Quantcast
Channel: Celebrity Net Worth
Viewing all 22234 articles
Browse latest View live

Carl Carlton Net Worth

0
0

Carl Carlton net worth: Carl Carlton is an American singer and songwriter who has a net worth of $4 million. Carl Carlton was born in Detroit, Michigan in May 1953. His musical styles include pop, R&B, soul, and funk. Carlton released his debut studio album Can't Stop A Man in Love in 1973. He also released the albums Everlasting Love in 1974, I Wanna Be With you in 1975, Carl Carlton in 1981, The Bad C.C. in 1982, Private Property in 1985, Main Event in 1994, and God Is Good in 2010. His first single "Competition Ain't Nothin" reached #36 on the US R&B chart and #75 on the US Pop chart. Carlton's single "46 Drums – 1 Guitar" reached #19 on the US R&B chart. His single "Everlasting Love" reached #6 on the US Pop chart and #11 on the US R&B chart and the song "She's a Bad Mama Jama (She's Built, She's Stacked)" reached #2 on the US R&B chart.

Read more: Carl Carlton Net Worth


The Super Wealthy Huawei Dynasty: A Debutante Ball, 3 Marriages, An Arrest And Possible Extradition

0
0

Meng Wanzhou is the CFO of electronics firm Huawei. She was recently arrested in Canada. The event put the Chinese mobile and telecommunications giant into the spotlight of Westerners. Most people in North America and Europe know Huawei as the manufacturer of smartphones that compete directly with Apple's iPhone, Google's Pixel, and Samsung's Galaxy phones. In fact Huawei is bigger than Apple and just lags behind Samsung as the second largest smartphone maker in the world. Huawei is headquartered in Shenzhen, China. The company has about 180,000 employees worldwide, which 60,000 of those employees located at its headquarters.

But, why was Meng arrested? U.S. authorities are taking a long, hard look at Huawei, and Meng in particular for violating trade sanctions against Iran. It's making the news because, as it turns out, Meng isn't just Huawei's CFO, she is also Chinese royalty. Her dad is Ren Zhengfei, the founder and CEO of Huawei, he keeps a very low profile despite his reported net worth of $3.2 billion. Ren has been married three times and fathered a slew of sons and daughters who are not at all media shy.

GREG BAKER/AFP/Getty Images

Ren Zhengfei was born in 1944 in China's poorest province, Guizhou. He came of age just before China's Cultural Revolution began. In 2015, Ren told the BBC that his background is humble, but his family had salt to cook with, so they were considered wealthy. He joined China's military as an engineer at the age of 30. That connection still brings up questions about the ties Huawei has to the Chinese army and government. Around the same time, he married his first wife, Meng Jun and in the early 1970s they had a daughter Meng Wanzhou and a son, Ren Ping.

Meng Wanzhou, also known as Sabrina or Cathy, decided to take her mother's last name when she was a teenager. She worked herself up through the ranks to become Huawei's CFO. In December, she was arrested in Canada. U.S. authorities expect that Meng was involved in covering up ties between Huawei and a company that sold Huawei's merchandise to Iran. This is a direct violation of U.S. sanctions. China is furious about Meng's arrest and has demanded that the U.S. drop its arrest warrant against her.

Not much is known about Ren Ping, who also uses his mother's last name and goes by Meng Ping. He appears to not want to have anything to do with the family business.

Ren Zhengfei retired from the Chinese army in 1983. He was 39-years-old. He had a brief stint working in oil and then founded Huawei in 1987. Since that time, Huawei has become the biggest electronics brand in China. Ren divorced his first wife around the same time as he founded Huawei. He married Yao Ling. The couple had a daughter, Annabel Yao.

Annabel is 21-year-old fashionable socialite who posts her exploits on Instagram. She lives the life of a Chinese princess. She is a student at Harvard studying computer science. She is passionate about fashion and ballet. Just before her half sister was arrested, Annabel was attending a high fashion debutante ball in Paris called La Bal des Debutantes. The ball is attended by the children of the rich and famous.

These days, Ren is onto his tired wife. He married his former assistant, Su Wei.

