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From $50K A Year Assistant To Billionaire: The Steve Ballmer Story

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Today, Steve Ballmer is a billionaire and owner of the NBA's Los Angeles Clippers with a net worth of $28.5 billion. But back when the now 62-year-old was 24, he dropped out of the MBA program at Stanford to take a job at his former Harvard classmate Bill Gates' new company Microsoft. It was a gamble that clearly paid off, but not before it totally scared his parents. After all, he had an undergrad degree from Harvard, was getting his MBA at Stanford, and was throwing it all away to take a $50,000 a year job as an assistant.

Ballmer was no dummy. He saw an opportunity and grabbed it. Plus, he was a smarty pants. He was the valedictorian of his high school class and graduated from Harvard magna cum laude. After college he worked at Proctor and Gamble as an assistant product manager for two years. Then he enrolled at Stanford to pursue his MBA. Less than a year into the program, he left to join Microsoft.

Kimberly White/Getty Images

His dad didn't get it. His mom didn't get it. His dad wanted to know what software was. His mom didn't see why anyone would ever need a computer. They wanted to be reassured that if his newfangled job at this tech startup they didn't understand did not work out that he'd go back and finish his MBA. Steve assured him that he would. Of course, he never did.

Ballmer started off as the assistant to the president. He was Bill Gates' assistant. He set up the accounting department to be more professional. He was HR and hired everybody. For this, he was paid $50,000 and also received 5 to 10% equity in Microsoft and 10% of the profit growth he generated.

When Ballmer joined Microsoft, Gates was doing everything from coding the software to hiring employees because he would not delegate. By bringing in his college friend, he was able to let go of some of that workload and in time Ballmer taught him how to hire people rapidly and create teams and organizations.

Ballmer made himself indispensable in 1980 when he played a key role in Microsoft's negotiations with IBM. The venerable computer giant had approached Microsoft with an idea to make computers available to everyday people and wanted Gates' company's help. Ballmer closed the deal with IBM to run Microsoft's software on their new personal computers. After that, Ballmer quickly rose through the ranks at Microsoft until 1998, when Gates asked Ballmer to be president of the software giant. In 2000, he became CEO of Microsoft. Ballmer was integral in leading the company through their anti-trust legal battle, the dot-com bubble, and the launch of Xbox, acquisition of Skype, and creation of Microsoft's $20 billion enterprise business.

Ballmer led Microsoft for almost 15 years when he retired. He stepped down as CEO in 2014. He retained his 4% state in the company, which is a considerable contributor to his fortune. He is also Microsoft's largest individual shareholder.

Read more: From $50K A Year Assistant To Billionaire: The Steve Ballmer Story


Gambling On The NBA Could Lead To A Huge Pay Raise For Its Players

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Whether you're a fan of gambling or not, the NBA's contract with MGM Resorts is a huge deal in the sports world. The deal, reportedly worth $25 million over three years, is the league's first betting partnership. It comes on the heels of New Jersey, Delaware, and Mississippi legalizing sports betting.

While the league is still figuring out how to monetize sports betting for now, that day will one day come. And when it does, it could create a huge spike in the salary cap. That means a huge pay increase for its players.

In 2016, the NBA signed a $24 billion television deal. The influx of revenue resulted in an increased salary cap. Rather than creating a system that artificially smoothed the cap out over several years, the NBA Players Association opted to just let a spike happen.

The cap jumped from $70 million to $94.1 million in just one year. Unsurprisingly, the summer of 2016 was the wildest free agency the league had ever seen. Worth $70 million or more, 19 deals were handed out and even fringe starters were earning huge paydays.

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Additionally, the Warriors were able to sign Kevin Durant with the extra money, and the Bulls had plenty of cash to hand out to Dwyane Wade. One of those moves worked out very well – we'll let you guess which one.

This deal with MGM could encourage more states to legalize gambling. If that happens, more people will be paying attention to games, and that leads to more revenue. In fact, Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban believes franchise values will double as a result of legalized sports betting.

All of this means we could see another salary cap spike just like we did in 2016. Both players and owners know this, and it's having an impact on free agency. Most players aren't willing to sign long-term deals without player options, and owners want to make sure they have cap flexibility if and when a spike arrives.

The NBA has consistently been at the forefront of innovation. This is just another example – and it's going to result in more money for everyone.

Read more: Gambling On The NBA Could Lead To A Huge Pay Raise For Its Players

Here's Where Some Of The Tech Billionaire "Giving Pledge" Signers Are Donating Their Money

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Warren Buffett's well known "Giving Pledge" appeals to billionaires' sense of altruism, but it also appeals to their desire for flexibility in signing such a pledge. It doesn't dictate any particular cause or charity in its text, and billionaires who have signed the pledge are free to give their wealth to their own charitable foundations, if they wish. Some of the most enthusiastic givers are billionaires in the tech industry, including one of the originators of the Giving Pledge, Bill Gates, who wrote on the subject of philanthropy in a recent open letter from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation:

"We think that's a basic responsibility of anyone with a lot of money. Once you've taken care of yourself and your children, the best use of extra wealth is to give it back to society."

