Zendaya Net Worth (Money & Salary)

What Is Zendaya’s Net Worth?

Zendaya is an American actress, singer, dancer, and producer who has a net worth of $22 million. Zendaya has successfully transitioned from a child actor on Disney shows to a veritable movie star and successful entrepreneur. She began her professional career as a model, appearing in ads for Macy’s, Old Navy, and “iCarly”-related merchandise. She also appeared as a dancer in both commercials and music videos.

Coleman is probably best known for playing Rocky Blue on the Disney Channel series “Shake It Up” (2010–2013), K.C. Cooper on the Disney Channel’s “K.C. Undercover” (2015–2018), Rue Bennett on HBO’s “Euphoria” (2019–present), and MJ in the films “Spider-Man: Homecoming” (2017) and “Spider-Man: Far from Home” (2019). She starred in and produced the 2021 film “Malcolm & Marie,” and she also served as a producer on “K.C. Undercover” and several of her music videos.

Zendaya released her self-titled debut album in 2013, and her single “Replay” was certified Platinum. In 2017, she had another hit with the 2x Platinum “Rewrite the Stars,” a duet she performed with Zac Efron in the film “The Greatest Showman.” Coleman published the book “Between U and Me: How to Rock Your Tween Years with Style and Confidence” in 2013, and she launched a shoe collection, Daya, in 2015 and a clothing line, Daya by Zendaya, in 2016.

Zendaya

Jason Merritt/Getty Images

Early Life

Zendaya Coleman was born Zendaya Maree Stoermer Coleman on September 1, 1996, in Oakland, California. Her mother, Claire Stoermer, comes from Scottish and German ancestry, and her father, Kazembe Ajamu Coleman, is African-American. Zendaya is the youngest of six siblings, and she attended Fruitvale Elementary School, where her mother was a teacher. When Coleman was six years old, she appeared in a play for Black History Month, and she later performed in productions at the California Shakespeare Theater, where her mother worked as the house manager during the summers. Zendaya helped seat audience members and sell fundraising tickets, and her time at the theater inspired her to pursue an acting career.

Coleman joined the hip-hop dance troupe Future Shock Oakland at age 8, and she also performed hula dancing with The Academy of Hawaiian Arts. While attending the Oakland School for the Arts, Zendaya appeared in several local theatrical productions, including “Once on This Island” at the Berkeley Playhouse and “Caroline, or Change” at TheaterWorks. She studied acting at the American Conservatory Theater and the CalShakes Conservatory program, and she has appeared in numerous Shakespeare plays, such as “Richard III,” “Twelfth Night,” and “As You Like It.” Coleman’s family moved to Los Angeles when she was in the seventh grade, and she graduated from Oak Park High School in 2015.

Zendaya Net Worth

(Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images)

Career

In 2010, Zendaya began starring as Rocky Blue on the series “Shake It Up,” which attracted 6.2 million viewers when it premiered, making it the Disney Channel’s second highest-rated premiere since the network’s launch in 1983. “Shake It Up” aired 75 episodes over three seasons, and Coleman reprised her role in a 2011 episode of “Good Luck Charlie.” In 2011, she released the promotional single “Swag It Out,” and she performed the song “Watch Me” with her “Shake It Up” co-star Bella Thorne; the track reached #86 on the “Billboard” Hot 100 chart. That year Zendaya also hosted the Disney Channel’s “Make Your Mark: Ultimate Dance Off 2011” and voiced Fern in “Pixie Hollow Games.”

In 2012, she starred in the Disney Channel movie “Frenemies” and guest-starred on “A.N.T. Farm,” and the following year, she voiced Lollipop in the film “Super Buddies,” finished in second place on “Dancing with the Stars,” and released the album “Zendaya,” which reached #51 on the “Billboard” 200 chart. She then starred in the Disney Channel film “Zapped” (2014) and guest-starred on ABC’s “Black-ish” (2015), and from 2015 to 2018, she starred as K.C. Cooper on “K.C. Undercover,” which ran for 75 episodes.

In 2017, Coleman starred in “Spider-Man: Homecoming” and “The Greatest Showman,” which were both massive hits, grossing $880.2 million and $435 million, respectively. Zendaya reprised the role of MJ in 2019’s “Spider-Man: Far from Home,” which was even more successful, bringing in $1.132 billion at the box office. and in October 2019, it was announced that she would be returning for “Spider-Man: No Way Home.” In 2018, she voiced Chris Jenkins in “Duck Duck Goose” and Meechee in “Smallfoot,” and in 2019, she guest-starred in three episodes of the Netflix series “The OA.”