Ren Zhengfei has often said that Meng Wanzhou and Meng Ping do not have the right qualities to lead Huawei in the future. He believes that running the company requires vision, determination, and a long term view. In an email he reportedly wrote: "None of my family members possess these qualities, therefore, they will never be included in the sequence of successors."

Despite that statement, Meng Wanzhou has proven her father wrong to some extents. She joined Huawei in 1993 and steadily rose through the ranks to become its CFO. In March 2018, she replaced her father as vice chairman. Like her father, Meng is a relatively private person. She has two children and resides part time in a large house in the British Properties neighborhood of Vancouver, British Columbia.

Her arrest has raised the tension between the U.S. and China. She was arrested in Vancouver and held on $7.4 million bail. She made bail and will be under surveillance via an electronic angel tag 24 hours a day. She is restricted from leaving the house between 11pm and 6am. She was required to surrender all passports and travel documents. The bail hearing was three days long, during which Meng's attorneys tried to provide guarantees that she was not a flight risk. Canadian prosecutors opposed this.

Meng is now facing extradition to the United States.

Read more: The Super Wealthy Huawei Dynasty: A Debutante Ball, 3 Marriages, An Arrest And Possible Extradition

Here Are 2018's Highest Paid Radio Hosts

0
0

The world once depended on radio disc jockeys to keep the supply of music running smoothly and entertainingly. But now, in the digital streaming era, it's radio talk show hosts who reign supreme – of the following five highest paid radio hosts of the last year, only one has a program related to music. Here goes:

5. Glenn Beck: $8.5 Million

J Pat Carter/Getty Images

The conservative former Fox News pundit Glenn Beck has always been primarily a radio guy, but his popularity has cooled somewhat in recent years. That's a relative term, though, since he still pulled in a healthy $8.5 million in between June, 2017 and June of this year, mostly thanks to his contract with Premiere Networks.

4. Sean Hannity: $36 Million

Another Fox News figure, this one a current host on the network, represents a big jump in annual income at $36 million. He's suffered multiple controversies over the last several months, including a few big advertising boycotts, but they haven't had too much of an impact on his own personal bottom line as of yet.

3. Ryan Seacrest: $74 Million

Jason Merritt/Getty Images

It's not all conservative pundits in the radio world. Ryan Seacrest made more than twice what Sean Hannity did over the last year, mostly thanks not to any of his radio jobs but the return of American Idol and its eight figure paycheck for the longtime host.

2. Rush Limbaugh: $84.5 Million

A giant of the old radio guard, Limbaugh is often called the most listened to radio host in the country, but early this year he put out his first ever mobile app, which reportedly bolstered his income from his intimidatingly named digital platform Rush 24/7.

1. Howard Stern: $90 Million

Mario Tama/Getty Images

The "King of All Media" is also the highest paid host on the radio, with $90 million in earnings over the last year thanks in part to his being an entire lucrative brand unto himself.

Read more: Here Are 2018's Highest Paid Radio Hosts

Tesla Suing Ex-Employee For $167M In Damages For Alleged Sabotage

0
0

For once, a Tesla employee who isn't CEO Elon Musk is getting some negative headlines for his conduct while at the company. It's EX-Tesla employee Martin Tripp, who is reportedly being sued by his former company for a whopping $167 million in damages, and has been described by Musk himself as a "saboteur," according to a CNBC story.

The lawsuit was filed back in June, and alleges that Tripp exported illegal data and made false statements to the press in his position as a Tesla process engineer. The lawsuit is in part a response to Tripp's claims to the press regarding a Tesla battery plant in Nevada, which he accused of having substandard manufacturing processes and using damaged batteries in Tesla Model 3s.

Scott Olson/Getty Images

More recently filed documents show that Tripp's defense team wants to depose more than ten people involved with Tesla, all the way up to co-founder and CEO Elon Musk. Tesla has refused to make Musk available for this, and is looking to limit the number of depositions Tripp's lawyers can get. Here's an excerpt from the case management report recently filed by Tripp's attorneys:

"Tesla has objected to Mr. Tripp's desire to take more than ten depositions… In this case, where Mr. Tripp is being sued for more than $167,000,000 and has asserted counterclaims against Tesla, more than ten depositions is certainly reasonable and appropriate."

