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Gwyneth Paltrow called out for criticizing ‘super rich White dudes’ with a reported $200 million net worth
Gwyneth Paltrow is getting called out for what critics are calling out-of-touch comments while discussing inequality of wealth.
During a recent episode of her podcast, “The Goop Podcast,” the 53-year-old actress spoke with guest Kara Swisher about the tech giants in Silicon Valley and how they have shaped the world, asking how society got to a place where wealth is all that is important.
“How did we get here as a culture? Obviously, there’s so much revenue and profit driving this whole thing. That’s at the heart of it,” Paltrow said.
“But how do you think we got to this place in culture where nothing matters and now all that matters is kind of these super rich White dudes who are breaking rules, setting rules, seemingly not caring so much about the downstream impact on everything, from health to culture.”
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Swisher added she once interviewed the CEO of Meta and walked away with the understanding that his mentality was “I am not responsible for everything downstream,” adding that society has “an idolatry of innovators and of wealth” with the belief that “if you’re wealthy, you must be smarter.”
Fox News Digital reached out for comment.
While many were happy this conversation was being had, many took issue with the fact that Paltrow was the one facilitating the conversation.
“Super rich white dudes? Coming from Paltrow that is kinda funny,” one fan wrote in the comments section of an Instagram post promoting the podcast.
“This is quite ironic when both of these people are surrounded with wealth. Gwen, your brand is crazy expensive. What?” another added.
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“Gwyneth is worth 200 million so not necessarily considered ‘the rest of us,'” a third commenter added, while a fourth wrote, “Ummmmmm, wut Gwen? Pot, meet kettle.”
According to a New York Times article published in April 2023, Paltrow is worth an estimated $200 million.
The “Shakespeare In Love” actress has gotten backlash many times in the past for promoting expensive wellness products and an unhealthy lifestyle, with many calling her out of touch over the years.
During an interview with The Hollywood Reporter in December 2025, the “Marty Supreme” star shared that she is aware of her reputation and went into detail about how her “privileged” upbringing has fed into years of criticism and explained how she works through the many misconceptions surrounding her reputation.
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“It must be a quality that I give off. I come from a very WASPy mother with Mayflower-ish roots, daughter of the American Revolution, all that kind of stuff,” said Paltrow. “So, I think maybe epigenetically, there is some of that there. And I was a very privileged kid.
“I grew up on the Upper East Side, and I went to a great school and all the things. So, some of the stuff that he sees, which is also the stuff I’ve been criticized for my whole life, is real.”
Paltrow is the daughter of actress Blythe Danner and late TV director Bruce Paltrow and a goddaughter to Steven Spielberg.
Paltrow went on to say that she finds it “traumatic to be at the whim of these projections,” when she feels that they are “misaligned” with who she actually is.
“My therapist talks about the evil shadow, which is the part of you where rage lives — the part of you that will burn the f—ing house down — and we do damage to ourselves by not embracing our shadows. When you close your eyes and get into evil shadow energy, there’s a freedom there, and I’m trying to experiment with that because when I go into evil shadow energy, I don’t care what anyone’s misperception is.”
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‘Brady Bunch’ cast made nearly nothing from decades of reruns, Eve Plumb claims
Eve Plumb says America’s favorite TV family wasn’t cashing in behind the scenes.
Despite “The Brady Bunch” becoming a widely popular sitcom after its 1969 to 1974 run, Plumb revealed the cast saw little financial reward from the endless reruns that turned the show into a pop-culture institution.
“A lot of times when you’re an actor, you can see that people are looking at you like you have it all, and you have all the money in the world… I just wanted to set it straight that that’s not necessarily true. That the pay rate was different… the residuals were different and also actors are continually having to fight to be paid, in any way,” Plumb exclusively told Fox News Digital.
‘BRADY BUNCH’ STAR SHARES THE SIMPLE WORD THAT SAVED HER FROM HOLLYWOOD TRAPS
“And there’s some sort of idea that we… should do this for free because it’s fun. It’s work… we’re trained, and we spend a lot of time and money to do the work well. So, we should be paid.”
The actress, best known for playing Jan Brady, debunked one of Hollywood’s biggest myths in her memoir, “Happiness Included: Jan Brady and Beyond” — that classic TV stars automatically became rich from reruns.
WATCH: ‘BRADY BUNCH’ STAR EVE PLUMB SETS THE RECORD STRAIGHT ON TV RESIDUALS
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“People often think that the six Brady kids now coast through life on our residuals from the hundreds of thousands of times the five seasons of ‘The Brady Bunch’ have been in reruns since 1974,” Plumb wrote in her book, out now. “If only it were so.”
“The reality is that we each had a contract that would pay us residuals for the first 10 reruns of each episode only,” she continued. “Obviously, it was never expected that the show would rerun more than three, maybe four, times. Needless to say, that faucet of residuals income ran dry before I even graduated from high school.”
Plumb said the money stopped almost as quickly as the cameras did.
WATCH: ‘BRADY BUNCH’ STAR EVE PLUMB SHARES HOLLYWOOD RULE THAT KEPT HER GROUNDED
JODIE SWEETIN SHARES SHOCKING ‘FULL HOUSE’ RESIDUAL CHECK AMOUNT DESPITE SHOW’S MEGA SUCCESS
“If I had a dime for every rerun episode, I’d pay off the national deficit,” she quipped in the memoir’s introduction before delivering the punchline: “I don’t.”
She later doubled down in an interview with “PauseRewind,” saying, “We don’t make residuals.”
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Former co-star Barry Williams has backed up Plumb’s claims for years.
