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Forbes: The Celebrity 100
This is the age of the Insta-Celebrity. Fame has never come so quickly and been prized so highly — yet rarely has it been so expendable and evanescent. Last year Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck were the Hollywood power couple, gracing most major media outlets and placing fifth and seventh, respectively, on the Forbes Celebrity 100 list. Since then the two have costarred in two failed films, called off their planned wedding and dropped off our list altogether. Almost 40 percent of the stars on last year's Celebrity 100, which evaluates the relative pay and profiles of performers in vastly different fields, didn't make the cut this go-round. The following are top ten according to power rank
His winless streak in golf's majors is at seven and counting, but Tiger still managed to win his fifth straight PGA Tour Player of the Year award in 2003. Despite his recent stumbles on the fairways, it's still good to be Tiger. He's the world's number one ranked player, earns $70 million a year in endorsements and is about to marry Swedish former nanny/model Elin Nordegren.
Reigning queen of daytime television celebrated her 50th birthday earlier
this year. But big birthdays barely a blip in a lifetime of accomplishments.
Latest venture: O At Home, biannual magazine published with Hearst.
Still making risky business. Took no money upfront for The Last Samurai for
bigger piece of the profits. Paid off: Action flick grossed more than $450
million worldwide.
Stones junkies who wanted to see Mick and Keith on tour last year had to pay an average of $158 a ticket—tops among the big acts in 2003.
Rowling sold 60 million books last year, riding on the release of Harry
Potter and the Order of Phoenix, the fifth installment in the boy wizard series.
Her worldwide tally now stands at 250 million books sold.
Jordan was rebuffed in his attempts to buy the Milwaukee Bucks last year, but
many think he'll make a run at buying another team. In the meantime, he'll have
to make due cashing checks from Nike that total close to $25 million a year.
Nike's Jordan brand generates $500 million in revenue for the footwear
company.
The Boss made more money on the road last year than any other concert act,
grossing $116 million in the U.S. alone.
Still minting Hollywood blockbusters with dream-team
casts. This summer's The Terminal pairs fellow Celebrity 100 listers Catherine
Zeta-Jones and Tom Hanks.
Quirky actor better known for taking challenging roles in low-budget flicks
struck gold playing the Keith Richards-inspired character Captain Jack Sparrow
in Jerry Bruckheimer's Pirates of the Caribbean. Got paid handsomely for the
upcoming Charlie and the Chocolate Factory . But any Pirates sequel will earn
him $20 million. Mel Gibson, propelled to the number 1 spot this year by The Passion of the Christ, is likely to fall a bit next year, though he could still rank high: He stands to reap a whole new round of prophet profits from the DVD. |
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