And in further comments to CNBC, one of those attorneys, Robert D. Mitchell, dismisses the damages being sought from his client by Tesla in the first place:

"The purported damage amount claimed by Tesla relates to supposed dips in Tesla's stock price by virtue of the information Mr. Tripp provided to the press last summer."

He went on to call Tesla's damage claims as "absurd."

This suit isn't the only action Tesla has taken against its former employee. Tripp is also the subject of a whistleblower complaint to the Securities and Exchange Commission over statements he made to investors involving the company's "Gigafactory."

Read more: Tesla Suing Ex-Employee For $167M In Damages For Alleged Sabotage

A Late Night Phone Call From Warren Buffett Might Have Saved The US From Another Depression

0
0

We're more than a decade out from the US economic recession of 2008, and some untold stories about that period are beginning to take hold. One that can be found in the Vice Special Report Panic: The Untold Story of the 2008 Financial Crisis was the subject of a recent CNBC write-up, and it involves a late night phone call from one Warren Buffett to then US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson in October of 2008, with an idea on how to ameliorate the damage to the US economy.

Paulson recalls that when the call came through, he was asleep, and it took his brain a few seconds to grasp who was calling him:

"My mom has a handyman named Warren. I'm saying, 'Why is he calling me?'"

The call came shortly after Congress had passed the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act, which allowed for a $700 billion "bailout" fund for buying assets belonging to struggling and failing banks. But as Paulson puts it, not even that staggering figure was adequate to prevent the US from sinking into another Great Depression:

"While we were getting this legislation in Congress, the situation worsened. We had the two biggest bank failures in U.S. history with Wachovia and Washington Mutual … We needed something that was going to work much quicker and be more powerful."

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Buffett's idea, as Paulson remembers it, is basically as follows:

"It might make more sense to put more capital in the banks than it would to try and buy these assets."

That idea, Paulson says, was "a germ" of what ended up happening, with $250 billion from the Troubled Assets Relief Program going directly into the banking system, and so the story goes, preventing a bad situation from getting as bad as it might have otherwise.

Read more: A Late Night Phone Call From Warren Buffett Might Have Saved The US From Another Depression

Ronald And Debra Perelman Donate $65 Million To Princeton. Why Doesn't That Seem Like A Lot Of Money?

0
0

Ronald Perelman and his daughter Debra just donated $65 million to Princeton. That is a huge sum of money. At the same time, it sort of pales in comparison to other donations by billionaires to institutions of higher learning. Just last month, Michael Bloomberg donated $1.8 billion to his alma mater, Johns Hopkins, so that low and middle income students could attend the elite university. In October, hedge fund mogul Stephen Schwarzman pledged $350 million towards a $1 billion college at MIT that will be devoted to the study of artificial intelligence. All the way back in 2006, George Lucas donated $175 million to expand the film school at the University of Southern California. Even Perelman himself has given bigger sums to higher education. In 2013, he donated $100 million to Columbia Business School for a new facility for strengthening innovation and cultivating a new generation of leaders.

That said, the gift from the Perelman's still stands out because of his daughter's involvement in it. A prominent woman is putting her name on a residential college at an Ivy League school. Typically, buildings are named for men. The Perelman's donation will support the construction of Perelman College, the seventh residential college at Princeton. It will join Whitman College, named for Meg Whitman, as one of the two residential colleges named for women at Princeton.

The Perelman College will be designed by an architectural firm run by women-Deborah Berke Partners.

Bennett Raglin/Getty Images

Princeton President Christopher L. Eisgruber released the following statement:

"The establishment of Perelman College will enable Princeton to admit more talented students from every sector of society, increasing our capacity to fulfill our mission and make a positive difference in the world."

The Perelmans' donation follows a 2016 commitment made by Princeton's board to increase its enrollment by 125 students per class with the goal of admitting more low-income and first-generation students.

Debra Perelman is an alumna of Princeton. She studied history and wrote her thesis on clemency for World War II war criminal. She graduated in 1996. While at Princeton, she lived in Rockefeller College, which was founded in 1932 and named for 1929 graduate John D. Rockefeller, grandson of the oil tycoon. Perelman went on to get her MBA from Columbia Business School and joined her dad's business. She spent six years at Revlon, 14 at MacAndrews and Forbes holding company, and returned to Revlon in the past year when she was named CEO.

