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Roger Glover Net Worth

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Roger Glover net worth: Roger Glover is a British musician, songwriter, and record producer who has a net worth of $35 million. Roger Glover was born in Brecon, Powys, Wales, United Kingdom in November 1945. He is best known for being the bassist in the hard rock bands Deep Purple and Rainbow. Deep Purple formed in 1968 and released their debut studio album Shades of Deep Purple in 1968. They have released 20 studio albums with many reaching #1 in at least one country including Deep Purple in Rock, Fireball, Machine Head, Who Do We Think We Are, Burn, Stormbringer, Perfect Strangers, The House of Blue Light, Now What?!, and Infinite. Their most popular singles include "Black Night" and "Smoke on the Water". Glover played bass for Rainbow from 1979 to 1984 and played on the albums Down to Earth, Difficult to Cure, Straight Between the Eyes, and Bent Out of Shape. Roger Glover has also released several studio albums and played on albums by many other artists in addition to producing many more.

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Robert Reed Net Worth

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Robert Reed net worth and salary: Robert Reed was an American actor who had a net worth equal to $3 million at the time of his death in 1992 (after adjusting for inflation). Robert Reed was born in Highland Park, Illinois in October 1932 and passed away in May 1992. He had more than 100 acting credits to his name and one of his best known roles came starring as Mike Brady on the television series The Brady Bunch from 1969 to 1974. Reed starred as Kenneth Preston on the TV series The Defenders from 1961 to 1965. From 1969 to 1974 he starred as Adam Tobias on the series Mannix. From 1981 to 1982 Robert Reed starred as Dr. Adam Rose on the television series Nurse. He also had recurring roles on the TV series Dr. Kildare, Rich Man, Poor Man, Roots, The Brady Bunch Variety Hour, The Runaways, The Love Boat, Hunter, The Bradys, and more. Reed was nominated for Primetime Emmy Awards for Rich Man, Poor Man and Medical Center in 1976 and for Roots in 1977. Robert Reed passed away on May 12, 1992 at 59 years old from colon cancer and HIV.

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Graham Patrick Martin Net Worth

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Graham Patrick Martin net worth: Graham Patrick Martin is an American actor who has a net worth of $4 million. Graham Patrick Martin was born in Metairie, Louisiana in November 1991. From 2007 to 2009 he starred as Trent Pearson on the television series The Bill Engvall Show. Martin starred as Eldridge Mackelroy on the TV series Two and a Half Men from 2010 to 2012. He began starring as Rusty beck on the series Major Crimes in 2012. Graham Patrick Martin has appeared in several films including The Girl Next Door, Rising Stars, and Somewhere Slow. He has also appeared in episodes of the TV series Law & Order: Criminal Intent, iCarly, Jonas, Good Luck Charlie, The Closer, The Anna Nicole Story, Impastor, and The Good Doctor. In 2009 he won Young Artist Awards for Outstanding Young Performers in a TV Series and Best Performance in a TV Series (Comedy or Drama) – Leading Young Actor for The Bill Engvall Show.

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Kemba Walker Net Worth

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Kemba Walker net worth and salary: Kemba Walker is an American professional basketball player who has a net worth of $20 million dollars. Kemba Walker was born in Bronx, New York in May 1990. He is a 6'1″ point guard who was a McDonald's All-American and second-team Parade All-American at Rice High School. Walker played his college basketball at Connecticut where he won the NCAA championship in 2011 and was named the NCAA Final Four Most Outstanding Player. He was also a consensus first-team All-American and won the Bob Cousy Award in addition to being the Big East Tournament MVP. Kemba Walker was drafted #9 overall by the Charlotte Bobcats in 2011 and has played for the Charlotte Bobcats / Hornets his entire career through the 2017-18 season. In 2017 and 2018 he was an NBA All-Star and also won the NBA Sportsmanship Award. In 2014 he signed a four year deal with Charlotte for $48 million.

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Datsik Net Worth

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Datsik net worth: Datsik is a Canadian DJ and record producer who has a net worth of $8 million. Datsik was born Troy Beetles in Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada in June 1988. He has been a staple at music festival around the world including Coachella, EDC Las Vegas, Ultra Music Festival, and more. He was accused of sexual assault in 2018 and stepped down from his record label and was dropped by the talent agencies representing him. Datsik released his debut studio album Vitamin D in 2012 and the album Let It Burn LP in 2013. He has also released the EPs Nuke 'Em (with Flux Pavilion, Tom Encore and Redline), Boom (with Excision and Flux Pavilion), Eradicate (with Chaosphere), Cold Blooded, Crazy (with Subvert and Fat Pat), Internet Streets (with Barely Alive), Down 4 My Ninjas, Darkstar, and Sensei with the last two reached the Top 10 of the US Dance chart.

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Fred Trump Net Worth

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Fred Trump net worth: Fred Trump was an American real estate developer who had a net worth equal to $600 million at the time of his death in 1999 which is the same as around $900 million after adjusting for inflation today. Fred's net worth was estimated at $200 million in 1982, which is the same as around $500 million today. Fred Trump was born in New York City, New York in October 1905 and passed away in June 1999. He had five children with his wife Mary Anne MacLeod including Donald Trump. Fred Trump started his career at the age of 15 with his mother Elizabeth Christ Trump in home construction and sales. In 1927 their development company was incorporated as Elizabeth Trump & Son. The operation built and managed single-family homes in Queens as well as barracks and garden apartments for the United States Navy near major shipyards on the East Coast and more than 27 thousand apartments located in New York City. In 1954 Fred Trump was investigated by a U.S. Senate committee for profiteering. In 1971 he made his son Donald the president of Trump Management Company and in 1973 the family was sued by the U.S. Justice Department's Civil Rights Division in violation of the Fair Housing Act. Fred Trump passed away on June 25, 1999 at 93 years old.

