Why is bethenny frankel famous




















Recently, B Strong has supported immediate aid programs in the Bahamas after Hurricane Dorian, as well as in Australia to help combat the devastating wildfires.

To combat the COVID pandemic, B Strong is currently working with various specific hospitals, medical facilities and government nationwide to provide masks for medical professionals on the frontlines. Having partnered in multiple successful ventures, Bethenny is an experienced investor in various industries and markets including food and beverage, real estate, and entertainment.

Her portfolio continues to grow as she identifies new and exciting investment opportunities. I wasn't buying diamonds and getting facials. The decision to go on reality television was single-handedly a business decision. It was frustrating to constantly be referred to as a "reality star. I wanted to be known as an entrepreneur and a businessperson. It was a strategy from Day One. I came up with the idea for the Skinnygirl margarita, a low-calorie cocktail, in my kitchen. I thought, Everybody wants to have a margarita, and nobody wants to feel guilty about it.

All the big liquor companies turned me down. Bethenny married Peter Sussman, who she had been pals with, in , according to Bravo. Fans might not know about her first marriage since her second marriage has played out in the public eye.

RHONY often focuses on dramatic, iconic scenes , so fans like hearing more about each housewife's background and past, including any bits of romantic history that are out there. Bethenny talked about being young when she got married for the first time and how it wasn't going to last.

Fans of RHONY remember watching Bethenny working hard in NYC in the early seasons of the show, and in every season that she appeared on, her passion, determination and work ethic were super clear.

Bethenny shared in an interview with Marie Claire that when it came to joining the cast of Bravo's reality series, "Everyone told me not to do it. Viewers are glad that Bethenny was cast on the show since she has had hilarious quotes and so many entertaining moments. For many, the show isn't the same since she left. It seems like the reality star has always worked incredibly hard.

Everyone should be taking a risk but also having a reward. I know what I want, the number I want, and that's what I say. You end up running into a lot of the same people, too, so if you're negotiating a contract—whether it's Bravo or lawyers or Shark Tank —everybody sort of knows who they're dealing with.

If your person asks for an astronomical number but then ends up settling for something far from it, they know that the next time you're in a weak position. If I'm looking to buy a house in the Hamptons, I'm offering the number that I'm offering. I'm very straightforward about everything, and I take care of people. If I do a deal and want to give my staff a bonus, I'm very fair. But it was what it was.

I shouldn't have been taken seriously in the beginning; I had no value. Or I didn't know the value I would have yet. But I knew what I wanted, which was to keep anything that I did in business. If you go on a reality show, you have to give a percentage [of any business you promote on the show] to the network—but I never did that. The industry ended up calling it "The Bethenny Clause.

But I was nobody; I had accomplished anything yet, really. On her real estate prowess… I invest in what I know. I really understand downtown Manhattan, the Hamptons, Aspen, and some parts of Vermont. I invest somewhere that I know I can make a real transformational difference, and I always pick something that I would live in.

That way, if everything went bad and I had to sell it all and only keep one of the places that I own, I would love to live in it. With my apartment in the city, nobody understood what I was doing.



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