Wednesday, April 15, 2020
How Real Housewife Yolanda Hadid Made Her Money
How 'Real Housewife' Yolanda Hadid Made Her Money Yolanda Hadid is loving her second career. The 54-year-old former supermodel, who rose to fame as a teenager signed to the Ford agency, is now even more widely known as the mother of Gigi and Bella Hadid (supermodels in their own right) as well as a star of Bravoâs The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, which she left in 2016. But sheâs back as the host of her own reality show, Making a Model with Yolanda Hadid, airing on Lifetime Thursdays at 10 p.m. EST. Hadid plays coach, judge, and surrogate mom to contestants who hope to be the next face of major fashion brands, with the twist that the young womenâs actual mothers are also in tow. âThe judging part of the show was really the hardest thing for me to do because I donât believe in judgment. I believe in positive reinforcement and doing it in a sweet way,â Hadid said of the experience. She set out to pull on viewersâ âheartstringsâ with Making a Model and hopes she provided the models and their moms with ârealisticâ expectations of the industry. After chronicling her struggle with Lyme disease on Real Housewives and in a book, Hadid says she is currently âfeeling amazingâ and is ready to tackle her next phase. She spoke to Money about what sheâs learned in a long, lucrative career in modeling and mediaâ"and her one true splurge. Yolanda Hadid started with next to nothing Born Yolanda van den Herik, Hadid grew up in the Netherlands under difficult circumstances, which influenced how she approached her modeling career, which began when she was only 16. âI was very money-driven,â she said. âI come from a very poor family and my dad died when I was seven, I took on this huge responsibility that I was going to provide for my mother and my brother. It wasnât that I had the dream of being a model. I never wore makeup. I didnât even know what Vogue or Cosmo or Elle was because it wasnât part of my life.â After being signed to Ford Models and spending time in Paris and Milan, Hadid moved into a âmodel homeâ in New York Cityâ"a place where rising models are given a chance to live. âI remember my mom gave me 100 guilders [the former Dutch currency], which was a lot of money for where I came from, and when I exchanged it, I think I ended up with like $55 dollars in my pocket,â she said. Her agency gave her a âroll of quartersâ to use between her go-sees, which are appointments where models have the opportunity to get hired. New to both the city and the country, she made her way from one meeting to the next using a paper map. âI was hungry to survive and my mom gave me a great set of tools, a great work ethic, and I guess destiny puts you on your path,â Hadid said. âI was meant to be there.â Hadidâs first big purchase was a smart investment As a young, successful model, Hadid was surprisingly careful with her earnings. âI was keeping tally marks for every thousand dollars I was making. I came here to make money and go home and buy my horses and take care of my family and continue my life in Holland â" America is just so great for that,â she said. Except she never ended up leaving her adopted homeland. Eventually, Hadid left New York for Los Angeles, where she made her first significant purchase at 21 years old. And it offers a lesson for young people today. âI didnât know about luxury items. I never spent any money. I was very frugal,â she said. âI bought an apartment in Los Angeles and that was my first piece of real estate. I started working for that, paying that off, and that was probably a good move because I sold it many, many years later, and made a lot of money off it. I was always interested in how I could make money.â Becoming Beverly Hills royalty Hadidâs first marriage was to real estate magnate Mohamed Hadid, whoâs known for building mansions and hotels in the Los Angeles area and has also appeared on Real Housewives of Beverly Hills. They had three kids who all became models: Gigi, Bella, and son Anwar. They were married from 1994 to 2000. She later married David Foster, whoâs worked with singers including Whitney Houston and Celine Dion, in 2011, and their divorce was finalized in 2017. At the time of their split, Hadidâs net worth was reported to be a lofty $45 million to his $30 million, in part coming from her modeling and TV success but also her divorce settlement with Mohamed Hadid. While on Real Housewives, Yolanda reportedly earned a six-figure salary per season. âItâs pretty amazing to look back,â Hadid said, reflecting on how far sheâs come from her roots. âI was very motivated.â How modeling has changed in the internet age When Hadid first stepped into modeling, the life was very different. âI would do literally 12 go-sees a day in order to meet clients and advertising agencies in order to break into a new market,â she said. âIn todayâs world, you can start posting on your social media outlets and you can catch somebodyâs eye in Paris while youâre not even in Paris. Itâs a very different business today.â Brands and agencies now look closely at modelsâ online followings, and not just the numbers, but what they have to say. âI think that in my time we didnât have a voice,â Hadid said. âWe were pretty faces who went to work at six in the morning, sunup until sundown, and we really didnât have a space to express who it was that we were as human beings. I say to my kids, âWhy has God given you this platform and what are you going to do with it? Because it certainly wasnât created for you just to post pretty selfies.ââ But the shift hasnât been entirely positive, she adds. âSocial media also comes with a whole bag of worms. Itâs too new for us to really understand how it affects the youth and the hate and the death threats and opinions from people that donât really know who theyâre talking toâ"thatâs the negative part of it.â The tough lesson she gives her kids Gigi and Bella Hadid may have made it to superstardom, with 37.9 million followers and 16.7 million followers on Instagram, respectively. But Yolanda is intent that it not go to her daughtersâ heads. âKids have to know theyâre no better than anybody else,â she said. âMy Gigi and Bella can be on the covers of magazines, but theyâre no better or prettier than anybody else. Theyâre just normal kids like everybody else. When they started working, I said to the girls, âListen, thereâs going to be a million girls that are more beautiful than you are and deserve success as much as you do, so how are you going to set yourself apart?â âYou have to be the hardest-working girl on the job. You have to be kind and polite to everyone, not just to the people who can further your career,â Hadid adds. âBeauty doesnât last, but the way you make people feel is something they will remember forever.â Why she prefers a simple life down on the farm Hadid splits her time now between an apartment in New York City and a farm in the Netherlands, which she calls a âsanctuaryâ for her and her family. Itâs pretty much the opposite of what viewers saw of her Malibu mansion on Real Housewives. âMy happiness is buying a little pony, feeding my cows and my goats, and getting my fresh eggs from my chickens, so thatâs really where my joy is,â she said. Sheâs back to riding horses, a pastime that she passed on to Gigi and Bella. âWeâre just hopping around shoveling the shit and getting back to our roots,â she added, laughing. Her one splurge Hadid still claims she isnât much of a believer in the material life, but in dealing with lyme disease, she has become an ardent consumer of alternative remedies and adheres to a strict organic diet. She admits that sheâs dropped quite a lot of coin on vitamins alone, and even administers her own intravenous therapy three days a week. âIâm eager to learn every day and try new things. Thatâs really a big part of my life and thatâs the only place I like to spend money,â she said of her dedication to holistic health. Plus, she appreciates it a lot more than a Chanel handbag.
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