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Search resuls for: "Sabrina Romanoff"


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There's one thing that Blake Shelton does daily that helps keep his marriage with Gwen Stefani strong. "The thing about Blake is that you'll never get through a day without laughing," Stefani said on "The Jennifer Hudson Show." AdvertisementGwen Stefani and Blake Shelton have been together since 2015, and there's one thing that he does every day that reminds her why she fell in love with him. "The thing about Blake is that you'll never get through a day without laughing," Stefani told Jennifer Hudson on the October 2 episode of "The Jennifer Hudson Show." Related storiesIn April, Stefani told Nylon that she had learned not to pay attention to tabloid rumors about her relationship with Shelton.
Persons: Blake Shelton, Gwen Stefani, Blake, you'll, Stefani, Jennifer Hudson, , Shelton, Gavin Rossdale, Miranda Lambert, Sabrina Romanoff Organizations: Service, Research, Business
Some people could find themselves wrangling with summer travel bills well after Labor Day. To that point, 36% of Americans said they plan to take on debt in order to travel this summer, according to a March survey from Bankrate. The payment methods for summer travel expenses ranged from personal loans (5%) and buy now, pay later services (8%) to borrowing from family and friends (6%). Additionally, 26% of summer travelers said they intend to use a credit card and pay over for the vacation over multiple billing cycles. "The reason that's worrisome is because the average credit card charges more than 20%, which is close to a record high," said Ted Rossman, a senior credit card industry analyst at Bankrate.
Persons: Ted Rossman, Gen Zs, Sabrina Romanoff Organizations: Labor, Finance, Disney
"The benchmark of a six-figure salary used to be the gold standard income," Sabrina Romanoff, a clinical psychologist, told CNBC. "It represented the tipping point of finally earning a disposable income and building savings and spending based on your wants, not just your needs." "It becomes increasingly hard for many families to be able to attain that sort of middle-class lifestyle, that American Dream," Gould said. Consumers using the popular 50-30-20 budget guideline aim to spend 50% of their income on essential expenses, with another 30% for discretionary spending and the remaining 20% for savings. Using that framework, GoBankingRates found that all 50 states require more than a $100,000 annual income, according to the report, with 38 states needing more than $140,000.
Persons: Sabrina Romanoff, haven't, Elise Gould, Gould, GoBankingRates, Jason Reginato Organizations: CNBC, SurveyMonkey, Economic Policy Institute, Consumers
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