With stars like Coco Gauff, Novak Djokovic, and Taylor Fritz vying for another championship title in their pristine whites, the spectacle always draws a number of society's elites.
So far, the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club has seen everyone from legendary athletes David Beckham and Maria Sharapova to Foo Fighters front man Dave Grohl and "Bridgerton" star Golda Rosheuvel.
As the competition continues to heat up, here's a look at all the A-listers attending Wimbledon this year.
English soccer legend David Beckham was seen enjoying day one of the tournament with his mom, Sandra.
Sandra Beckham and David Beckham at day one of Wimbledon.
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Also on day one, "Bohemian Rhapsody" star Lucy Boynton wore an embroidered babydoll dress by Celine, color-coordinated sunglasses, and gold hoops.
Musician Arlo Parks was also in attendance on day one.
Arlo Parks, right, at day one of Wimbledon.
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Couple James Blake and Jameela Jamil posed for pictures on club grounds.
James Blake and Jameela Jamil at day one of Wimbledon.
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Golda Rosheuvel, also known as Queen Charlotte on "Bridgerton," was seen on day one in a red and white striped dress.
Golda Rosheuvel at day one of Wimbledon.
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"Boy's a Liar Pt. 2" singer PinkPantheress was snapped checking her phone.
PinkPantheress, right, at day one of Wimbledon.
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British actor Kingsley Ben-Adir, who portrayed Bob Marley in "Bob Marley: One Love," was seen walking the grounds on day one.
Kingsley Ben-Adir at day one of Wimbledon.
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Famed British broadcaster and biologist Sir David Attenborough was seen giving a standing ovation.
Sir David Attenborough at day one of Wimbledon.
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"Foo Fighters" front man Dave Grohl traded his usual rock 'n' roll style for a navy-blue suit and orange patterned tie as he watched day two's action with his wife, director Jordyn Blum.
Dave Grohl and wife Jordyn Blum at day two of Wimbledon.
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Actor and producer Rebel Wilson was seen taking selfies with a fellow spectator in a bright floral blazer by Alice and Olivia.
Rebel Wilson, right, takes a selfie with a fellow spectator at Wimbledon day two.
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The multitalented model, singer, and actor Grace Jones was spotted having a laugh in the crowd.
Grace Jones at day two of Wimbledon.
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Five-time Grand Slam singles champion Maria Sharapova was seen with her fiancé, businessman Alexander Gilkes.
Alexander Gilkes and Maria Sharapova at day three of Wimbledon.
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"Ted Lasso" fan favorite Hannah Waddingham stopped for pictures on day three in a lilac, floral-patterned dress by Elie Saab with white accessories.
The Sailing Pickle Family has spent years exploring the world by boat.
Nicky Piccalilli
Nicky Piccalilli, her husband, kids, and dog live on a 35-foot catamaran and travel the world.
They learned how to sail and fixed up the boat after Nicky had a serious health incident in 2017.
Nicknamed the Sailing Pickle Family, the group has seen many countries around the world.
The Sailing Pickle Family lives a life that many dream of: They sail around the world and explore new countries on a regular basis.
But their exciting adventure started from a low point. In 2017, Nicky Piccalilli, 46, caught meningitis and was placed in intensive care and isolation.
She said the infection caused damage to her brain, eyesight, and hearing — but it was something of a pinnacle moment in her life. She texted her husband, Chris, 48, and told him, "When I get out of here, I'm going to sail the world."
Nicky, Chris, their youngest children, 15-year-old Beau and 10-year-old Bear, plus their Doberman, Buddy, began doing just that in 2019.
It was love at first sight when they found their boat
The boat needed a lot of updates, but the family was willing to put in the work.
Nicky Piccalilli
As Nicky began her recovery, she and Chris researched how to sail and started looking for a boat.
Just a week after Nicky left the hospital, they arranged to look at Pickle, the 35-foot Prout Snowgoose catamaran that they'd eventually buy.
"I literally just fell in love," Nicky told Business Insider. "She needed a huge amount of work. It was a really good thing that I was so naive."
The family got a great deal on the boat but spent the next year fixing sails, ropes, and everything else to get it into sailing condition.
"The only thing we didn't do was completely rewire it," Nicky said.
The boat's interior has a large seating area.
Nicky Piccalilli
Nicky described the inside of the boat as being like a Tardis, the time machine on "Doctor Who."
It has futuristic curved shapes, a large seating area, a kitchen, toilet, showering area, and lots of storage. There's enough space for two small rooms to have double beds and private areas for their kids.
The Pickle family has weathered some storms and explored many places already
The Pickle family has sailed around England.
Nicky Piccalilli
The family began their journey by sailing across the South coast of England and toward France.
One of the biggest challenges they faced early on in their journey was crossing the Bay of Biscay, a stretch of water along the western coast of France notorious for its unforgiving weather.