Princeton has one of the largest endowments of any U.S. university at $26 billion.

Read more: Ronald And Debra Perelman Donate $65 Million To Princeton. Why Doesn't That Seem Like A Lot Of Money?

Nick Foles Could Make A Ton Of Money Over The Next Few Weeks

0
0

Nick Foles helped lead the Philadelphia Eagles to a Super Bowl last season. He was a local hero and even started the first two weeks of this year. Once Carson Wentz returned from injury, though, Foles went back to the bench.

But now, Wentz is back on the injured list, and Foles has a chance to shine once again. And he just may earn millions of dollars in doing so.

The Eagles announced Wentz has a stress fracture in his back, an injury that could keep him sidelined for three months. That likely means Foles will start in every game left for the Eagles this season.

After the team's Super Bowl victory, it restructured Foles's contract to be more incentive-based. Though he'll earn $9 million in base salary, signing bonus, and roster bonus, he can earn millions more during the final few weeks of the season.

Corey Perrine/Getty Images

Foles will make $250,000 per game simply by starting. With Wentz likely done, that means Foles is already getting $750,000 if he stays healthy. That per game amount doubles if the Eagles win. Foles could potentially make $1.5 million if the team wins out. Add another $250,000 if Foles completes 62.5% of his passes – totally a reasonable goal in the Eagles offense.

On top of that, Foles can make $500,000 more if he plays at least half the snaps in a playoff game.

Despite the team's struggles this year, the postseason is completely within reach. The Eagles can make the playoffs by winning out and getting to 9-7 while the Minnesota Vikings and Carolina Panthers each lose at least one of their final three games.

If things break perfectly, Foles will take home an extra $2.25 million by the end of the season. Not bad for a month's work!

Read more: Nick Foles Could Make A Ton Of Money Over The Next Few Weeks

Giving Away Billions Of Dollars Is Harder Than You May Think

0
0

There are a lot of billionaires these days getting positive headlines for their philanthropy efforts. Warren Buffett in particular has become, in some circles, better known for his desire to give away most of his wealth than he is for accumulating that wealth in the first place. But buried in these stories of people like Buffett or Bill and Melinda Gates' ambitions to give away virtually all their money to charity is a usually unspoken question: If you want to give away your money so bad, why don't you just do it? A fair question, but a recent Vox article explains that it can sometimes be harder to give away billions of dollars than the average person might realize.

The first and most important obstacle towards a successful philanthropy effort is the giver's desire for his or her philanthropy project to be successful or effective. This becomes striking when you realize how many such projects fail to have any positive impact whatsoever – like the $575 million (including $200 million from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation) project to improve schools over a period of several years which according to a recent study "didn't improve student outcomes at all." As a matter of fact, failure to make a difference tends to be the most common outcome even for projects with hundreds of millions of dollars at their disposal, per charity evaluator GiveWell:

"We think that charities can easily fail to have impact, even when they're doing exactly what they say they are… [M]any of the problems charities aim to address are extremely difficult problems that foundations, governments and experts have struggled with for decades. Many well-funded, well-executed, logical programs haven't had the desired results."

That sounds a little depressing, but the article points out that actually program failures can be a positive sign that charitable organizations are trying new things and investing in problems that don't have easy, obvious solutions.

Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Then there are the cases where huge amounts of money don't necessarily help at the same scale that smaller, successful projects do. Programs that work well in small proportions may not be as effective, or could turn out to be actively harmful, if scaled up without the necessary research. In short: "the fact that there's an urgent need for $50,000, or $100,000, doesn't mean that there's a good opening to spend $2 billion."

Many organizations that do a lot of good in the world are simply unable to process a massive influx of cash, or wouldn't have any use for, say, a couple of billion dollars in any practical way. Billionaires can be just as prone as indecision as anyone, and with the multitude of problems out there it can be difficult to choose where one's money can best be spent. But don't misunderstand, taking the effort to do so is extremely worthwhile, especially in the fields of global medicine, animal care, and myriad problems that lack even basic research into how to solve them.