Bill and Melinda Gates

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For Bill and Melinda Gates, that has translated to billions of dollars to a variety of causes, including global medicine, disaster relief, poverty relief, education, and more. Through their foundation, the couple has given more than $36 billion (and counting) since it was launched in 2000. This has included a $75 million donation to establish the Child Health and Mortality Prevention Surveillance Network, focused on childhood mortality in developing nations, and another gift of over $50 million towards the fight against the Ebola virus. Melinda Gates in particular has also spearheaded efforts to combat the gender pay gap and to advance the cause of equality between men and women.

Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan

Mark Zuckerberg and wife philanthropist Priscilla Chan were among the first to sign on to the Giving Pledge, and in 2015 Zuckerberg went beyond its parameters by pledging to give away at least 99 percent of his Facebook stock over the course of his lifetime – worth about $45 billion at the time. The Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital got its name thanks to a $75 million gift to the hospital, and the CDC Foundation got a $25 million gift for the cause of fighting Ebola. But they've also set their sights much higher than that: In late 2015, the pair pledged $3 billion over the following decade towards the lofty goal of "cur[ing] all disease" by the end of the century.

Larry Ellison

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Larry Ellison, co-founder of the Oracle Corporation, became a Giving Pledge signatory in 2010, and since then he's also focused his charitable contributions on the field of medicine. When he signed on, he claimed to have already given hundreds of millions to the causes of medical education and research, with a desire to give billions more. So far, that's included $200 million towards cancer research, and another $100 million to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative.

Paul Allen

Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen is part of the Giving Pledge league, founding the Allen Institute for Brain Science, investing about half a billion dollars in it, plus another $100 million towards the fight against the West African Ebola outbreak. So far, he reportedly has about $2 billion in philanthropic giving to his name.

Elon Musk

Elon Musk has rockets to launch and planets to terraform, but he's also signed onto the Giving Pledge. His biggest recent gift of note is a $15 million donation to the XPRIZE Global Learning program, which helps kids in developing countries learn skills in mathematics and technology.

Dustin Moskovitz and Cari Tuna

Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz and wife Cari Tuna were among those who signed the Giving Pledge in its first year. Since then, they've founded the Good Ventures Foundation and donated to causes including criminal justice reform, biosecurity, and more.

Azim Premji

PRAKASH SINGH/AFP/Getty Images

Azim Premji is a business tycoon in India who signed onto the Giving Pledge in 2013. Before then, he donated a reported 8.7 percent of the stock of his company Wipro Limited toward the establishment of his own non-profit foundation, focused on improving public education in his home country. The stock was worth about $2 billion at the time, and since then he's made two more major gifts to the foundation, one valued at $2.2 billion in 2012 and another at $3.8 billion in 2015.

Hasso Plattner

German billionaire Hasso Plattner is no stranger to the philanthropy game, having established his own foundation about 20 years ago. He took until 2013 to sign on to the Giving Pledge, though, continuing to donate millions toward his pet causes of worldwide education and healthcare. In 2016, he co-founded the the Wildenstein Plattner Institute, focused on the digitization of artist materials of historical significance.

Read more: Here's Where Some Of The Tech Billionaire "Giving Pledge" Signers Are Donating Their Money

Could Conor McGregor's Return Lead To UFC's Biggest Fight Ever?

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When Conor McGregor fought Floyd Mayweather last August, it seemed like perhaps his UFC days were behind him. But we'll see McGregor back in the octagon in less than two months – and it could be the biggest fight UFC has ever seen.

McGregor will take on undefeated lightweight champion Khabib Nurmagomedov on October 6. The pair has a bizarre history. In April, McGregor attacked Nurmagomedov on a bus in Brooklyn. The attack was a retaliation for Nurmagomedov confronting Artem Lobov, McGregor's friend and teammate.

McGregor was cleared of criminal charges in late July, and UFC has moved on from hiding the news to embracing it. They're using the bad blood between the two to help promote the October 6th fight.

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Nurmagomedov is a worthy opponent, too. He currently holds the lightweight belt after McGregor's extended absence around the Mayweather fight. McGregor had the belt stripped, and Nurmagomedov has pounced on the opportunity. He's 26-0 as a fighter, with a 10-0 record in UFC.

After taking home around $100 million in his fight with Mayweather, McGregor is obviously a huge draw. He's a welcome sight for UFC and its president Dana White. PPV numbers are on a downward trend for his company, and McGregor can help breathe some life back into the organization.

Will McGregor make as much in UFC 229 as he did in the Mayweather fight? That remains to be seen, but we'll bet there's plenty of talking in the days leading up to the event.

Read more: Could Conor McGregor's Return Lead To UFC's Biggest Fight Ever?

6-Year-Old YouTube Star Ryan ToysReview Gets Merchandise Line At Walmart

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What were you doing at six years old? It's a little tough for me to remember the answer to that question personally, but I imagine there were some cartoons being watched, some comic books being read, some toys being played with. Whatever I was doing, I was way behind the six-year-old YouTube star known as Ryan ToysReview, who has turned playing with toys into a lucrative business, and just launched his own toy and apparel line available for sale at Walmart locations nationwide.

The line is called Ryan's World, and the first-grade-aged kid is reported by L.A. Biz as having served as the line's "creative director," working with children's digital network pocket.watch to develop products for kids aged three and up. And you can tell a kid was consulted on the product line because it includes almost four times as many toys as it does apparel items: Four t-shirt designs against 15 toys.