"In the Bay of Biscay, the waves were bigger than we were," Nicky said. "We were just unlucky that we got into one of those storms."
She described how the boat nearly went onto its side and the cockpit filled with foamy seawater — she clung onto her dog for dear life as waves crashed over the boat.
Nicky Piccalilli documents her family's travels online.
Nicky Piccalilli
It was the only moment when Nicky doubted what they were doing, but getting past it helped them appreciate the journey more.
They've now seen a lot of places, from Spain and Italy to Tunisia and the western Turkish coast — and they haven't experienced a storm that bad since.
The family has shifted their lifestyle, but there are some things about living on land they miss
The family sometimes misses growing vegetables and not checking the weather.
Nicky Piccalilli
To fund their new lifestyle and adventures, Chris works remotely, and the family shares their journey on YouTube and Patreon.
Nicky and Chris homeschool their children, and Beau and Nicky plan to return to England this year so Beau can complete her GCSEs while Chris and Bear stay on the boat in Europe.
Even so, the family misses a few things about living on land. Nicky misses having a garden and growing her own produce for the family.
The Sailing Pickle Family travels with their dog.
Nicky Piccalilli
Chris misses not having to worry about the weather. The weather at sea has a tremendous impact on the ease of sailing and is something the family has to consider at all times. It can change in the space of just an hour or two, so they have to check the forecast regularly throughout the day.
"It's constantly on your mind. Even if you're sick and dying, you have to check the weather," Nicky told BI.
Even so, the family doesn't plan to stop their adventures anytime soon. Next, they hope to sail across the Atlantic and visit North and South America.
This month, Aldi is carrying new items like a Mediterranean-olive mix and smoothie pops.
Aldi
In July, Aldi will release dozens of new summer products like easy meals, dips, and desserts.
Aldi is releasing both sweet and spicy dip options in cinnamon-bun and pineapple-jalapeño flavors.
For dessert, indulge in pie bites, gelato bites, ice-cream-flavored truffles, and more.
Aldi is ready to help shoppers make the most of the summer season, with plenty of new offerings coming to shelves this July.
From iced lattes and ready-made chicken salads to ice-cream-flavored truffles, the store is stocking plenty of exciting options for every meal.
Best of all, the budget grocer — which announced plans to cut prices on over 250 items this summer — has many products available for under $5 each. Here are some of the best things to get at Aldi this July.
Enjoy your favorite pies with the Belmont chocolate-covered pie bites — no baking required.
The Belmont chocolate-covered pie bites are available in banana-cream, coconut-cream, and key-lime flavors.
Aldi
Instead of turning on the oven to bake a pie this summer, indulge in the Belmont chocolate-covered pie bites.
Available in coconut-cream, key-lime, and banana-cream flavors, each box of this frozen summertime treat is available for just under $5.
Stay cool on the hottest summer days with Nature's Nectar sparkling French sodas.
Nature's Nectar sparkling sodas come in three different flavors.
Aldi
Cool off with these sparkling French sodas from Nature's Nectar, which are refreshing on their own or as an ingredient in cocktails and mocktails.
The sodas, which cost $3.20 per bottle, come in three flavors: pink raspberry, pomegranate blueberry, and blood-orange grapefruit.
The Bake Shop cotton-candy-frosted sugar cookies offer a taste of summer fun.
A box of 10 cookies costs less than $4.
Aldi
Feeling nostalgic? You can enjoy a taste of the fair with these cotton-candy-frosted sugar cookies.
Each cookie has a soft, fluffy base and a frosting that tastes like cotton candy. A box of 10 cookies costs less than $4.
Pair the Park Street Deli cinnamon-bun or cookie-dough dips with your favorite fruits and sweet treats.
These sweet Park Street Deli dips taste great with fresh fruit, graham crackers, and marshmallows.
Aldi
If you want to add more variety to the lineup of dips at your next gathering, consider these sweet options from Park Street Deli.
These dips are available in cinnamon-bun or cookie-dough flavors and pair well with fresh fruit, graham crackers, pretzels, marshmallows, and more. Try one or both flavors for $3 each.
Start your morning off right with the Barissimo iced lattes.
The Barissimo iced lattes cost $2 each.
Aldi
If you're trying to save money and skip the drive-thru this summer, you'll want to keep these budget-friendly lattes on hand.
The Barissimo lattes, which are $2 each, are available in new flavors like raspberry mocha, salted caramel, and toasted coconut.
Add more flavor to your meals with the Journey To Greece Mediterranean-olive mix.
Each jar contains a mix of green and kalamata olives.
Aldi
Whether you're planning to whip up a pasta salad, make a nice charcuterie spread, or snack straight from the jar, these Mediterranean olives will be a kitchen staple.
Each jar, available for just $3.50, contains a mix of green and kalamata olives, red peppers, and garlic.
The Park Street Deli chicken salads are a convenient lunch, snack, or dinner option.