Read more: Giving Away Billions Of Dollars Is Harder Than You May Think


Billionaire Mohammed Al Amoudi Went Missing For 400 Days, And His Business Boomed

0
0

In these overwhelming times, it's a natural thing to wonder what would happen if you just dropped off the grid and took a year or so off. Ethiopian billionaire Mohammed Al Amoudi didn't quite make that decision himself – he was detained by Saudi officials as part of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's ongoing corruption crackdown – but Bloomberg reports that in his extended and mysterious absence his business has only grown, and his own personal net worth has seen a six percent spike since when his absence from the world stage began. That gives him a net worth of $8.3 billion, which isn't bad for someone currently awaiting trial on charges of corruption and bribery.

Al Amoudi was one of dozens of Saudi princes and businessmen who were last seen at the Ritz-Carlton in Riyadh (seen below), and for the following 400 days no one seemed to know for sure what became of him. Finally, Saudi authorities have claimed he is alive, well, and awaiting trial "at some point," but in the meantime oil company Preem AB has seen a 30 percent surge in sales. He has a reported $7.6 billion worth of assets outside of Saudi Arabia, among them several businesses both in Europe and in Africa.

GIUSEPPE CACACE/AFP/Getty Images

In part, Preem's continued growth is thanks to the fact that prior to his disappearance Al Amoudi "was not really involved in the day-to-day management of the business," according to Vladislav Nikolov, an analyst with financial firm Finch.

Preem is a household name in Sweden thanks to its availability at hundreds of gas stations in the country, and Al Amoudi is the sole shareholder with a $5.1 billion stake. Despite his numerous business interests throughout the world, the only entity said to be publicly lobbying for his release is the government of his native Ethiopia, where he is the single largest private investor.

Read more: Billionaire Mohammed Al Amoudi Went Missing For 400 Days, And His Business Boomed

Sean Parker Built A Beach Access App To Make Up For His Awful Wedding

0
0

Sean Parker's 2013 wedding to Alexandra Lenas is legendary for all the wrong reasons. The wedding was disgustingly opulent and tone deaf. It was a prime example of the arrogance and excesses of Silicon Valley. Parker is, of course, the founder of Napster and a former president of Facebook. He married singer-songwriter Alexandra Lenas in a campground in Big Sur, California. The event planners transformed a public campground into an enchanted forest. Over the months of prep, an artificial pond was created as was a bridge, faux ruins of a stone castle, rock staircases, and a 20-foot-tall wrought iron gate with the couple's initials forged into it. There was a pen full of rabbits for people to snuggle with. Ken Fulk designed the wedding and called it "Citizen Kane meets Gatsby."

The guests were famous and incredibly wealthy and included Sting, Emma Watson, Sean Lennon, Metallica's Lars Ulrich, Gavin Newsom, and Senator Kamala Harris as well as a multitude of tech entrepreneurs. The guests wore outfits created by the Oscar winning costume designer from the Lord of the Rings movies. Vanity Fair covered Parker's wedding twice.  The June 1st wedding reportedly cost somewhere between $5 million and $10 million. The elaborate wedding went off without a hitch. At least until Monday morning.

Theo Wargo/Getty Images

On June 3rd, two days after the wedding, the California Coastal Commission released a report outlining in clear language the lengthy list of violations by the wedding. Parker was named as an offender alongside the Ventana Inn and Spa. The commission said that Ventana Inn had not fulfilled promises it made regarding a public campground and parking lot. The campground was closed in 2007 without the permission of the state. The parking lot had been annexed by the hotel for its guests. This is where Parker's wedding took place.

The construction projects related to the wedding were substantial and did not have the required "coastal development permits." The report from the California Coastal Commission caused a ton of negative press for Parker and his over the top wedding. One headline called is an "eco-wrecking wedding," another called it an "Ecological Wedding Disaster," yet another headline read "Sean Parker's $10 million destruction of a park epitomizes what's wrong with Silicon Valley."

It should be noted that most of the violations cited by the California Coastal Commission were due to the Ventana Inn's choices. Parker wrote a 9,000 word rebuttal to the report calling out the media's out of whack coverage of the scandal. Only one reporter reached out to him for his side of the story, he said.

It was a standoff. Parker agreed to pay $2.5 million to clear up all the violations from the event. He also sat down with his wife and the California Coastal Commission to brainstorm ideas. The result was an app that helps people find access to beaches along California's coast. Called YourCoast, the app maps all of the public access points to the coast – all 1,563 coastal access points. Before the app, people looking for this information were forced to wade through various blogs and internet search results without any guarantee that the information they provided was accurate.

