yeah.
- You had a very clear sense of very defined space and it almost felt a little more confined. But once you start--
- You lose the sense of depth. - Exactly, once you start optimizing that, we put the hallway in, we organize it with the
large great room here. I mean, it really makes it feel bigger. - I love the wood textures you brought, which kind of softens up that concrete type of feel.
- Yeah, exactly. But we wanted to keep kind of a rugged kind of barn house, somewhat masculine kind of
sensibility to that as well. And even the way we do the lighting here, we didn't wanna start
putting cans in the ceiling like you're used to with standard homes. We wanted to keep that open. We didn't wanna compromise the concrete just to put lighting in. So, what do we do? This really nice, open-- - Nice string lighting, yeah. - Yeah, that's kind of
an indoor outdoor thing, but it works really well
for this kind of space. - Amazing, I wanna cover the kitchen. And Dante, I've seen
these cabinets before, you know why? They're from Ikea.
- Yes, they're. - They're really good. Their hardware is amazing.
- They're good. And you know what I like is
that every is soft closing. You don't have to see
any hardware sticking out because they have that kinda nice little ridge for you to grab onto. I think it's just subtle, and it doesn't need to stand out. - To the point, gets the job done. - Exactly. - You have another seating area here. I'm assuming this is kind
of where you hang out. - Yeah, I mean, I have my laptop there. That's kind of my office right now, for lack of a better term. But I like it, 'cause I can
just sit there, put my feet up. It's nice and plush and cozy, just a nice little nook. - This is awesome. So, I wanna ask you this, you've done the layout here
a little bit differently. As soon as you walk in, you see the entire hallway and you didn't compromise
the ceiling heights here. What was your vision for that approach? - So we wanted to keep as much kind of volume present as
you go all the way down. It just kind of makes this hallway feel a lot bigger than it actually is by letting the ceiling go
all the way up to the top. However, what you're not seeing here, which is kind of a
counterpoint to what we had in the last one in 1201, the kind of the in progress is that we have completely enclosed all of the overhead storage. So when we start walking into the rooms, you're gonna see it's still the regular
eight foot ceiling height. So what do we do with the rest of that? Well, everything on top of that eight foot all the way to the top, our beautiful storage space.
- Is storage. Take us in.
- So, okay, so the first room here is the master.
- Oh, nice. This room looks really cozy. I'm assuming each room
you went with little bit different colors and just spice it up. - Yeah, just a little bit
different color scheme. But again, it always
keeps the same attitude, the same kind of barn house, nice, rustic, warm, cozy. - Amazing.
- Yeah. - I mean, it's a good size bedroom. I like the carpet floors. It's just comfortable.
- Yep. - I'm just gonna go to the room next door. - Yeah, for sure.
- Nice. - [Dante] This is kind of the little entertainment theater room. - Look at you, you get a
little screening room here. (Dante laughs) I'm jealous.
- Well, a screening room that needs a bigger TV, but it's coming. - You don't see behind camera.
- That's right, okay. - Mikey is just smiling already. He's like, yep, yep. We're gonna sit down here and watch TV. - So now the only thing that's
gonna really make the me feel really happy about this space is once I actually can
get my hands on a PS5, then it'll feel good, but until then... (Dante laughs) - I can totally see it.
- It's impossible right now. - [Enes] I'm assuming we've got bathroom. - So we have two bathrooms. This one has a nice full vanity toilet and a nice shower with a tub. Again, just simple. So on the other side, what we'll see in the next bath is that you just get a vanity and a toilet and we have hookups ready and waiting for the washer and dryer. - How many rooms do you have here? - So it's a four bedroom and two bathroom. One of the four bedrooms
is kind of being used as an extra space, and then we have two
storage rooms in the back, kind of the storage utility.
- I mean, you pulled a lot out of a 2200 square foot-ish. - Yeah, yeah.
- Amazing. - Without making it feel cramped. And all these rooms are about
12 feet wide and 10 feet long. - All right, let's check it out. - Check out this room here.
- Oh, nice. - This one's kind of a kids'
room, it could be a guest room. We got the bunk beds in here. We wanted to go with kind
of the fallout theme, but then kind of the old school. - Mikey, can we get a close up here. - Yeah, we have to.