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Walmart's vice president and divisional merchandise manager for toys Anne Marie Kehoe is excited about the partnership:

"This is the first time that a YouTube star in the children and family space has created their own dedicated line of toys and apparel, and we are excited to be partnering with pocket.watch to have it available at Walmart stores nationwide."

Ryan's World toys include slime, toy vehicles, stuffed animals, and more, as well as "blind bag collectibles" that kids will have to wait until they get home to see after they're bought. And naturally, the toys will be heavily promoted on the Ryan ToysReview YouTube channel, although one can only hope that Ryan ToysReview will review the toys with the impartiality and objective fairness he has become known for in the toy review community.

The Ryan's World line launches in earnest on August 6th, with an accompanying "experiential tour" hitting 75 select Walmart locations, with Ryan himself set to make surprise appearances at a few.

Read more: 6-Year-Old YouTube Star Ryan ToysReview Gets Merchandise Line At Walmart

Charlie Sheen Says He's In A "Dire Financial Crisis" With "Less Than $10M To His Name"

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Another reminder that everything truly is relative in this world: Charlie Sheen of film and television isn't working as much as he used to in his glory days, particularly those in which he was pulling in about $1.8 million an episode on Two and a Half Men. A recent People story says that according to the actor, this downturn in his professional stature has resulted in a "dire financial crisis" that has in turn provoked him into filing requests to modify two child support agreements he has with ex-wives Denise Richards and Brooke Mueller, with which he has two kids each. Per the article:

"The actor claims he's had a 'significant reduction' in his earnings, and is in a 'dire financial crisis' with less than $10 million to his name. The document also lists several debts Sheen has been unable to pay because of his finances, including both a pool service and a gardening service which are both noted as 'past due.'"

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The documents say that Sheen has "been unable to find steady work, and [has] been blacklisted from many aspects of the entertainment industry." He says he's no longer making the kind of money he used to, or working as much, so he wants to get his monthly child support payments reduced by the court. It's a long way down from where he was in 2010, when his aforementioned Two and a Half Men gig made him the highest paid actor on TV for a time, before he was fired from the show after a very public meltdown during a rehab-related hiatus.

Another aspect of Sheen's financial crisis is also the almost $5 million in unpaid income taxes from 2015 that he was reported to have earlier this year. And a few months before that, he put his Mulholland Estates mansion on the market for a hair under $10 million.

Read more: Charlie Sheen Says He's In A "Dire Financial Crisis" With "Less Than $10M To His Name"

Rams Owner Stan Kroenke Becomes Sole Owner Of Arsenal FC

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Billionaire Los Angeles Rams owner Stan Kroenke is about to become the sole shareholder of Arsenal football club after minority shareholder Alisher Usmanov accepted Kroenke's offer to buy his 30% stake in the team. The deal values the football club at $2.3 billion and ends a 10 year battle for control of Arsenal. Usmanov released a statement confirming his decision to sell:

"I have decided to sell my shares in Arsenal Football Club which could be the best football club in the world," he said. "I wish all the best and great success to this wonderful football club and to all those whose lives and careers are entwined in it."

Kroenke purchased Usmanov's stake in the team for just over $708 million. The takeover bid is now binding, and Kroenke can force the other shareholders to sell their stakes to him, making him the sole owner of the legendary football club. Fans and pundits believe that Kroenke's sole ownership of the club will be disastrous. Kroenke does not. Kroenke Sports & Entertainment released a statement saying:

"KSE believes moving to private ownership will bring the benefits of a single owner better able to move quickly in furtherance of the Club's strategy and ambitions. KSE is a committed, long-term owner of the Club."

Clive Rose/Getty Images

Kroenke also released his own statement, saying:

"We at KSE are moving forward with this Offer leading to 100% ownership of the Club. We appreciate Mr. Usmanov's dedication to the Arsenal Football Club and the storied ethos and history the Club represents."

The Arsenal Supports Trust represents over 1,000 fans of the club. They released a statement saying that the deal

"…will see the end of supporters owning shares in Arsenal and their role upholding custodianship values. The most dreadful part of this announcement is the news that Kroenke plans to forcibly purchase the shares held by Arsenal fans. Many of these fans are AST members and hold their shares not for value but as custodians who care for the future of the club. Kroenke's actions will neuter their voice and involvement. It is in effect legalized theft to remove shareholder scrutiny on how Arsenal is managed."

Kroenke has a net worth of $7.7 billion. He made his money in real estate before becoming the owner of the NFL's Los Angeles Rams, NBA's Denver Nuggets, the NHL's Colorado Nuggets, and others. He began building his state in Arsenal in 2007. He is married to Ann Walton.

Read more: Rams Owner Stan Kroenke Becomes Sole Owner Of Arsenal FC

Some Billionaires Play Golf. Broadcom Founder Henry Nicholas Preferred Drug Fueled Hooker Orgies In His Private Sex Dungeon.

