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I was laid off at 37 and decided to downsize. Building my own tiny house led me to start a handyman business.

A woman standing on a truck hauling a tiny home.
Melanie Copeland with her 144ft tiny home.
  • Melanie Copeland was laid off from her real estate job in 2017 at the age of 37.
  • She and her husband built a tiny home to scale back their lifestyle and make their money go further.
  • They knew little about DIY, but the steep learning curve led them to become professional handymen.

This story is based on an interview with Melanie Copeland, 45, of Buckingham County, Virginia, the author of “Trailblazing Tiny: A Guide to Breaking Free.” Copeland runs a handyman business with her husband, John, 46. The conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

My husband, John, and I had been considering moving into a tiny home for a few years before we finally did so in February 2018.

The popularity of tiny homes on wheels was significantly smaller than it is now, and it was challenging to find a wealth of information on blogs and social media platforms, such as YouTube.

Still, we did our research and due diligence because the idea appealed to us so much.

We’d always been pretty minimalist people, and even when we “lived big” while renting a two-storey house in Charlottesville, Virginia, we didn’t own a lot of stuff.

The catalyst was being laid off

But I’d work the entire week in a busy, full-time job, ranging from financial and legal editing to real estate, only to spend at least one day cleaning the place and doing laundry on weekends.

There wasn’t much time for John and me to have fun and enjoy ourselves because we were tethered to our property.

So, when I was suddenly laid off by my realty agency in December 2017, it seemed like the perfect time to downsize.

A woman painting the deck of a tiny home
Copeland painting the deck of her tiny home

There is no way we would have been able to afford the project without an interest-free loan from my mother. She lent us the money for our $27,000 contract with the Incredible Tiny Homes company in Tennessee.

It included a meeting with a designer who advised us on aspects such as window placement. The price included materials, not labor.

We had never been DIYers

During a weeklong workshop, John, my mother-in-law, a friend, a volunteer, and I lived in a bunkhouse at the company’s warehouse in Inca, where we built the tiny house ourselves. They provided us with three meals a day.

A supervisor demonstrated how to operate the equipment and tools, such as the saws. A plumber and an electrician came in to comply with safety regulations. But the rest of it was up to us. We cut the wood, put up the walls, and laid the floor.

John and I had never been DIYers, so it was a steep learning curve.

A couple celebrating the holidays in their tiny home
Copeland and her husband, John, inside their 18-feet-by-8-feet home.

Luckily, I’m naturally inclined toward mechanics. My sister was usually the one throwing the doll’s tea party when we were little, while I was playing with blocks and Erector sets.

The workshop was completely hands-on, and although we made mistakes at times, we eventually figured out the spacing and how the pieces are put together. By the seventh day, before the hauler arrived to take our 144 square foot home to Virginia, we knew it wasn’t rocket science.

We lived in a friend’s backyard and at a campground before obtaining a farm loan and purchasing a 1.07-acre plot of land for $16,000 in 2000. It was relatively cheap because it had a burned-down house on it, and we had to clear the debris.

I didn’t want to be nose to the grindstone

John and I put our life and soul into the property. We taught ourselves how to paint, stain, and do polyurethane and finishing work. We made some frustrating mistakes, but we learned and continued to learn.

We now know how to fix everything in our home because we built it ourselves and understand its components. You could call it skill-building.

I took another real estate job in 2019, but quit around the same time we closed on our new land. I didn’t want to be nose to the grindstone anymore.

A dog lying on a pet bed in front of a fire
The Copelands’ dog, General Chaos, get cozy next to the fireplace

John reached the same conclusion in 2023 when he left his position as the manager of a parking garage. By then, we’d figured out that we could live in the tiny home for less than $300 a month, including the land payment, tax, insurance, and power bills.

Then, in 2024, we decided to leverage our newly proven DIY abilities and launch our own business. We make and fix things for other people now.

We rely on word of mouth

We’ve worked on a few tiny homes and shed conversions. But it’s mostly regular houses. We just finished staining a huge deck, and I built a custom bookcase inside a beautiful, 18th-century house.

We have no marketing budget and rely on word of mouth. Last year’s income from the handyman business was $80,000, and we’re on target to make $100,00 by the end of the year.

Building our 18ft by 8ft tiny home opened up a whole new world for us, and one of the best parts is being our own boss.