The new Park Street Deli chicken salads are available in Green Goddess and lemon-poppy-seed flavors.
Aldi
If you need a protein-packed snack or an easy lunch or dinner idea, pick up a tub or two of the new Park Street Deli chicken salads, available in Green Goddess and lemon-poppy-seed flavors.
These would pair well with crackers or lettuce cups and are available for $4.30.
The Sundae Shoppe gelato bites put a new spin on a classic dessert.
The Sundae Shoppe gelato bites are available in toffee and cookie-dough flavors.
Aldi
Gelato is already delicious, but the new Sundae Shoppe bites take this dessert to the next level.
Each bite of gelato, available in cookie-dough or toffee flavors, is coated in chocolate. The toffee flavor has a cookie crumble on the outside, and the cookie dough variety features a chewy cookie-dough center. Grab a bag for only $4.
Enjoy a restaurant-quality seafood dinner with Fremont Fish Market crab or lobster cakes.
The Fremont Fish Market seafood cakes are great on top of salads.
Aldi
Summer is seafood season, and Aldi is celebrating by making dinner even easier with the Fremont Fish Market crab and lobster cakes. They're great for topping salads or pairing with slaws and grilled veggies.
Each pack contains five cakes for just under $5, making it a budget-friendly alternative to going out to eat at a seafood restaurant.
Stock up on Park Street Deli’s new sweet-and-spicy dips.
Each dip costs just over $3.
Aldi
No cookout is complete without plenty of dips and spreads on hand for chips, burgers, and veggies.
To ensure your guests are offered a good variety, consider grabbing one of the new Park Street Deli sweet-and-spicy dips.
The dips are available in pineapple-jalapeño or sweet-chili-mango flavors for $3.40 each.
Clancy's kettle chips are great for picnics.
Each bag of Clancy kettle chips costs less than $2.
Aldi
Aldi shoppers will want to stock up on the new flavors of Clancy's kettle chips for picnics, snacking, movie nights, and more. Each bag of chips, which come in fun flavors like sweet Maui onion and chili-pepper lime, cost just under $2.
Take your tastebuds on vacation with the Specially Selected limoncello-cheesecake cups.
The Specially Selected limoncello-cheesecake dessert is imported from Italy.
Aldi
Aldi's new limoncello-cheesecake dessert cups are a fancy-looking dessert option that won't break the bank.
Each cup costs $2.50 and features a crispy, buttery, cookie base topped with a thick layer of creamy cheesecake and lemony fruit topping.
The Simply Nature smoothie pops make for a fun and refreshing snack.
The Simply Nature superfood smoothie pops are organic and non-GMO.
Aldi
When you're ready to cool off from the rising summer temperatures, grab one of Simply Nature's organic smoothie pops.
These non-GMO smoothie pops are packed with superfoods and make a refreshing summer treat.
Available in berry or mango flavors, each pack of six smoothie pops costs $5.
Treat yourself to the Moser Roth ice-cream shop truffles.
Each box contains rocky-road, fudge, vanilla-chip, and orange-creamsicle-flavored truffles.
Aldi
There's never a wrong time to treat yourself with these luxurious-looking Moser Roth ice-cream-shop truffles.
Each box contains 12 chocolates in four ice cream-inspired flavors — rocky road, fudge, vanilla chip, and orange creamsicle — for only $3.70.
Costco has been selling gold and silver at a rate of $200 million per month, per analyst estimates, and it's showing no signs of slowing down.
Look no further than this week's sell-off of the company's largest gold product: 100-gram bars of 24-karat gold from PAMP Suisse that last sold for $7,599.99.
Weighing as much as three and a half standard coins, the two-square-inch slabs cost as much as a high-mileage used car.
The price didn't dissuade gold buyers, who snapped up the stash of 100-gram bars in less than a day. It's unclear how many units were in this release, but the product listing shows dozens of reviews from verified customers.
Costco's 100-gram gold bars were sold last for $7,599.99.
Costco
As one review pointed out, Costco's 2% rewards for Executive membership, plus 2% from Costco's credit card translate to some big bucks on such a large purchase.
In this instance, the combined rewards would come in around $300 — not a bad windfall for converting dollars into gold, assuming prices hold.
Because Costco prices its precious metals so close to the market spot price, the rewards can make the deal extremely competitive.
At these rates, it's unlikely that Costco is making much profit from its precious metals business, but that might not matter for the company right now.
Between the e-commerce cheat code of routing hundreds of millions of dollars through online sales, attracting new members, incentivizing existing members to upgrade, and boosting the appeal of the credit card, there are plenty of benefits for Costco to enjoy.
Costco executives often remind investors that "we're a top-line company" — referring to their dedication to growing sales rather than maximizing profits — and nothing drives that idea home quite like selling through stacks of $7,600 gold bars in less than a day.
Ina Garten has become a household name for cooking comfort-food staples like her perfect roast chicken and beef bourguignon.
