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Joakim Broden Net Worth

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Joakim Broden net worth: Joakim Broden is a Swedish Czech singer and songwriter who has a net worth of $5 million. Joakim Broden was born in Falun, Sweden in October 1980. He is best known for being the lead singer, keyboardist, and occasional guitar player for the heavy metal band Sabaton. The band was formed in 1999 and released their debut studio album Primo Victoria in 2005. They also released the albums Attero Dominatus in 2006 and Metalizer in 2007. Sabaton released the album The Art of War in 2008 which reached #5 in Sweden. Their album Coat of Arms was released in 2010 and had worldwide success including #2 in Sweden. Their album Carolus Rex was released in 2012 and also reached #2 in Sweden. The band's album Heroes was released in 2014 and reached #1 in Sweden and their album The Last Stand was released in 2016 and reached #1 in Sweden, Finland, and Switzerland. Their single "Cliffs of Gallipoli" reached #1 in Sweden. Joakim Broden competed in the national pinball championships in 2015 and 2016.

Read more: Joakim Broden Net Worth


Johnny Pacheco Net Worth

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Johnny Pacheco net worth: Johnny Pacheco is a Dominican musician, arranger, producer, composer and bandleader who has a net worth of $8 million. Johnny Pacheco was born in Santiago, Dominican Republic in March 1935. He is known for playing different types of Cuban music and has become one of most influential people in Latin music. Pacheco created the Fania All-Stars as well as Fania Records and invented the term "salsa" as it's used to describe music. He released his first album in 1960 and has released dozens over the years. Johnny Pacheco has also worked as a sideman with George Benson, Kenny Burrell, Johnny Lytle, Les McCann, McCoy Tyner, and Kai Winding. He has been nominated for several Grammy Awards and in 2005 he received the Latin Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. Pacheco plays percussion, flute, and saxophone. He has also received the ASCAP Silver Pen Award from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers.

Read more: Johnny Pacheco Net Worth

Kenny Bartram Net Worth

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Kenny Bartram net worth: Kenny Bartram is an American professional freestyle motocross rider who has a net worth of $3 million. Kenny Bartram was born in Stillwater, Oklahoma. He competed in Oklahoma State Series MX races before starting his career in freestyle motocross. Bartram is the most successful racer in his sport with more than 50 career wins. He has broken more than 20 bones and had seven teeth knocked out. He also also suffered other injuries including a steel plate in his jaw and he damaged a blood vessel in his brain. Kenny Bartram won the 2002 WFA Freestyle in Cleveland, Ohio. He has 10 X Games and Gravity Games medals including four gold, two silver, and four bronze. He signed with KTM in 2009 and has appeared in video games.

Read more: Kenny Bartram Net Worth

Bumble Founder Swipes Right To Enormous Fortune

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Whitney Wolfe Herd founded Bumble, the dating app that requires that women make the first move, in December 2014. Prior to that she was a co-founder at Tinder, where she reportedly came up with the company's name and served as the VP of Marketing. She exited the company abruptly in 2014 and filed a lawsuit against Tinder and then Match.com parent company IAC, alleging that Tinder's CMO Justin Mateen subjected Wolfe to "a barrage of sexist, racist, and otherwise inappropriate comments, emails, and text messages." Tinder and Wolfe settled the lawsuit out of court. Justin Mateen was relieved of his post. Wolfe reportedly received a more than $1 million settlement in addition to stock in the company.

Well now, Whitney is getting the last laugh as her dating app has been valued at $1 billion, giving the 29-year-old a $230 million net worth.

Vivien Killilea/Getty Images

After Wolfe Herd departed Tinder, she didn't have any plans to go back into the world of dating apps. She actually wanted to found a social space for women online. She pitched the idea to Russian billionaire Badoo Andrey Andreev. He didn't love the concept, but he did love Whitney's passion. He advised her to stick to what she knew: dating apps. From that meeting, Wolfe Herd landed on the idea for Bumble. It is pretty simple: when two people match, women have 24 hours to send the first message. If they don't, the match disappears. If they send a message, the man has 24 hours to reply, or the match disappears. Once both parties have sent a message, that timer gets turned off.

Andreev put up $10 million for 70% of the company. He also gave Wolfe Herd access to his dating app Badoo's systems and software. Wolfe Herd brought the marketing prowess to the deal. Within the first month after its launch, Bumble had been downloaded 100,000 times.