Read the original article on Business Insider

My favorite vacation spot is an island city in Florida. I love it so much that I hope to move there once I’m an empty nester.

Dock area in Kewy West, Florida
My husband and I would like to make Key West our permanent home one day.
  • My favorite vacation destination in the US is the island town of Key West, Florida.
  • Though I’ve visited several times, I never tire of the island’s natural beauty and local history
  • The relaxed island vibes make it seem ideal for retirement. I plan to one day call Key West home.

On the first cruise I ever took, I happened to be pregnant and terribly sick. However, a switch seemed to flip when we arrived at the island of Key West, Florida.

The sky and waters were a stunning blue, and the weather was lovely and mild. Suddenly, I felt better — and that feeling persisted as my husband and I explored the southernmost city in Florida.

Though being sick on a cruise ship wasn’t ideal, I’m grateful the experience introduced me to what’s still my favorite vacation destination years later.

In fact, we love the city so much that we now hope to retire there.

It’s easy to understand why Key West is such a popular travel destination

Peopel taking pictures during sunset at Mallory Square
Key West has famous sunsets.

Key West welcomes about a million visitors a year, which is no surprise given it’s a popular stop on cruises and it has an international airport.

The city has a lot to offer tourists, and when I travel, I seek to indulge my love of both history and nature. Key West has plenty of both

The Key West Shipwreck Treasure Museum enchants with the island’s rich history of shipwreck salvage operations, which date back centuries.

Mallory Square, the city’s historic waterfront plaza, serves as an outdoor market where visitors can check out local artisans, entertainers, and food vendors.

It’s also where dozens of people gather each night for the island’s Sunset Celebration. Yes, the sunsets in Key West are that spectacular.

On our first visit alone, we took in the island’s gorgeous beaches and stopped by for a photo at the Southernmost Point of the Continental United States.

We were also mesmerized by the inhabitants of the Key West Butterfly and Nature Conservatory, which has dozens of species of colorful birds and butterflies.

Finally, we took a tour of the Hemingway Home, a museum established in author Ernest Hemingway’s former Key West house, and were absolutely charmed by the location’s famed polydactyl cats.

The culinary scene is great, too

a slice of key lime pie in a plastic container
Key-lime pie is famous for a reason.

Key West’s food and beverage scene is impressive, and the island is especially famous for desserts and drinks made from its eponymous Key limes.

Coincidentally, Key-lime pie and Key limeade were the first foods I could enjoy without experiencing morning sickness, so they have an especially dear place in my heart.

Key West has multitudes to offer on a savory front, too, especially when it comes to seafood.

Though it’s native to the area, queen conch is no longer allowed to be harvested in Florida due to decades of overfishing. However, it’s still imported and is a staple, as locals in the area specialize in preparing conch and do it very well.

Briny and sweet, conch is used in fritters, chowders, salads, and ceviche.

Don’t worry if seafood isn’t your thing, as Key West’s Gulf Coast locale means you’ll also find tasty Caribbean and Cuban fare here.

Key West feels worth rediscovering over and over again

Sunset along the water with palm trees, buildings nearby
Hopefully, I will call Key West home one day.

My husband and I have been to Key West several times since that first visit. On our next trip there, we’ll be celebrating our oldest son’s 18th birthday.

It’s hard to believe the cause of that morning sickness will soon be an adult, but I can think of no place more fitting to celebrate his life.

I know it won’t be our last trip to Key West, either. My husband and I have a goal to make the island our permanent home one day.

In my opinion, ocean breezes, local history, a distinctive culinary scene, and unique attractions make the island an ideal place to live out one’s twilight years.

However, we’re still raising our kids in Houston — a city we love just as much as Key West — and plan to stay put until they finish their education.

Until then, we’re looking forward to enjoying brief pockets of “living on island time” on our vacations.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway cashed in another $6 billion worth of stocks in his penultimate quarter as CEO

Warren Buffett
Warren Buffett
  • Warren Buffett just published the details of his penultimate quarter as Berkshire Hathaway CEO.
  • Berkshire’s operating profits soared and its cash pile hit a new high.
  • But Buffett once again struggled to find bargains.

Warren Buffett‘s penultimate quarter as Berkshire Hathaway CEO saw the company’s operating earnings soar and its cash pile grow to a fresh record of over $350 billion, but the legendary investor once again struggled to find bargains.