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At first glance, Henry Nicholas III comes across as just your typical mild-mannered internet billionaire. He is known today as a religious man who is very active in the Episcopal Church. He is also the founder of a philanthropy called Justice for Homicide Victims, Inc., a non-profit organization that supports the families of murder victims that Henry launched in honor of his late sister. Based on these qualities, Henry certainly seems like an upstanding man of high moral value, right?  Certainly not a man who at one point in his life built a secret sex lair under his house to host wild orgies. Certainly not a man who once faced charges of prostitution, distribution of cocaine, and meth. Certainly not a man who once smoked so much weed on his private jet that the pilot was forced to wear an oxygen mask to avoid getting a contact high. Who exactly is this Henry Nicholas character? An upstanding successful entrepreneur with high morals? Or a depraved drug fiend presiding over a sex dungeon in his Laguna Hills, California home? Let's take a look…

Henry Nicholas was born in Cincinnati in 1959. His father, Henry Nicholas Jr., was an attorney for the IRS who struggled with alcoholism. Henry's parents divorced when he was four years old. After the divorce, Henry and his sister Marsalee moved with their mother to Santa Monica, California. His mother remarried in 1967. Henry's stepfather was a screenwriter named Robert Leach. Henry, who has gone by "Nick" since he was young, graduated from Santa Monica High School and went on to the United States Air Force Academy. He dropped out after three years when it became clear that at 6'6″ tall, he would never be a fighter pilot. So he enrolled at UCLA and eventually earned a B.S. in 1982, M.S in 1985, and PhD in 1998, all in electrical engineering.

While Nicholas was in graduate school at UCLA in 1983, his family suffered a tragic loss. His sister Marsalee, who was a 21 year old senior at UC Santa Barbara, was murdered by an ex-boyfriend. The family was devastated. Henry and Marsalee's step-father would go onto become a leading figure in California's victim's rights movement.

After finishing school, Henry Nicholas went to work at the defense contractor TRW. There he met his future Broadcom partner Henry Samueli. He also met a fellow electrical engineer named Stacey Feller. Five years younger than Nicholas, they quickly started dating and were married in 1987. Around this same time, the two Henrys began consulting part-time for a start-up company called PairGain Technologies.

Via wikimedia commons

Broadcom

Nicholas and Samueli founded Broadcom in the spare bedroom of Nicholas' Redondo Beach condominium in 1991. They each invested $5,000 of their own money to get the business off the ground. Nicholas was the C.E.O., and Samueli served as the chief technologist.

Broadcom would eventually go on to make computer chips that enable voice, video, data, and multi-media to travel at very high speeds. Their chips were revolutionary in building high-speed Internet, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth technology. Nicholas quickly became well known for his work ethic. He was driven and slept no more than three or four hours a night in pursuit of his vision. He also soon developed a reputation for extreme arrogance.

Nicholas and Samueli took their company public on April 17, 1998 right smack dab in the middle of the original dotcom frenzy. Broadcom stood out from the other dot-coms of the day because, unlike all the rest, their company actually produced profits by the time it went public! The company was one of the fastest companies in history to achieve $1 billion in annual revenue.  On IPO day, Broadcom's stock debuted at $4 a share and over the course of the first day of trading more than doubled. When the final bell was rung that day, Nicholas and Samueli were each worth more than $600 million dollars. It was one of the hottest public offerings in history. Six months later both Henry Nicholas and Henry Samueli were billionaires.

By August 2000, Broadcom's stock was at $182.42 per share. At this price, Broadcom's market cap topped $60 billion. The average Broadcom employee was worth $6 million dollars.  The company's parking lot was filled with Porches, Ferraris, Lamborghinis, and other expensive luxury cars. The two Henrys were each worth $10 billion.

As a result of their respective windfalls, Nicholas and his wife Stacey began to spend lots of money. Or, rather, Nicholas did. Despite her new found wealth, Stacey still preferred her more modest minivan and shopping trips to Target over the luxury vehicles her husband seemed to acquire by the dozen.  Nicholas also bought an aviation company called Prestige Air that gave him access to three private jets and a helicopter.

The Underground Lair

Henry and his wife soon began to renovate their house.  They lived in the Nellie Gail Ranch area of Laguna Hills – one of the most luxurious developments in the area. The Nellie Gail Ranch features 20 miles of equestrian trails and homes that are 5,000 square feet are considered small. Just a week after Broadcom's I.P.O. Nicholas and his wife bought a much larger home a few doors down Rodeo Circle from their current home for $1.7 million. They immediately began a $400,000 renovation project that would balloon into a budget of more than $30 million by the time the saga was complete.

Apparently Henry Nicholas was not content to sit back and enjoy the well-deserved quiet home life of an internet billionaire. On the contrary as a matter of fact. Nicholas had a plan that would allow him to indulge in what he considered the finer things in life (sex, drugs, prostitutes etc). While his wife settled in the main area of their property, Henry set out to build the ultimate (hedonistic) man cave.

Henry's dream man cave was actually an underground lair that would be built below the family's hillside home.  Nicholas had contractors create a tunnel leading down to a series of rooms between the house's gym and library that would eventually connect to a 2,000 square foot personal sports bar that was to be called Nick's Café.

In the library, a panel opened toward the passageway. The tunnel had faux stone walls with impressions of skulls carved into niches, which were lit by candelabras. The underground lair had a number of entrances and exits – there was a staircase in the sports bar that lifted up, an entrance covered by a rock close to the wine cellar, and an exit onto a horse trail that was disguised as a supply shed.  The lair was filled with every amenity for decadence they you can imagine. Twelve-foot high ceilings, columns covered in 24-carat gold leaf, top of the line sound equipment and a Jacuzzi were all contained in the rooms that brought to mind someone's harem fantasy gone overboard.

