LGBT billionaires

LGBT billionaires refers to any people who identify as LGBT who are billionaires, in terms of the monetary fortune they control. As of 2015, according to US LGBT-interest magazine The Advocate, Italian fashion designer Giorgio Armani with a net worth of US$8.1 billion was the world's richest person who is openly part of the LGBT community.[1]

History

In 1980, DreamWorks co-founder David Geffen came out as the first openly gay billionaire in the world. He had dated women before such as Cher, but finally came to terms with this sexuality in the early 1980s and had become one of the most important forces in the gay rights movement by 1992.[2]

Giorgio Armani is known for being notoriously private and has remained relatively quiet about his own sexuality. The Sunday Times speculates he has remained quiet on the subject out of fear sales of Armani might decline in Asia if he officially came out. However, in 2000 he told Vanity Fair, "I have had women in my life. And sometimes men."[3][4]

On 16 August 2013, Jennifer Pritzker made headlines by announcing that she identifies herself as a woman for all business and personal undertakings. This announcement made Pritzker the world's first openly transgender billionaire.[5] In October 2015, Norway's second richest billionaire Stein Erik Hagen came out as bisexual on the Norwegian talk show Skavlan.[6]

List

LGBT billionaires
Name Net worth
USD bn
LGBT identity Citizenship
Giorgio Armani[7] 8.10 Bisexual Italy
David Geffen[8] 6.10 Gay United States
Stein Erik Hagen[9] 4.30 Bisexual Norway
Peter Thiel[8] 3.30 Gay United States and New Zealand
Jennifer Pritzker[8] 1.80 Transgender United States
Domenico Dolce[8] 1.74 Gay Italy
Jon Stryker[8] 1.60 Gay United States
Stefano Gabbana[8] 1.56 Gay Italy
Megan Ellison[10] 1.50 Lesbian United States
Tim Cook[8] 1.30 Gay United States
Michael Kors[8] 1.00 Gay United States
gollark: I think you're anthropomorphizing them too much.
gollark: Reinforcement learning is a field which exists, though.
gollark: The largest AIs around are just trained to predict the next token of text, which is very easy to test and gives good natural language understanding.
gollark: With how things are going, it seems entirely possible that you'd get something human-level in at least a few ways just by taking some current AI designs and scaling them up a few orders of magnitude.
gollark: We can make language models act "emotionally" right now, also.

See also

References

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