Berkshire’s third-quarter earnings report on Saturday showed a 34% year-on-year surge in operating income to $13.5 billion, as insurance underwriting income nearly tripled to $2.4 billion.

Profits also climbed at the BNSF Railway and in the manufacturing, service, and retailing division. The Berkshire Hathaway Energy and the insurance investment segment saw a drop in operating earnings.

Buffett, 95, and his team spent $6.4 billion on stocks but sold $12.5 billion worth, making them net sellers for the 12th quarter in a row. Berkshire will disclose which US stocks it bought and sold in a regulatory filing later this month.

The legendary stock picker didn’t buy back any Berkshire shares for a fifth consecutive quarter, signaling that even his own company’s stock didn’t strike him as a bargain. The stock sales and lack of buybacks contributed to Berkshire’s cash pile swelling to $358 billion, or $382 billion if payables for Treasury purchases are excluded.

Buffett rocked the business world in May when he broke the news to an arena full of Berkshire shareholders that he would step down as CEO at the end of this year after 55 years in the role.

Greg Abel, who leads Berkshire’s non-insurance businesses, is set to succeed him, with Buffett staying on as chairman.

It hasn’t been a total deal drought for Buffett as he prepares to hand over the reins, however.

On October 2, Berkshire announced it had agreed to pay nearly $10 billion to acquire OxyChem, a chemicals business, from Occidental Petroleum, which counts Berkshire as one of its largest shareholders.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Investor Keith Rabois’ advice to people who want to break into VC

Keith Raibos
Keith Rabois shared advice for young professionals on “The Rise” podcast on Thursday.
  • Keith Rabois shared advice for young professionals interested in VC on “The Rise” podcast.
  • Rabois said young professionals should first create a startup or company to gain experience.
  • “I think it’s a bad idea for almost anybody right out of school to want to be a VC,” he said.

Longtime VC Keith Rabois has some advice for young professionals hoping to break into the industry.

“I think they should either join a startup or found a company with almost no exceptions — especially if they’re technical,” Rabois said Thursday on “The Rise” podcast.

“You’d ask the question, like, ‘Why are they interested in venture?’ and usually when I meet people like that, the answers are pretty superficial. Most people don’t even understand what venture really is versus what it looks like on TV,” he added.

Rabois said it’s essential for newcomers to either learn how to build their own companies or watch others do the same.

“First of all, it’ll make you more confident that you’re making the right decision. This is a 20-year job minimum. Secondly, you’ll be better suited to perform the job. And third, you’ll have more credibility, which also helps you perform the job,” Rabois said.

Rabois is a managing director at Khosla Ventures and has served on the boards of several companies, including Reddit and Yelp. He’s also the cofounder and chairman of Opendoor Technologies.

During the podcast interview, Rabois said it’s a “bad idea” for new graduates to want to become venture capitalists right after school.

“Doesn’t mean you can’t be an associate somewhere. You know, spend two years watching and learning, A: Is this right for me? Because you’ll see how the industry really works,” Rabois said. “Then, use the platform and vantage point of seeing 100 or 200 portfolio companies and choose the best company for you to join.”

“Then, if you really enjoy the experience of working a venture and think it’s what you want to do, then doubling or tripling down after you’ve built something is a very good move,” Rabois added. “If you do this right out of school, you know, by the time you’re 30, you’ll be you have maybe two shots at a startup,” Rabois said.

When contacted for comment, Rabois pointed Business Insider toward a blog post written by Founders Fund partner Delian Asparouhov, who previously shared five lessons he learned from Rabois, including on how to become a VC. Asparouhov writes that it boils down to: becoming a junior generalist, gaining experience at a “high-growth” startup, allocating resources with VCs, and learning from the best.

“Fundamentally, in order to get a job in venture, a current VC needs to think you will be a good VC,” Asparouhov wrote. “They need to think you have relevant expertise and they need to think you have great judgment. There are no shortcuts to developing expertise or judgment.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

We left our jobs at 60 to travel the world. Retiring early means living off savings before Social Security kicks in.

The Mayerniks in front of pyramids in Mexico.
The Mayerniks in Mexico.
  • Married couple Sandra and Jeff Mayernik were burned out and ready for a calmer, stress-free life.
  • They retired, sold their home, and set out to travel the world — they’ve been to 11 countries so far.
  • They’re currently in Albania, where they say they’re saving money and are happier.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with married couple Sandra and Jeff Mayernik, 62-year-old retired realtors who left the US in 2023 to travel abroad. The couple, who run the blog The Mobile Retiree, are currently in Pogradec, Albania. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

Jeff: A couple of years after moving to central Oregon, we became empty nesters. We had a place outside Bend and lived on five acres. We had a couple of horses, a tractor, some project cars, and various storage buildings.