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Terje Håkonsen Net Worth

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Terje Håkonsen net worth: Terje Håkonsen is a Norwegian professional snowboarder who has a net worth of $4 million. Terje Håkonsen was born in Amot, Telemark, Norway. He is known for being one of the most influential snowboards the sport has ever seen. Author Rob Reed stated that Hakonsen "took the young sport of snowboarding and revolutionized nearly every aspect of it". He was at the height of his career during the 1990s when he would win the International Snowboarding Federation World Championship for halfpipe in 1993, 1995, and 1997. Terje Håkonsen also won the European Championship in 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, and 1997 which was every time he competed. He won the US Open Halfpipe Finals in 1992, 1993, and 1995 as well as seven Mt. Baker Banked Slalom championships. Terje Håkonsen set a world record in 200 for the highest air at 9.8 meters about the top of a quarter pipe. He has appeared in many videos and has had many sponsors including Oakley and Volcom.

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Chris Larsen Is The World's First Cryptocurrency Billionaire

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Chris Larsen is the co-founder of the cryptocurrency company Ripple Labs. Ripple is the company behind the Ripple blockchain and the digital currency XRP. Larsen has become the first cryptocurrency billionaire to make the list of the 400 richest Americans. He has the unique distinction of being the only person in the U.S. who has accumulated wealth solely through cryptocurrencies. Of course, the volatility of cryptocurrency of late affects Larsen's fortune day-to-day, but it is safe to place his net worth at $2 billion. This puts him in a league with people like Philadelphia Eagles owner Jeffrie Lurie, in terms of total net worth.

Chris Larsen was born in 1960 in San Francisco. He attended San Francisco State University and graduated in 1984 with a degree in international business and accounting. After college, he worked for Chevron doing financial audits in Brazil, Ecuador, and Indonesia. He got his MBA from Stanford in 1991 and went on to become a serial entrepreneur. Larsen founded the online mortgage lender e-Loan in 1997. In 2005, he founded peer-to-peer lender Prosper. Larsen co-founded Ripple with Jed McCaleb in 2012 with the goal of facilitating international payments for banks using blockchain technology. Ripple controls 61 billion of the 100 billion XRP on the market. He has a 17% stake in the company. Ripple has more than 100 customers including Bank of America, Santander, and Mitsubishi Financial. Larsen stepped down from Ripple in 2017 but remains executive chairman.

Jack Taylor/Getty Images

Back in January, Ripple hit an all time high of $3.84, making Larsen's net worth $60 billion. That briefly made him the 7thrichest person in the world. He was richer than Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin. He was richer than Michael Bloomberg. On January 4th, the richest people in the world were Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates, Amancio Ortega, Warren Buffett, Mark Zuckerberg, Bernard Arnault, and Chris Larsen. And then the cryptocurrency bloodbath began and Ripple's currency fell 74% from that all time high of $3.84 and took with it $44 billion of Chris Larsen's net worth.

The current value of XRP is $0.48, much lower than it was back in January when it hit its all-time high.

As mentioned, Larsen owns 17% of the company Ripple (which controls 61% of all the digital currency). He also owns an additional 5.19 billion XRP as a personal stake. Larsen's $2.1 billion net worth is not liquid. In fact, it is extremely illiquid. If he tried to sell, say $1 billion of XRP, it would flood the market with coins and tank the value of XRP. Additionally, there would have to be a person out there willing to buy that $1 billion worth of XRP. As a result, Larsen's net worth is a paper net worth—much more so than other technology sector billionaires.

Read more: Chris Larsen Is The World's First Cryptocurrency Billionaire


These Three Billionaire Entrepreneurs Quit Bad Habits To Be More Successful

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We all have habits and routines. Some of them are good, some are less so. Habits and routines help us organize our day and be productive. But bad habits can hold you back and keep you from becoming successful. If you have bad or counterproductive habits that you'd like to quit, you can get some inspiration from billionaires Bill Gates, Mark Cuban, and Elon Musk, who all had to overcome bad habits over the course of their journey to become the successful billionaires they are today.

Procrastination
The second richest man in the world had a big problem with procrastination. When Bill Gates was young he was someone who put things off until the last moment. This was especially true during the two years he spent as an undergraduate at Harvard. He was the guy who didn't do anything until the last minute. When Gates entered the business world, he had a big wake up call. In business, deadlines have to be met. Being on time is valued. He noticed this and consciously set out to become more like the students he knew in college who were organized and had things done on time.

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

The Bad Communicator
Mark Cuban had to learn that yelling is not the best way to get your point across. This was a lesson he learned in his 20s. He founded the early computer company MicroSolutions with Martin Woodall in the early 80s. The two often disagreed over how to run the company. They drove each other crazy. Woodall rode Cuban hard about how sloppy and unorganized he was. Cuban yelled back that Woodall was so focused he was missing big opportunities.

It took Cuban some time to learn that yelling increased stress and when stress was increased productivity, competitiveness, and profitability decline in the people around you. Yelling did more harm than good.

The Caffeine Fiend
Tesla and SpaceX founder Elon Musk recently admitted he works 120 hours a week. Obviously, this leaves very little room for sleep. To make up for the lack of sleep, Musk used to drink huge amounts of caffeinated beverages. In 2014, Musk told the German automobile magazine Auto Blid, "There were probably times when I had like eight [diet cokes] a day or something ridiculous. I think these days it's probably one or two, so it's not too crazy."

Musk also used to drink a ton of coffee, which made him over caffeinated and wired. Too much caffeine can increase stress and anxiety levels. It also creates its own type of fatigue, which leads to more caffeine consumption and affects sleep. Musk cut back on his caffeine addiction and started drinking a lot more water.

Read more: These Three Billionaire Entrepreneurs Quit Bad Habits To Be More Successful

How Being Nice To A Younger Geeky High School Classmate Earned Paul Allen A $20 Billion Fortune

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October 15, 2018: We just learned that Paul Allen died today at the age of 65. Paul was first diagnosed with Hodgkin's lymphoma in 1982. This time around, his cancer was successfully treated with radiation. Unfortunately, in 2009 he was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma which ultimately turned fatal. He was a truly remarkable man who donated billions to charity, on top of owning several sports teams, an insane real estate portfolio and much much more. Here's a look back at the life of Paul Allen from an article we wrote a few years ago. Please excuse anything that sounds un-timely)…

The reigning Super Bowl Champions, the Seattle Seahawks, are set to defend their title against the New England Patriots at Super Bowl XLIX in Phoenix, Arizona on February 1, 2015. Seahawks owner Paul Allen has to be thrilled about this development, and the chance to have back-to-back Super Bowl Championships under his belt. There is one area, however, where Allen doesn't need to compete with fellow NFL owners, his personal net worth. After Allen, the next three NFL owners with the most wealth don't even come close to that of Allen's. St. Louis Rams Stan Kroenke, Miami Dolphins Stephen Ross, and Tampa Bay Buccaneers late Malcolm Glazer (who passed away in 2014) have a COMBINED net worth of $14.6 billion.