As much as I'd love one of her gourmet meals in the middle of each day, using my entire lunch hour to whip up something from the TV personality's arsenal of recipes isn't always realistic. Fortunately, Garten has a few quick recipes up her sleeves, including a 10-minute take on a tuna-melt sandwich.
The recipe uses pantry-staple ingredients I usually have on hand, as well as fresh elements like green onions, microgreens, celery, and dill.
As someone who loves a good tuna sandwich, I was curious to see if this dish could replace my expensive lunchtime takeout orders. Here's how it went.
To start, I gathered my ingredients.
The total cost of the ingredients ended up being a little bit pricey.
Lara Walsh
Garten specifies using imported tuna packed in olive oil, so I chose two cans of Genova yellowfin tuna instead of the water-based ones I normally use.
It was shockingly hard to find Swiss cheese that wasn't in the form of sandwich slices at my Jewel-Osco — let alone the Emmentaler that she suggested. I decided to use a Swiss Gruyere AOP instead, which had a similar flavor.
I also picked up celery, scallions, fresh dill, a lemon, anchovy paste, and bread. I already had avocado-oil mayo at home, so I used that for the recipe.
The "Barefoot Contessa's" tuna-melt recipe also called for microgreens, but I left them out as I'm not a fan of their grassy flavor.
My receipt ended up coming out to about $35, or roughly $8.75 per serving — which I found to be a little pricey for a tuna-melt sandwich.
I began by draining the oil from the tuna and flaking it with a fork in a bowl.
The tuna's creamy texture made it easy to flake.
Lara Walsh
Even though I drained most of the oil, the tuna seemed to have a creamy texture and flaked easily. I chopped the celery into quarter-inch pieces, diced the green onions and dill, and added them to the tuna mixture.
Next, I cut a fresh lemon and squeezed out 2 tablespoons of lemon juice. I then added 1½ teaspoons of salt and three-quarters of a teaspoon of pepper, mixing to combine the ingredients.
I then added the mayo and anchovy paste to make the mixture creamy.
The anchovy paste didn't look appealing at first, but it quickly blended in with the rest of the mixture.
Lara Walsh
I added the mayo, which made the mixture creamy, and the anchovy paste, which looked a little unappetizing at first. However, it quickly assimilated into the tuna mixture when I put it in.
I turned on the broiler to preheat, then toasted two slices of bread.
I put a healthy serving of tuna on each slice of bread.
Lara Walsh
After the bread was done toasting, I put the slices in a baking dish and spread a thick layer of the tuna mixture on each piece.
While Garten suggests using about a quarter of the mixture for each slice of bread, I added a little more tuna since it otherwise seemed to be a small serving.
After grating cheese over the tuna mixture, I popped the sandwiches in the oven.
I took the tuna melts out of the oven just as the cheese started to melt.
Lara Walsh
I grated the cheese on top of the tuna mixture, then placed the open-faced sandwiches in the oven to broil for about 3 minutes each.
I waited until the cheese just started to melt and brown before taking the tuna melts out of the oven to serve.
My first bite of Garten’s tuna melt was heavenly.
The flavors meshed together well, and the ingredients formed a great texture.
Lara Walsh
The combination of olive oil, melted cheese, and creamy mayonnaise made the tuna taste much richer than I'm used to. The fresh-lemon juice cut through some of that richness, while the green onions, fresh dill, and diced celery added some fresh flavor and texture.
I also liked that the bread didn't get soggy, even after I finished up some emails before eating my second tuna-melt slice. I think this was probably because the bread was toasted.
The sandwich was delicious, but I'd make a few changes next time.
Next time, I'll reduce the amount of salt used and maybe add chives.
Lara Walsh
The anchovy paste added a little extra savory umami flavor to the sandwich, but it also made it saltier. In the future, I'll reduce the amount of salt I use.
I also think that adding a briney element like capers could make this tuna melt even better, even though it was already delicious as is.
I really didn't miss the microgreens, thanks to all the fresh ingredients and crunch in the sandwich, and I think it would have just been an expensive throwaway topping that added to the cost of the meal.
My main complaint was that Garten’s tuna-sandwich recipe didn’t yield as much filling as I’d expected.
I'll still add the sandwich to my lunch rotation.
Lara Walsh
I was disappointed there wasn't more of the tuna melt left after my boyfriend and I scarfed it down — especially given its relatively high price tag and the fact that it's supposed to be enough for four portions.
However, considering how quick it was to make and how delicious the results were, this tuna-melt sandwich will definitely become a regular in my lunch rotation. Next time, I'll just make some adjustments to make it a little more budget-friendly.
Trump has various campaign rallies scheduled for the coming days.
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
Trump has not been quiet in the post-debate fallout.
The former president has been posting consistently on Truth Social and scheduling campaign rallies.