Parker's app organizes beaches, overlooks, trails, tide-pools, and other coastal features into one slick, easy to use map. People can zoom in on a location pin to find out more info about the spot including whether it has parking, bathroom and picnic areas, or is strolled friendly. It is the first time the public (or at least people with iPhones) have had access to the whole coast of California in one place.

Parker supplied the technological aspect and engineering of the project. He also provided funding for two years of maintenance of the app. He is also making a video about the commission that is required per his settlement contract to go viral.

Read more: Sean Parker Built A Beach Access App To Make Up For His Awful Wedding

Here Are The Five Most Expensive Porsche Cars Sold At Auction

0
0

Few name brands in the automotive industry or anywhere else carry the power of the name "Porsche." That kind of prestige doesn't come cheap, but there are a handful of Porsches that have gone for top tier prices at auction, ranking them among the most valuable vehicles in the world. Without further fanfare, here are the five most expensive Porsche cars ever sold at auction:

1973 Porsche 917/30 Can-Am Spyder: $3 Million

Once belonging to famous comedian and Porsche collector Jerry Seinfeld, he let go of this as part of a group of 15 Porsches at auction in 2016. In the auction catalog, on why he got rid of the ridiculously fast and powerful race car, Seinfeld said "the car's crazy. I'm not."

1956 Porsche 550A Spyder: $5.1 Million

The car known as the "giant-killer" for its tendency to outrun more powerful vehicles with bursts of pure speed, this car holds a spot in Porsche history as the first developed by the company specifically for racing.

1998 Porsche 911 GT1 Strassenversion: $5.7 Million

Commissioned to make 20 official special GT1 vehicles for Le Mans 1997, one result was this beauty, which later sold at auction for $5.7 million.

1982 Porsche 956: $10.1 Million

Bryn Lennon/Getty Images

In the number two slot we take a significant jump in price at $10.1 million. This was also developed for Le Mans in the early 1980s, and one notable feature of its design is its side-mounted exhaust ports, which could often be seen spitting flames.

1970 Porsche 917K: $14 Million

Bryn Lennon/Getty Images

The most expensive Porsche ever sold at auction is none other than the 1970 Porsche 917K. The car, once owned by the legendary Steve McQueen, earned its stripes at both Le Mans and is known for its Gulf graphic branding, and its Hans Mezger-developed engine gives it 630 horsepower and a top speed of more than 220 miles per hour. So really, its current status as the most expensive Porsche is only a confirmation of its legendary stature in the history of the brand.

Read more: Here Are The Five Most Expensive Porsche Cars Sold At Auction

Hunter Tylo Net Worth

0
0

Hunter Tylo net worth: Hunter Tylo is an American actress, author, and model who has a net worth of $13 million. Hunter Tylo was born in Fort Worth, Texas in July 1962. As an actress she is best known for starring as Dr. Taylor Haynes on the soap opera The Bold and the Beautiful starting in 1990 and appearing in more than 2,000 episodes. Tylo has appeared in the movies The Initiation, Final Cut, Longshot, and Down and Derby. She has also appeared in episodes of the TV series All My Children, Days of Our Lives, Burke's Law, Baywatch, Diagnosis Murder, The Nanny, She Spies, Queens of Drama, and more. Hunter Tylo won a Telvis Award in 2002 for Foreign Female TV Performer. She was nominated for Soap Opera Digest Awards in 1995 and 1999 for Hottest Female Star for The Bold and the Beautiful. She has been married three times including to Michael Tylo.

Read more: Hunter Tylo Net Worth

Stephen Miller Net Worth

0
0

Stephen Miller net worth: Stephen Miller is an American political activist who has a net worth of $200 thousand. Stephen Miller was born in Santa Monica, California in August 1985. He is a Republican who graduated from Duke University. Miller became the White House Director of Speechwriting under President Donald Trump in January 2017. At the same time, he also became the Senior Advisor to the President along with Jared Kushner. Miller formerly served as the communications director for Senator Jeff Sessions and was a press secretary for Republican representatives John Shadegg and Michele Bachmann. Stephen Miller helped architect Trump's travel ban as well as his policy of separating migrant children from their parents and the administration's reduction of refugees accepted into the country. He has made false and unsubstantiated claims in regard to widespread electoral fraud. He had a heated debate with Jim Acosta from CNN at the White House daily briefing in 2017. According to his 2016 personal finance disclosure, Miller's net worth ranges between $60,000 and $245,000. He earned $106,000 for his work during the campaign. He earns $179,000 for his White House job.