So with a net worth of $20 billion, the Microsoft co-founder is not just one of the 30 richest people in the world, he is by far the wealthiest NFL team owner. That's a far cry from where Allen was in 1975, when as a college dropout, he and his high school classmate Bill Gates were creating a line of software for the newly-born personal computer industry. That software, dubbed Micro-Soft, was the bedrock upon which one of the world's most valuable corporations would be built.

Paul Allen and Bill Gates met in high school while attending The Lakeside School in Washington State. Despite their two-year age gap, they became fast friends who got their start programming and hacking, thanks to the access they had to a mainframe system owned by their school. The school infamously bought what it expected would be a year's worth of time on the mainframe, only to find Allen and Gates had used up that time in just three weeks.

Getty

Soon, Allen was finding ways to sneak into computer labs and logging in as an administrator. Allen even passed himself off as a graduate student at the University of Washington so he could get in some extra programming time. Eventually, he was caught and banned from the lab. Allen and Gates pressed on however. Their big break came when they saw an article about the Altair 8000 in Popular Electronics Magazine. The computer was small and inexpensive, and was ideal for home computing. The two men got in touch with the computer's manufacturer and offered to design a programming language for the Altair 8000. That language was called BASIC, and it's development opened their eyes to the potential opportunity that existed in creating a programming language. Oh, and yes, they designed it for a computer they not only didn't own, but one they had never even seen before. Incredibly, it was a success and their language worked.

Paul Allen co-founded Microsoft with Bill Gates in 1975. It was Allen who eventually dubbed their venture "Micro-Soft". They trademarked the shortened version "Microsoft" on November 26, 1976.

When Microsoft officially incorporated in 1981, Steve Ballmer owned 8% of the company, Paul Allen owned 25% and Bill Gates owned 45%. The remaining 22% was split up among some of the luckiest people ever to join a risky young startup.

Microsoft IPO'd on March 13, 1986. Microsoft ended the day with a total market cap of $780 million. Gates' 45% stake was worth $350 million. Allen's 25% stake was worth $195 million. Ballmer's 8% stake was worth $51.5 million.

As we all know, over the next 30 years Microsoft ballooned into one of the largest and most valuable companies on the planet.

[As of October 2018, the company has a market cap of $825 billion. Allen's exact Microsoft stake today is not known because over time he sold off the vast majority of his equity, to the point where the company no longer needs to report his holdings. What is known is that at the time of his death, Paul had a net worth of $20 billion.]

Paul left Microsoft in the mid 1980s after a management dispute with Bill Gates but he stayed a member of the company's board of directors until 2000. Even despite his relatively early departure, his enormous wealth allowed Paul to finance an impressively lavish lifestyle of mansions, super yachts, private jets, and several pro sports teams. His most recent project involves commercializing the space travel industry.

Over the years, Paul invested proceeds from his Microsoft shares into his private venture firm, Vulcan Capital. Today, Vulcan owns both the Maaco and Meineke car care brands. It has developed nearly 7 million square feet of real estate, and was a founding investor in film studio Dreamworks SKG. During his life, Paul Allen gave more than $2 billion to charities focused on brain science, and music and arts education.

Paul's financial assets are no longer solely related to the tech industry. He owns three professional sports teams, including the Seattle Seahawks and the Portland Trailblazers. He purchased the Seahawks in 1997 for $194 million when former owner and real estate developer Ken Behring threatened to move the Seahawks to Southern California. Since Allen has been at the helm of the Seahawks, he has built a new stadium, hired former USC coach Pete Carroll, won a Super Bowl, and generally worked to please a legion of fans considered to be among the most rabid of hometown bases in the NFL. Today, the Seahawks are worth $1.3 billion less than the other three teams that played in the NFC and AFC championship games this season.

There are many other examples of how Paul Allen has used the wealth Microsoft has provided him to pursue other interests. He is involved in many philanthropic and entrepreneurial endeavors. In 2003, Allen founded the Allen Institute for Brain Science. His goal is to better understand both the diseased and the healthy human brain. In 2013, the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation granted $2.4 million for a study aimed at gaining a better understanding of traumatic brain injuries. This, of course, is a subject of great interest to an NFL owner, as concussions have become a serious problem for football players at all levels.

In addition to the Seahawks, Allen owns a number of other professional sports teams, including the NBA's Portland Trailblazers and the soccer team, the Seattle Sounders. It may seem odd the co-founder of a technology company has such an interest in sports, but then again, if Paul Allen has a true talent, it is being able to defy everyday conventions. Last summer, he and his band, The Underthinkers, released their debut blues-rock album, Everywhere At Once. Allen plays a mean electric guitar and does so with friends like Joe Walsh of the Eagles and Chrissie Hynde of the Pretenders.

Paul Allen truly lived a truly incredible life. He was a tech entrepreneur, space travel enthusiast, certified scuba diver, friend of Bono, and owner of the three pro sports teams. It was fabulous life, and that is evident in every facet of his activities in business and other ventures. Allen's life story makes you think back and remember all of the underclassmen at your high school you may have misjudged, and perhaps should have been nicer to. You never know, having been a bit more friendly and outgoing just may have put $20 billion in your bank account and a couple of professional sports teams in your portfolio!

Read more: How Being Nice To A Younger Geeky High School Classmate Earned Paul Allen A $20 Billion Fortune

Microsoft Co-Founder Paul Allen Just Died Unexpectedly At The Age Of 65

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Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen has died from complications of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. He was 65 years old. At the time of his death he had a net worth of $20 billion which made him one of the 30 richest people on the planet. He was also notable for owning the Seattle Seahawks, the Portland Trail Blazers and part of the Seattle Sounders FC. During his lifetime he gave more than $2 billion to various philanthropic causes. In 2010 he signed The Giving Pledge which promised to give at least half of his fortune to charity. Rest in peace.

