Bethenny Frankel, 47, isn't just a reality TV star — she's also a successful businesswoman.
Frankel was born in 1970. Her late father was a horse trainer; he left the family when she was four. Frankel has described her childhood as dysfunctional, citing "gambling, drinking, drugs, eating disorders, and physical abuse."
"I was an adult as a child," Frankel said. "I saw so much as a very young child that I think it matured me in an unnatural and unusual way."
For college, Frankel attended Boston University and then New York University. After graduation, she moved to Los Angeles, hoping to be an actress.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip Ad"I was always hustling," Frankel said. "I was always figuring out some way to just get by." At one point, she said, she was "one of the largest importers of pashminas in the world."
Frankel ended up on "The Apprentice: Martha Stewart" in 2005 because she'd made a bet with somebody who thought she could never get on the show. She ended up being one of two finalists.
At the time, she was a natural-food chef in New York and she'd created Bethenny Bakes, a wheat-egg-and-dairy-cookie company.
She started working as a private chef and began writing an anti-diet book, "Naturally Thin," which was published in 2009.
She said her "big moment" was when she appeared on the "Today" show with Hoda Kotb, talking about food personalities.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdFrankel is perhaps best known for being on the reality show "Real Housewives of New York City." She remembers someone coming up to her at the sport event Polo in the Hamptons, asking her to be the fifth wife on a show called "Manhattan Moms."
At the time, she was unmarried and didn't have kids. She didn't want to be on the show: "I thought it was going to be a bunch of drunk people acting crazy and a disaster."
The first season aired in 2008. "I ended up making money off of that, those drunk people," she said.
On "Real Housewives," "I was honest about being broke and being alone, and people connected to me," Frankel said. "Which is why, in turn, they connected to the books and products." "Naturally Thin" became a bestseller.
In 2011, Frankel sold Skinnygirl Cocktails, a line of low-calorie mixers, to Beam Global for a reported $100 million, while maintaining the name rights. That same year, she appeared on the cover of Forbes magazine. She was also one of the highest paid celebrities of 2016, earning $55 million.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdSince then, Skinnygirl has expanded into a global lifestyle brand. In 2017, Frankel worked with One Jeanswear Group to launch Skinnygirl Jeans.
In 2010, Frankel married pharmaceutical sales representative Jason Hoppy. Their divorce was finalized in 2016. Frankel's first marriage was to Peter Sussman in 1996; they divorced in 1997.
On the third season of "Real Housewives," Frankel discovered she was pregnant with her daughter, Bryn.
Between June 2015 and June 2016, Frankel earned $8.5 million. But she said she defines success through her daughter, who is now eight years old. "I'm the most happy when we've connected and we've spent days together."
Frankel is a guest investor on season 9 of ABC's "Shark Tank." She also launched a new real-estate show in 2018, "Bethenny and Fredrik," with New York City real-estate entrepreneur Fredrik Eklund.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdForbes estimates that Frankel's salary from the TV network Bravo is over $1 million, and that she earns between $10,000 and $30,000 for each paid Instagram post.
In partnership with Dress for Success, Frankel launched the crisis-intervention initiative B Strong. In 2017, B Strong and Delivering Good raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for victims of natural disasters.
In December 2017, Frankel purchased a second home in the Hamptons, for $2.5 million. (In 2015, she'd bought a cottage in the same town that was initially listed for $3.2 million.) She listed the second home in May 2017, for $2.995 million.
Frankel said she wasn't intimidated by the prospect of being on reality TV, and it seems like she isn't intimidated by much. As she put it, "I'm cut out for anything."