Some real estate agents do the least their job requires. Others don’t even do that. But some go way above and beyond. Jay Glazer of Corcoran is in the latter category. He so clearly loves his profession and we all have a blast watching him do it.
Last August, we highlighted Jay’s Kiki Challenge video for 49 West 12th Street. The video got over 5,000 views and the unit closed this February. Although the video was on the silly side, it effectively showed the unit’s features while Jay jumped out of a (thankfully) stopped cab and sashayed his way in the building and through the apartment. The video walkthrough was a bright and welcoming light in a relatively dull category of real estate videos.
But Glazer and his team have outdone themselves. For their stunning four-bed, two-and-a-half bath loft-like listing at 303 Mercer Street, Glazer has produced an equally stunning short film with the most ingenious way to show off the unit’s beautiful rooms and spacious multiple levels.
The Glazer Team bought the upbeat Moby song rights from Sound Freedom.
This latest video follows three children playing hide-and-seek to Moby’s upbeat song “Honey” in the airy and bright apartment. The small size of the children highlights the home’s 13-foot ceilings and oversized windows. The many places the children find to hide and seek and their abundant energy show off all the closets, the kitchen ladder, the stunning floating steel architectural staircase and all of the fun ins and outs of the apartment.
The video was Glazer’s creative idea but he said, “We have always wanted to do a hide and go seek video in a bit sprawling apartment.” The Glazer Team hired professional child actors, they used Mikey Pozarik Studio for the videography and bought the Moby song rights from Sound Freedom. Keep your eye on Team Glazer, there are two more innovative, and we have no doubt incredibly fun, videos in the works.
303 Mercer Street, unit B102 is a 2,300 square foot beautiful four bedroom, two-and-a-half bathroom triplex co-op with a private garden located in the heart of Greenwich Village.
Contributing Writer
Michelle Sinclair Colman
Michelle writes children's books and also writes articles about architecture, design and real estate. Those two passions came together in Michelle's first children's book, "Urban Babies Wear Black." Michelle has a Master's degree in Sociology from the University of Minnesota and a Master's degree in the Cities Program from the London School of Economics.