Read more: Stephen Miller Net Worth

Theresa May Net Worth

0
0

Theresa May net worth: Theresa May is a British politician who has a net worth of $2.5 million. Theresa May was born in Eastbourne, Sussex, England in October 1956. She is a member of the Conservative party and graduated from St. Hugh's College and Oxford. She married Philip May in 1980. Theresa May served as a Member of Parliament for Maidenhead beginning in 1997. From 2002 to 2003 she was Chairwoman of the Conservative Party. May served as Minister for Women and Equalities from 2010 to 2012. From 2010 to 2016 she served as Home Secretary. Theresa May became the Leader of the Conservative Party in 2016 as the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom the same year. She became the 14th Commonwealth Chair-in-Office in 2018. May worked for the Bank of England and the Association for Payment Clearing Services. She was unsuccessful in running for the House of Commons twice. In 2018 a vote of no confidence for her leadership was triggered.

Read more: Theresa May Net Worth

Ginni Rometty Net Worth

0
0

Ginni Rometty net worth and salary: Ginni Rometty is an American business executive who has a net worth of $90 million. Ginni Rometty was born in Chicago, Illinois in July 1957. She serves as the chair, president, and CEO of IBM. Rometty became the first woman to head the company and graduated from Northwestern University. She has an annual salary of $32.7 million. She joined the company in 1981 as a systems engineer before working her way up to head global sales, marketing, and strategy. She has been named to Bloomberg's 50 Most Influential People in the World as well as Time's 20 Most Important People in Tech, Fortune's 50 Most Powerful Women in Business, and Forbes' America's Top 50 Women in Tech. Ginni Rometty has presided over 24 consecutive quarters of declining revenue and has been criticized but she has focused on areas including cloud computing, analytics, and cognitive computing systems during her tenure.

Ginni Rometty Stock Holdings: As of late 2018, Ginni is the largest individual shareholder in IBM. She holds 206,000 shares directly and another 96,000 restricted stock units. As of late 2018 those shares are worth a total of $33.2 million.

Read more: Ginni Rometty Net Worth


Mary Barra Net Worth

0
0

Mary Barra net worth and salary: Mary Barra is an American businesswoman who has a net worth of $60 million. Mary Barra was born in Royal Oak, Michigan in December 1961. She serves as the Chairwoman and CEO of General Motors. Barra became the CEO in 2014 which made her the first female CEO of a major worldwide automaker. In 2013 she was named to succeed Dan Akerson as Chief Executive Officer. Previous to that Barra was the Executive Vice President of Global Product Development, Purchasing, and Supply Chain for GM. She graduated from Kettering University and earned her MBA from Stanford University. Mary Barra has also served as board member for Disney and the Stanford University Board of Trustees. She started at GM at just 18 years old as a co-op student and by 2008 she was the Vice President of Global Manufacturing Engineering. Next up she became the Vice President of Global Human Resources. In 2017 Mary Barra was the #1 person on Fortune's Most Powerful Women of 2017.

Read more: Mary Barra Net Worth

Robert Stack Net Worth

0
0

Robert Stack net worth: Robert Stack was an American actor, sportsman, and television host who had a net worth equal to $30 million at the time of his death in 2003, after adjusting for inflation. Robert Stack was born in Los Angeles, California in January 1919 and passed away in Beverly Hills, California in May 2003. He had nearly 100 acting credits to his name and his best known role came starring as Eliot Ness on the television series The Untouchables from 1959 to 1963. Stack starred as Dan Farrell on the TV series The Name of the Game from 1968 to 1971. From 1976 to 1977 he starred as Captain Linc Evers on the series Most Wanted. He starred as Captain Frank Murphy on the television series Strike Force from 1981 to 1982 and narrated the TV series Hercules from 1998 to 1999 and the series Unsolved Mysteries from 1987 to 2002. Stack starred in several films including The High and the Mighty, Great Day in the Morning, Written on the Wind, John Paul Jones, The Last Voyage, Airplane!, Caddyshack II, Joe Versus the Volcano, and more. He won a Primetime Emmy Award for The Untouchables and received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7001 Hollywood Blvd. He married Rosemarie Bowe in 1956 and had two children. Robert Stack passed away on May 14, 2003 at 84 years old. A few months after his death, Robert's widow Rosemarie sold the couple's Bel-Air home for $7 million.