Not a man known for holding his tongue, Trump is beginning to turn his commentary to Kamala Harris.
On the morning of July 5, Donald Trump posted on Truth Social 23 times in a span of 10 minutes. Though some are suggesting that the former president is remaining strategically quiet in the wake of last week's debate, he's not staying silent on social media or in person.
The flurry of activity — between 10:28 am and 10:38 am — included everything from polling graphics to pictures on the golf course. Trump's other posts over the past week have been similarly wide-reaching. Some days, he shares lengthy paragraphs about Biden's policy failures; other days, campaign videos; others still, an un-captioned, zoomed-in, pixelated image of Joe Biden's face looking oddly tan.
Some of his posts have begun to focus on Vice President Kamala Harris, whom many Democrats speculate will replace Biden on the ticket should he drop out. On July 4, Trump referred to her as "our potentially new Democratic Challenger, Laffin' Kamala Harris."
Trump is present beyond social media as well, with campaign rallies scheduled for July 9 and July 13, in Florida and Pennsylvania respectively, according to his campaign website.
"We continue to have a robust campaign schedule that outpaces Crooked Joe Biden," Steven Cheung, a spokesperson for the Trump campaign, told Business Insider. "We just announced a slate of events and rallies next week. Biden could never."
The White House and Biden campaign did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment. Biden is scheduled to hold a rally in Wisconsin on July 6.
Though Trump has sat for a few radio interviews since the debate, two advisors told the New York Times that he is content to let the media focus on the Democrat party's internal chaos. He would rather Biden remain the nominee, the advisor said, as recent polling indicates that other Democrats, namely Harris, are more formidable opponents.
Yet a leaked video, first reported by the Daily Beast, illustrates the former president's penchant for speaking freely and loudly. In it, Trump rides on a golf cart and calls Biden a "broken-down pile of crap" and Harris "pathetic."
With a known love for the spotlight, Trump is not a man known for holding his tongue. A judge told him as much earlier this year, saying, "You just can't control yourself."
As the fallout continues to swirl around Biden, it remains to be seen how long Trump will be content to let someone else sit in the eye of the media storm.
Steve Jobs and Laurene Powell Jobs have three children together.
Brian Ach/WireImage via Getty
Steve Jobs left the bulk of his fortune to his wife, Laurene Powell Jobs, when he died in 2011.
The pair have three children, and Jobs has a daughter from a previous relationship, as well.
His only son, Reed Jobs, founded a VC firm dedicated to investing in cancer treatments in August.
Steve Jobs is arguably the most influential tech leader in the history of modern computing.
In 1976, after he dropped out of college, Jobs cofounded Apple with his high-school friend, Steve Wozniak, while they were still in their 20s, according to "Steve Jobs," a biography by Walter Isaacson.
Jobs helped turn Apple from a makeshift computer manufacturer housed inside his parents' garage to a global tech giant now worth more than $3 trillion.
Jobs was also the father of four children. He had his oldest, Lisa Brennan-Jobs, with his high-school girlfriend, Chrisann Brennan. Later, he had Reed Jobs, Erin Jobs, and Eve Jobs with his wife, Laurene Powell Jobs.
She does not plan to share her inheritance with her children. "I'm not interested in legacy wealth buildings," she said in an interview with The New York Times.
"Steve wasn't interested in that," she told the Times. "If I live long enough, it ends with me."
Each of Jobs' children received millions of dollars from their father, the Times reported, and might be considered "nepo babies" — a label popularized by a New York Magazine story about Hollywood actors who rose to fame thanks, in part, to their family connections.
While Jobs' children have largely pursued careers outside of tech, from modeling to writing, it's likely their family name contributed to their success.
Apple, Laurene Powell Jobs, and Reed Jobs did not reply to requests for comment, nor did representatives for Lisa Brennan-Jobs and Eve Jobs. Erin Jobs could not be reached.
Meet Jobs' widow Laurene Powell Jobs and four children, and see how his legacy helped his loved ones succeed.
Powell Jobs first met Jobs when she was an MBA student at Stanford in 1989, according to Isaacson's biography. Jobs was giving a guest lecture at the university when his future wife and her friend snuck into the lecture late and ended up sitting next to the Apple cofounder.
Powell Jobs later told Isaacson that the Apple cofounder "was not that big of a deal to me" and that she initially had him mixed up with Bill Gates. At the time, Jobs was working at Next, a computer-workstation company that was later bought by Apple.
Jobs recalled seeing this "beautiful girl" sitting next to him and later followed her to the parking lot. She agreed to a dinner date that night that turned into the two spending the night together, Isaacson wrote. Less than two years later, they got married.
During their marriage, the couple had three children: Reed, Erin, and Eve.
Since Jobs' death, Powell Jobs has been active in philanthropy and founded Emerson Collective in 2004 as a "social change organization." She has served on the boards of several nonprofits, including Teach for America and Conservation International, and has made donations to members of the Democratic Party.