In 2019, she also began starring as Rue Bennett on HBO’s “Euphoria,” a role that earned her two Primetime Emmy awards. In 2021, Zendaya starred in the film “Malcolm & Marie,” voiced Lola Bunny in “Space Jam: A New Legacy,” and played Chani in the sci-fi epic “Dune.” In 2020, she was cast as Ronnie Spector in a biopic that is based on Spector’s 1990 memoir “Be My Baby,” and she will also be producing the project. Zendaya is set to produce and take on the role of Tashi Donaldson in 2023’s “Challengers” film, and she will reprise her role of Chani in “Dune: Part Two.”

Endorsements

Zendaya has been the face of Madonna’s Material Girl clothing line as well as CoverGirl, Beats Electronics, and Chi Hair Care. She was a spokesmodel for Lancôme in 2019 and Valentino and Bulgari in 2020, and that year, the CNMI Green Carpet Fashion Awards honored her with a Visionary Award for “her efforts in promoting diversity and inclusion in fashion and film.” In 2022, she was announced as the global brand ambassador of Glaceau SmartWater. And in 2023, Zendaya became am ambassador for Louis Vuitton.

Personal Life

Since 2017, there have been rumors that Zendaya and her “Spider-Man” co-star Tom Holland were dating, with a source telling “People” magazine, “They’ve been super careful to keep it private and out of the public eye, but they’ve gone on vacations with each other and try and spend as much time as possible with one another.” Coleman and Holland denied the rumors for years, but in July 2021, they were spotted kissing in Tom’s car in Los Angeles. Zendaya was also rumored to have dated her “Euphoria” co-star Jacob Elordi and NFL player Odell Beckham Jr.

Coleman is a vegetarian and she has said of making the choice to give up meat, “My main reason for being a vegetarian is that I’m an animal lover – definitely not because I love vegetables.”

Zendaya has supported numerous charities, such as the American Heart Association, DonorsChoose.org, Toys for Tots, Donate My Dress, and Friends for Change. She was named an ambassador for Convoy of Hope in 2012, and she has been a spokesperson for UNICEF’s Trick-or-Treat campaign and the Verizon Foundation’s #WeNeedMore initiative. Coleman participated in the January 2017 Women’s March on Washington and the June 2020 George Floyd protests, and in September 2020, she was involved with Michelle Obama’s “When We All Vote” organization.

Awards and Nominations

In 2020, Zendaya won a Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series for “Euphoria.” She won the Emmy award again in 2022, making her the youngest two-time acting winner. The series also earned her a Black Reel Award for Television, International Online Cinema Award, a People’s Choice Award, and a Satellite Award. Coleman has been nominated for 11 Teen Choice Awards, winning Candie’s Choice Style Icon in 2014, Choice Summer Movie Star: Female for “Spider-Man: Homecoming” in 2017,  Choice Movie Actress: Drama, Choice Movie: Ship (shared with Zac Efron), and Choice Music: Collaboration (shared with Efron) for “The Greatest Showman” in 2018, and Choice Summer Movie Actress for “Spider-Man: Far from Home” in 2019. She has earned seven Kids’ Choice Award nominations, taking home the prize for Favorite TV Actress (2016) and Favorite Female TV Star (2017 and 2019) for “K.C. Undercover” and Favorite Movie Actress for “Spider-Man: Homecoming” and “The Greatest Showman” (2018).

Zendaya won People’s Choice Awards for Favorite Female Movie Star of the Year for “Spider-Man: Far from Home” in 2019 and Favorite Style Star of the Year in 2020, and she also received a Best Supporting Actress award from the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films for “Spider-Man: Far from Home.” She was honored with the SeeHer Award at the 2021 Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards, and the Shorty Awards named her Best Celebrity in 2020. In 2021, “Malcolm & Marie” earned Coleman a NextGen Award from the Critics’ Choice Celebration of Black Cinema Awards and a Virtuosos Award from the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. In 2023, Zendaya received the CinemaCon Star of the Year Award, won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress — Television Series Drama, and received a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination.

Zendaya Height

How tall is Zendaya? Zendaya is 5 foot 10 inches tall. That is three inches taller than her “Spiderman” co-star Tom Holland.

Real Estate

In 2017, Zendaya paid $1.4 million for a home in Northridge, California.

In March 2020, she paid $4 million for a 5,000-square-foot home sitting on four acres in Encino, California. She continues to own the Northridge home as of this writing. She also owns a condo in Brooklyn that she purchased in 2020 for $5 million.

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Climate Change Exacerbated Flash Floods in Bangladesh

Asia-Pacific, Civil Society, Climate Change, Education, Environment, Food and Agriculture, Headlines, Health, TerraViva United Nations, Water & Sanitation

Bangladesh Feni Flood August 2024. People wading through the flood waters, in search of shelter in Feni. Credit: UNICEF/Sultan Mahmud Mukut

UNITED NATIONS, Sep 6 2024 (IPS) – Since late August, severe flash floods and monsoons plaguing Bangladesh have affected nearly 6 million people. Bangladeshi officials have declared the floods to be the country’s worst climate disaster in recent memory. These recent floods follow the wake of Cyclone Remal, which devastated Bangladesh and West Bengal earlier this year.