Paul Allen and Bill Gates met in high school while attending The Lakeside School in Washington State. Paul was two years older than Bill. Despite their two-year age gap, they became fast friends who got their start programming and hacking, thanks to the access they had to a mainframe system owned by their school. The school infamously bought what it expected would be a year's worth of time on the mainframe, only to find Allen and Gates had used up that time in just three weeks.

Soon, Allen was finding ways to sneak into computer labs and logging in as an administrator. Allen even passed himself off as a graduate student at the University of Washington so he could get in some extra programming time. Eventually, he was caught and banned from the lab. Allen and Gates pressed on however. Their big break came when they saw an article about the Altair 8000 in Popular Electronics Magazine. The computer was small and inexpensive, and was ideal for home computing. The two men got in touch with the computer's manufacturer and offered to design a programming language for the Altair 8000. That language was called BASIC, and it's development opened their eyes to the potential opportunity that existed in creating a programming language. Oh, and yes, they designed it for a computer they not only didn't own, but one they had never even seen before. Incredibly, it was a success and their language worked.

Getty

Paul Allen co-founded Microsoft with Bill Gates in 1975. It was Allen who eventually dubbed their venture "Micro-Soft". They trademarked the shortened version "Microsoft" on November 26, 1976.

When Microsoft officially incorporated in 1981, Steve Ballmer owned 8% of the company, Paul Allen owned 25% and Bill Gates owned 45%. The remaining 22% was split up among some of the luckiest people ever to join a risky young startup.

Microsoft IPO'd on March 13, 1986. At the end of the day, the company had a total market cap of $780 million. That meant Gates' 45% stake was worth $350 million. Allen's 25% stake was worth $195 million. Ballmer's 8% stake was worth $51.5 million.

As we all know, over the next 30 years Microsoft ballooned into one of the largest and most valuable companies on the planet.

As of October 2018, the company has a market cap of $825 billion. Allen's exact Microsoft stake today is not known because over time he sold off the vast majority of his shares, to the point where the company no longer needs to report his holdings.

Paul left Microsoft in the mid 1980s after a management dispute with Bill Gates, though he stayed on the company's board of directors until 2000. Even despite his relatively early departure, his enormous wealth allowed Paul to finance an impressively lavish lifestyle. He owned the 14th biggest yacht in the world (featuring two helicopter pads, a submarine, swimming pool, music studio and basketball court), the Portland Trail Blazers of the NBA and the Seattle Seahawks of the NFL.

He owned millions of square feet of commercial real estate. In July 2018 he listed an undeveloped 122-acre plot of land in Beverly Hills for $150 million.

At the time of his death, Paul Allen's real estate portfolio included:

  • 10 properties in Seattle
  • A 4,000-acre Idaho ranch
  • An island in the Pacific Northwest
  • A Beverly Hills mansion
  • A 22,000 square-foot home in Silicon Valley
  • A $25 million Malibu mansion
  • A $7.5 million estate in Hawaii
  • A $39 million apartment across two floors in New York City
  • A $30 million mansion in St. Jean Cap-Ferrat in France
  • A London apartment

During his lifetime he donated more than $2 billion to charity. He was also a member of The Giving Pledge which indicates around half of his fortune will eventually be given away.

Paul never married and never had any children. It's unclear what will happen to the portion of his non-Giving Pledge fortune. We'll update if we find out.

Rest in peace Paul. You clearly lived an incredible life.

Read more: Microsoft Co-Founder Paul Allen Just Died Unexpectedly At The Age Of 65

How Jamal Khashoggi, Donald Trump, Prince Al-Waleed, And Late Billionaire Arms Dealer Adnan Khashoggi Are All Connected By A Yacht

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Unless you've been living under a rock for the last few days, you know the story of Jamal Khashoggi. But just to be safe, Jamal is a Saudi Arabian-born journalist who has been missing for a week after entering the Saudi embassy in Istanbul. Jamal was one of the most outspoken critics of the Saudi royal family, specifically the 33-year-old Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman. As for how he was murdered, it's almost explicitly clear that the grizzly act was carried out by a 15-man special forces hit squad sent from Saudi Arabia. We know this thanks to multiple CCTV videos and travel logs at airports and hotels that show the hit-squad's movements step by step from the moment they arrived in Istanbul on two Gulfstream private jets, to the moment they walked into the embassy, to the moment they flew home on those same jets less than 24 hours later.

Jamal Khashoggi is presumed dead and the Saudi government is reportedly about to admit that he died in their custody during a failed kidnapping attempt. It's a horrific incident that puts Donald Trump in a very awkward position when it comes to the Saudis who just last year agreed to buy $100 billion worth of arms and other goods from the US.

And in another strange twist, President Donald Trump actually has an interesting connection to Jamal's late uncle Adnan Khashoggi.

Back in the 70s and 80s, Adnan was the biggest arms dealer in the world. Adnan brokered many extremely lucrative deals between governments all over the world. But he made the majority of his fortune as the go-between for the US and Saudi governments. His clients included Lockheed Corporation, Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, Raytheon, and Northrop Corporation. He received $106 million in commissions from Lockheed alone between 1970 and 1975. That's the same as around $500 million today.

As a result of his dealings, Adnan managed to accumulate a peak net worth of $4 billion in the early 1980s, the same as around $9 billion today after adjusting for inflation. That was enough to make him the richest person on the planet for several years, before being replaced by Bill Gates.

Adnan, who just died just last year at the age of 81, lived an extremely insane life. At his peak, he traveled the globe with a harem of 11 "pleasure wives" and supposedly spent $250,000 PER DAY funding his lifestyle. During the go-go 80s, Adnan spent a lot of time socializing in New York City. And whenever he visited Manhattan, he hung out with Donald Trump. They had a lot in common. They were rich. They loved women. The loved buying extravagant toys… They both would eventually go through extremely expensive divorces.

