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The World: All The Money In

Even then, the billionaire negotiated. He finally agreed to pay $3 million, but only because $2.2 million was the maximum amount that was tax-deductible. The remaining $800,000? He lent it to his own son—the boy's father—at 4% interest.

The air in Rome during the summer of 1973 felt heavy, not just with the heat, but with the weight of old secrets. Paul Getty III, a teenager with more hair than sense, wandered the cobblestone streets, his pockets as empty as his famous grandfather’s were full. All the Money in the World

Months passed. The kidnappers, realizing the "Golden Boy" wasn't worth the gold they expected, sent a gruesome reminder through the mail—a lock of hair and a piece of Paul's ear. Even then, the billionaire negotiated

Back in Italy, the boy’s mother, Gail, was living a different reality. She was a Getty by name but lived on a budget. She fought a two-front war: negotiating with ruthless criminals who were losing their patience and pleading with a father-in-law who valued his ledger more than his blood. He lent it to his own son—the boy's

Paul was eventually released at a snow-covered gas station. He called his grandfather to thank him, but the old man refused to come to the phone.

J. Paul Getty died a few years later, surrounded by the finest things "all the money in the world" could buy, yet arguably owning nothing that truly mattered. He proved that while money can build a fortress, it often turns that fortress into a tomb.

All the Money in the WorldAll the Money in the World
All the Money in the WorldAll the Money in the WorldAll the Money in the World
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