Sandra: Our property included two dwellings. A 1,000-square-foot double-wide manufactured home that came with the property. The second was a 1,700-square-foot custom-built, three-bedroom, two-bath house. It was gorgeous.

Jeff: Life was good in Oregon, but the political climate in the US was becoming uncomfortable for us, and the cost of living just kept rising.

Our property taxes went up, along with car and homeowner’s insurance. At first, it was just a couple of percent a year, and before you know it, it all added up. Meanwhile, our wages weren’t increasing at the same rate.

While the cost of living was probably a secondary concern. Our age and health were bigger factors in wanting a change of scenery. I’d had a couple of heart attacks and now have an ICD — an implanted cardioverter-defibrillator.

Eventually, we reached a point where we thought, “You know what? We don’t need the stress anymore.” We knew we wouldn’t be rich on the road, but we also wouldn’t be poor.

So we said, “Let’s just go see the world.”

We sold everything we owned

Jeff: Prior to retirement, my wife and I were both Realtors. Before that, I spent a couple of decades in commission sales positions, including several years as a salesman in retail automotive.

When we started planning our move abroad, we did the math, skinned it up, and figured out that we could travel the world full-time for around $40,000 a year.

Sandra: To financially prepare for the move, we sold everything we owned — our house, our cars, everything. Until we start receiving our Social Security benefits, we’re living off our savings and the proceeds from the sale of our house, which we’re investing.

A selfie of Sandra and Jeff Mayernik.
Sandra and Jeff Mayernik.

Sandra: We left the States in November 2023. We knew we couldn’t establish residency anywhere without an income, but with tourist visas, you can stay 30 to 90 days in about a hundred different countries.

We’ve been to Panama, Costa Rica, Portugal, Spain, France, England, Canada, Chile, Mexico, and Argentina. And now we’re in Albania, where we can stay for a full year on a US visa. We spent two months in Durres, Albania. We’re currently in Pogradec, and we’re heading to Saranda next.

There’s something for everyone in Albania

Jeff: Albania is a compact country with every kind of geography. If you want mountains, there are mountains. If you want the coast, there’s the coast. And it has a Mediterranean climate along the shoreline.

It’s funny, we’ve visited so many countries, and there are some places where we just don’t feel comfortable right away. In Albania, within just a couple of days of wandering around, we felt like we belonged here.

Sandra: It felt like a gut instinct that this place was good for us. The culture here is all about taking care of each other.

Jeff: We were talking to a tourism official here in Pogradec the other day, and he said Albania is known as “the house of God and the house of guests.”

Sandra: They really do take care of their guests. For instance, when we first moved into our current apartment, the day after we arrived, there were a couple of things that needed to be fixed. Of course, the handyman came, but also the landlord’s aunt or cousin, and they brought over lunch for us.

There are pros and cons to living here

Sandra: Right now, we’re living in a three-bedroom, two-bath apartment in Pogradec.

It has a full kitchen, a washer, and three balconies overlooking Lake Ohrid. We’re on a short-term rental, and our monthly payment, including utilities and high-speed internet, averages about $1,100 a month, so it’s a huge apartment for the price. If we were to do a year lease, the rent would be even cheaper.

Pogradec, Albania.
Pogradec, Albania.

Whenever we move somewhere new, we spend the first week getting our bearings — finding the grocery stores, pharmacies, parks, and coffee shops.

Jeff: Living abroad means adjusting to a new currency and a new language, so even simple errands take a bit more effort. Back in the US, I could walk into a Kroger, read every label, and instantly know what I was paying. Here, I once grabbed what looked like a package of ham — but it definitely wasn’t.

Sandra: Grocery shopping is more of a process — the butcher for meat, the farmer’s stand for vegetables, the store for packaged goods, and the bakery for bread.

Since we walk everywhere and don’t have a car, we can’t do one big monthly grocery run like we used to. Instead, we shop every couple of days, searching for ingredients or substitutes to make our favorite meals. All of that, day after day, wears on you a little.