When Adnan filed for divorced from his wife Soraya Khashoggi in 1979, the case dragged on bitterly for five years. When it was all said and done in 1984, a judge ordered Adnan to pay Soraya $875 million. It was the largest divorce settlement in history at the time and currently the third most expensive divorce ever.

In 1988 Donald bought a 282-foot yacht from Adnan for $30 million. Adnan had spent $100 million in 1980 building and furnishing the yacht, which is the same as around $300 million today. It was one of the largest yachts in the world when it was built. Today it is one of the 60 largest yachts in the world.

Adnan named the yacht Nabila after his daughter (Jamal's cousin). As part of the sale, Adnan offered to knock $1 million off the purchase price if Donald promised to change the yacht's name because he felt it would be disrespectful to his daughter. It was a stupid offer because Donald had no intention of keeping that name. He had already been planning to rename the yacht the Trump Princess:

JACQUES SOFFER/AFP/Getty Images

JACQUES SOFFER/AFP/Getty Images

In 1991, Donald was teetering on personal bankruptcy thanks to a downturn in the New York City real estate market and a pending divorce from first wife Ivana. He needed cash so he put the yacht up for sale. Donald eventually sold the yacht for $20 million. The buyer? Saudi Arabia's Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal.

In 1995, Donald was still feeling a financial pinch and was looking for a buyer for New York's Plaza Hotel. The eventual buyer? Prince Al-Waleed, for $325 million.

In 2001, Donald sold the entire 45th floor of Trump World Tower for $12 million. The buyer? The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Prince Al-Waleed and Crown Prince Mohammad are cousins. They are both grandsons of Ibn Saud, the founder of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/Getty Images

And guess what? Prince Al-Waleed is also connected to Jamal Khashoggi!

In 2010, Prince Al-Waleed launched a news channel called al-Arab. The goal was for al-Arab to be an independent, privately owned broadcaster offering objective and agenda-free news for the Arab world. Who did Prince Al-Waleed hire to run al-Arab? Jamal Khashoggi.

Unfortunately, al-Arab did not stay on the air for very long. On the first day of broadcasting, al-Arab aired an interview with a Bahraini political dissident who denounced the government of Bahrain. Oh, I forgot to mention that al-Arab was based out of Bahrain. After years of planning, the network was shutdown after just one day. Whose decision was it to interview the Bahraini dissident? And who conducted the actual interview? Jamal Khashoggi.

It gets weirder.

In September 2017, Jamal fled Saudi Arabia amid a crackdown of journalists and other critics of the Kingdom that was initiated by the Crown Prince.

Just two months later, in November 2017, Prince Al-Waleed sent an email to his old friend Jamal encouraging him to return to Saudi Arabia to get involved and "contribute" to the Crown Prince's vision and goals. Jamal didn't trust the invitation and made that clear in his reply. A few days after he sent that email to Jamal, Prince Al-Waleed was arrested. He was subsequently held at the Ritz Carlton in Riyadh for three months under charges of corruption.

He was released only after reportedly agreeing to fork over $6 BILLION worth of assets to the government. Who ordered the arrest and is essentially "the government"? Crown Prince Mohammad.

What was that email all about? Was Prince Al-Waleed being pressured to get Jamal back to Saudi Arabia where he would have been jailed or executed? Why was he himself jailed? Believe it or not, nearly a year later and the multi-billionaire prince is still wearing an ankle monitor and can't leave Saudi Arabia.

Clearly there are some weird connections and interesting twists to this story. What happens if it is proven that the Crown Prince ordered Jamal's assassination? What happens to his standing in the world and his planned arms deal with the United States? We'll update you as we learn more!

Read more: How Jamal Khashoggi, Donald Trump, Prince Al-Waleed, And Late Billionaire Arms Dealer Adnan Khashoggi Are All Connected By A Yacht

Moon Bound Billionaire Yusaku Maezawa Says Not To Work So Much

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Most successful businessmen dole out advice proposing hard work and dedication on a regular basis, and you might expect that Japanese billionaire Yusaku Maezawa would have similar thoughts on the subject. He's all set to be the first private space tourist on a near future trip around the moon with SpaceX in 2023, and he's the founder of the massively successful Japanese retail company Zozo Inc. Presumably, he didn't get to that point without a little bit of hard work, but Bloomberg reports that the billionaire had some somewhat surprising words when asked at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan how he will be able to find the time to prepare for his moon voyage in between his busy work schedule. To put it simply, his work schedule isn't as busy as you might think:

"Our employees began working differently under the program: they stopped wasteful activities, wasteful conversations, wasteful meetings. As a result, they could concentrate more, be more productive, and actually go home after six hours."

TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA/AFP/Getty Images

The program Maezawa refers to is a four- or even three-day workweek, each day lasting no longer than six hours apiece. Zozo, which was called Start Today until very recently, implemented the six hour workday back in 2012, and as Maezawa explained the company has seen mostly good results. A spokesman for Zozo says that the shorter, more intense workweek has become a cornerstone of the company's policies, and judging by its massive success over the last few years, it may be something more companies should consider for themselves.

As for Maezawa's fast approaching moon trip, he told the press he's hoping that will help him in his work as well:

"I believe if I go to the moon I can produce better work, great work. So this is very important to me and I try to promote this among my employees as well."

There you have it, folks: You can make it to the moon working just 18 hours a week!

Read more: Moon Bound Billionaire Yusaku Maezawa Says Not To Work So Much

Russian Oligarch's $42.5 Manhattan Mansion Seized By U.S. Government

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Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska's $42.5 million mansion on the upper east side of New York City has been seized by the U.S. government as part of the sanctions placed on him. The 50-year-old is currently under investigation by the U.S. Treasury for his links to bribery, money laundering, racketeering, and murder.

In April, the U.S. leveled its most severe sanctions at Deripaska's metals conglomerate. Americans are banned from dealing with companies including United Co. Rusal. This move caused Deripaska's empire, the largest aluminum producer outside of China, to lose half its value in one day. The sanctions bar Deripaska from participating in the economy of the global dollar. The impact of this was instant. International investors dumped stocks and bonds issues by Deripaska's companies and aluminum traders refused to buy metal from Rusal. Oleg Deripaska spent decades cultivating the U.S. and other Western business circles and the sanctions immediately wiped all that out. He may be able to continue to do business in Russia, but he has been crippled elsewhere in the world by the sanctions.

