User:Rashby93

About
This creator of the user name Rashby93 is a young, wildly successful billionaire entrepreneur by the name of Sir Milicent Reidifer Ashby IV, Esq. He achieved wild popularity in Europe after his development of the Cake 'n Bake in 2003, which provided simpler minds a way to prepare baked goods safely and successfully. His net worth is an estimated 55,000,000,000 USD, and he is the majority shareholder in both Cake 'n Bake Industries and Wrangler Jeans Co.

Birth
Milicent was born of his father (of the same namesake), and his mother, Clarice Elizabeth Ashby, on July 4, 1992 in the wealthy, aristocratic- and yet bustling- city of Dovenshirestownsborough, England. He is the youngest of three children, with notorious older brother James Reginald Ashby, and brilliantly gifted, yet much forgotten middle child Gregory Jamison Ashby. His father is the owner of DERPS (Dovenshirestownsborough Electrical Running Power and Steam), which has become a household staple of clean energy initiative in the modern world. His mother Clarice was a modest preparatory school teacher of literature until 1994, when she discovered that she belonged to the Royal Family, a distant cousin to the Queen. She promptly retired from teaching at the end of the academic year, and reaped all the benefits of her royal blood.

Personal Life
Much of the Ashby family's private lives has widely been made public, credited in most part to the universal success of DERPS and the royal heritage of Clarice Ashby. James Reginald has been much a topic of controversy, and has been blamed for throwing away millions of dollars in online gambling. However, Milicent has managed to keep most of his personal life under wraps. In 2011, Time magazine listed him as the "Most Eccentric Billionaire to Have Ever Lived," just topping the list ahead of fictional billionaire Tony Stark. He is a much sought-after personality by the paparazzi, and yet he has managed to elude the cameras for a great portion of his life. Because of this, many legends have arisen about the man, the most famous being the 2012 New York Times article titled, "The Argument for Aquaman." In this article, senior staff writer Hugh Jass virtually risked his career to formulate a logical argument identifying Milicent as the legendary Aquaman. Fellow staff member Jamarius Cook famously opined that the article had "the most asinine thesis it has ever been my misfortune of reading." Though amongst co-workers the reviews of the article were mixed, Jass received critical acclaim and the Pulitzer Prize for Outstanding Work of Literary Fiction. Milicent has yet to collect any royalties from the success of the work, yet has also declined consent to publish the article.