In 2016, Bumble launched BFF, an app that helps women find friends. In 2017, it launched Bizz, an app that focuses on women meeting people for career networking. At each turn, Bumble puts women first and puts women in control.

Bumble has more than 35 million users and is the fastest growing dating app in the U.S. About 10% pay $9.99 per month for in app perks. The company brought in $100 million in revenue in 2017. That same year, Wolfe Herd turned down a reported $450 million acquisition offer from the Match Group, the parent company of Match.com, Tinder, and a slew of other dating apps and websites. Match.com followed up with a $1 billion offer. Wolfe Herd turned that down as well.

In March, Match.com sued Bumble, accusing it of being a Tinder copycat and claiming patent and trademark infringement. Match also accused Bumble of the misuse of trade secrets. Bumble filed a countersuit, seeking $400 million in damages and calling Match's lawsuit "frivolous" and one that aimed to "chill the market for an investment in Bumble."

The lawsuits are ongoing. The press hasn't hurt Bumble. Since the suits were filed, the app has increased its user base by 5 million.

Read more: Bumble Founder Swipes Right To Enormous Fortune

Nick Saban Just Accomplished Something No College Coach Has Ever Done Before

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Saying Nick Saban has had success at Alabama is an understatement. In 11 seasons, his teams have compiled a 127-20 record. The Crimson Tide have won five of the past nine championships. Yet it's Saban's latest accomplishment that might be his most spectacular yet.

After extending his contract through the 2025 season, Alabama made Saban the first college coach to be guaranteed $10 million in one season. Right now, Saban is set to earn $10.3 million in the final year of his new deal.

It's a strong message from the university. Saban is 66 years old, which means he'll be in his mid-70s by the time this deal expires. But Alabama is the cream of the crop in college football. As long as Saban is willing to coach and recruit, the university will reward him accordingly.

Streeter Lecka/Getty Images

Over the course of this deal, Saban will make $74,400,000. That, of course, assumes Alabama doesn't add any more years to the contract. Saban could even earn more than the nearly $75 million he's owed.

Of course, Saban's players don't make any dollars, which causes contention among a group of fans. But you could argue that playing in Saban's system opens up the door to success in the NFL. With that comes millions of dollars.

Perhaps this is the most staggering note of all, per Darren Rovell: Kay Ivey, the governor of Alabama, makes $119,500 per year. Nick Saban makes more than that ($123,288) every six days. That's incredible to think about.

Then again, consider how many championships and revenue Saban has brought into the school. Alabama might even be getting a bargain with this new deal.

Either way, it looks like the Crimson Tide won't be going away anytime soon.

Read more: Nick Saban Just Accomplished Something No College Coach Has Ever Done Before

Apple Is $3 Away From Being A $1 Trillion Company (And Tim Cook Is On The Verge Of A Massive Bonus)

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As of this writing, Apple (ticker symbol AAPL) is trading at $200.25 per share. The stock is up 5% in the last 24 hours thanks to a strong earnings release. At that price, the company's market cap is $982 billion. That's pretty cool. But you know what's cooler? If Apple's stock increases by another $3 per share, it's market cap will be $1 trillion.

By the way, we often report about "market cap" on Celebrity Net Worth, and occasionally people contact us with questions about what that means and how it is calculated. Market cap, or more formally, market capitalization, is calculated by multiplying a company's stock price by the total number of its outstanding shares. As an example, let's consider the (very real?) possibility that CNW becomes a public company. Let's also assume the public offering made 1 million shares available to public investors on an exchange such as the NYSE. If our current price per share is $100, CNW would have a market cap of $100 million. Make sense?

Apple has 4.91 billion shares outstanding. Multiply that number by $200 and you get their current market cap of $980 billion. If Apple's stock hit $203, a mere $3 increase from today, you'd multiply that number by 4.91 billion to get a market cap of $1 trillion.

You know who would be really really happy to see Apple become a $1 trillion company? Tim Cook. At the moment Apple hits $1 trillion, a clause in his contract kicks in that makes him a billionaire thanks to a performance option bonus deal.

Scott Olson/Getty Images

Other $1 Trillion Companies:

Would Apple be the first $1 trillion company in history? No.

On November 5, 2007, a company called Petrochina IPO'd on the Shanghai Stock Exchange. When it first debuted, the company had a market cap of $350 billion. By the end of the first day of trading, the share price roughly tripled, giving Petrochina a market cap of $1 trillion. After adjusting for inflation, that's around $1.137 trillion today.