OLGA MALTSEVA/AFP/Getty Images

Fellow Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich's ex-wife, Dasha Zhukova, and children have been reportedly living in Derispaska's Manhattan home. Dasha is a friend of Ivanka Trump. She and her son Aaron Alexander and daughter Lea Lou are all American citizens. Dasha and her family have vacationed with Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner.

Derispaska's New York home is a double wide, five story townhouse that was previously owned by art dealer Alec Wildenstein and his then wife Jocelyn Wildenstein. He has owned the home since 2008.

Derispaska's Washington, D.C. mansion has also been seized. The FBI is reportedly looking into his assets abroad.

Derispaska is a known friend of Vladimir Putin and told the FBI and U.S. Justice Department that their sanctions against him were "groundless, ridiculous and absurd" when they attempted to turn him against the Russian government and his former business partner Paul Manafort. Derispaska was one of at least six wealthy Russians who were questioned about Manafort.  Paul Manafort is Donald Trump's former campaign manager who was convicted of hiding millions of dollars in payments from the Ukrainian government. Manafort was formerly a business associate of Derispaska.

Oleg Derispaska is currently on an international blacklist that is usually reserved for terrorists, warlords, and human rights violators. His years climbing the ladder of the metals industry are filled with allegations that he ordered the murder of a businessman, bribed a government official, and has links to the Russian mafia.

Read more: Russian Oligarch's $42.5 Manhattan Mansion Seized By U.S. Government

Billionaire Bill Gross Sells Stamp Collection For Record $10 Million Price

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Stamp collecting is not necessarily known as a wealthy person's hobby, since starting a collection of your own doesn't require a huge monetary investment (unlike, say, fine art or cars, two things you're more likely to find billionaires collecting). But billionaire Bill Gross doesn't let his billionaire status keep him from a good stamp collection – how good? A press release from Siegel Auction Galleries announced that Gross recently let go part of his "legendary" collection for a record sum of over $10 million.

This might not mean too much in the way of specifics to a non-philatelist, but here are some highlights from the auction, which was only the first of four sales of Gross' highly valuable stamps, along with their auction sale price (including buyer's premium):

  • The 24-cent 1869 Pictorial Inverted Center ($737,500)
  • The 2-Cent Blue Hawaiian ($619,500)
  • The largest unused block of the 10-cent 1847 First General Issue, also known as The Bible Block ($590,000)
  • The block of twenty 1-cent Pan-American invert ($472,000)
  • The only recorded unused block of the 1857 5-cent Jefferson Perforated Stamp ($472,000)

Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Altogether, this batch of Gross' stamps went for $10,003,155 – the most ever spent on a stamp sale in a single day.

Other than the extremely large sums involved, another difference between the way billionaires collect stamps, and the way you or I might, is the existence of "stamp collecting advisers." Siegel Director Charles Shreve has served as such an adviser to Gross for more than 25 years, and he had this to say on the sale:

"After having assisted Mr. Gross for over 25 years assembling his magnificent collection, I am pleased to see so many new collectors were eager to participate—and participate vigorously—at his first U.S. auction. For an auction of so many high-profile items, the participation was excitingly broad. The results were most impressive."

Gross isn't pocketing all the money he's getting from his stamp collection, nor is he just turning around and using it to buy more stamps. Instead, the release states that some of the proceeds from the sale are going to Doctors Without Borders and The New York Times Neediest Cases Fund, which is in keeping with Gross' practice of donating proceeds from stamp sales to charity. In 2007, after selling off his valuable Great Britain Stamp Collection, he cut a check for $9.1 million to Doctors Without Borders, and he says he plans to announce more charitable contributions from the sale in the future.

The remaining pieces in the Gross Collection are scheduled to be sold off in 2019 and 2020.

Read more: Billionaire Bill Gross Sells Stamp Collection For Record $10 Million Price


Alibaba Founder Jack Ma Is The Richest Man In China, Once Again

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It's been a hot moment since Jack Ma was the richest man in China, but he's back on top again after a new round of investment in his Ant Financial put it at a $150 billion valuation. Over the past year, the 54-year-old Alibaba founders net worth has increased by 35% to reach $44 billion. That increase moves him ahead of Evergrande founder Xu Jianyin and Tencent founder Pony Ma in terms of wealth. Real estate mogul Jianyin's wealth is down 14% due to slumping property sales. Pony Ma's net worth is also down for the first time in the 13 years since he first made the rich list in China. This is due to a decline in the share price of Tencent due to a suspension on the approval of new video games by the Chinese government.

VCG/VCG via Getty Images

There are 11% fewer people on the list of China's richest this year. The wealth threshold this year was $290 million. There were 1,893 people on the list, which is 456 less than last year. That's the biggest decline since the list started two decades ago and seems to reflect the slowdown in China's economy. Overall, the Chinese stock exchange is down 20% due to the slowing economy and the trade war between the US and China.

More than a quarter of people on the list are in the manufacturing industry. Real estate was second with 14.9% of the names on the list. Investments and IT followed that.

In September, Jack Ma announced that he was stepping down from his role at Alibaba. He intends to dedicate his time and fortune on philanthropy and teaching.

Read more: Alibaba Founder Jack Ma Is The Richest Man In China, Once Again

Africa's Youngest Billionaire Kidnapped Leaving Gym

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Mohammed "Mo" Dewji is a 43-year-old Tanzanian billionaire. He is the president of Mohammed Enterprises Tanzania, Ltd. (MeTL) and a former member of Tanzania's parliament. He was entering the gym of a luxury hotel in Dar Es Salaam for his morning workout on Thursday, October 11th when he was kidnapped by masked men toting guns. The kidnappers fired their guns into the air before driving off in a car with Dewji.

