If you’re like us, you’re spending the Droughtlander rewatching Outlander (again…). One of the show’s most fascinating characters is Geillis Duncan—the first fellow time traveler Claire Fraser meets. Because of their time traveling abilities, some fans thought Geillis was Claire’s daughter. Outlander author Diana Gabaldon did confirm Claire and Geillis are related, but not in that way. In fact, the women are related through an unexpected character from season 2.
Dr. Dre and Jimmy Iovine are doing what it takes to improve their communities. As most know by now, Dr. Dre and Jimmy Iovine are two of the biggest names in the music industry for a number of reasons.
Jimmy is one of the co-founders of Interscope Records, whereas Dre came up in the rap scene and went on to massive success as an entrepreneur as well. During a new conversation with GQ, Jimmy and Dre shared one way in which they’re giving back to their communities.
Take a peek inside Stanley Hotel, the haunted Colorado resort that inspired Stephen King's The Shining — if you dare. Famed businessman Freelan Oscar (F.O.) Stanley finished construction on the hotel in 1909. Six years earlier, Stanley’s doctor had ordered him to seek the clean, mountain air of the West, in hopes that it would improve his tuberculosis. When his trip to Estes Park, Colorado did just that, Stanley fell in love with the area and vowed to return there each summer.
InfoCategory:Richest Business › CriminalsNet Worth:$150 MillionBirthdate:Nov 4, 1981 (42 years old)Birthplace:George Town, Penang, MalaysiaProfession:Businessman (Fugitive)Nationality:Malaysian 💰 Compare Jho Low's Net Worth Table of ContentsExpandEarly Life and EducationCareer Beginnings in Business1Malaysia Development Berhad Scandal FugitivePersonal LifeWhat is Jho Low's Net Worth?Jho Low is a Malaysian fugitive criminal businessman who has a net worth of $150 million. Jho Low is wanted in connection with the 1Malaysia Development Berhad scandal. He is alleged to have been the mastermind behind a global scheme involving the systematic embezzlement of $4.
Not so fast. A high school student by the name of Mohammed Islam made headlines after leading New York magazine to believe he had made $72 million by playing the stock market — but turns out, he was lying. In an interview with the Observer, New York mag’s “boy genius” admitted he made it all up.
So how exactly did a high school senior pull off the hoax? Islam told the Observer, while being monitored by newly hired PR firm 5WPR, that his “friend’s father worked at New York magazine and he had the reporter contact me and then she [New York magazine writer Jessica Pressler] called me.