Quality of life is more important to us than making money

Sandra: I miss a few things about the States, like going kayak fishing with my sisters and spending time with family — that’s about it.

Jeff: I do get cravings for certain things. Every now and then, you just want some brown gravy, mashed potatoes, and Skippy Super Chunk peanut butter.

Sandra: We have two months scheduled in Saranda. We’re not sure what we’ll do after, but we don’t plan on going back to the US.

There are a lot of things we don’t miss about living there, like being car-centric. I was always the driver back in the States, and now I don’t have to think about it — no oil changes, flat tires, or maintenance. I don’t miss the mental load of having a car at all.

Our quality of life has definitely improved abroad. Before we left, I was a workaholic. In fact, when we decided to leave, I arranged with my principal broker to keep me on, working in an administrative capacity, because I really loved my job. But after about six to nine months on the road, I realized I didn’t want to do that anymore, and the stress just evaporated.

Now, I spend my days walking along the promenade along Lake Ohrid, reading a book, or just relaxing.

Sandra Mayernik walking along a beach in Durres, Albania.
Sandra walking along a beach in Durres, Albania.

Jeff: I’d say it’s a much lower-stress retirement. Healthcare is a lot more affordable; my medications usually cost less than my copay back in the States. And when we do decide to go out and do things, it’s a lot less expensive.

Although no financial advisor in their right mind would have advised us to do it, I think we were at the right stage of life for an early retirement. Our quality of life is way more important to us than making more money.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The largest superyachts owned by tech billionaires, from Jeff Bezos’ Koru to Mark Zuckerberg’s Launchpad

launchpad and mark zuckerberg
Mark Zuckerberg’s Launchpad, which set sail in 2024, cost a nine-figure sum and is one of the largest superyachts owned by a tech billionaire.
  • As tech billionaires get wealthier, their superyachts are getting longer and more luxurious.
  • In recent years, Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos have each spent nine figures on their pleasure crafts.
  • These are the biggest superyachts owned by tech billionaires.

Size doesn’t always matter, but it absolutely does in the rarefied world of superyachts.

Palaces at sea have long been a status symbol for the masters of the universe, a place to live a life of excess and network, far removed from the prying eyes of ordinary people.

As the rich get richer — the world’s 10 richest people are $500 billion wealthier this year — their boats are getting longer.

The trend illustrates an unofficial yachting rule of thumb: The bigger the boat, the richer the owner. To own a 50-meter vessel, you likely have to be a billionaire. Over 100 meters long? You probably have a few billion to your name.

Over the past two years, three of the wealthiest people on the planet  — Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, and Sergey Brin — have taken possession of yachts over 100 meters long.

“It’s a bit of a celebration of your success in life, of wealth,” Giovanna Vitelli, the chair of the Azimut Benetti Group, one of the biggest producers of superyachts, told Business Insider.

Decked out with amenities like gyms, spas, pools, movie theaters, and helicopter hangars, these megayachts — broadly defined as over 70 meters long — are custom-built and cost hundreds of millions of dollars.

Over the summers, the superyachts criss-cross the Mediterranean, visiting the islands of Greece and stopping in St. Tropez, before making their way across the Atlantic for New Year’s in the Caribbean. (Mark Zuckerberg’s Launchpad reportedly took a pit stop on its annual migration this year, stopping at a shipyard in southern France for a multi-month tune-up.)

The comings and goings, customizations, and sheer size of superyachts give us insight into how today’s ruling class lives. After all, they’re about the most expensive asset money can buy.

Here are the largest yachts owned by tech billionaires, or at least those we know about.

In an industry governed by discretion, deciphering who owns what is an exercise in stringing together many clues. There are likely yachts that have not been publicly recorded or registered. Evan Spiegel, for example, is rumored to own the 94-meter megayacht Bliss. If you’re lucky, it turns out money can buy privacy.

Sergey Brin: Dragonfly
Butterfly, a yacht owned by Sergey Brin
Butterfly, owned by Sergey Brin, is the smaller of his two yachts.

Google cofounder Sergey Brin has a flotilla of yachts, boats, and water toys known as the “Fly Fleet.”

The largest, 142-meter-long Dragonfly, was delivered in December 2024.

Built by the prestigious German shipyard Lürssen, Dragonfly has been lauded for its design, which earned it the 2025 Yacht Style award in its length class.