The ongoing construction made Nicholas' neighbors impatient and they soon began to complain – especially when they were confronted by Henry's armed guards on the horse trail. Neighbors called city officials in Laguna Hills who discovered that there was no permit for any of the construction. The city officials shut Nicholas down immediately.

Nicholas was too addicted to the idea of his own secret lair to let it go so easily, so he bought a warehouse in a gritty industrial district five minutes from his home. He basically just shifted all the contractors from his house to the warehouse where they were instructed to build a replica of the lair.

The warehouse lair was soon given the name "The Ponderosa" or "The Pond" as regulars came to call it. Visitors entered through a secret passageway that opened up to a large room decorated in red and gold. Nicholas liked the Pond so much that he began to host wild parties there. According to government prosecutors, it was at these parties where Henry supplied drugs like cocaine, ecstasy, and marijuana to his guests. Prostitutes were an abundant mainstay at the Pond. Henry basically treated the Pond as his own personal brothel.

Unfortunately, the good times did not roll forever. In May 2002, Henry's wife Stacey drove over to The Pond and caught Nicholas red handed cheating on her with a prostitute. Henry was also reportedly sky-high on drugs.  Stacey immediately filed for divorce. The battle between the former spouses took more than seven years to finalize, during which time Henry allegedly spent more than $1 million dollars of their joint family trust to have Stacey followed and intimidated. According to 2008 court documents, Henry once even told his ex-wife that he could have her "whacked". She later withdrew this claim. But Stacey wasn't the only person furious with Henry Nicholas. In the fall of 2002, seven contractors who'd worked on the project both at his home and at the warehouse filed a lawsuit against the aspiring playboy alleging that he used "manipulation, lies, intimidation, and death threats" to get out of paying the bills presented to him.

Nicholas stepped down as CEO of Broadcom in 2003, ostensibly to work on his marriage and family life. Law enforcement closed in on Nicholas, accusing him of hosting a revolving parade of prostitutes, the spiking of clients' drinks with Ecstasy, and most importantly: Backdating stock prices.

Former employees alleged that Nicholas used the drugs and prostitutes to get an advantage in business. A former event planner for Broadcom testified that he saw Nicholas put "powdered ecstasy pills into the drinks of his customers."  A Broadcom engineer also stated in a lawsuit that Nicholas had "a practice of hiring prostitutes to greet customers, business associates, and for himself." Reportedly, Nicholas even gave these prostitutes titles at Broadcom. He called them professional saleswomen.

Away from all the sex, drugs and parties, Broadcom had a bigger problem. An accounting problem.

The Indictments and Trials

After the dot-com boom, the government launched a massive investigation into charges that many companies, including Broadcom, Apple, and other technology giants, engaged in backdating stock-options. When a company backdates an option, it alters the date at which that option was actually granted. If the stock has gone significantly up or down, you can guess why changing the date you were given the shares might be a valuable advantage.

Broadcom received an inquiry from the Securities and Exchange Commission in June 2006. Broadcom launched an internal inquiry and found that certain executives did backdate stock options. The issue was not whether companies were entitled to issue options that are already "in the money". Companies have the right to do that. But when they do that they are supposed to take a noncash charge to earnings to accurately reflect the correct amount to shareholders. Tech companies were reluctant to follow that rule because they lived for earnings growth.

Four years after Nicholas left Broadcom, in January 2007, the company accepted a $2.2 billion charge to account for the cost of the backdated options. That is the largest charge taken by any company that was a part of the dotcom era. Broadcom placed the blame squarely on three former employees: Bill Ruehle, the CFO who had resigned that fall due to the stock-option inquiry; former VP of human resources Nancy Tullos; and Henry Nicholas, who, in an official statement from Broadcom, "bears significant responsibility for the lack of adequate controls in the option granting process due to the tone and style of doing business he set."

Alongside the backdating of options, Nicholas was charged with drug distribution tied to all those parties in his never fully completed underground lair and at The Pond.  Prosecutors were aware that Nicholas wasn't in the business of selling drugs, but there were too many reports that detailed how freely available drugs were at his parties.

In April 2008, Henry Nicholas voluntarily checked himself into a Betty Ford alcohol-rehabilitation program and then went on to complete treatment at Cliffside Malibu. He threw himself into sobriety and philanthropy. Would this influence the outcome of the cases waged against him?

Ultimately and surprisingly, both the charges of options backdating and drug distribution were dismissed in 2010. Since then, Henry Nicholas has focused his energies on both fighting the continual stream of lawsuits still coming his way, and on philanthropy thanks to his $3.6 billion personal net worth. He established the Nicholas Academic Centers and those centers have sent more than 200 students to top-ranked universities. Through his Henry T. Nicholas Foundation, he frequently gives to Episcopal Church community causes as well as arts and education programs. In 2008 he mobilized California to pass Marsy's Law, a crime victim's bill of rights, named for his murdered sister.

