.08 a dollar so u have to multiply .08 by how much money the item costs.
Movie producers are entrepreneurs, not salaried workers. When developing a budget for a film, a producer will, however, potentially enter a line item with a dollar amount that represents expected earnings for the producer.
An item which still needs to be recieved
a shortcut
Like any other gold plate over a base metal, whatever you can get. However based on current conditions, not much. But when the value of the dollar drops, they might make a good item to barter with.
Gold Bathtub
A Golden Bath Tub
There is not, and never has been in American currency a million dollar bill. If you have what appears to be an American million dollar bill, it is a "novelty item", and essentially worthless.
The million dollar bill was purely a novelty item, never made by the government. The highest denomination is $100,000.
...Nothing. There is and was no US one million dollar bill in circulation. It is a privately made novelty item that isn't worth more than the money used to print it.
There is no official 1 million dollar note ever produced by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing (BEP). You have a novelty item that sells for a couple of dollars in gift shops.
They buy very large quantities of things for very little money. If it costs 99 cents to acquire, transport and sell an item (for $1)- and if they sell a million of that item- they just made a profit of $10,000.
The United States never printed a $1 million bill. You have a novelty item that sells for a few dollars in gift and joke shops.
If you type "million dollar note" into a Google Images search, you should be able to see all of the various One Million Dollar notes. Neither the U.S. nor Canada ever issued an official banknote with that value. Anything that purports to be a "million dollar bill" from either of those countries is simply a novelty item made by a private company, and is only worth a few dollars at a toy store or similar shop.
A few cents for the paper it's printed on. It's a novelty item that you can find in some gift shops and online sites. The highest-denomination bill ever printed for general use was worth $10,000. There are no genuine "million dollar" or "billion dollar" bills.
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I get this strange feeling that the answer just might be a million!