Side note: We've excluded state-owned companies in this article because their value is generally hard to determine, since most of them are controlled by a government. Furthermore, their values aren't really a level playing field compared to a typical private entity. The most notable example of a state-owned company is Saudi Aramco. As you might have guessed, Aramco is Saudi Arabia's state-owned petroleum and natural gas conglomerate. Saudi Aramco is privately controlled by one family: The House of Saud. AKA the Saudi Royal Family. The precise market value of Saudi Aramco is impossible to know, but most experts believe it to be in the range of $1-4 trillion. Likely on the lower end of that estimate after oil's decline in the last few years.

So does this mean that when Petrochina had a $1 trillion market cap it was the most valuable private company in history? Not by a long shot!

No matter how successful a company like Apple, Microsoft, or Petrochina is today, they are still a far cry from being the most valuable company in history. That title belongs to a little operation called The Dutch East India Company. It seems like a ridiculous number, but at one point, The Dutch East India Company was worth a mind-boggling $7.4 trillion. Widely recognized as the first multinational corporation, the Dutch East India Company's reach and power make today's major corporations look like small potatoes. The first corporation of its kind, the Dutch East India Company provided the framework for which all other conglomerates have been built upon ever since.

By 1669, the Dutch East India Company had 150 ships for trade, 40 warships, a private army of 10,000, and 50,000 employees. The company's success made its original investors unimaginably rich, as the company has boasted a dividend payment of 40%. At the peak of their power in the mid 1600s, accounting records show the company valued itself at 78 million Dutch Guilders. When adjusted in comparison to modern dollars after inflation, that's equal to $7.4 trillion.

Read more: Apple Is $3 Away From Being A $1 Trillion Company (And Tim Cook Is On The Verge Of A Massive Bonus)

Billionaire Roundup: Bitcoin, Billionaire Tantrum, And Three Californias

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Hello party people! Our favorite billionaires are out there mouthing off, Tweeting, and doing their thing. In this edition of the Billionaire Roundup, Ken Griffin gives his opinion on cryptocurrencies, Elon Musk appears to be unravelling before our eyes, and one billionaire's plan to split California into three states has hit a roadblock. Buckle up! This is the Billionaire Roundup.

Ken Griffin Is Not A Fan Of Bitcoin
Billionaire hedge fund manager Ken Griffin is not a fan of bitcoin and other digital currencies. At the Delivering Alpha Conference in New York, he said:

"I don't have a single portfolio manager [of mine] who has told me we should buy crypto, not a single portfolio manager.  I have a hard time finding myself wanting to be in the position of being a liquidity provider to a product that I don't believe in."

He added that he wishes the younger generation would turn their focus to more productive activities rather than investing in cryptocurrencies.

Griffin founded Citadel in 1990. His firm manages more than $30 billion in assets. One out of every five U.S. stocks trade through Citadel Securities daily. He has a net worth of $9 billion.

Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images

Elon Musk Apologizes
What is going on with Elon Musk? First, he has a fit because he thinks being called a billionaire is derisive. Then he comes up with a completely insane plan for rescuing the Thai soccer team. Then he gets offended when his mini submarine isn't used. Then he takes to Twitter to call one of the rescue divers a pedophile. Is he off his rocker?

Musk faced a ton of intense backlash after he Tweeted that completely off-the-wall and unfounded accusation at Vernon Unsworth, an expert cave diver who was integral in the rescue mission that save the 12 boys and their coach from a flooded cave.

Musk eventually took to Twitter to sort of apologize. He basically said that Unsworth started it.

"…my words were spoken in anger after Mr. Unsworth said several untruths & suggested I engage in a sexual act with the mini-sub, which had been built as an act of kindness & according to specifications from the dive team leader. Nonetheless, his actions against me do not justify my actions against him, and for that I apologize to Mr. Unsworth and to the companies I represent as leader. The fault is mine and mine alone."

Elon Musk got his panties in a twist when Unsworth described Musk's attempt to save the soccer team with a "kid sized submarine" as a PR stunt. He told CNN that the submarine had "absolutely no chance of working." He also said that Musk could "stick his submarine where it hurts."

That's when Musk called Unsworth a pedophile.

Elon Musk appears to have a problem with impulse control.

Court Blocks Billionaire's Bid To Divide California Into Three States
Billionaire Tim Draper had a looney idea to break California into three states. Now, the California Supreme Court has blocked what Draper was called Proposition 9. The court said it should not be on the November ballot because the potential harm in allowing it "outweighs the potential harm in delaying it."

