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A Forbes Magazine Interview

Question: We wanted to start by exploring your arrival in Hong Kong, your background. You’re obviously influenced by your father, a teacher. He instilled in you a deep thirst for reading and knowledge. It sounds as if, despite the difficulties of your early career, you are an optimist about the future. Would you classify yourself as an optimist?

Li: First of all, I am an optimist. When you study hard and work hard, your knowledge grows, and it gives you confidence. The more you know, the more confidence you gain. When I was 10 years old, I lost my schooling, but I still had plenty of hope to return to school. When we came to Hong Kong, the family had no choice, and I had to work. I was facing life for the first time. I was 12 years old, but I felt like a 20-year-old. I knew then what life was. My father had tuberculosis, which was as devastating a disease as cancer is today. If you were rich and could afford proper care, you might have a better chance. We had no choice. I needed to be strong, and needed to find some way to secure a future.

Question: And as long as you have that preparation, that confidence, you have the general belief that things will work out?

Li: During the Japanese occupation, besides working, I also needed to get plenty of fresh air to remain healthy, because at that time, I also had TB. But at the same time, I also needed to study and work. That gave me confidence. I got my first break right after the Second World War. My boss needed a letter written. He had a secretary who wrote his letters for him, but he was on sick leave. When he asked around the office to see who could take his place temporarily, my colleagues recommended me. My boss said that my letters were quick and nice, and I got his meaning. He was happy with my work, and I was promoted to head a small department. I always believe that knowledge can change life. It was a case of knowledge changing my life.

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No. 1. Perez Hilton (Mario Lavandeira)

Ever heard of Mario Lavandeira, Pete Cashmore or Heather Armstrong? Probably not – yet they are among a select group of web celebrities, who have shaken up the entertainment industry and even changed how we talk to each other.

They were included by Forbes magazine in the top 25 biggest and brightest stars on the internet. People unknown in the real world who had gone on to hold huge sway online.

They vary widely from stay-at-home mothers to technology entrepreneurs and bed-ridden films enthusiasts. The fourth annual survey reveals how the world wide web has become a massive levelling force this century.

No. 2. Michael Arrington-Techcrunch.com

David Ewalt from Forbes.com, said: ‘A kid with a webcam can become a movie star; an entrepreneur with a smart idea can get on Oprah; a tech blogger can reach a bigger audience than a bestselling novelist.’

Forbes calculated their influence in four areas. How many web references they had, the traffic ranking of their home pages, how much TV and press interest they provoked and their number of followers on micro-blogging site Twitter.

Mario Lavandeira, a.k.a Perez Hilton topped the chart for the third time in a row. The controversial gossip blogger writes what he calls ‘Hollywood’s most hated website’, and has become something of a celebrity himself.

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John Harold Johnson (19 January 1918 – 8 August 2005) was an American businessman and publisher. He was the founder of the Johnson Publishing Company, and in 1982, the first African-American to appear on the Forbes 400.

The Early Idea
In High School, Johnson was a high achiever, because of this Johnson was invited to speak at dinner held by the Urban League. When the president of the Supreme Life Insurance Company, Harry Pace, heard Johnson’s speech, he was so impressed with the young man that he offered Johnson a job so that he would be able to use the scholarship.

Johnson began as an office boy at Supreme Life and within two years had become Pace’s assistant. His duties included preparing a monthly digest of newspaper articles. Johnson began to wonder if other people in the community might not enjoy the same type of service. He conceived of a publication patterned after Reader’s Digest. His work at Supreme also gave him the opportunity to see the day-to-day operations of an African American-owned business and fostered his dream of starting a business of his own.

Once the idea of Negro Digest occurred to him, it began to seem like a “black gold mine”, Johnson stated in his autobiography Succeeding against the Odds. Johnson remained enthusiastic even though he was discouraged on all sides from doing so. Only his mother, a woman with biblical faith and deep religious convictions, as well as a powerful belief in her son, supported his vision and allowed him to use her furniture as collateral for a $500 loan. He used this loan to publish the first edition of Negro Digest in 1942.

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Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud (also spelled Al-Walid) is a member of the Saudi Royal Family. He is the nephew of the Saudi Arabian King Abdullah.

An entrepreneur and international investor but without real political power within the House of Saud or in Saudi Arabia, he has amassed a fortune through investments in real estate and the stock market.

As of August 2009 his net worth is estimated at US$16.3 billion, down from $21 billion, according to the Arabian Business rich list published August 29, 2009.

The AB have also ranked him as number 1 on their Rich List. They state on their websiteWe have deliberately not included royalty, with the exception of HRH Prince Alwaleed given that his wealth has been achieved through his business dealings.”

He is ranked by Forbes as the 22nd richest person in the world. He has been nicknamed by Time magazine as the Arabian Warren Buffett.

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