Bankruptcy in its simplest form is a recovery and relief task meant to heal and reprise a business or person back to a baseline stable for success.
The problem is it carries such an emblem of failure that the term is most often uttered with lowered eyes and sunken shoulders.
Bankruptcy is not the End of the Road
This is by no means is a final destination or label which should be branded on one’s forehead for life.
It is a sign for redirection, and a chance to start over- or move on.
Even those we idolize have filed bankruptcy.
In glancing at a recent article on Bloomberg.com, there in black-and-white is news that shows even the bright lights of Hollywood, the loud cheers of Shea Stadium or the brotherly love of Phillies fans can't save our stars from having to file for bankruptcy.
Celebrities and Bankruptcy: Dykstra, Baldwin, Trump
In the article, All-Star baseball great Lenny Dykstra is recorded to be filing bankruptcy under chapter 11 due to owing $10 to $50 million.
Then there is Stephen Baldwin, whose failed apprenticeship trials and inability to use his celebrity status to get him “out of here” has led him to filing bankruptcy.
Times are tough, even for our idols and it seems as though they will not be getting easier any time soon.
This economic blunder is even affecting such major banking institutions as JP Morgan Chase.
Bloomberg’s article mentions that “steeply rising filings by consumers are hurting commercial banks. JPMorgan Chase & Co., the second-largest U.S. bank, predicted more losses on consumer loans last month.”
In the same article JPMorgan’s CEO Jamie Dimon was resound in his thoughts of the current state of affairs.
Dimon doesn’t expect the credit card business to formulate a profit in 2009 or 2010.
In fact, the company augmented its loss projection for prime and subprime mortgages.
Not good news for those who lean on such institutions for stability in an otherwise unstable time.
Truthfully, examples of filings by celebrity figures, major business institutions and those who appear to have it all are interchangeable.
Just ask Donald Trump and M.C. Hammer.
The difference now is that more of the country is bound by these ties which otherwise were seen to connect only "the less" than rather than "the more of".
Tags: Celebrities and Bankruptcy, filing bankruptcy
This entry was posted on Thursday, August 20th, 2009 at 11:12 am and is filed under Finance 101: Secure Your Future, Miscellaneous News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.







The economic recession affected equally celebrities and average people, and for most of them the answer to financial problems was bankruptcy!
Hi I’ve got a graph here you might be interested in on the relationship between recessions and bankruptcy