- That's right. - [Mikey] Is this why
we're sleeping tonight? - [Dante] That is where you
guys are sleeping tonight, so get cozy but--
- Yeah, we will get cozy. We got another bedroom, I'm assuming, or like a storage area here. - Yeah, currently it's a
bedroom work in progress. - Okay.
- I might actually change my mind and turn it into an office. - Got it.
- I mean, hell, I might even just put a
standalone jacuzzi in there. - [Mikey] Who can say you got a jacuzzi inside a bunker, right? (Dante laughs)
- You can do that, you can do that.
- I could totally do that. - Another bedroom? - Another bedroom, so this one is mine. Again, you'll see that all the furnishings are different but cohesive, right? All the color schemes are
different, but cohesive. - Yeah. - And that's been the idea all along. - And you've kind of designed it more on the rustic side of things, a little bit more wood, iron.
- Exactly, yeah, exactly, I like
that kind of rod iron. To me it is more masculine. - Well, also it fits the surroundings. - It does, yeah, because does that steel, that rod iron does that not fit in with thinking about the rebar
inside the bunker itself? - [Enes] Absolutely. - So back here, this room is fuel storage. It is also, I'm gonna put some cleaning
supplies and stuff in here, but this right here is a dropdown ladder. You go up to that, and
that's how you access both sides of the overhead storage. - Gotcha.
- In the loft. - It's awesome to see that you have all that interior square footage, but yet on the back you
can tuck the utilities and you have that overhead space, so you can do a lot with it. And I'm assuming those are your batteries. - That's right, yeah.
- Okay. - So we have to have a full battery array. To just have a generator is pointless. You wanna have a generator that can feed a more passive system. So then I don't have to use the fuel all the time to run the generator. - Okay.
- So then you also have to have a smart inverter and charger. You have to have a way of telling that generator automatically,
turn on, we need it, turn off, we don't need it.
- We don't need it. - So in addition to that,
we have a solar controller. So I want that solar panel outside to be doing most of the work during the day.
- Heavy lifting. - Exactly, I want, and you can, really. You can expect that solar, which is a pretty modest panel size, that can do most of the heavy
lifting for the daytime, and then if I need a
little extra power at night and the battery's getting low, now that inverter just
kicks on the generator and we're running it for a
few hours and we're done. (upbeat music)
(air whooshing) - All right, so we just settled in. We're pretty tired. I had a banana, I shared
another butter with Mikey. It's pretty tasty, we're a little beat up. - Yeah.
- I'm responding to comments, he's handling footage. I assume we're gonna start cooking dinner. So far everything's good. Mikey's back is on fire. - And this is really
driving these dinner hands just constantly, it (indistinct) - I'm trying to hook everything. We have the internet, life's good. - Everybody thinks bunker
food is like military rations, MREs, that sort of BS. And honestly, I don't dig that. I cook every night at home, so I wanna bring a little
bit of home with me. And hey, if I can get
fresh enough groceries, so we're doing a chicken
Fettuccine Alfredo tonight and we'll see how it goes. (Dante laughs) It'll be my first official time cooking in this bunker though. - No appetizers? I'm gonna get right into it. - Sure.
- How much? - 45,000. - Per bunker. - That's right, for an empty bunker, with all the grout fixing,
the floor fixing, any cracks, all of that fixed nice
clean, empty bunker, 45,000 for a 99 year lease. - I know you mentioned it to me that you sold the entire F block, which is F block stands for, there are multiple areas
within the property. - That's right.
- So how many units you have sold so far and
how many you have vacant? - So I wanna say we're
right around 200 units sold, maybe a little more,
and that's out of 575. So, consider we're creeping
up on about halfway there. - That's amazing. And how many of these units
sold are full-time residents? - That's always been a smaller percentage. I would say we have about 30 families living out here right now full time. - So Dante cooked us a
meal that looks delicious. (Dante chuckles) We are hungry. - Very much so. - That's a fact. - What is on the menu tonight? - It's not exactly what I wanted to make, but it's what I could make with what I could find in town, right? So, at the grocery store, 'cause it's a tiny grocery store. - [Erman] Yeah. - It's a Pancetta chicken
with a Fettuccine, a little olive oil and butter sauce on it, and a little bit of Parmesan in between. - It looks good to me.
