Slott | Svensk Porr

Slott | Svensk Porr




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Slott | Svensk Porr
Definition from Wiktionary, the free dictionary
slott n ( genitive singular slots , plural slott )

slott n ( definite singular slottet , indefinite plural slott , definite plural slotta or slottene )

slott n ( definite singular slottet , indefinite plural slott , definite plural slotta )

“slott” in The Nynorsk Dictionary .


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Slott had been working at Marvel for nearly a decade when he was chosen to helm his own super hero title with 2004’s SHE-HULK series. In Slott’s run, lawyer Jennifer Walters was promoted from standard human prosecutions and thrown into the unregulated world of superhuman litigations.
“The way I sold it was ‘Ally McBeal with muscles.’ What would it be like to be a super hero, to be a lawyer in a super hero world? We hadn’t seen this at Marvel,” Slott explained. “Everything she was dealing with [before] was real-world law, and the fun of this run of SHE-HULK was we introduced superhuman law. Mainly, it’s because I don’t know a thing about the law, and I could write a lawyer show that way, the same way I could write – like I don’t know anything about science, but I can write a whole story about Adamantium and Antarctic vibranium and Pym particles and cosmic rays. I don’t need a degree in that!”
“So, this was my way of doing that to the law,” he added. “I could decide the precedent for, ‘Is X-ray vision an invasion of privacy?’” (And for those who are curious, Slott confirms that it is!)
Slott’s newfound determination to legislate the Marvel Universe—and his curious line of questioning— eventually led him to answer one of the biggest questions in fans' minds: Couldn’t Spider-Man sue J. Jonah Jameson for libel? This led Slott to create a crossover between the hyphenated heroes, Spider-Man and She-Hulk. 
“ SHE-HULK (2004) #4 really was my chance to go in and do a full-length issue of a Spider-Man comic,” Slott said. “It was my first super hero monthly book from Marvel, and I didn’t know how long it was going to last and when they were going to wise up and kick me off. So it was like, ‘OK, I’ve got one job to do. Everything I’ve ever wanted to do with Spider-Man, we’re going to do it in this comic. Like, if I get fired tomorrow, if I never get to write Spider-Man again, I will have gotten everything I wanted to get in here.’ So that was kind of fun. That was a hoot.”
In SHE-HULK #4, Spider-Man teams up with She-Hulk to sue J. Jonah Jameson for all the libel printed at The Daily Bugle over the years. However, problems arise for the super hero duo when Spider-Man refuses to reveal his secret identity for a potential payout. (Turns out you can’t cut a check to a masked vigilante!) The legal team is then forced to prove that Spider-Man is who he says he is before a verdict can be reached. Will an old Avengers identity scanner be enough to protect Peter Parker from coming forward? 
Slott revealed that this storyline was partially inspired by Steven Grant , Roger Stern , and John Byrne ’s AVENGERS (1963) #189 issue “Wings and Arrows!”, which features the first use of the retina identity scanner by Falcon . "That’s one of the big reasons he could never go after Jonah. I remember reading – I think it was a Roger Sterns' AVENGERS issue where he got to put his retina up to a scanner and it registered him as Spider-Man, and it was all kept off-the-books. And I'm like, 'The Avengers are like a real government agency back then.' So he should be able to go, 'I can prove in a court of law I'm Spider-Man. Bring in the Avengers scanner; now I can sue J. Jonah Jameson.' And that was the fun.”
In addition to more behind-the-scenes fun facts involved with creating his iconic SHE-HULK run, Slott also shared his advice for creating story structure. And for those keeping an eye on the latest developments in the Spider-Verse, Slott teased “twists and turns and emotional stakes” for the remaining issues of EDGE OF SPIDER-VERSE . 
“Mark Bagley and I are ending the Spider-Verse! We’re destroying it, completely and utterly! We’re taking this thing you all dearly love and is a huge cash cow for Marvel and we’re just pouring gasoline on it, setting it on fire, and running away cackling,” Slott joked with the crew. “We’re having fun!”
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What You Need to Know

The new proposed RMD regs took something that was getting simplified and made it more complex, Slott said.
The 10-year rule is the biggest surprise.
The regs also create a “bizarre” new RMD term, Slott says.