Her hobbies reportedly include sailing on The Venus — a yacht her late husband commissioned before his death — art collecting, and beekeeping.
Powell Jobs has also taken an interest in media. In 2017, she acquired a majority stake in The Atlantic magazine for over $100 million, per The Wall Street Journal. She also owns stakes in the sports teams the NBA Wizards and NHL Capitals.
In June, Powell Jobs bought her fourth property in 10 years in Malibu. The 3,399-square-foot oceanfront estate cost her $94 million, according to the LA Times.
Despite her billionaire status, Powell Jobs has said she doesn't plan to pass on her fortune to any of her children.
"Steve wasn't interested in that. If I live long enough, it ends with me," she told The New York Times in 2020. "I inherited my wealth from my husband, who didn't care about the accumulation of wealth. I am doing this in honor of his work, and I've dedicated my life to doing the very best I can to distribute it effectively, in ways that lift up individuals and communities in a sustainable way."
Lisa Brennan-Jobs
Lisa Brennan-Jobs is Steve Jobs oldest daughter.
Nathan Congleton/NBCUniversal/Getty Images
Even though Lisa Brennan-Jobs received millions from her father, The New York Times reported, she did not always benefit from her wealthy father.
Lisa, now 46, is Steve Jobs' first daughter. Her mother, Chrisann Brennan, who is a painter and memoirist, was Jobs' high-school sweetheart.
For years, Jobs denied that he was Brennan-Jobs' father and provided little financial or emotional support to her and her mother when Apple took off, per The New York Times. As a result, Brennan went on welfare and cleaned houses to support her daughter, according to Vanity Fair.
Despite the initial neglect, Brennan-Jobs moved in with Jobs as a teenager so they could work on their relationship, according to the Times. Still, she said they didn't spend much time together.
After high school, Brennan-Jobs attended Harvard (which she admitted she might have gotten into because she dropped her father's name during the admission interview, per the Times). She then moved to London and Italy to work in finance, pivoted to a design role, and then switched to freelance writing for magazines and literary journals, according to the Times.
Brennan-Jobs' major breakthrough as a writer came in 2018 when she published "Small Fry," a memoir that dives deep into her tumultuous relationship with her father. In it, she writes about the times he treated her poorly, from initially denying that his Apple Lisa computer was named after her to saying that she smelled "like a toilet."
Despite all the turmoil, Brennan-Jobs said that she is "grateful" for her upbringing, per the Times.
She is now married to Bill Morein, a Microsoft employee turned tech-startup founder. They have three kids – Morein's two daughters from a previous relationship and a son they had together, according to the Times.
Reed Jobs
Reed Jobs and his mother, Laurene Powell Jobs, at a 2022 state dinner.
Reuters
Reed Jobs — named after the university his father attended before dropping out, according to Walter Isaacson's biography — is the son of Jobs and Laurene Powell Jobs, born just months after the two got married.
Of his four children, Steve Jobs was closest to the 32-year-old, which came at the cost of his relationships with his daughters, according to Isaacson's biography.
Even though his father raised him without an emphasis on money, it was impossible for Reed and his siblings to avoid the privileges of being rich.
Larry Ellison, the cofounder of Oracle who's worth $158 billion and was a close friend of Steve Jobs, would frequently take the Jobs family out on joy rides on his many luxury yachts, according to Isaacson's biography. Ironically, Reed would call Ellison "our rich friend."
Reed was also exposed to his father's business early on. When he was a senior in high school, his father took him to Hawaii so he could "be in the room with the best people in the world making really tough decisions," like Apple executives and other high-level tech moguls, per Isaacson's biography.
"I want you to be in every single one because you'll learn more in those two days than you would in two years at business school," Steve Jobs said, according to Isaacson.
In 2014, Reed got his bachelor's degree in history and international security from Stanford University — a favorite of wealthy tech offspring like Steve Ballmer's son Peter and Eric Schmidt's daughter, Sophie, and where his mother attended business school — then stayed for another year to get his master's in history.
After receiving his master's degree in 2015, Reed worked at the Emerson Collective — the philanthropic and impact investing organization his mother founded — as a managing director, leading a team that invests money into cancer research.
In August 2023, Reed announced he was leaving Emerson work at a venture capital fund named Yosemite, where he continued to lead investments in new cancer treatments. Yosemite raised more than $200 million to invest in cancer care, The Wall Street Journal. His investments include a startup that helps patients compare the cost of medical services called Turquoise Health.
Erin Siena Jobs
Erin Siena Jobs is the most private of Steve Jobs' children.
The 28-year-old does not appear to have any public profiles on social media, though her younger sister, Eve, posted a picture of Erin on Instagram for her birthday in 2021.
"To my lifelong best friend — happy birthday!!" Eve wrote next to an old picture of the two sisters on a boat that has since been deleted. "I love you I love you I love you."
