What does a tastemaker’s home reveal about how they live—and what can you borrow for your own space?
I open the door as I would for a client—looking for a story, not just pretty photos. On a site where media and sports collide, this home reads like a curated highlight reel: light on original brick, a pool lane that pulls your eye outside, and rooms edited for real life.
I pay attention to texture and touch—marble that carries history, wood that softens sound, upholstery that invites you to flop down after a long day of debates. These are design moves you can adapt.
My goal isn’t celebrity gawking. It’s practical inspiration: zoned rooms that calm a busy mind, gardens that cool afternoons, and privacy layers that help you breathe. Each neighborhood informs the mood, and each material choice supports living well.
Key Takeaways
- Design tells a story: look past trophies to materials and sightlines.
- Choose durable finishes that still feel warm and inviting.
- Zone rooms to reduce stress and improve daily flow.
- Use outdoor spaces to extend usable square footage.
- Translate glossy website photos into practical home moves.
Inside Bill Simmons’s Property Portfolio: From Sports Media Windfall to Landmark Homes
Money from media success often buys options; here it bought a thoughtfully balanced property portfolio. In 2020, Spotify agreed to acquire The Ringer for a widely reported 200 million, and the ripple is clear in where and how purchases followed.
I watch these moves like lineup decisions. He added a Hancock Park estate noted near $16.1 million and a Carbon Beach ocean cottage in the multimillion range. A second Malibu acquisition—the 1.2-acre ranch with a converted 1940 barn—cost about $4.7 million. Earlier holdings include a 2015 Carbon Beach cottage, a 2007 Tudor in Hancock Park, a Westwood condo, and a Larchmont Spanish-style home.
The mapping
Each property answers a different life need: urban gravitas in Hancock Park, shoreline mornings at Carbon Beach, and a private hilltop retreat for hosting and quiet.
| Location | Type | Approx. Purchase | Role in Portfolio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hancock Park | Historic estate / Tudor | $16.1M / $3.1M (earlier) | Architectural bones, central access |
| Carbon Beach | Oceanfront cottage | $10M / $7.5M (earlier) | Sunrise rituals, ocean frontage |
| Malibu hills | 1.2-acre ranch with barn | $4.7M | Retreat, privacy, hosting space |
| Other LA | Condo / Spanish home | $1.7M+, varied | Convenience and city comfort |
The takeaway: a major payout—yes, that 200 million inflection—often becomes the brief for lasting, varied homes rather than a single flashy purchase. Aim for roles, not just roofs.
Bill Simmons House on Malibu’s Carbon Beach and Hills: Design, History, and Privacy
You feel the shift from beach hush to hilltop drama the moment you leave Carbon Beach and climb to the red-barn ridge.

The oceanfront cottage captures shoreline calm—salt air, low tides, and a rare private quiet among marquee neighbors. That hush becomes the baseline for a very different hilltop story.
Up above, a candy-apple red 1940 barn anchors a 1.2-acre ranch. Original red brick floors sit beside marble and imported stone. A nearly new kitchen with Wolf and SubZero appliances makes hosting effortless.
Inside, rooms breathe character. A lounge with wood paneling and a vaulted ceiling invites lingering. The dining room pairs a fireplace, wine fridge, and seating for ten—ideal for family meals or parties. The hayloft transforms into a primary suite with views and breeze.
Outside living is finely tuned: a lap-lane pool, brick patios, perennials under sycamore shade. Stone-and-brick pathways guide you to a separate guesthouse with a bedroom, bath, office, and a deck that overlooks the main house.
Practical takeaway: the house-to-guesthouse layout creates privacy for visitors and flexible zones for daily living. Walled, gated grounds and an elaborate security system add quiet reassurance so the property can simply be enjoyed.
Hancock Park Standout and a $25K-Per-Month LA Rental: Scale, Amenities, and Neighborhood Appeal
Hancock Park shows how scale and quiet can coexist—grand lanes that invite slow afternoons and rooms that feel lived-in, not staged.
The reported more-than-$16.1 million purchase of a historic Hancock Park property reflects that balance. Meandering pathways under ancient oaks slow your pace, while formal gardens give structure and curb appeal.
The estate includes a detached guesthouse that mirrors the main residence. That layout supports long visits or multigenerational living without losing privacy.

Living like the podcaster: a practical LA rental
Nearby, a Los Angeles home listed at $25,000 per month gives a feel for daily comfort at scale. It has roughly 4,200 square feet, four bedrooms, a large living room with a fireplace, a modern kitchen with stainless-steel appliances, a study, and a family room.
The main bedroom reads like a resort: a spa-style bath and room to recover after busy days. Outside, a pool with spa, multiple seating areas, and concrete walkways create intuitive flow for parties or quiet mornings.
Media coverage and sensible security
When Variety removed coverage of the Hancock Park story over security concerns, it illustrated a larger point: privacy matters. I often advise clients to layer security so it feels seamless.
| Feature | Hancock Park Estate | $25K/Month LA Home |
|---|---|---|
| Size & Scale | Historic grounds, formal gardens, pathways | ~4,200 sq ft, 4 beds, multiple living rooms |
| Amenities | Detached guesthouse, tennis court, pavilion | Pool & spa, modern kitchen, study |
| Practical takeaway | Privacy + neighborhood calm | Every room supports daily routines |
- Comment: Hancock Park offers a neighborhood sweet spot—tree-lined calm with city access.
- Plan sightlines, discreet tech, and landscape that screens while letting light and pollinators in.
Conclusion
Great design often shows up in the quiet moments—a patch of morning light, a cool brick step, a view that makes you pause.
Walking through these properties reminded me that smart choices add up: materials that tell a story, rooms laid out for real life, and gardens that act like a lung for the home.
The portfolio stitches character and wellness—think carbon beach horizons, sycamore shade, and brick underfoot. I watched how one owner balanced big investments with everyday comfort.
Privacy and security should feel like a gentle hand, not a headline. Invest in bones you can’t fake, then layer in light, landscape, and warmth.
If you have a design question or a specific challenge, drop a comment—I’m here to help you make big ideas fit your space.