It comes equipped with a full suite of amenities, including a glass-bottomed pool, cinema, spa, gym, business deck with a home office, and a helicopter hangar.

The superyacht is Brin’s second of the same name.

The former Dragonfly, 73 meters long, was listed for sale under a new name, Capricorn, with a $30 million asking price. It has since been renamed Capricorn.

Brin’s fleet also includes Butterfly, a 38-meter-long yacht often moored in the Bay Area. In its downtime, its crew members spend time kitesurfing and teaching swimming lessons to local kids.

The rest of the armada, which requires a team of 50 full-time employees, consists of a smaller boat named Firefly, Jet Skis, foil boards, dinghies, and kiteboards.

Jeff Bezos: Koru and Abeona
PORTOFINO, ITALY - JUNE 13: Koru and Abeona, Jeff Bezos yachts are seen on June 13, 2023 in Portofino, Italy.
Jeff Bezos and his fiancée, Lauren Sanchez spent last summer on Koru, seen at left, with her support vessel, Abeona, seen at right.

Bezos’ $500 million megayacht, the 127-meter Koru, made a splash when it was delivered in 2023.

The sailing yacht is hard to miss thanks to its massive size and unique design. It also travels with Abeona, its 75-meter support vessel, in tow.

“I heard back in 2018 or something that somebody had ordered a classic sailing yacht,” one superyacht aficionado told Business Insider. “You order 125 meters, that’s not really going to be classic. But it is. I think it’s pretty cool.”

The yacht has hosted several of Bezos and Lauren Sánchez Bezos’ famous friends for various occasions, including an engagement party that drew Bill Gates and Leonardo DiCaprio on board and a pre-wedding foam party to celebrate Sánchez Bezos’ son’s birthday.

Before its completion, Koru made headlines after it was announced that a historic bridge in Rotterdam would be taken apart to allow the Oceanco-built boat through. (Due to the backlash, the shipyard made alternative plans.)

The yacht has also been criticized for the liberal use of teak on its decks and interiors. The wood has gained a reputation for its connection to Myanmar, a country with a checkered human rights record.

In 2024, Oceanco was fined for violating the European Timber Regulation, and the shipyard has since apologized.

Mark Zuckerberg: Launchpad
Launchpad Yacht
Mark Zuckerberg’s Launchpad is among the largest superyachts owned by techbillionaires.

Following months of rumors, Zuckerberg debuted Launchpad in 2024. The 118-meter superyacht was originally designed for a sanctioned Russian businessman.

The ship made its maiden voyage in March 2024, going from Gibraltar to St. Maarten and mooring in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. It has since visited Panama for Zuckerberg’s 40th birthday and spent summers in the Mediterranean.

Little is known about its interior, but photos show a large swimming pool and helipad, and its shipyard, Feadship, has written about its “fully enclosed pod-like observation lounge” and two helipads.

Its price has been kept under wraps, but a yacht of that size would typically cost nine figures.

Eric Schmidt: Whisper
The yacht "Kismet" is located in central London on the banks of the Thames. The yacht is adorned with a sculpture of a jaguar on the bow. Photo: Jan Woitas/dpa (Photo by Jan Woitas/picture alliance via Getty Images)
Eric Schmidt bought Kismet from the Jacksonville Jaguars owner Shahid Khan — hence the figurehead — last year and renamed her Whisper.

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt purchased Kismet, a 95-meter-long superyacht formerly owned by billionaire Shahid Khan, the owner of the Jacksonville Jaguars, in 2023 and renamed the Lürssen-built vessel Whisper.

Schmidt had agreed to purchase the Alfa Nero, which formerly belonged to a sanctioned Russian oligarch, for $67 million in an auction. He backed out of the deal following legal issues over its true ownership.

Whisper can accommodate 12 guests and a crew of 28, according to Moran Yacht & Ship, which oversaw its construction. It features a master deck with a private jacuzzi, a full-service spa, a lap pool, a movie theater, and an outdoor fireplace.

While its final sale price was not public, it was listed for about $158 million at the time of the sale.

Schmidt charters the yacht for about $1.4 million a week — an opportunity his fellow billionaire, Magic Johnson, has taken advantage of. In the summer of 2025, Johnson posted videos and photos from a weekslong Mediterranean vacation aboard Whisper, including workouts in the outdoor gym and a toga party with the crew.

Barry Diller: Eos
Eos yacht
Barry Diller and Diane von Furstenberg’s Eos yacht has become a popular destination for celebrities.