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Ed Slott: New IRS Secure Act Regs Are an RMD ‘Nightmare’



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März 14, 2022 at 03:00 PM



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The Internal Revenue Service’s recently released proposed regulations about how to handle required minimum distributions under the Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement (Secure) Act of 2019 are a retirement planning nightmare, according to IRA and tax planning expert Ed Slott of Ed Slott & Co.
The new proposed regs turn the 10-year rule into a “retirement planning nightmare for both advisors and clients!” Slott told ThinkAdvisor Monday in an email.
Right now, he continued, “we are rewriting all of our advisor IRA training and workshop manuals, and inserting all of these new provisions. It’s now a real mishmash of complexity, combining some old rules (which we thought no longer applied) with new ones.”
As Slott explained in a previous interview with ThinkAdvisor, the Secure Act “left many open questions” when it was enacted in 2020.
After more than two years, “these proposed regulations provide our first glimpse into the answers to most of the open RMD questions” after the Secure Act, Slott said.
“I really don’t know how advisors will be able to explain this all to clients, especially right after they have spent two years learning the Secure Act rules, explaining them to affected clients and then doing planning based on how they believed the post-death RMD rules would work,” Slott said Monday. “There are even added rules that affect 90 +-year-olds.”
The real problem: “these provisions affect virtually everyone with a retirement account, IRAs, 401(k)s, everything, and the penalties for missing an RMD are 50%.”
Th new “labyrinth of confusing rules,” Slott continued, “will fall not only on the clients in setting up their IRA estate plans but specifically on their beneficiaries who first must figure out — what kind of beneficiary am I?”
Even thornier: “When a trust is the beneficiary, which affects many clients with large IRAs, who tend to leave those IRAs to trusts,” Slott said. “These trusts will now have to be reviewed to see if they will still hold up and meet the client’s intended estate plan. They probably won’t.”
Under the Secure Act, Slott explains, when a beneficiary inherits they can fall into one of three groups:
Examples are an estate, charity or non-qualifying trust.
“These rules have not changed but this is the worst category of beneficiary, for RMD payout purposes,” Slott said. “This generally applies when a person neglects to name a beneficiary or a beneficiary has died, and the beneficiary form was not updated.”
These are beneficiaries who will no longer qualify for the stretch IRA (most older children, grandchildren and other non-spouse beneficiaries) and will end up with the 10-year rule (all inherited funds must be withdrawn by the end of the 10th year after death).
These are surviving spouses and a few other beneficiary categories:
These EDBs still qualify for the stretch IRA.
The biggest surprise under the new IRS RMD proposed regs “is their interpretation of the 10-year rule,” Slott continued.
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“For two years we all thought that OK, Congress did away with the stretch IRA for most non-spouse beneficiaries and replaced it with a 10-year rule requiring all the inherited funds to be withdrawn by the end of the 10-year term,” Slott said.
“That actually made things much simpler since there was generally no need any more to calculate RMDs, identify beneficiaries to determine the measuring life, or to know which rules applied based on when death occurred (either before or after the required beginning date — the RBD),” he said.
The regs, however, “now bring back that original RMD complexity and add it to the 10-year rule, creating new layers of planning to determine the post-death RMD payouts to beneficiaries.”
The rules are effective now, Slott said, “and could possibly even affect 2021 RMDs that should have been taken but weren’t because no one thought they were required.”
The IRS will hopefully provide relief on this point, he said.
Under the regs’ 10-year rule, to determine the payouts to beneficiaries, “you first must know when the IRA owner died,” Slott explained.
“If death was before the required beginning date (RBD) then no annual RMDs are required. The only RMD would be at the end of the 10-year term when the full balance of the inherited IRA must be withdrawn,” he said.
If death occurs “on or after the RBD, then annual RMDs are required for years 1-9, based on the regular stretch IRA rules, and then again, the full balance of the inherited IRA must be withdrawn by the end of the 10-year term,” Slott explains.
“This means that we must go back to calculate relatively small RMDs for years 1-9, which brings in more complexity especially when there are multiple beneficiaries with different life expectancies.”
Roth IRA owners “will always be deemed to have died before their RBD (regardless of their age at death) since Roth IRAs have no lifetime RMDs,” Slott said. “Roth IRA inheritors will not have to take RMDs for years 1-9, like other IRA beneficiaries might.”
The 10-year rule RMD interpretation “carries the confusion over to successor beneficiaries (after the beneficiary dies), who also may be subject to RMDs base on the original beneficiary’s life if the original beneficiary died before the 10-year term expired, and if that beneficiary inherited from an IRA owner who died after his RBD,” Slott explained. “Who is going to keep track of all these key dates and rules?”
These rules will also apply to trust beneficiaries which can mean RMDs for years 1-9 that would have to be paid out to trusts, and which could (depending on the type of trust) be taxable at high trust tax rates each year.
There are also new rules for multiple beneficiaries (when one beneficiary for example is an EDB and the other is not) and for trusts, which are generally favorable to the beneficiaries if they can navigate the rules.
While surviving spouses were thought to be generally unscathed by all these rules, since they are EDBs, it turns out that the regulations also affect them.
The IRS created an “incredulous new term ‘hypothetical required minimum distributions’ to make sure that certain spouses who elected the 10-year rule don’t avoid RMDs that would otherwise have had to be taken when that spouse hit RMD age — 72,” Slott explained.
These “hypothetical” RMDs “are not really RMDs that must be taken, but additional annual RMD calculations will have to be made each year to determine how of much of the IRA that the spouse inherited from his/her spouse can be rolled over in a spousal rollover, since RMDs cannot be rolled over,” Slott said.
The IRS considers these “hypothetical” RMDs “as funds that cannot be rolled over in spousal rollover. Yearly calculations will have to be made to determine how much of the IRA the spouse inherited from his or her spouse can be rolled over as a spousal rollover.”