Henry Nicholas III still says he didn't do it. And even though the charges were dropped, far too many people took part in his infamous sex and drug laden parties to believe it didn't happen.  Nicholas' drive and ambition allowed him to create an empire, but once he was a billionaire, he couldn't handle the success and went into self-destruction mode. As Rick James once said, "cocaine is a hell of a drug."

***Update: Unfortunately Henry Nicholas was arrested in August 2018 after police found suitcases full of drugs and an unresponsive woman in his hotel room. Please read this article for the full story.

Read more: Some Billionaires Play Golf. Broadcom Founder Henry Nicholas Preferred Drug Fueled Hooker Orgies In His Private Sex Dungeon.


Veronica Rodriguez Net Worth

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Veronica Rodriguez net worth: Veronica Rodriguez is a Venezuelan American pornographic actress who has a net worth of $700 thousand. Veronica Rodriguez was born in Caracas, Venezuela in August 1991. She worked in retail before appearing in a scene with Bang Bros. She has about 100 acting credits to her name. Veronica Rodriguez has been nominated for multiple AVN Award and an XRCO Award. She has worked for studios including Jules Jordan Video, Reality Kings, Digital Playground, Brazzers, and more.

Read more: Veronica Rodriguez Net Worth

Dana DeArmond Net Worth

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Dana DeArmond net worth: Dana DeArmond is an American pornographic actress and director who has a net worth of $1 million. Dana DeArmond was born in Fort Bragg, North Carolina in June 1979. She joined the industry in 2004 and was popular on MySpace with more than 300 thousand friends. Dana DeArmond has nearly 500 acting credits to her name. She has also hosted the radio show Dirty/Nerdy for Sirius XM. She was featured in the books Naked Ambition: An R Rated Look at an X Rated Industry and L.A. Bondage. DeArmond won Urban X Awards in 2009 and 2010 and an AVN Award in 2012. In 2016 she was inducted into the AVN Hall of Fame. Dana DeArmond has another 40 award nominations to her credit.

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Maryse Ouellet Net Worth

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Maryse Ouellet net worth: Maryse Ouellet is a Canadian professional wrestler, manager, actress, and model who has a net worth of $4 million. Maryse Ouellet was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada in January 1983. As a model she won Miss Hawaiian Tropic Canada in 2003. Ouellet signed with the WWE in 2006 and competed in the WWE Diva Search. As a wrestler she won the WWE Divas Championship twice and was ranked as the #9 female wrestler in 2009 in the PWI Female 40. As an actress she has appeared in the films October, Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No!, Santa's Little Helper, The Marine 5: Battleground, and more. She has been featured on the reality TV series Total Divas starting in 2016 and Miz & Mrs. starting in 2018. Maryse Ouellet married professional wrestler The Miz in 2014. She has worked as a realtor and an entrepreneur with her House of Maryse clothing and jewelry line.

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Lior Suchard Net Worth

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Lior Suchard net worth: Lior Suchard is an Israeli mentalist who has a net worth of $10 million. Lior Suchard was born in Haifa, Israel in December 1981. He began performing at the age of 14. Suchard served in the Israeli Air Force and appeared on Uri Geller's television series The Successor and won the reality show. He appeared in the 2011 documentary Skeptical and hosted and directed the game show Money Pump. Suchard accurately predicted the results of the Nineteenth Knesset elections in 2013. He has appeared on several TV series including The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, The View, Larry King Now, The Doctors, Good Morning America, and The Late Late Show with James Corden. Lior Suchard ranked #28 on People Magazine's Sexiest Men Alive in 2010. He is also popular in Russia and Australia as well as India where he correctly predicted the score of a cricket match between Australia and India.

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DJ Red Alert Net Worth

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DJ Red Alert net worth: DJ Red Alert is an American disc jockey who has a net worth of $3 million. DJ Red Alert was born in Antigua, West Indies in November 1956. He is one of the founding fathers of hip hop music and its culture. DJ Red Alert gained popularity by working for 98.7 Kiss-FM located in New York City. He was one of the first Djs to perform with Universal Zulu Nation. DJ Red Alert has been responsible for helping artists including A Tribe Called Quest, Black Sheep, and Queen Latifah get their big breaks. He holds a record for appearing in the most music videos. He is known as the father of mix tapes. He formerly had a hip hop management company called Red Alert Productions. DJ Red Alert was awarded a location on the Bronx Walk of Fame. He is uncle of Mike Gee of the group Jungle Brothers.

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Chandler Parsons Net Worth

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Chandler Parsons net worth: Chandler Parsons is an American professional basketball player who has a net worth of $30 million. Chandler Parsons was born in Casselberry, Florida in October 1988. He is a 6'10" small forward who played at Lake Howell High School where he won the Florida Class 5a state basketball championship. Parsons played his college basketball for Florida where he was the SEC Player of the Year in 2011. He was also first-team All-SEC and an AP honorable mention All-American. Chandler Parsons was drafted #38 overall by the Houston Rockets in the 2011 NBA Draft. He played in France for Cholet and played for the Rockets from 2011 to 2014. Parsons played for the Dallas Mavericks from 2014 to 2016 and joined the Memphis Grizzlies in 2016. In 2012 he was named to the NBA All-Rookie Second Team. In 2014 he signed a three year deal for $46 million with the Mavericks. Between June 2017 and June 2018, Chandler Parsons earned $24 million between salary and endorsements, which made him one of the highest paid basketball players in the world.