Dewji is credited with taking the family business—a wholesale and retail company established by his father in the 1970s—and turning it into a pan-African conglomerate. MeTL has a valuation of more than $1 billion and employs 24,000 people. MeTL has interests in beverages, financial services, mobile phones, textile manufacturing, energy, real estate, edible oils, and flour milling in at least six African countries. Dewji also served in Parliament as a ruling party MP from 2005 to 2015.  He resigned from Parliament to focus on the family business. Dewji also launched Mo Cola, a beverage brand to compete with Coke in 2014.

KHALFAN SAID HASSAN/AFP/Getty Images

Dewji has celebrity status in Tanzania. Despite this, he never travels with security or body guards. He has always been approachable to residents of Tanzania. In fact, he had driven himself to his workout and was going to drive himself home. Police examined his Range Rover—with personalized license plate "Mo"—looking for clues after his abduction.

Police have taken 30 suspects into custody including the manager of the hotel and a number of security guards working at the time of the abduction. Three people have been arrested in connection with the kidnapping. Two of the kidnappers are believed to be foreign nationals.

Dewji is Tanzania's only billionaire with an estimated net worth of $1.5 billion. He is also the first person from Tanzania to join The Giving Pledge. When he pledged to donate at least half his fortune to charity, he said:

"Our role as citizens of this world is to truly support the betterment of our society so that our future generations and their offspring grow up to live even better lives and strive for even more than they think is possible for them today."

The motive for the kidnapping is unknown. This is believed to be a ransom kidnapping.

Read more: Africa's Youngest Billionaire Kidnapped Leaving Gym

Rob Gronkowski Hasn't Spent A Dime Of His $54 Million In NFL Earnings

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Rob Gronkowski is the latest professional athlete to set himself apart from the pack with his financial savvy in addition to his athletic prowess. During an interview with Business Insider, Gronk spoke a bit on his personal finances, which he says so far has involved not spending a dime of the $54 million he's earned from the NFL as one of its most highly paid athletes. Instead, he's lived exclusively off of his various endorsement deals. And he says he has some advice for other young pro athletes who might find themselves earning a good deal more than they're accustomed to – and no, it isn't just "sign a lot of endorsement deals."

Instead, Gronkowski says it pays in the long run to keep things simple and avoid a lot of lavish splurging when you find yourself with your first few big paydays:

"I'd just say keep it simple. Keep it easy, and I'd say keep it simple. Get what you need to be comfortable, save the extra."

Maddie Meyer/Getty Images

Gronkowski goes on to point out that in the NFL, one might have a particular reason to keep things on an even keel, spending-wise:

"Because you don't know how long you're going to be in the league for. It's a short career here in the league. The average is about three to four years, and when it's done, it's done. Be simple, manage it safe, so when it's done you've got a little base, a little foundation to live off."

Gronkowski's financial habits might not have gotten the coveted Warren Buffett endorsement just yet, but he is joining a select group of highly-paid football players who are choosing or chose to make it a point of saving all of their NFL earnings during their playing days, including Marshawn Lynch and rookie New York Giants running back Saquon Barkley.

Read more: Rob Gronkowski Hasn't Spent A Dime Of His $54 Million In NFL Earnings

In-N-Out Heiress Lynsi Snyder Opens Up In Rare Interview

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Lynsi Snyder inherited the In-N-Out burger empire when she turned 35. She was recently found to have a net worth of $3 billion, making her the youngest female billionaire in the U.S. She is famously publicity shy due to two kidnapping attempts when she was younger. Now 36, she runs the beloved burger chain started by her grandfather in 1948. She's been integral in its growth. She's grown up and she recently sat down with Forbes for an exclusive interview.

Harry and Esther Snyder founded In-N-Out in the Los Angeles enclave of Baldwin Park. Today, In-N-Out's heart and soul is still in the neighborhood where the first burger stand opened 70 years ago. The company's offices are, appropriately, on Hamburger Lane. Next door is an In-N-Out, of course. Not far away lies the location of the first, simple, tiny, burger stand optimistically started by a newly married couple after World War II, when L.A. was going through its post-war growth spurt and everything was filled with hope.

Halfway down the block from the original In-N-Out lies a building behind a security fence. This is the top secret corporate test kitchen for In-N-Out. Unlike McDonald's and Burger King, who serve over 80 different items, In-N-Out has just 15 items on its menus: burgers, cheeseburgers, fries, soda, milk shakes and the famous Double-Double. The menu at In-N-Out doesn't change much. Lynsi added hot chocolate to it in 2018. Occasionally the company will swap out the brand of coffee it serves. Otherwise, things stay the same. That consistency is key to In-N-Out's business and popularity.

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Lynsi, like the family members who've helmed In-N-Out before her, has no intentions to shake up the menu or structure of In-N-Out.

"It's not [about] adding new products. Or thinking of the next bacon-wrapped this or that. We're making the same burger, the same fry. We're really picky and strategic. We're not going to compromise."

The truth is, In-N-Out hasn't evolved much since that first burger stand in Baldwin Park in 1948. Their burger meat is never frozen. Their buns are baked each morning. Food is delivered to its 333 locations daily. All of the locations are company owned. In-N-Out does not franchise. Most of In-N-Out's locations are in California. Freezers, microwaves, and heat lamps are banned from all In-N-Out locations. The recipes for the famous burgers and fries have remained pretty much the same for 70 years.

There are more than 14,000 McDonald's locations in the U.S. There are 333 In-N-Out locations in six states. Yet a typical In-N-Out outsells a McDonald's location. In fact, In-N-Out brings in nearly double what a McDonald's does–$4.5 million in gross annual sales compared to McDonald's $2.5 million.

In-N-Out's revenue should be more than $1 billion this year. Over the past eight years that figure has nearly doubled. The company is worth about $3 billion. Lynsi Snyder owns pretty much all of it after receiving chunks of it on her 25th, 30th, and 35thbirthdays.

Ten years ago, the idea of Lynsi taking over was… a bit scary. She got married right out of high school. She's battled drugs and alcohol. She's been married four times and divorced three times. But she came out of all of that with a need for stability. She found that in her religion –she is a devout Christian—and in the family business. She took over In-N-Out in 2010 determined to change the company as little as possible and to preserve its image of 1950s wholesomeness.

