Not Bad for a Girl with No Talent!

Taylor Swift tops Forbes’ annual list of the 100 highest-paid celebrities with $170 million. She […]

Taylor Swift tops Forbes’ annual list of the 100 highest-paid celebrities with $170 million.

She beat out the likes of Adele, who came in at No. 9 with $80.5 million, Madonna at No. 12 with $76.5 million, Rihanna at No. 13 with $75 million and Katy Perry at No. 63 with $41 million.

Other top 10 earners included boy band One Direction at No. 2 with $110 million, actor-comedian Kevin Hart at No. 6 with $87.5 million and self-proclaimed “king of media” Howard Stern at No. 7 with $85 million.

Kim Kardashian

She’s featured on the magazine’s cover. She’s No. 42 on the list with $51 million. Kim actually tweeted “Not bad for a girl with no Talent”… Forbes says 40 per cent of her paycheque this year came from her mobile game “Kim Kardashian: Hollywood.”The game’s maker, Glu Mobile, is scheduled to release an app starring Swift later this year.

Beyoncé continues to live up to her royal nickname: Queen B and husband Jay Z are this year’s highest-paid celebrity couple, raking in a regal $107.5 million over the past year.

Calvin Harris Moves on From Taylor Swift to… Nicole Scherzinger…If this relationship is real, Calvin Harris has found himself a pretty good rebound. TMZ, caught the couple partying together all weekend long.

 

Celine Dion just made a titanic fashion statement.

celine-dion-sweatshirt-inline-today-160711_22ada5c60d6ddb0c4722db37ca387a16.today-inline-large

Over the weekend, the French Canadian singer lived out all your ’90s nostalgia dreams when she appeared in Paris rocking a black hoodie with Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet from “Titanic” on it.

For those not fortunate enough to nab a “Titanic” tee during at the height of the movie’s fame, now is your time to invest in some merchandise.

But keep in mind, the singer’s oversized sweatshirt reportedly costs a mere *gasp* $885 and is currently sold out.

By comparison, a first-class ticket on the Titanic cost about $150 in 1912 (or around $3,600 in today’s dollars).