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Maryam d'abo Net Worth

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Maryam d'abo net worth: Maryam d'abo is an English actress who has a net worth of $10 million. Maryam d'abo was born in Hammersmith, London, England, United Kingdom in December 1960. She is best known for being a Bond girl starring as Kara Milovy in the 1987 film The Living Daylights. D'abo has had recurring roles on several TV series including Master of the Game in 1984, Something Is Out There in 1988, Mowgli: The New Adventures of the Jungle Book in 1998, Doctor Zhivago in 2002, Helen of Troy in 2003, and 13 Steps Down in 2012. Maryam d'abo has also appeared in several films and episodes of TV series including Murder, She Wrote, Tales from the Crypt, Dorian Gray, and more.  She married director Hugh Hudson in 2003. D'Abo is the cousin of the singer of the musical group Manfred Mann, Mike d'Abo. She is also the first cousin once removed of the actress Olivia d'Abo.

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Davante Adams Net Worth

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Davante Adams net worth and salary: Davante Adams is an American professional football player who has a net worth of $25 million. Davante Adams was born in Redwood City, California in December 1992. He is a wide receiver who played at Palo Alto High School. Adams played his college football at Fresno State where he was named the MWC Freshman of the Year in 2012. In 2013 he was named first-team All-MWC and a second-team All-American and won the Paul Warfield Trophy. Davante Adams was drafted #53 overall in the 2014 NFL Draft by the Green Bay Packers. He has played his entire career for the Packers through the 2018 season. In 2017 he was selected to the Pro Bowl. In 2017 he signed a four year deal worth $58 million with the Green Bay Packers. During his first four NFL seasons Adams had 26 touchdowns, 2,811 yards, and 237 receptions. He also had four touchdowns in his first three postseasons. Between June 2017 and June 2018, Davante Adams earned $25 million between salary and endorsements. That made him one of the highest paid athletes on the planet.

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The Hefner Family Sells Off Last Stake In Playboy Enterprises For $35M

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Hugh Hefner's name and the magazine he founded will likely be linked in the public's mind for as long as the latter keeps publishing new content, but in the financial sense the two are no longer connected. That is the case now that the late Hefner's family has recently made the decision to sell off their last remaining shares in Playboy Enterprises, as reported by The Blast.

The Hugh Hefner Trust and Playboy Enterprises struck a deal that had the latter buying back the former's shares for the grand total of $35 million. More precisely, the deal was struck between the Hefner Trust and Icon Acquisition Holdings LLC, a company that owns some of the Playboy media empire.

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The deal was also a bit more complicated than a simple sale of stock. It was actually divided into two parts: First, Icon Acquisition Holdings agreed to buy 800,000 shares in the Playboy company for $15 million. Second, the million shares the family trust had are to be put in escrow, with Playboy paying for it with a loan of $20 million.

As for who gets the money, proceeds from the sale will be divvied up between Hefner's widow Crystal Hefner, as well as his children and a few other beneficiaries. One of those children, son Cooper Hefner, will stay on at his position of Chief Creative Officer of Playboy Enterprises, but without any ownership stake in the company.

It's the end of a very long chapter in the story of Playboy, the magazine Hugh Hefner founded back in 1953, famously with a starting loan from his mom of just a thousand bucks. From there, he guided the magazine to worldwide fame and recognition, serving as the public face of the whole Playboy brand virtually all the way up until his death in September of last year at 91 years old.

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Chewing Gum Billionaire Moves From Candy Aisle To Medical Marijuana

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William Wrigley Jr. II helped sell his family's business to Mars Inc. back in 2008. Now, he's got a new business. He recently led a $65 million investment round for the Georgia based medical marijuana company Surterra Wellness. We have to sort of wonder if pot gum will be part of the company's edible offerings. Surterra Wellness has licenses to operate in Florida and Texas. This most recent funding round brings the total raised so far to $100 million.

Wrigley left the candy and gum business after the 2008 sale. Since then, the 54-year-old has been backing companies through his personal investment firm in West Palm Beach, Florida. After the initial investment round for Surterra last September, Wrigley is increasing his stake. He is chairman of Surterra. This is his first investment in the burgeoning marijuana industry. He got into the industry because of its medical benefits. He is using his experience with brand building and product distribution to help Surterra grow. The company has 10 medical dispensaries in Florida.

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In an interview, Wrigley said:"When I understood the massive benefits, it really changed my mind about the industry. You don't see too many opportunities to have that kind of an impact in an industry that is being created from scratch."

Wrigley's great grandfather founded Wrigley Co. in 1891. He is not investing in the growing recreational marijuana market yet. He is, however, watching the industry closely as more and more states make recreational marijuana legal. Medical marijuana is available legally more widely and the FDA recently approved the first drug to be derived from cannabis, indicating that the federal government may be leaning towards loosening regulations. The current federal ban on marijuana of any sort means banks and big institutional investors cannot take part in the boom in cannabis businesses.

Wrigley said that Surterra will eventually also sell recreational marijuana. Right now, nine states have legalized marijuana for recreational use by adults. The market for recreational marijuana is expected to pass $5 billion this year. If you include medical sales the U.S. marijuana market is an $11 billion behemoth.