Under Lynsi's tenure, In-N-Out has opened more than 80 new locations. By comparison, Five Guys has opened 500 in the same period.

 "I felt a deep call to make sure that I preserve those things that [my family] would want. That we didn't ever look to the left and the right to see what everyone else is doing, cut corners or change things drastically or compromise. I really wanted to make sure that we stayed true to what we started with. That required me to become a protector. A guardian."

Over the years, In-N-Out grew slowly and strategically. By 1976, when Harry Snyder died, there were 18 locations. His younger son Rich took over the family business. Lynsi's dad Garry was passed over over due to the opiate habit he had picked up after a motorcycle accident left him in chronic pain.

On December 15, 1993, Rich Snyder was killed when his private plane crashed. The day before he died, he had flown to Northern California to see then 10-year-old Lynsi, perform in a pageant.

After Rich's death, Guy and Lynsi were the only heirs to In-N-Out left. Guy was still battling his drug addiction. He was named Chairman of the company. Esther took on the role of President. Day-to-day operations of In-N-Out were handled by Esther. The company continued to expand. In 1997, In-N-Out had 124 locations. Then tragedy struck the Snyder family once again. In 1999, Guy Snyder died of a drug-related heart failure. In-N-Out had 140 locations and $200 million in revenue when Guy died. Esther Snyder was 79 years old and had lost her husband and both of her children. The only heir to In-N-Out was her then 16-year-old granddaughter, Lynsi.

Lynsi started working at In-N-Out when she was a teenager. Her first job was separating leaves of lettuce and working the cash register. She got married at 18 and took a job in the corporate merchandising department approving t-shirt designs. It was during this time that she started drinking heavily and smoking marijuana. She got divorced. She quickly remarried. That marriage was short lived. She calls it the black sheep era of her life. By the time she was in her early 20s, she was over it.

Lynsi moved through the various departments to learn the business. Meanwhile, then 80-year-old Esther was running day-to-day operations. Then Esther died in 2006. A long time In-N-Out executive became company president until 2010 when Lynsi took over. She was 27-years-old and running a business with 251 locations and $550 million in sales.

She got married for the third time to a race car driver. They divorced in 2014. She got married for the fourth time. She has four children. She is grounded.

In 2011, Lynsi moved In-N-Out into Texas for the first time. In 2015, In-N-Out moved into Oregon. Last year, the company announced that it was expanding to Colorado—as soon as it finishes building the patty making facility and new regional headquarters. There is a long standing rule that all new In-N-Out restaurants fall within a day's drive of the closest warehouse, so the food stays fresh. After Colorado, In-N-Out has its eyes on New Mexico. Lynsi doesn't see In-N-Out becoming a national chain:

"I don't see us stretched across the whole U.S. I don't see us in every state. Take Texas—draw a line up and just stick to the left. That's in my lifetime. I like that we're sought after when someone's coming into town. I like that we're unique. That we're not on every corner. You put us in every state and it takes away some of its luster."

Of course, no matter where In-N-Out expands to, it has to deal with competitors—some with entrenched, cult like followings similar to what In-N-Out has in Southern California. In Texas, that's the 68 year old chain Whataburger. There are 674 Whataburgers in Texas. In-N-Out has 36 in Texas. Lynsi is betting that higher quality food will win over Texans. In-N-Out has a billboard campaign in Dallas with the tagline:

"No Microwaves, No Freezers, No Heat Lamps."

In California, In-N-Out is contenting with the invasion of Shake Shack, the $359 in sales New York burger chain. Shake Shack has nine locations in Southern California.

On the corporate front, Lynsi is popular with In-N-Out's 26,000 employees. She has a 99% approval rating on job reviews site Glassdoor.com. There is a good reason for these high marks. In-N-Out pays its restaurant employees $13 an hour—well above the $9-10 that other restaurant workers make. Part and full time employees can enroll in dental, vision and life insurance programs. Full time employees get health insurance and paid vacation.

The average manager of an In-N-Out store has been with the company for 17 years and makes $163,000. That is more than a dentist or accountant in California. Managers also get profit sharing.

One question that is eternally asked of Lynsi and all the Snyders that went before her is how much would it take to buy In-N-Out from the Snyders? Or when will In-N-Out go public? Lynsi (and Guy, Rich, Esther, and Harry) have been asked this time and time again.

"We've had some pretty crazy offers. There's been, like, princes and different people throwing some big numbers at us where I'm like, 'Really?' " The plan never changes. "We will continue to politely say no to Wall Street or to the Saudi princes. Whoever will come…" — Arnie Wensinger, In-N-Out general counsel.

"It's not about the money for us. Unless God sends a lightning bolt down and changes my heart miraculously, I would not ever sell." – Lynsi Snyder

Read more: In-N-Out Heiress Lynsi Snyder Opens Up In Rare Interview

Allen Iverson Is Still Making $800,000 Per Year From Reebok

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Allen Iverson was an 11-time All-Star. He won the league MVP in 2001. He led the league in scoring four times throughout his career. And his No. 3 jersey was retired by the Philadelphia 76ers. It's safe to say Iverson had a very impressive career.

Yet perhaps his biggest accomplishment is that he's still getting millions of dollars a from Reebok despite not playing in an NBA game since 2010.

Iverson signed a lifetime endorsement and marketing deal with Reebok after winning his MVP award. The agreement came on top of a ten-year, $50 million deal Iverson signed when he became the No. 1 pick in the 1996 draft.

The lifetime deal pays Iverson $800,000 a year. He'll also have access to a fund worth $32 million when he turns 55 years old in 2030.

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Though Reebok's focus is now more on lifestyle rather than sports – CrossFit and UFC are Reebok's current top sports partners – Iverson remains an integral part of their business.

According to Reebok's Chief Executive Officer Matt O'Toole, Iverson is absolutely worth the money. O'Toole pointed to Iverson's large influence in Asia; the former MVP travels there a couple of times of year on behalf of Reebok.

O'Toole also said that a lot of Reebok customers still connect to Iverson and his legacy. And when you've got a signature play from the NBA Finals, you're not going to be forgotten easily.

Read more: Allen Iverson Is Still Making $800,000 Per Year From Reebok

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