14 celebrities who are also big tech insiders
JR Hildebrand
Jimmy Fallon
The talk show host was building towards a college degree in computer programming at the College of Saint Rose in New York. He learned all the languages in his coursework, going up to C++, before switching over to become a communications major just one semester before he would have finished.
Fallon once said, “if there’s a computer-programming sketch, I will somehow make that happen.”
Ashton Kutcher
The rom-com pretty boy surprised many with his portrayal of Steve Jobs in the documentary of the Apple luminary – and even then, some people weren’t too impressed with the movie itself.
The actor has famously invested in many tech companies – 51 investments to be exact, in companies like Spotify, AirBnb, Foursquare, Uber and Dwolla. On top of that thick portfolio, Kutcher is an entrepreneur – he founded a media company called Katalyst which curates media events for entertainment and tech; it’s hosted speakers like Ben Horowitz, Steve Forbes and Arianna Huffington.
Four years ago, Kutcher also founded A-Grade Investments with some of his pals and the firm that provides mobile apps and e-commerce companies with early stage and seed investments.
Justin Timberlake
When Timberlake isn’t crooning “Cry Me A River” into the mic, he’s been known to invest in some cool tech startups. Some include Stipple, a photo-sharing startup, and Myspace.
A source involved in a deal told Business Insider that Timberlake invested in a super stealth augmented reality startup called Dekko, but his spokesperson denied it.
Will.i.am
The Black Eyed Peas frontman didn’t just create music videos with hover cars and tech loving album art concepts — he made a foray into the tech world after he attended and performed at a FIRST robotics competition at the Southern New Hampshire University.
Intel officials made Will.i.am the head of creative innovation of the company, and he has advised them on laptop and tablet designs. He also works on producing expressive music for Intel.
Karlie Kloss
Karlie Kloss is trying to make waves in tech as well as the fashion universe. The Victoria’s Secret model knows how to fly drones with code and program with a language called Ruby.
She created a Kode with Karlie scholarship in April for women interested in the computer programming field at the Flatiron School in New York, where she studied.
Jared Leto
The 30 Seconds to Mars frontman and upcoming Joker in the highly anticipated Suicide Squad film has been plugged into the venture capital world for some time. He’s invested in Silicon Valley startups Zenefits, Surf Air, Wish, and Nest — the last of which was picked up by Google for $3.2 billion. Leto was invited to give entrepreneurs a talk about investment strategy at a keynote event held by a file storage service Box.
Chamillionaire
Chamillionare dropped his hit song "Ridin" in 2005, and hasn't been a huge blip on the hip hop radar since then. It turns out that he's been working on his entrepreneurship game.
The Grammy-winning rapper, along with heavy-hitter entrepreneur Mark Suster, invested with Upfront Ventures for a while before Suster pronounced him Entrepreneur In Residence at the VC firm. At Upfront, Chamillionaire and some other partners were some of the earliest investor in Maker Studios, a company eventually acquired by The Walt Disney Company.
Suster praised Chamillionaire relentlessly on his blog, saying, "Chamillionaire has a way more refined sense of what customer behavior is like than most Ivy League graduates with nice Powerpoint slides that I meet."
Trent Reznor
The Nine Inch Nails ringleader strums industrial rock on his guitar but also happens to advise a major tech company with their music service as the Chief Creative Officer. Reznor worked on Beats Music -- now Apple Music -- with its creative designs, especially with its music apps. He’s the “point man” for the project, along with Beats co-founder Jimmy Iovine and CEO Ian Rogers.
MC Hammer
Ever since the hip hop recording artist laid his eyes on Silicon Valley, he thought that entrepreneurship was too legit to quit.
Hammer co-founded a now-defunct Silicon Valley startup called DanceJam, a social media platform for dancers to learn and share their moves. After he nixed it, he went on to start a lifestyle clothing line and talked about a web venture called WireDoo that he wanted to compete with Google and Bing (it went bust in 2012).
The self-labeled “super geek” and avid tweeter consults eight tech companies; Hammer’s even performed at the TechCrunch Disrupt conference and given talks about social media in marketing at Harvard and Stanford.
Leonardo DiCaprio
He hasn’t won an Oscar, but he’s scored many tech ventures in the process. That’s why DiCaprio teamed up with Carlos Slim, a Mexican billionaire and entrepreneur, to create a photo sharing application called Mobli -- a real-time photo and video sharing platform meant to compete with Snapchat. DiCaprio invested a good chunk of change, but also acts as an advisor for marketing and branding.
Lady Gaga
Did you know that Lady Gaga was heavily involved in a tech startup called Backplane? She owned a fifth of the company’s equity, and the rest was invested by heavy hitters like Google CEO Eric Schmidt, Menlo Ventures, and SV Angel.
Backplane, a social network that lets you make your own cash as a user, did a nosedive after there was a lot of mismanagement, and the product never rolled out. Backplane eventually renamed itself to place.xyz, and Gaga’s current involvement is unclear.
Magic Johnson
The NBA all-star scores way more than just baskets -- he goes big with VC too. Four years ago, he invested millions in Detroit Venture Partners along with ePrize founder Josh Linkner and owner of the NBA Cleveland Cavaliers Dan Gilbert. The firm continues to invest huge chunks of change in companies that are related to digital media, mobile application development, and e-commerce areas.
Bono
The U2 vocalist cofounded a Silicon Valley venture capital firm called Elevation Partners (Bono named it after the U2 song "Elevation"). His team made investments in companies like Yelp, Facebook, and file sharing service Dropbox, which is part of the unicorn club — a group of startups that are valued at more than $1 billion.
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