The judges said that there are substantial questions about the proposition's validity that require review.

The court asked California's secretary of state and Draper to explain by August 20th why a conservation group's request to block the measure shouldn't be granted. Draper will have 30 days to respond.

In a statement after the court's decision, Howard Penn, executive director of The Planning and Conservation League that filed the lawsuit, said Prop. 9 is "a costly, flawed scheme" that would "waste billions of California taxpayer dollars, create chaos in public services including safeguarding our environment and literally eliminate the State of California – all to satisfy the whims of one billionaire."

Draper wants to divide the state into three smaller state governments. Northern California would include San Francisco and 39 other counties. California would include Los Angeles and five other counties. Southern California would cover San Diego, Fresno, and any county left over.

Read more: Billionaire Roundup: Bitcoin, Billionaire Tantrum, And Three Californias

Philadelphia Eagles Lineman Chance Warmack Is The First NFL Player To Collect On A Loss-Of-Value Policy

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Chance Warmack signed with the Philadelphia Eagles last season on a one-year, $1.5 million deal. Typically, this signing would be received with minimal fanfare. Offensive linemen don't get a lot of headlines anyway, and Warmack hasn't been incredibly impressive on the field.

But he did just do something no NFL player has ever done before: collect on a loss-of-value policy.

Warmack was drafted 10th overall in the 2013 NFL Draft by the Tennessee Titans. Warmack took out an insurance policy that allowed him to collect if his second NFL contract was worth less than $20 million.

That $1.5 million deal with the Eagles was Warmack's second contract in the NFL, which put the policy into effect. Warmack will collect about $3 million, which is the maximum payout.

Mitchell Leff/Getty Images

While Warmack is the first NFL player to collect on a loss-of-value policy, a handful of college players have taken out insurance policies, as well.

USC's Marqise Lee and Michigan's Jake Butt are some of the bigger names to do so. They both suffered injuries in college, which resulted in them being drafted lower than expected. The insurance policies helped protect them financially. The players collected on the difference between their projected spot and where they were actually taken.

Warmack signed a one-year extension with the Eagles in September of last year, so he'll be back in Philadelphia again this season.

In the span of just six months, he's won a Super Bowl ring and added an extra $3 million to his bank account. 2018 has been mighty kind to Warmack.

Read more: Philadelphia Eagles Lineman Chance Warmack Is The First NFL Player To Collect On A Loss-Of-Value Policy


What's The Most Valuable Company In History?

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What's The Most Valuable Company In History? Apple? Google? Maybe Exxon? These would all be very good guesses. As of this writing, Apple is the most valuable company in the world today, with a market cap of $988 billion. Apple's share price is $2 away from topping that $1 trillion market cap milestone for the first time in its history. Pretty impressive, right? Well, can you imagine a company that was worth a trillion dollars? How about $7.4 trillion?

No matter how successful a company like Apple or Exxon is today, they are still a far cry from being the most valuable company in history. That title belongs to a little operation called The Dutch East India Company. It seems like a ridiculous number, but at one point, The Dutch East India Company was worth a mind-boggling $7.4 trillion. Widely recognized as the first multinational corporation, the Dutch East India Company's reach and power make today's major corporations look like small potatoes.  The first corporation of its kind, the Dutch East India Company provided the framework on which all other conglomerates have been built ever since.  The company's rise, and eventual fall, is both a lesson in business management and a major cautionary tale.

MAURICE AMOUREUS/AFP/Getty Images

The necessity for a Dutch trading company came about after Portugal cut Dutch merchants out of their Asia to Europe trade agreements.  The Dutch Revolt in the late 1500s had severed Spain's control of the northern portion of the Netherlands.  Since Portugal was an ally of Spain, this put a definite damper on trade between the two countries.  The ugly politics, combined with the fact that it was cheaper for Portugal to deliver spices to Europe via Hamburg, resulted in the Dutch being cut out of the major trade routes.  However, it quickly became clear that Portugal was not able to meet the demand for spices, so Dutch merchants began sending their own ships out.

The new Dutch traders began with some major advantages.  Many of the Portuguese trade routes had been sailed by Dutch captains, so they had the knowledge and the contacts in place already.  Over the course of the next five years, larger and larger expeditions were sent out by various merchants.  While some crews perished due to pirate attacks, attacks from the Portuguese, and storms, many were able to make the trip successfully.  The merchants began forming alliances with various small islands along the route, securing monopolies on the spices grown on the islands.  More importantly, they secured the support of the indigenous peoples, essentially hiring them to harass/attack merchants from other countries who were sailing the same routes.