Billionaire Barry Diller, the chairman of digital media company IAC, owns the megayacht Eos with his wife, fashion designer Diane von Furstenberg, who is immortalized in a figurehead sculpture by Anh Duong.

One of the largest private sailing yachts in the world, the three-masted Lürssen schooner measures 93 meters long. It took three years to build before being delivered to Diller in 2009, and little has been revealed about its interior and features since then.

The power couple has hosted many celebrities on the Eos, which spends its summers in the Mediterranean and New Years Eve in St. Barts. Over the years, guests have included Oprah Winfrey, Emma Thompson, Anderson Cooper, and Bezos, leading some to believe it inspired Koru.

Jim Clark: Athena
Athena yacht
Netscape founder Jim Clark has listed Athena for sale but is yet to find a buyer.

Netscape founder Jim Clark purchased the 90-meter sailing yacht Athena in 2004.

“I could easily have built a 50- or 60-meter motor yacht that would have had the same space as Athena, but I was never really interested in building a motor yacht,” he told Boat International in 2016. “To my eye, she’s one of the most gorgeous large sailing yachts, maybe the most gorgeous large sailing yacht in the world.”

The former Stanford professor tried to sell it at various points — listing it for $95 million in 2012, $69 million in 2016, and $59 million in 2017 — but it has yet to change hands.

Larry Ellison: Musashi
Super Yacht Musashi owned by Oracle CEO Larry Ellison
The Mushashi superyacht, seen here in Venice, is owned by Oracle CEO Larry Ellison.

Oracle founder Larry Ellison has owned several superyachts over the years, including the Katana, the Ronin, and the Rising Sun, which he sold to fellow billionaire David Geffen.

He purchased his current boat, Musashi, in 2011 for a reported $160 million from custom-yacht giant Feadship.

Named after a famous samurai warrior, the 88-meter-long yacht has both Japanese and Art Deco-inspired design elements. It also boasts amenities such as an elevator, swimming pool, beauty salon, gym, and basketball court.

Ellison is known for his extravagant spending — private islands, jets, a tennis tournament — and yachting is among his favorite and most expensive hobbies. He took up racing them in the 1990s and financed the America’s Cup-winning BMW Oracle Racing team.

Laurene Powell Jobs: Venus
A superyacht at sea.
Venus was originally designed for Steve Jobs, though he never stepped foot on her.

Steve Jobs’ widow, investor and philanthropist Laurene Powell Jobs, inherited a nearly finished 78-meter yacht named Venus when the Apple cofounder died in 2011.

After spending years vacationing on Ellison’s yachts — Venus and Musashi come from the same shipyard, Feadship — Jobs wanted one for himself. He designed Venus with French starchitect and decorator Philippe Starck, and it was worth $130 million upon completion.

“Venus comes from the philosophy of minimum,” Starck said of its design. “The elegance of the minimum, approaching dematerialization.”

Jobs and Starck began working together in 2007, the designer told Vanity Fair, and held monthly meetings over the course of four years. Venus was delivered in 2012 to Jobs’ specification: six identical cabins, a design to ensure spaces of absolute silence, and the most up-to-date technology.

“There will never again be a boat of that quality again. Because never again will two madmen come together to accomplish such a task,” Starck told the magazine.

Charles Simonyi: Norn
harles Simonyis luxury yacht 'Skat' sits in the harbour on November 21, 2008 in Gothenburg, Sweden.
Early Microsoft employee Charles Simonyi traded in his first yacht Skat, pictured here, for the bigger Norn.

Early Microsoft employee Charles Simonyi has purchased two megayachts from the German shipyard Lürssen: the 90-meter Norn and 71-meter Skat.

Delivered in 2023, Norn is full of luxurious features, including an outdoor cinema and a pool floor that lifts to become a light-up dance floor. It shares a militaristic style with Skat, which Simonyi sold in 2021 after listing it for €56.5 million.

“The yacht is to be home away from my home in Seattle, and its style should match the style of the house, adapted for the practicalities of the sea,” Simonyi once said of Skat.

Grace Kay and Sindhu Sundar contributed to an earlier version of this story.

Correction: May 6, 2024 — An earlier version of this story misstated Giovanna Vitelli’s title. She is the chair of the Azimut Benetti Group, not a vice president.

Read the original article on Business Insider