- It looks good to me too. And I'm expecting some sort of like a Tiramisu cheesecake, like a killer dessert after this one. (Enes laughing) - Hey, which finger am I holding up? - You're like, go open up your M&M'S. The one thing I didn't expect about staying in this bunker is that you lose track of time because there are no windows anywhere. Our dinner lasted for what
felt like a few minutes, but when we looked at the time, it was already late at night. We've done everything
we could in the bunker so we're gonna go outside now. All right, let's do it. The feeling of isolation out here at night is unlike anything I've ever felt. Dante, so do you go for walks at night, or you're doing this
because we're forcing you? - You kind of twisted my arm, (Enes laughing) but I'm actually not upset about it. I should do this more often. - Dante showed us a few more empty bunkers that haven't had any work done on them. And I could feel an eerie
connection to the past and the site's history. I had to constantly remind
myself that at one point in time, every one of these bunkers was full of weapons intended for war. And now six years later, they have been repurposed into shelters, intended to save lives
if the world falls apart. (gentle music) (Mikey laughing) - Just imagine the whole bed collapsing. - Oh boy, Mikey, thank God
you're not above me, dude. I would have not felt safe. (Mikey laughing) I'm cozy. - [Mikey] Yeah, Erman, what about you? How do you like that? - I love the bed, first of all. - Yeah.
- Yeah, I need someone to tell a
story before I go to bed. (all laughing) - I'm gonna tell something. We've been working a lot on this channel for the last three years. I mean, we've really been, but we may have pushed a
little too much just to, yeah. - [Mikey] You say that a lot, but this time it might be true. - Exactly, Mikey, can you imagine a fan seeing us like if you walk outside and
they're like, wait, what? Because we considered to stay
at this bunker last night. Like we literally spent the last 12 hours shooting this place. We're tired. We're gonna go to sleep now, then in the morning we'll wake up, probably to grab a coffee, and we'll talk to you guys to see what's up.
- Good night, everyone. (cock crowing) - [Mikey] We're recording. - So I slept great last night. I don't think I moved. The first second I woke up, I'm like, oh, yeah, the day's starting. And I'm like, dude, what
are you talking about? There is no window here. - You know what I want? It would be so amazing if we go out. There's like full like
LA douchebag breakfast, like just small pan cakes. (all laughing) - [Mikey] Those little mini omelets. - Exactly. - [Mikey] Okay, is that what this is? (Enes laughing) (upbeat music) - 6:55 am, we just woke up. Literally we put our shirts on because I wanted to see
sunrise, and look at this. It's so untouched, and just so organic and raw around here. It's hard to explain,
but it's dead silent. You have miles of land to look at. It's so peaceful, and honestly, it's so
refreshing to be here. I'm kind of enjoying our time and I don't how much complaints. We're gonna grab some hot coffee, plan our day and get to work. But other than that, I just wanted you guys to
experience this space with us. The two days we spent at Vivos xPoint, was unlike anything we
had ever experienced. We were hesitant to buy
into the concept initially, but after spending some time with Dante and having the opportunity to
experience it for ourselves, I truly understand what
draws so many people to this isolated little
corner of South Dakota. All right, everyone, that's it for Vivos xPoint. I hope you all enjoyed this video. We certainly have a lot of
fun here, touring this place, checking out the bunkers, and staying in the one down below us. Overall, the experience was phenomenal. And if you want more information, make sure to check out the
links in the description. Lastly, if you enjoyed the tour, make sure to give us a like, subscribe to our channel, and we'll see you guys next week. (upbeat music) - We're just walking through
the woods, doing our thing. Our bunker shoot was successful. Enes, how did you like it? - Here or the bunkers? - Okay, guys, we're at
Mount Rushmore right now. We're not just walking through the woods. Like you can't drive through
South Dakota and not stop here. I mean, it was five minutes
out of the way like, why wouldn't we stop here? - [Erman] Oh.