‘BRADY BUNCH’ ACTOR ADMITS ROMANCE WITH CO-STAR WAS ‘ON-AGAIN, OFF-AGAIN’ FOR YEARS
In his 1992 memoir, “Growing Up Brady: I Was a Teenage Greg,” Williams revealed just how modest the cast’s paychecks really were during the show’s peak.
WATCH: ‘BRADY BUNCH’ STAR EVE PLUMB SHARES TOUGHEST PART ABOUT WRITING ‘HAPPINESS INCLUDED’ MEMOIR
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“Salaries for sitcom actors have changed considerably since the ’70s,” Williams wrote, according to Page Six. “In our fifth and final year, the highest salary among us kids was $1,100 a week.”
The top-paid Brady kid earned just over $24,000 for the final 22-episode season — before taxes, agent fees and helping support family members.
“It was enough to indulge in toys, but hardly enough to carry you through the slow periods that inevitably followed,” Williams wrote.
He also confirmed the cast’s rerun income evaporated fast.
“Payments for subsequent airings of the show dried up shortly after we finished filming,” Williams wrote.
“Happiness Included: Jan Brady and Beyond” is available now.
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Fitness influencer says one simple habit can help anyone get back in shape
Fitness influencer and trainer Mark Langowski, known on social media as @bodybymark, hosted a pushup and plank competition in New York City this week, where he urged the public to get up and get moving.
On his platform of nearly two million Instagram followers, Langowski asks fit people to share their workout routines. He was able to meet more in-shape New Yorkers at his Washington Square Park meet-up, in partnership with Oikos yogurt on May 12.
A male and a female winner who achieved the most pushups or held a plank the longest were gifted $500 each.
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Besides the cash prize, the inspiration was to get more people moving, Langowski shared during an interview with Fox News Digital.
“[It’s] a way to encourage strength and overall fitness in New York City and all around the country,” he said.
“We got together and we’re doing a plank competition, pushup competition. We had a guy just do 111 pushups. We’re just getting people moving.”
FITNESS EXPERT REVEALS SIMPLE RULE TO GET IN SHAPE WITHOUT DREADING THE GYM: ‘JUST MOVE’
Langowski said the attributes of a great competitor include strength, humility and confidence.
“The people who … did the most, they didn’t say they were going to do the most,” he said. “And there were other people who said they could do 150, and they did 70.”
Having a bit of humility helps make a good competitor, the trainer added.
Pushups and planks mark a “good general baseline” for measuring fitness level, according to Langowski. Some other basics include pull-ups, squats and endurance challenges, like running a mile — the kind of basics included in an elementary school fitness assessment.
For those who haven’t yet mastered these basics but want to get in better shape, Langowski shared some advice on how to get started.
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“Get with a trainer or someone who knows how to progress you,” he advised. “A lot of people are like, ‘I can’t do a pushup, so I’m never going to do one.’ That’s not the way.”
Langowski recommends starting with pushups on your knees or against a wall, then gradually progressing to standard pushups by moving onto your toes and lowering yourself fully to the ground before pushing back up.
“You’ll be surprised after you do that for a couple weeks, a couple months, a couple years – you’re going to be able to do a lot,” he said. “Nobody was born being able to do 111 pushups. They put in the work and they started somewhere.”
The trainer noted that in addition to practicing, it’s just as important to give the body rest and to support muscle growth with proper protein intake and an overall healthy diet.
But perhaps the most crucial step toward getting in shape, according to Langowski, is having the motivation to get started
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“I know that’s easy for me to say – I’ve been in fitness and been relatively fit most of my life,” he said. “And I know a lot of people are sitting on the couch and they either feel sorry for themselves or they’re going through a tough time … You’ve just got to get out there.”
The trainer suggested starting with a simple walk — even just around the block — with no gym equipment required.
“You don’t need an expensive gym membership to get in good shape,” he said. “Most of the people that I stop on the street, they don’t have a gym membership at all. They do it in their living room.”
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“And that’s where you can do the exercises I mentioned – the squats, the lunges, the pushups,” Langowski went on.
“So, I would encourage people just to start, but also to get some friends or get a trainer, someone to support you and do it safely.”
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Deion Sanders comes to son’s defense over ‘sandwich’ remark toward NFL reporter
Deion Sanders responded to Shilo Sanders’ “sandwich” comment toward NFL reporter Mary Kay Cabot on Friday.
The Colorado Buffaloes head coach was on an episode of “The Barbershop” when he spoke about it.
ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON’T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!
“We don’t talk about nobody,” he said. “We don’t do nothing to nobody. I know Shilo had a little altercation that he spoke up for his brother. You’ve got to understand, man, that’s his brother.
“And God bless Mary Kay’s soul, that’s his brother. I mean, she said something, he said something, like media is different today. I know a lot of people don’t respect the old school. I do, because I grew up in that era that we didn’t have a say so. … But Shilo spoke up for his brother, and he was ridiculed for that.”
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Shilo Sanders, who was briefly on the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ roster last year before he was cut, reacted to Cabot predicted that Deshaun Watson would enter training camp as the No. 1 quarterback on the Cleveland Browns’ depth chart over Shedeur Sanders.
He said, “Go make me a sandwich, Mary.”
Shilo Sanders said he had an issue with Cabot giving her opinion over reporting facts.
“If you’re gonna be a reporter, then report facts. Whenever you have your opinion, and your opinion is always something hateful to Shedeur, then it seems like there’s something weird. Like there’s an agenda you have going on,” he said in a livestream earlier this month.
Fox News’ Jon Root contributed to this report.
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