The British increased pressure on all merchants, when they formed the first monopoly enterprise in the 1600s.  Instead of investing in each expedition individually, English merchants, backed by the crown, were now sending out massive expeditions with combined resources.  In order to stay competitive, the Dutch formed the Dutch East India Trading Company in 1602.  Backed by the Dutch government, the Dutch East India Trading Company came to monopolize trade with Asia.  The heads of the company were also allowed to create treaties with Asian countries and islands along the trade routes.  More importantly, they were allowed to form armies and build fortifications in order to defend those trade routes from other countries.  The Dutch East India Company, was, for all intents and purposes, its own country – a country whose sole purpose was to make the Dutch government, and private investors, richer.  The Dutch East India Company and the British trading companies eventually banded together in 1620, but by 1623, everything had fallen apart.  The whole mess came to a head when twenty tradesman, ten of whom were British, were arrested, tortured, convicted, and beheaded on charges that they were conspiring against the Dutch government.  The British withdrew from the trade routes they shared with the Dutch, and the Dutch East India Company continued its rapid expansion with very little resistance.

The head of the Dutch East India Company during this time was a man named Jan Pierterszoon Coen.  Mr. Coen had major ideas about how the company should expand and he refused to let anything stand in his way.  The Dutch became ruthless about establishing control of their trade routes, and each successive head of the company followed the example set by Mr. Coen.  By 1669, the Dutch East India Company had 150 ships for trade, 40 warships, a private army of 10,000, and 50,000 employees.  The company's success had made the original investors unimaginably rich, as the company now boasted a dividend payment of 40%. At the peak of their power in the mid 1600s, accounting records showed that the company valued itself at 78 million Dutch Guilders. When adjusted to modern dollars after inflation, that's equal to $7.4 trillion.

However, all good things must come to an end, and such is the case with the Dutch East India Company.  The problems began in the early 1700s, when multiple small wars interrupted trade routes.  Then the spice trade began to dry up.  The Dutch had always very carefully controlled the spice market, especially the pepper market, by always having just a little too much pepper available.  This made it difficult for other countries to make a profit selling pepper because the oversupply depressed the market slightly.  If anyone else tried to get a spice trade going, believing that the market would eventually shift, they found themselves disappointed and poor.  The Dutch East India Company, which was very wealthy at this point, would simply wait them out.  This plan worked quite well until the demand for spices from Asia began to disappear. Suddenly, they had to diversify, and the economics of their new products – cotton, sugar, tea, and coffee, could not match the money they'd made via the spice trade.  They'd also spent a great deal of money setting up armies and securing treaties.  However, multiple smaller companies began forming more lucrative treaties with islands and market hubs that had originally been loyal to the Dutch.

The central offices of the Dutch East India Company at Hugli, in Bengal, India. Circa 1665:

Getty Images

By the 1780s, the Dutch East India Company had become a house of cards.  Trade and trade routes were diminishing.  Though the Dutch East India Company was massively successful, its employees were paid very little.  (Sounds like every major company today, doesn't it?)  Consequently, smaller factions within the company were stealing profits, whenever, and wherever they could.  Combine all that with the fact that employees died – all the time – due to shipwreck and attacks, and it was becoming increasingly difficult to hire anyone to work for them.  Additionally, the company was slow to change with the times.  They'd always brought all of their products to one central location in Batavia, and then distributed everything from there.  Other companies began going straight from Asia to the port with the most demand for the particular products they were trading.  The Dutch East India Company simply couldn't keep up, because they had an intermediary stop.  Finally, their high dividend payments eventually exceeded their profits.  In fact, the company was soon in debt, because its high dividend payments had exceeded their profits for all but 10 years of the company's existence.  The company was surviving on anticipatory loans, but with all of the problems, they started to buckle.  By 1799, the Dutch East India Company was no more.  All of the islands and small nations that it had controlled were divided between the Dutch and the British after the Napoleonic Wars in the early 1800s, and that was that.

Over the course of two hundred years, the Dutch East India company went from four ships on an exploratory expedition, to the most successful business ever, to bankruptcy.  Looking at its history, it's easy to see that the company simply grew too big, too fast.  It is proof that it is possible to be too successful, too multinational, and dare we say, too greedy.  Will the big oil companies, big media conglomerates, and big technology firms of today find themselves crumbling under the weight of their own expansion someday?  Will any company ever grow to be worth $7.4 trillion again?  The answer is probably no.  Yes, the Dutch East India Company provides a great example of how to grow a business.  However, it also provides an excellent example of how to run it into the ground.  The latter seems to be the lesson to which most business people have paid attention.