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Jersey Mike's Founder Turned $125,000 Into Billions

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Peter Cancro has been the CEO of Jersey Mike's for 43 years. He got his start at a local mom and pop sandwich shop called Mike's Subs in Point Pleasant, New Jersey when he was 14 years old. As a high school student, he played football, was a lifeguard during the summers, and made sandwiches at the shop that was founded in 1956. During the spring of his senior year of high school, he found out that the two brothers who owned Mike's Subs wanted to sell it. His mom suggested he buy the sub shop. He skipped school the following day and started knocking on doors trying to raise money.

On a cold night in March of 1975, Cancro knocked on the door of his high school football coach Rod Smith. Cancro told him that he'd missed all his classes the past week because the sub shop where he had worked for four years was for sale and he wanted to buy it. It was selling for $125,000. He showed his coach the folder he had with the gross profits and earnings potentials of the business. Smith was a banker. Impressed with Cancro's drive, he told him he could help.

Image via Michael Rivera/Wikimedia Commons

Cancro was, as mentioned, a senior in high school. He was the quarterback on the football team and class president. He intended to study law at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. However, once he was the owner of Mike's Subs, his priorities changed. He had been skipping a lot of classes during his last semester of high school. He had enough credits to graduate and drove up to graduation in the Mike's Subs van.

Over the first decade of his ownership of the sub shop, Cancro opened up a few more stores and repaid the loan from Smith with interest. In 1987, he decided to open up the sub shop to franchising and changed the company's name to Jersey Mike's to reflect the original shop's roots. Every year, more and more Jersey Mike's opened up. By 1991, there were 30 Jersey Mike's shops. Then the recession of the early 1990s hit the company hard.

The recession hit banks particularly hard. It was nearly impossible to get a loan. In order to survive, he had to lay off six people including his own brother. He thought it was all over. Clearly that was not the end. Today, Jersey Mike's has 1400 stores in 45 states and does a billion dollars in annual sales. Jersey Mike's has been the fastest growing franchise restaurant in the U.S. for the last four years.

Cancro has big plans for the future. Over the next five years, he plans to double Jersey Mike's to 3,000 locations and $2 billion in annual sales.

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The Incredible Work Ethic Of One Of India's Youngest Self Made Billionaires Has Made Him An Enormous Fortune

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Div Turakhia became one of India's youngest self-made billionaires in 2016 when he sold Media.net, his ad tech startup for $900 million. That wasn't the now 36-year-old's first big success, either. He and his older brother Bhavin founded Directi Group, a holding company with a portfolio of tech companies that brings in $250 million in annual revenue. Div and Bhavin founded Directi in 1998 as a web hosting business. They ran it out of their parents' house in Mumbai when they were 16 and 18 years old, respectively. They started the company with a $500 loan from their father to rent a server to host data. Within four years, Directi had revenue of $1 million.

Div taught himself how to program a computer when he was 7 or 8. By the time he was 13, public internet access was available in India and he had enough experience to offer his services to local companies that wanted webpages built. From the ages of 14 to 16, Div did web consulting, built websites, took care of security. At the same time, Bhavin was running his own jobs portal where job seekers could be connected with recruiters online. The brothers wanted to launch a project that would have broad appeal. They realized that all of these people who wanted websites would need hosting services. That's how they decided to start their own web hosting business.

Image via Aviefern/Wikimedia Commons

Once Directi took off it just kept growing. By the time Div was 23, the company had $10 million in revenue. Div and his brother mostly invested their earnings back into the business – after making some splurge type purchases such as a car for themselves and an SUV for their dad. A few years later, Div bought his $220,000 Porsche Boxster S. By that time, he was worth tens of millions, which was a drastic contrast to how he'd grown up.

Div's family moved to Mumbai when he was a small child. His family briefly lived with his uncle in a small one bedroom apartment. Eight people in a one bedroom apartment.

Bhavin is the CEO of Directi, which the brother's co-own and invest in tech startups. Div had taken off on his own to launch ideas more than once. In 2005, Div launched Skenzo, a company that buys unused web domains. That company became part of Media.net when he founded it in 2010. He founded Media.net to get a foot in the door of the $270 billion digital ad market. He modeled the company off Google's AdSense. He was able to convince Yahoo, who he had a relationship with through Directi, to sign an exclusive deal with Media.net. Yahoo even pursued buying Div's company a number of times, but Yahoo's struggling search engine business made that impossible. Media.net kept growing and in 2015, a year before China's Beijing Miteno shelled out nearly a billion dollars for the company, Media.net had $232 million in annual revenue.

Div still runs Media.net as a subsidiary of Beijing Miteno. He does not yet know what his next move will be. He does know that he doesn't know what he'd do if he wasn't working non-stop. He's been working for 22 years every single day including weekends, 10 to 14 hours a day. In a profile of him in Wired, he said:

"There's no work-life balance until after you succeed, and even after that. If you look at my hours, they're crazy right now. But at some point in time, everybody normalizes, hopefully. Am I happy? Yeah, absolutely. I wasn't happy I wouldn't do it. I don't need money."

Read more: The Incredible Work Ethic Of One Of India's Youngest Self Made Billionaires Has Made Him An Enormous Fortune

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