In Isaacson's biography on Steve Jobs, the writer described Erin as "quiet, introspective."
Erin told Isaacson she sometimes wished she could have had more of her father's attention, but "he does his best to be both a father and the CEO of Apple, and he juggles those pretty well."
Eve Jobs
Eve Jobs is the youngest of Jobs' children.
Vianney Le Caer/Invision/AP
Twenty-five-year-old Eve Jobs, the youngest of Steve Jobs' children, is a model and an accomplished equestrian.
Unlike her older sister Erin, Eve is used to being in the spotlight. In 2020, she started her modeling career with a Glossier ad campaign alongside "Euphoria" star Sydney Sweeney and "RuPaul's Drag Race" finalist Naomi Smalls, Vanity Fair reported.
In 2022, she signed with DNA Model Management — the same agency that represents Kaia Gerber and Emily Ratajkowski — and attended Paris Fashion Week, per Elle Magazine and Vogue. Eve starred in an edgy fashion campaign for the luxury streetwear brand Enfants Riches Déprimés in February.
Prior to launching a modeling career, Eve attended Stanford University — the same school her brother attended and where her mom got her MBA. She graduated in 2021 after studying science technology and society, Harper's Bazaar reported.
During her college years, Eve was ranked No. 5 on the list of the top 1,000 riders under 25 around the world by Horse Sport in 2019. A year later, she said in an interview with World of Showjumping that "being able to compete in the Olympics and World Equestrian Games would be a dream."
From luxury beach hideout to party getaway, the Hamptons is going through a cultural transformation.
James Conrad Williams, Jr./Newsday RM via Getty Images/mark peterson/Corbis via Getty Images
The Hamptons are facing an influx of exclusive social clubs and locals aren't happy.
Traditionally a quiet refuge for the wealthy, club nightlife is now encroaching on the area.
The Hamptons' residents don't want their homes to become a party hotspot.
Just two hours east of Manhattan, the Hamptons is an ultra-wealthy beach hideaway where millionaires and celebrities from Martha Steward to Beyoncé hide away from the big city bustle.
At least it used to be.
Nowadays, exclusive social clubs with long lines, dress codes, and pounding music are popping up in the Long Island hub for the rich, and residents aren't happy.
Take the Blu Mar restaurant, for example. The Southampton restaurant was recently transformed into an Italian restaurant and nightclub by KyKy Conille, who is known for operating several hotspots in NYC, the Hollywood Reporter reported in July 2024.
Conille told the Hollywood reporter that the restaurant's club will be inclusive, catering to "customers from 25 to anyone who can still walk."
However, another club in the back is more selective about who to let in.
"We will pick the clientele for the lounge,'' Conille reportedly said at the time. "My doormen will choose by the way they dress. We don't want people coming in the lounge in the evening wearing shorts. I want to bring back elegance — for people to get excited to get dressed.''
And KyKy Conille isn't the only one transforming the scene.
Scott Sartiano, owner of the elite Manhattan social club Zero Bond where high-profile celebrities from Taylor Swift and Elon Musk to Tom Brady and Kim Kardashian go to party, planned to convert East Hampton's historic Hedges Inn into a new club location earlier this year, according to the same article.
Business Insider previously reported that the club's fees for new members range between $2,700 and $9,000 a year, depending on age.
But Sartiano's plans had to shift in May after locals filled town meetings and convinced local leaders to set up an 11 p.m. curfew for this season.
Since that spoiled the nightclub idea, Sartiano says he'll use the property as a new outpost for his NYC restaurant, Sartiano's, for the time being.
Still, some locals aren't buying it.
"Mr. Sartiano has greatly watered down his proposal so that it will simply be an Italian restaurant, and if that's the case, we will roll out the red carpet," Marcos Baladrón, East Hampton Village administrator, told the Hollywood Reporter. "But if his ultimate goal is to open another Zero Bond, I think the neighbors should be very wary."
The New York Times reported that town officials could not confirm if Sartiano had officially leased the property on July 4.
While the future of the Hamptons is up in the air, one thing is clear: the coastal wealth enclave is going through a cultural identity crisis, and locals will have to fight to stop it from transforming into a getaway for partiers.
"One of the lost things in this world is quietude," village trustee Carrie Doyle, told The New York Times. "People come out for peace and quiet, and the ironic thing is that to get it, you have to make a lot of noise. So that's what we've done."
Some of the buzziest theatrical releases of the year hit streaming this week.
Sam Taylor-Johnson's Amy Winehouse biopic "Back to Black" and the sequel "Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire" are both now available to watch at home. New movies, like "Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F," are also out.
There are also some oldies but goodies to check out — watch "Pearl" before hitting theaters to see Mia Goth kill it again in the sequel "MaXXXine," and revisit "Independence Day" in time for the holiday weekend.
Here's a complete rundown of all the best movies, shows, and documentaries to stream this weekend, broken down by what kind of entertainment you're looking for.