Read more: What's The Most Valuable Company In History?

Carmen Finestra Net Worth

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Carmen Finestra net worth: Carmen Finestra is an American film and television producer and writer who has a net worth of $16 million. Carmen Finestra was born in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania in June 1947. He was a producer and supervising producer for the TV series The Cosby Show from 1985 to 1991. In 1996 Finestra executive produced the series Buddies. He executive produced the television series Soul Man from 1997 to 1998. From 1991 to 1999 he served as executive producer for the TV series Home Improvement. Finestra also produced episodes of the TV series Thunder Alley and Costello and the movies Firelight, Where the Heart Is, Company Man, and What Women Want. He wrote for the TV series The Love Boat, Punky Brewster, The Cosby Show, Thunder Alley, Buddies, Soul Man, Home Improvement, and more. Carmen Finestra created the TV series Home Improvement, Soul Man, Buddies, and Thunder Alley. He has been nominated for six Primetime Emmy Awards.

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Darshan Thoogudeep Net Worth

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Darshan Thoogudeep net worth: Darshan Thoogudeep is an Indian actor, producer, and distributor who has a net worth of $12 million. Darshan Thoogudeep was born in Ponnampet, Kodagu, Karnataka, India in February 1977. He has mostly worked in the Kannada film industry. He is the son of actor Thoogudeepa Srinivas. Darshan Thoogudeep has starred in several films including Majestic in 2002, Kariya in 2003, Shastri in 2005, Dattha in 2006, Anatharu in 2007, Abhay in 2009, Saarathi in 2011, Bulbul in 2013, Ambareesha in 2014, Tarak in 2017, and more. Darshan Thoogudeep has won several awards including the Onida Style Icon at the Zee Kannada Innovative Film Awards in 2010, Best Actor at the TV9 Awards in 2012, Favorite Hero at the Suvarna Film Awards in 2012, Bangalore Press Club Man of the Year in 2012, and Filmfare Best Actor Award in 2013. In 2006 he established the production company Thoogudeepa Productions.

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Rich Christensen Net Worth

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Rich Christensen net worth: Rich Christensen is an American television producer who has a net worth of $4 million. Rich Christensen was born in New Hampton, Iowa. He is best known for being the creator and lead executive producer of the TV series Pinks and Pinks: All Out. Christensen was also the host of the series Pinks: All Out from 2007 to 2010. He has also created and produced the TV series Speed Records, Rapid Turnover, Blow It Up, Pass Time, Drag Race High, and Won & Done and the TV movie The Move. The TV series Pinks and Pinks: All Out were based on street racing. The winner of the race is awarded the title of the vehicle they defeated.

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Lynn Hamilton Net Worth

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Lynn Hamilton net worth: Lynn Hamilton is an American actress who has a net worth of $1 million. Lynn Hamilton was born in Yazoo City, Mississippi in April 1930. From 1972 to 1977 she starred as Donna Harris on the TV series Sanford and Son. Hamilton starred as Cousin Georgia Anderson on the TV mini-series Roots in 1979. From 1973 to 1981 she starred as Verdie Grant Foster on the series The Waltons. She had recurring roles on the TV series 227 from 1986 to 1989, Dangerous Women from 1991 to 1992, and The Practice from 1997 to 2002. Lynn Hamilton has also starred in several films including Shadows, Brother John, The Seven Minutes, Buck and the Preacher, Lady Sings the Blues, Hangup, Leadbelly, The Jesse Owens Story, Legal Eagles, The Vanishing, Beach: A Black Woman Speaks, and more. Her older sister is actress and comedian LaWanda Page. Hamilton was married for 50 years before her husband passed away and had one child.