Read more: Robert Stack Net Worth

Sable Net Worth

0
0

Sable net worth: Sable is an American model, actress, and former professional wrestler who has a net worth of $10 million. Sable was born in Jacksonville, Florida in August 1967. She joined the WWE in 1996 an was the second Women's Champion in the company. She left the WWE and filed a lawsuit against them for $110 million, alleging sexual harassment as well as unsafe working conditions. She returned to WWE but left again to spend time with her family. Sable has appeared on the cover of Playboy magazine three times. As an actress she has appeared in the movies Corky Romano, The Final Victim, and Slaves of the Realm. Sable has also appeared in episodes of the TV series Pacific Blue, First Wave, and Relic Hunter. She was married to wrestler Marc Mero who trained her from 1994 to 2004 and Sable married Brock Lesnar in 2006. She modeled for companies including Pepsi, L'Oréal, and Guess?.

Read more: Sable Net Worth

Ashlyn Rae Net Worth

0
0

Ashlyn Rae net worth: Ashlyn Rae is an American pornographic film actress who has a net worth of $1 million. Ashlyn Rae was born in Prescott, Arizona in August 1990. She grew up in Laguna Beach, California and was a cheerleader in high school. She entered the adult film industry at 19 years old in 2009 and has worked for companies including Penthouse, Reality Kings, Hustler, and more. She has 72 acting credits from 2009 to 2016. Ashlyn Rae was nominated for six Adult Video News Awards in 2011 including for Best New Starlet.

Read more: Ashlyn Rae Net Worth

Ex-Wife Of Russian Billionaire Collects First Part Of  $572 Million Settlement

0
0

Remember Russian billionaire Farkhad Akhmedov? He's the 'charmer' in Vladimir Putin's inner circle who went out of his way to hide is money and assets from his wife during their divorce. He's also fought tooth-and-nail to not pay her a settlement. Fortunately for Tatiana, the courts sided with her and he is required to pay out about 40% of his fortune, roughly $572 million, to his ex-wife.

Tatiana was just 17 years old when she met Farkhad. They married in 1993 when she was 21 years old and pregnant. After their marriage, the couple moved to England. Akhmedov started out selling sable furs. He made his fortune when he sold his shares in ZAO Northgas in 2013 for $1.375 billion. The Akhmedov's marriage started to fall apart in 2013 and ended in 2014.

Since that time, Tatiana's attorneys claim Farkhad has done everything he could to make sure his wife received nothing from him. He moved almost all of his wealth to offshore accounts to make sure his wife wouldn't be awarded any of it while the divorce trial progressed.

Juergen Schwarz/Getty Images

Farkhad and Tatiana were married for more than two decades and have two children together. Farkhad's lawyers argued that the settlement is unfair. The ruling was one of the largest financial awards made by a British court. The judge ordered Akhmedov to give his wife an art collection valued at more than $114 million, property in England worth $3.2 million, a $442,000 Aston Martin car, and a lump sum of $442 million. Tatiana Akhmedova claims that despite the court's order more than a year ago, she has received nothing from her ex-husband… until now.

Tatiana has JUST gotten the first part of the award after seizing and selling a helicopter that her ex-husband owned. The Eurocopter EC155 helicopter was sold for $5.7 million according to Tatiana's attorney. Tatiana has also been given the superyacht Luna, which was built for Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich before Akhmedov bought it in 2014.

Tatiana had to employ a team of attorneys and asset tracing specialists to unravel the web of offshore companies her ex set up around the globe.

Farkhad Akhmedov is still seeking to nullify the settlement

Read more: Ex-Wife Of Russian Billionaire Collects First Part Of  $572 Million Settlement

Viewing all 22234 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images