If you're looking for sci-fi, 'Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire' is streaming now
Godzilla and Kong return.
Warner Bros.
It's not "Godzilla Minus One," but it's still a satisfying monster flick if you're looking for something action-packed to watch this weekend. Watching kaiju punching each other and destroying cities in the process never gets old.
Sam Taylor-Johnson's Amy Winehouse biopic got a mixed reception when it arrived in theaters earlier this year. But it's worth a watch for Marisa Abela's performance as Amy Winehouse.
For a riveting true story, watch 'The Man with 1000 Kids'
Suzanne and Natalie in "The Man with 1000 Kids."
Netflix
This documentary tells the story of Jonathan Jacob Meijer, a prolific sperm donor who's fathered kids around the globe and has since been banned from donating sperm in his native Netherlands.
Horror fans should watch 'Pearl' before seeing 'MaXXXine' in theaters
Mia Goth in "Pearl."
A24
Mia Goth gives a killer performance in "Pearl," the prequel to Ti West's breakout horror hit "X." It's a great time to revisit the second movie in the trilogy before the final installment, "MaXXXine," hits theaters this weekend.
The retired high-school teacher in Ohio, whose last name is known to Business Insider but withheld over privacy and professional concerns, said her retirement isn't looking how she anticipated. Both she and her late husband were public servants,which means they didn't have high-paid careers, but she does have a pension — meaning she'll get a monthly payout in retirement. But it's not getting her as far as she'd hoped.
"We lived the modest life of two public employees just making ends meet," Linda said. "We bought a house, we struggled in debt. I'm still in debt after his death, and the bills keep coming, and I need to keep working."
Before her retirement, she was earning about $5,000 a month. Now, with her pension, she'll have about $3,700 a month coming in, according to documentation BI review.
She's looking into part-time work and other opportunities that could keep her afloat. She wants something that will give her a "modicum of autonomy" when it comes to scheduling,and she said that if necessary,she'd apply for Instacart and deliver groceries. She wants to ensure she's never burdensome to her children, even in her older age.
She doesn't ever see herself being able to stop working completely; she said she'd work until she could no longer physically do so.
Linda isn't alone. Many retirees or would-be-retirees aren't able to fully throw in the towel. The Census Bureau's Current Population Survey found just more than half of respondents over 65 were living on an income of less than $30,000 in 2022, and many older Americans are expecting towork until the day they're not physically able to anymore. It's a situation that's become more pronounced in the past few years, as retirement becomes increasingly reserved for higher earners — and it may only get worse as pensions continue to wither and Social Security remains imperiled.
"I fully see myself working for the next 20-some years — if I have that many left. Whatever years I have left, I will not be enjoying the retirement life in Florida," Linda said.
A looming retirement crisis for many
Linda's retirement goals are modest: She's hoping to concoct a winning recipe with her teacher's pension, a rolled-over government-worker retirement plan, the sale of her house, and some part-time work.
"I'm hoping that all of those ingredients piled together in a bowl will bake something that I am able to live with. I will never be wealthy. I will never be without care and without worry, but I would like to at some point get to the point where I am free to travel and supplement my income with part-time employment," she said.
Linda is one of the dwindling number of retirees who have a pension, but that comes after a career spent in low-paying public service. A Government Accountability Office report last year found that older lower-income Americans had become increasingly less likely to have any retirement account balances; simultaneously, fewer low-income households had a pension. That means that the onus of retirement saving and planning has shifted onto workers rather than employers who pay into a monthly pension benefit; for lower-income workers, who may not be able to spare savings, that can be an even more acute challenge.
Linda said she thought teachers especially had gotten a bad rap over the past few decades. The idea that they just want to siphon off of the system couldn't be further from the truth, she said.
"Even though I had that position, I also had the low salary that went with it. And there are many things that you have to deal with in life financially," she said. "And teaching, unfortunately, is not a career choice that guarantees financial stability."
Even so, she said it was still the most uplifting and rewarding work she'd ever done.
She'd also like the country to rethink conversations around Social Security and retirement benefits more broadly. She said pensions had gotten into the hands of private equity, potentially imperiling those guaranteed benefits. At the same time, politicians have taken aim at Social Security, suggesting pushing up the retirement age and not moving to fund its coffers.
"We have to get out of this frame of mind that suggests that Social Security that people have paid into for decades is somehow an entitlement. It is a right," she said.
But, even so, Linda still feels fortunate: She has two adult sons who will always look out for her; she's even moving to be closer to one. They make good money, and she knows she has a safety net.
"There are so many in this country who are looking at retirement age and throwing up their hands and in total desperation, wondering how they're going to make it," she said. "And those are the people I really feel terrible for."
Are you struggling to retire or not experiencing the retirement you hoped for? Are you working during retirement? Contact this reporter at jkaplan@businessinsider.com.