Floods have caused widespread destruction in Bangladesh, with the Feni, Cumilla, Laxipur, Chattogram, and Noakhali districts among those hit hardest. The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has stated that 71 people have been reported dead. The floods have decimated villages, with thousands of homes having been destroyed or submerged underwater, causing widespread internal displacement.

“So far, a reported 500,000 people have been displaced in more than 3,400 evacuation shelters”, Stéphane Dujarric, Spokesman for the UN Secretary-General, said during a press briefing held on September 4 at the headquarters in New York.

“We, along with our humanitarian partners, are mobilized and supporting the government-led flood response,” Dujarric said. “We are also helping with local efforts to help the most vulnerable people and communities impacted by these floods.”

Displacement shelters in Bangladesh have become overcrowded due to the sheer amount of civilians that were displaced from their communities. According to an August 30 report from the United Nations Inter-Cluster Coordination Group (ICCG), this has heightened protection concerns for affected women and girls.

Floods have also damaged critical infrastructure in Bangladesh, greatly impeding relief efforts by humanitarian organizations. Farah Kabir, Country Director of ActionAid Bangladesh stated “The disruption of roads and communication has further escalated their plight, making it difficult for them to reach safety and essential resources. The UN reports that certain areas are entirely inaccessible to aid workers due to the extent of the high water levels.

According to the ICCG report, in Noakhali, approximately 50 percent of the flood-affected areas are considered “unreachable” by local authorities and aid personnel. The floods have also caused significant power outages, aggravating these challenges in accessibility.

This has taken a significant toll on nationwide education. Floods have ravaged educational facilities across the nation and have made countless roads and passages inaccessible, making schooling for children extremely difficult. According to Dujarric, over 7000 schools are now closed due to flooding, which has impacted 1.7 million children and young people.

Water sanitation systems have been severely compromised with the swelling of dirty water filling the streets. Without access to emergency medical supplies, the risk of contracting waterborne diseases has risen significantly.

Kabir added, “The collapse of the sanitation system in many areas has heightened the public health crisis”.

Last week, In one instance last week, Bangladesh’s Directorate of General Health Services (Dte. GHS) reported that over a period of 24 hours since the flooding began, 5000 people had been hospitalized, reporting cases of diarrhea, skin infections and snake bites. UNICEF is currently on the frontlines of this disaster, distributing 3.6 million water purification tablets to prevent the spread of illnesses.

Additionally, the livelihoods of millions have been impacted by the floods. Agriculture, specifically, has been hit the hardest. According to Bangladesh’s agriculture ministry, the floods have resulted in a loss of 282 million US dollars due to crop damage, impacting over 1.3 million farmers. This is significantly detrimental as the agricultural sector employs roughly 42 percent of Bangladesh’s workforce.

Dujarric added that the floods have caused 156 million US dollars worth of losses in livestock and fisheries. This has devastated Bangladesh’s economy as well as greatly exacerbated levels of food insecurity nationwide.

“With supplies disrupted, thousands of families are still stranded in shelters without any food,” said Simone Parchment, the World Food Programme (WFP) Representative in Bangladesh, in a press release issued on August 30. “Our focus is on delivering emergency assistance to the people who have been displaced and lack the means to cook for themselves.”

Hundreds of thousands of people are facing risks of starvation and malnutrition as aid workers scramble to distribute dry food to shelters. WFP is currently in the process of delivering fortified biscuits to 60,000 families in areas that have been hit the hardest.

The UN’s Acting Relief Emergency Coordinator, Joyce Msuya, has allocated 4 million dollars from the UN’s Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF). In addition, UNICEF is on the frontlines of this disaster, providing over 338,000 people with live-saving supplies. However, current efforts are not enough to mitigate this disaster. UNICEF has requested over 35 million dollars from donors in order to provide all families affected with medical assistance.

It is also imperative to tackle the climate crisis, as Bangladesh is one of the world’s most climate-sensitive nations. A 2015 report by the World Bank Institute stated that approximately 3.5 million people in Bangladesh are affected by annual river flooding, an issue that is only worsened by the climate crisis.

Deputy Representative of UNICEF Bangladesh Emma Brigham remarked that the devastation caused by the floods in the eastern regions of Bangladesh are “a tragic reminder of the relentless impact of extreme weather events and the climate crisis”, particularly for children. “Far too many children have lost loved ones, their homes, schools, and now are completely destitute,” she said.

