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Snoop Dogg Net Worth

Snoop Dogg Net Worth

  What is the net worth of Snoop Dogg?

With a net worth of $160 million, Snoop Dogg is a rapper, singer, songwriter, producer, media personality, businessman, and actor from the West Coast. Snoop has grown to be a cherished pop culture figure despite controversy during his early career. He is well-known for his easygoing demeanor, unique vocal style, and cultural impact. His enduring career in the music business and his capacity to remain relevant across several decades have solidified his place in hip-hop history.

 

Dr. Dre found Snoop Dogg, who then went by Snoop Doggy Dogg, and he made his music debut in the early 1990s. His music may be heard clearly on Dre’s 1992 solo debut album, “The Chronic.” This exposure paved the way for Snoop’s 1993 self-titled first album, “Doggystyle.” Over 20 million versions of that album were eventually sold globally and it became an enormous success. His unique, carefree vocal delivery and insightful lyrics made him a major player in the developing G-funk scene. Snoop continued to put out successful albums and hit singles in the 1990s and 2000s. He worked with many musicians in a variety of genres, demonstrating his adaptability and increasing his appeal.

 

Snoop has undertaken a wide range of endeavors outside of music. He has acted in several TV series and films in addition to being himself. He has presented TV shows that have showcased his mainstream appeal and captivating personality, such as a cookery show with Martha Stewart.

 

In addition, Snoop has dabbled in esports, cannabis-related businesses, and a variety of endorsement deals. In addition to starting a wine label and a children’s show, he has published a cookbook. Over the course of his career, Snoop has experimented with a variety of musical genres, including gospel and reggae (as Snoop Lion). He’s sold over 35 million albums worldwide and has been nominated for many Grammy awards.

 

2024 Olympics in Paris Earnings

After Snoop and Martha Stewart were contracted by NBC to cover the events and conduct interviews and commentary, they unintentionally became the unofficial stars of the 2024 Olympics. Watching the games on NBC’s many platforms, American audiences found Snoop in particular to be incredibly popular. Later, it came to light that Snoop (and probably Martha too) was paid $500,000 a day by NBC for their involvement at the Olympics PLUS expenses. The duration of the Olympics, including travel to and from, is about 20 days. Snoop worked for just under three weeks if he was paid $500,00 for each of those twenty days.

 

Childhood

On October 20, 1971, in Long Beach, California, Cordozar Calvin Broadus Jr. was born, the father of Snoop Dogg. One might infer Cordozar Calvin Broadus Sr. was his biological father. Actually, it isn’t the case. Vernell Varnado was Snoop’s birth father. When Snoop was three months old, Vernell separated from his mother Beverly. Beverly later wed a man by the name of Cordozar Calvin Broadus. At this point, Cordozar Calvin Broadus Jr., after his stepfather, was the legal name given to infant Snoop. What his parents called him at birth and in the months leading up to his mother’s second marriage are unknown.

 

The young Cordozar’s affection for the Peanuts cartoon character led to his being dubbed Snoopy. Snoop started playing the piano and singing in the Golgotha Trinity Baptist Church when he was very young. He started rapping in the sixth grade.

 

Calvin’s family relied on him selling sweets, delivering newspapers, and bagging groceries as a child to make ends meet. He started playing football and singing in the choir in his adolescent years, despite his mother’s best attempts to stop him from doing gang banging and roaming the streets. He was from Long Beach’s Eastside and a member of the Rollin’ 20s Crips gang. Shortly after receiving his high school diploma, he was taken into custody for cocaine possession. He spent the next three years coming and going from jail or prison.

 

Career in Music

Homemade cassettes were recorded by Snoop, his pal Warren G, and his cousins Nate Dogg and Lil’ 1/2 Dead. At that time, they went by the Long Beach area code, 213 for short. One of Snoop’s first solo freestyle tracks, “Hold On,” was on a mixtape that ended up in Dr. Dre’s possession. He connected Snoop to NWA affiliate The D.O.C., who taught him how to organize his lyrics and create verses, hooks, and choruses since he was so impressed that he asked Snoop to audition.

 

Dr. Dre produced Snoop’s debut album, Doggystyle, which Death Row Records released in 1993. On the Billboard 200 and Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums charts, the album opened at number one. Several big songs from the album were released, such as “What’s My Name?” and “Gin & Juice.” In 1996, Snoop released Doggfather, his follow-up album, which likewise debuted at the top of both Billboard charts. Snoop departed Death Row and signed with No Limit Records for his next three albums. He put out three albums: Tha Last Meal (2000), No Limit Top Dogg (1999), and Da Game Is to Be Sold, Not to Be Told (1998). Following that, he released Paid tha Cost to Be da Boss in 2002 after signing with Priority/Capitol/EMI Records. In 2004 he joined Geffen Records and put out R&G (Doggumentary, That Blue Carpet Treatment, Ego Trippin, Malice ‘n Wonderland, and Rhythm & Gangsta: The Masterpiece).

