How Burt Reynolds Could Use Personal Savings

By Rob Sutter


When I think of actors who have fallen from such great heights, Burt Reynolds comes to mind. After his work in the "Smokey and the Bandit" series, Reynolds couldn't have been more popular with audiences and movie makers alike. However, some bad personal choices marred his career and the fact that he hit a reporter on TV did not make matters better for him. Reynolds certainly isn't a young man anymore and he may want to look into getting his personal savings in gear.

Organizations such as Savings2Income can help anyone become educated on the subject of retirement income and I believe it'd be wise for Reynolds to take up such advice. After all, no profession guarantees one will work forever and actors seem to have a shorter shelf life in terms of their overall popularity. Reynolds would have to really buckle down if he were serious about his personal savings. In order to calculate his rate, he would have to take a few matters into consideration.

In order to gain the most precise personal savings rate for you, be sure to take a few steps into mind beforehand. You must first acquire your total net savings and losses number, comprised of both retirement and non-retirement savings. Once this is done, you must find out your total income, done by adding your total take home amount along with your retirement savings by your employer. Finally, you are to divide the two numbers found by one another. This is a painless process that can be done easily if the accurate numbers are found.

If anyone needs to get a firm grasp on his financial troubles, it has to be Reynolds. Just one year ago, Reynolds had to go through a foreclosure on his Hobe Sound, Florida home as it was learned that he owed $1.2 million. During the 1970's, he owned a nightclub called "Burt's Place" for about a year but that idea fell apart pretty quickly as well. This is simply a matter of a man who made way too many bad decisions in his life and he has to work through them or else who knows what may happen after?

I strongly believe that Reynold's amount of personal problems is equally proportional to his number of relationships. Sometimes there are times when the two blended together. With that said, he appears to be a troubled individual who doesn't appear to have a grasp on his future once acting his done for him. I don't believe that he's thought much about retirement, judging by his issues over the years and his overall personality, so who can say that finding out his personal savings rate wouldn't be a good start?




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