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Celebrities and Wealth

America worships celebrity. As a society, we tend to view celebrities as having better judgment, as being more ethical, more attractive and more worthy of attention that average people.

In my searches for financial information on the internet, I’ve come across some interesting links on the relating to celebrities and their financial lives. It seems that if you take a closer look at the finances of many celebrities, some have done incredibly well, others have failed and filed bankruptcy.

While its undoubtedly easier to become wealthy if one is famous, it would seem that process of making money shouldn’t matter based one’s celebrity status (e.g. the stock market doesn’t care who ownes shares, its about supply and demand). I’ve given the matter some thought, and although I’ve by no means thoroughly considered all angles, its seems that regardless of ones celebrity, some principles for building wealth still apply:

1) Living below one’s means
2) Building and maintaining a business
3) Making sound and well reasoned investments

From what I’ve read, MC Hammer went bankrupt due to the cost of maintaining a 40 person entourage. He seemed to have spend more than he was making. Oprah has grown from being a successful actress to being one of America’s most powerful women through her publishing and multimedia business. Finally, Toby McGuire got taken to the tune of $187,000 because he failed to research his investment advisor and Kim Basinger blew $20 million on a bad real estate investment. Something tells me Toby and Kim didn’t think through their purchases before they made them.

If you’d like to read more, click here for Bankrate.com’s series on celebrity financial profiles. Its got some useful and insightful articles. Otherwise, have a great day and happy web surfing!

Best,

James

Chipping Away at Our Debt

Happy New Year Everyone!!!

For todays posting, I just wanted to updated our readers on the story with our second mortgage. A s you may know, we’ve been steadily chipping away at the debt with a view to eliminating it by June of this year. Paying this off has become especially important for us in light of Miel’s student loan payments coming due in the next few weeks.

The situation is we owe approximately $18,259.22 on the second mortgage. This is a decline of 5% from last months balance of $19,252.45. We also have a payment of $600 on the way and are expecting an additional $1,000 from a settlement related to my grandmother’s cremation, so we think we’re making good progress and are both optimistic about dumping this debt by June.

Here is our transactions for the past few months.

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