 

Following a trip to Jamaica in 2012, Snoop declared that he had become a Rastafarian and would henceforth go by Snoop Lion. Reincarnated is the title of both a reggae record and a documentary he released about his time in Jamaica.

 

He released Bush in 2015 and resumed going by Snoop Dogg. 2018 saw Snoop declare his conversion to Christianity and the release of Bible of Love, his debut gospel album. In 2019, he put out his seventeenth solo album, titled I Wanna Thank Me.

 

Along with his music, Snoop has directed a number of pornographic films under the aliases Michael J. Corleone and Snoop Scorsese. He has also acted in films and television shows, both as himself and in made-up parts. Doggy Fizzle Televizzle, Snoop Dogg’s Father Hood, Dogg After Dark, WrestleMania, and Snoop and Martha’s Potluck Dinner Party are just a few of the television programs that Snoop Dogg has hosted. In addition, Snoop endorses several products and brands, including as Boost Mobile, Chrysler 200, Orbit Gum, and St. Ides. He also names a malt liquor, Snoop Dogg Board Company, footlong hot dogs, and several apparel lines. He collaborated with 19 Crimes to make a wine under the moniker “Snoop Cali Red” in 2020. The wine was having trouble selling and wasn’t living up to expectations as of May 2023.

 

The “Gangsta Gaming League” is the esports league that Snoop founded in 2019. He became a member of the Board of Directors of FaZe Clan in March 2022. He withdrew from the role in March of the subsequent year.

 

Snoop formed an investment group in 2023 headed by businessman Neko Sparks in an attempt to purchase the National Hockey League’s Ottawa Senators.

 

Records of Death Row

It was revealed in February 2022 that Snoop Dogg had purchased the rights to use Death Row Records’ brand name. The label’s master recordings and music royalties were retained by Blackstone, the massive private equity firm from which he bought the brand. Snoop bought the rights to sell goods and record music under Death Row Records under the brand name.

 

Casa Verde Capital Snoops is undoubtedly the world’s most well-known cannabis user. For many years, marijuana has been a fundamental part of his psyche. He established Casa Verde Capital, an investment firm, in 2015 to oversee his holdings in the cannabis sector. Casa Verde was part of an investor group that funded $10 million in August 2015 for Eaze, an app-based, on-demand marijuana delivery service that calls itself the “Uber for weed.”

Casa Verde introduced merryjane.com in September 2015; the website describes itself as “the encyclopedia of weed.”

 

Individual Life

Snoop tied the knot with Shante Taylor, his high school sweetheart, on June 12, 1997. They filed for divorce in May of 2004. In January 2008, they reconciled and reaffirmed their marriage vows. Together, they are parents to three children: a daughter named Cori (1999) and two sons, Corde (1994) and Cordell (1997). Julian Corrie Broadus (1998), Snoop’s kid from his connection with Laurie Holmond, is another child. In 2015, Corde and his fiancée, Jessica Kyzer, welcomed a son into the world, making Snoop a grandfather. Ten days after his birth, in September 2019, Corde’s second son lost away.

 

Sasha Banks, a professional wrestler, and R&B artists Brandy and Ray J are Snoop’s first cousins.

 

Snoop stated in a 2006 interview that he worked as a professional pimp in 2003 and 2004, adding, “It was a natural calling for me, and once I got into it, it became enjoyable.” For me, it was similar to shooting layups. I was consistently making them.” He continued by saying that he eventually stopped pimping to spend more time with his family, at the advice of some of the pimps he knew.

 

In collaboration with local authorities, Dogg distributes turkeys to the underprivileged in Inglewood, California, during Thanksgiving every year. In 2016, he distributed 3,000 turkeys.

 

Revenues by Year

 

Snoop Dogg’s profits from 2007 to 2020 are broken down as follows:

  • 2007 – $17 million
  • 2008 – $16 million
  • 2009 – $11 million
  • 2010 – $15 million
  • 2011 – $14 million
  • 2012 – $9 million
  • 2013 – $10 million
  • 2014 – $10 million
  • 2015 – $10 million
  • 2016 – $13 million
  • 2017 – $17 million
  • 2018 – $15 million
  • 2019 – $15 million
  • 2020 – $8 million
  • 2021 – $9 million
  • 2022 – $11 million
  • 2023 – $10 million

 

Property

Snoop Dogg received $1.83 million for the sale of his 6,527-square-foot, eight-bedroom Mediterranean-style mansion in Claremont, California, in 2007. Snoop paid $660,000 for the mansion in 1994, but he left it in 2000.

 

For the past few decades, Snoop has lived mostly in a 3,808-square-foot, four-bedroom home in Diamond Bar, California. For $720,000, he purchased this home in 1998.

 

Snoop spent $458,000 in 2021 for a one-acre estate in Douglasville, Georgia, that has six bedrooms. In addition, he owns a few smaller Southern California investment properties.

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