Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Small D energy.
This + peanut brain.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t join the government D! It sux a big kak.
Get a job on a soap opera or something. Them you won’t have to work with ugly self important asswipes that won’t know what they are doing, make many meetings, nod their heads a lot, take notes, take years to finish simple projects, abuse their pathetic powers, drink lots of coffee, take big shits, and then get up and waste more money doing the same stupid useless crap the next day.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting, didn't realize his last name was Tanaka and has a Japanese father.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting, didn't realize his last name was Tanaka and has a Japanese father.
Anonymous wrote:Small D energy.
Anonymous wrote:Love to hear that! He’s an amazing patriot
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He's broke and needs the signing bonus. I hear it's 50K. Also, obviously, GROSS. He knows what he's going to be asked to do and he doesn't care.
asked to enforce the law? Not sure what you are talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He's broke and needs the signing bonus. I hear it's 50K. Also, obviously, GROSS. He knows what he's going to be asked to do and he doesn't care.
Net worth is 10 million
I’m sure a long time ago he was making good money. It all depends on if he invested well and if he saved.
If he’s joining ICE for the signing fee, he has not managed his money well. Most actors of his caliber don’t. They are uneducated and easily taken advantage of. I’d be shocked if he hadn’t gotten caught up in some bad investment scheme years ago and never recovered.
I guess it wouldn’t surprise me if he has 10M. He went to Princeton so presumably knows some finance folks. If he put his Superman money into just a standard mutual fund that would probably net him 10M. He doesn’t seem like he’s living a high life and spending it like a Johnny Depo did (who was basically giving to away and flushing it down the toilet). Google says he got paid 75K per episode for Lois and Clark — if you invested 1 million in the s and p in 1995, it would be worth over 22 million today.