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Jerry Rivera Net Worth

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Jerry Rivera net worth: Jerry Rivera is a Puerto Rican salsa singer and songwriter who has a net worth of $4 million. Jerry Rivera was born in Humacao, Puerto Rico in July 1973. His debut studio album Beginning to Live was released in 1989 and he went on to release the albums Opening Doors in 1990, Count On Me in 1992, Baby Face in 1993, The New and the Best in 1994, Magic in 1995, Fresh in 1996, I'm Not That Child Anymore in 1997, In Other Ways in 1999, Salsa Gold in 2000, History 1 in 2000, Forever in 2000, Rivera in 2001, You Won't Forget Me in 2001, Fly Very High in 2002, Singing To My Idol… Frankie Ruiz in 2003, Oh My Life in 2005, Caribe Gardel in 2007, Love Exists in 2011, and Jerry Christmas in 2012. Jerry Rivera has had #1 singles on the US Latin or US Latin Tropical charts with the songs "Suave", "Loco de Amor", "Una y Mil Veces", "Ese", "Quiero", "Vuela Muy Alto", "Mi Libertad", "Cuesta Abajo", "Solo Pienso En Ti", and "Solo Con Un Beso".

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Seth Enslow Net Worth

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Seth Enslow net worth: Seth Enslow is an American motorcyclist and stunt performer who has a net worth of $3 million. Seth Enslow was born in California in January 1975. He race as an amateur dirtbiker at 16 years old. In 1999 he attempted to break the world record of longest motorcycle jump which was 251 feet. He also broke the record held by Robbie Knievel of 226 feet for most motorcycle jumps. In 2006 he took place in The Night of Records Down Under where six new records were set. Several more records were broken at the Night of Records in 2008. In 2010 Seth Enslow set a new world record when he leaped between ramps of 183.7 feet. Enslow has appeared in several movies including Crusty Demons of Dirt and the Crusty Demons series. He appeared in the TV series Destroyed in Seconds. He opened up a tattoo parlor because it became more difficult to perform motorcycle stunts as he aged.

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Liz McClarnon Net Worth

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Liz McClarnon net worth: Liz McClarnon is an English singer, songwriter, dancer, and television presenter who has a net worth of $10 million. Liz McClarnon was born in Liverpool, England in April 1981. She is a member of the girl group Atomic Kitten. The group formed in 1998 and released their debut studio album Right Now in 2000 which reached #1 in the UK. Their album Feels So Good was released in 2002 and also reached #1 in the UK and they also had success with their album Ladies Night in 2003. Atomic Kitten's single "Whole Again" reached #1 in the UK and several other countries and they also had #1 hits with the songs "Eternal Flame" and "The Tide Is High (Get The Feeling)". As a solo artist Liz McClarnon released the single "Woman in Love" which reached #5 in the UK. She starred in the 2016 film Gangsters Gamblers Geezers.

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Robert Cray Net Worth

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Robert Cray net worth: Robert Cray is an American blues guitarist and singer who has a net worth of $5 million. Robert Cray was born in Columbus, Georgia in August 1953. His debut studio album Who's Been Talkin'? Was released in 1980. Cray went on to release the albums Bad Influence in 1983, False Accusations in 1985, and Showdown! (with Albert Collins and Johnny Copeland) in 1985. His album Strong Persuader was released in 1986 and reached #13 on the Billboard 200 chart. Robert Cray released the albums Don't Be Afraid of the Dark in 1988, Midnight Stroll in 1990, I Was Warned in 1992, and Shame + A Sin in 1993. His albums Some Rainy Morning in 1995, Sweet Potato Pie in 1997, Take Your Shoes Off in 1999, Shoulda Been Home in 2001, Time Will Tell in 2003, and Twenty in 2005 all reached #2 or #3 on the US Blues chart. Cray's album Live from Across the Pond was released in 2007 and reached #1 on the US Blues chart as did his album In My Soul in 2014. His single "Smoking Gun" reached #2 on the US Rock chart.

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Hong Kong Billionaire Pollyanna Chu Yuet Wah Has Lost 74 Percent Of Her Fortune

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The thing about being a billionaire is you can lose all but a slim fraction of your wealth and still be rich beyond belief, but still, Hong Kong's Pollyanna Chu Yuet Wah must not be feeling great these days. That's because she has, according to recent reports, lost 74 percent of her total wealth over the first half of 2018.

At the beginning of the year, Chu enjoyed a fortune of about $8.4 billion, but after some bad turns of fate for her Kingston Financial Group Ltd, a company which handles both margin-lending firms and operates several casinos in Macau, she's lost $6.2 billion, or a good 74 percent of that fortune. You'll notice that she's still healthily a billionaire with a remaining fortune of $2.2 billion, but she's not anywhere near as rich as she used to be, and the loss qualifies as the largest suffered by any individual in Asia in 2018.

