—u/bob-lob —u/Wwwweeeeeeee —overduebook —u/Mazon_Del 2) He paid $30K just to close our restaurant for one meal. 3) Flew his favorite chef from New York to Orlando to cook for him on his private jet, and then back again. Of course, it was likely the OTHER private jet he had just for his staff, not for himself or his family. 4) Made food for our entire staff, all the kitchen staff, all the federal, state, and local security and him, and his wife and his kids. I had a buddy who taught ski lessons to another Saudi prince’s little kid and had some nearly unbelievable yet similar details during his interactions with them. That kid had an entire team around him or probably 10 staff, plus vehicles, snowmobiles, a helicopter, and so on. I later met a guy who worked on an ultra-luxury 300-foot yacht and served Bill Gates and his wife, among other super-rich people. Their primary job was to operate without interacting with them, or at least as little as possible. This shows you, in some sense, that having people around you doing stuff you need to be done but doing it invisibly is another perk of being rich." —u/durgadas —u/Jackpot777 —u/iHitchhikesometimes —u/A_Crinn —u/RussiaIsRodina “More often, it’s because they want the option to get different jets. Flying with my wife, small jets will do. Flying 20 of my friends to my island…” —u/CANifornian —u/hacknat —u/MesWantooth