IPS UN Bureau Report

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Knowledge is Power. Gaza War Supporters Don’t Want Students to Have Both

Civil Society, Democracy, Featured, Global Governance, Headlines, Human Rights, IPS UN: Inside the Glasshouse, Middle East & North Africa, TerraViva United Nations

Opinion

Student protesters at Columbia University, New York. Credit: IPS

SAN FRANCISCO, USA, Sep 6 2024 (IPS) – With nearly 18 million students on U.S. college campuses this fall, defenders of the war on Gaza don’t want to hear any backtalk. Silence is complicity, and that’s the way Israel’s allies like it.


For them, the new academic term restarts a threat to the status quo. But for supporters of human rights, it’s a renewed opportunity to turn higher education into something more than a comfort zone.

In the United States, the extent and arrogance of the emerging collegiate repression is, quite literally, breathtaking. Every day, people are dying due to their transgression of breathing while Palestinian.

The Gaza death toll adds up to more than one Kristallnacht per day — for upwards of 333 days and counting, with no end in sight. The shattering of a society’s entire infrastructure has been horrendous.

Months ago, citing data from the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, ABC News reported that “25,000 buildings have been destroyed, 32 hospitals forced out of service, and three churches, 341 mosques and 100 universities and schools destroyed.”

Not that this should disturb the tranquility of campuses in the country whose taxpayers and elected leaders make it all possible. Top college officials wax eloquent about the sanctity of higher learning and academic freedom while they suppress protests against policies that have destroyed scores of universities in Palestine.

A key rationale for quashing dissent is that anti-Israel protests make some Jewish students uncomfortable. But the purposes of college education shouldn’t include always making people feel comfortable. How comfortable should students be in a nation enabling mass murder in Gaza?

What would we say about claims that students in the North with southern accents should not have been made uncomfortable by on-campus civil rights protests and denunciations of Jim Crow in the 1950s and 1960s? Or white students from South Africa, studying in the United States, made uncomfortable by anti-apartheid protests in the 1980s?

A bedrock for the edifice of speech suppression and virtual thought-policing is the old standby of equating criticism of Israel with antisemitism. Likewise, the ideology of Zionism that tries to justify Israeli policies is supposed to get a pass no matter what — while opponents, including many Jews, are liable to be denounced as antisemites.

But polling shows that more younger Americans are supportive of Palestinians than they are of Israelis. The ongoing atrocities by the Israel “Defense” Forces in Gaza, killing a daily average of more than 100 people — mostly children and women — have galvanized many young people to take action in the United States.

“Protests rocked American campuses toward the end of the last academic year,” a front-page New York Times story reported in late August, adding: “Many administrators remain shaken by the closing weeks of the spring semester, when encampments, building occupations and clashes with the police helped lead to thousands of arrests across the country.” (Overall, the phrase “clashes with the police” served as a euphemism for police violently attacking nonviolent protesters.)

From the hazy ivory towers and corporate suites inhabited by so many college presidents and boards of trustees, Palestinian people are scarcely more than abstractions compared to far more real priorities. An understated sentence from the Times sheds a bit of light: “The strategies that are coming into public view suggest that some administrators at schools large and small have concluded that permissiveness is perilous, and that a harder line may be the best option — or perhaps just the one least likely to invite blowback from elected officials and donors who have demanded that universities take stronger action against protesters.”

Much more clarity is available from a new Mondoweiss article by activist Carrie Zaremba, a researcher with training in anthropology. “University administrators across the United States have declared an indefinite state of emergency on college campuses,” she wrote. “Schools are rolling out policies in preparation for quashing pro-Palestine student activism this fall semester, and reshaping regulations and even campuses in the process to suit this new normal.

“Many of these policies being instituted share a common formula: more militarization, more law enforcement, more criminalization, and more consolidation of institutional power. But where do these policies originate and why are they so similar across all campuses? The answer lies in the fact that they have been provided by the ‘risk and crisis management’ consulting industries, with the tacit support of trustees, Zionist advocacy groups, and federal agencies. Together, they deploy the language of safety to disguise a deeper logic of control and securitization.”

Countering such top-down moves will require intensive grassroots organizing. Sustained pushback against campus repression will be essential, to continually assert the right to speak out and protest as guaranteed by the First Amendment.

Insistence on acquiring knowledge while gaining power for progressive forces will be vital. That’s why the national Teach-In Network was launched this week by the RootsAction Education Fund (which I help lead), under the banner “Knowledge Is Power — and Our Grassroots Movements Need Both.”

The elites that were appalled by the moral uprising on college campuses against Israel’s slaughter in Gaza are now doing all they can to prevent a resurgence of that uprising. But the mass murder continues, subsidized by the U.S. government. When students insist that true knowledge and ethical action need each other, they can help make history and not just study it.

Norman Solomon is the national director of RootsAction.org and executive director of the Institute for Public Accuracy. His latest book, War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine, was published in paperback this month with a new afterword about the Gaza war.

IPS UN Bureau

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