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It all began in January when the Securities and Futures Commission revealed that 90 percent of Kingston's stock was being controlled by a group of just 20 shareholders. The news led to a 17 percent drop in Kingston's value, which was later followed by another plunge after a disappointing profit report for 2018. A small part of her decline in fortunes can probably also be attributed to a drop in gaming revenue in Macau where Chu has an interest in casinos managed by Kingston. The company gets a reported 15 percent of its revenue from the gaming industry there, the generated HK$473.5 million representing a 3.8 percent drop in fiscal 2018 compared to the previous year.

Kingston is Chu's primary financial holding, but her proclivity for small-cap stocks in the Hong Kong market has led to her being referred to as the "Queen of Shell Companies" in Hong Kong.  Earlier this year, she closed a $5.2 billion deal to purchase the bulk of a Hong Kong skyscraper, which is reportedly the most expensive real estate transaction of all time.

Read more: Hong Kong Billionaire Pollyanna Chu Yuet Wah Has Lost 74 Percent Of Her Fortune

These Are The 20 Highest-Paid Celebrities Right Now

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While it has never been easier to become famous than it is in the era of social media, it is traditional celebrities – musicians, athletes, actors, authors, radio personalities and Kylie Jenner who dominate the list of the 20 highest-paid celebrities right now. Not surprisingly, Floyd Mayweather (#1) and Conor McGregor (#12) made the list thanks to the hefty paydays both athletes received in their Boxing-UFC crossover match in August 2017.

The three hottest players in soccer made the list with Lionel Messi (#8) edging out Cristiano Ronaldo (#10) and Neymar (#13). George Clooney is the second-highest paid celeb of the year and his impressive $239 million isn't from acting or directing gigs. The bulk of Clooney's earnings over the past year from Casamigos, the tequila company he co-founded. Casamigos sold to liquor conglomerate Diageo. The $239 million haul makes him the highest paid actor by far. The next closest is Dwayne Johnson at #5 with $124 million in earnings. Notably absent from the top 20 list are Beyoncé, Jay-Z, and Diddy.

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The world's 100 top earning celebrities made a combined $6.3 billion over the past 12 months. That's up 22% from last year.

#20. Robert Downey Jr. – $81 million

#19. Katy Perry – $83 million

#18. Rush Limbaugh – $84.5 million

#17. LeBron James – $85.5 million

#16. James Patterson – $86 million

#15. Ellen DeGeneres – $87.5 million

#13. Howard Stern – $90 million

#13. Neymar – $90 million

#12. Conor McGregor – $99 million

#11. Bruno Mars – $100 million

#10. Cristiano Ronaldo – $108 million

#9. Ed Sheeran – $110 million

#8. Lionel Messi – $111 million

#7. Coldplay – $115.5 million

#6. U2 – $118 million

#5. Dwayne Johnson – $124 million

#4. Judy Sheindlin – $147 million

#3. Kylie Jenner – $166.5 million

#2. George Clooney – $239 million

#1. Floyd Mayweather – $285 million

Read more: These Are The 20 Highest-Paid Celebrities Right Now

An Apple Stock Market Rally Made Warren Buffett $2 Billion In One Day

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Investment billionaire Warren Buffett is famously a big fan of Apple. Maybe not of their products, but of their management and their financial success, as he and his company Berkshire Hathaway are believed to be the owner of more than 239 million shares in the company. CNBC reports that a particularly good day on the stock market for Apple naturally equated to a good day for Buffett as well.

On Wednesday, August 1st, the value of Apple's stock saw a rally of 11 points. As of March of this year, Buffett held 239.6 million Apple shares, and assuming he didn't sell any shares in the meantime that rally equated to a gain of $2.7 billion for him. With days like that, it's really no wonder that Buffett is having so much trouble giving away his fortune.

Back in May, Buffett took to CNBC to discuss his investment loyalty to Apple, explaining it like this on the channel's Squawk Box program:

"I clearly like Apple. We buy them to hold. We bought about 5 percent of the company. I'd love to own 100 percent of it. … We like very much the economics of their activities. We like very much the management and the way they think."

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Apple's good stock market performance on Wednesday can be traced back to the company's quarterly earnings report on the previous day, which posted better than expected earnings per share of $2.34 against the expected figure of $2.18. And Apple stock is also doing well against S&P 500's 5 percent gain over the course of this year, with a reported growth of 19 percent in the same span of time.

Long story short, whenever you see Apple stock going up, you can also know that Warren Buffett, who used to be the richest person in the world and likely still would be if he didn't give a lot to charity, is getting even richer.

Read more: An Apple Stock Market Rally Made Warren Buffett $2 Billion In One Day

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