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February 24, 2022, 3:55 PM · 3 min read
Ed Slott and Company Named to ThinkAdvisor’s LUMINARIES Class of 2021 (PRNewsfoto/Ed Slott and Company)
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Ed Slott, CPA, IRA Expert and Host of Several Popular Public Television Specials, Launches His Latest Show to Teach People How to Protect Their Retirement Savings
NEW YORK , Feb. 24, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- " Ed Slott's Retirement Freedom!", a new public television special that educates viewers on key retirement savings strategies to have more, keep more and make their money last, is now airing on public television stations throughout the country. Those who wish to tune in should check their local listings in their area. Slott, a nationally recognized CPA and IRA Expert, founder of Ed Slott and Company, and creator of irahelp.com , is participating in live pledge drives in cities across the country, including Atlanta , Boston , Detroit , and more. For a complete list of cities on the pledge drive tour, visit irahelp.com/speaking_schedule.php.
"These are some of the most challenging times I've ever seen in my career as a tax advisor," said Slott. "Uncle Same wants your hard-earned savings more than ever, and with ever-changing retirement tax laws, it can be difficult to understand how you and your family are impacted. My goal is for viewers to come away from my special with the knowledge they need to get their own retirement plan, not the government's plan."
During the public television special, Slott shares his Four Pillars of Retirement Freedom: freedom from taxes, freedom from worry, freedom from risk, and freedom from bad advice. The special also includes real-life stories about those who planned and those who didn't to help viewers gain a better understanding of the importance of retirement planning. Viewers of the show will learn:
The latest retirement planning strategies and opportunities for 2022
How to move their money from forever taxed to never taxed
Slott's "always" rules for a successful retirement and strategies to help get everything on their retirement wish lists
This is the seventh special Ed Slott has hosted on public television. Combined, these programs have helped raise more than $60 million for public television. "Ed Slott is one of the most successful public television personalities who has brought the message of 'it's not how much you make, but how much you keep,' to tens of millions of viewers," said show producer Bob Marty. "Public television audiences respond enthusiastically to Ed because of his in-depth knowledge and how he delivers it with his inclusive, kind, funny and informed approach."
"There is a lot of noise out there about retirement planning and advice – and most of it is just that – noise!" added Slott. "With this special, I'm able to cut through all of that and come directly to viewers of all ages and arm them with the latest information on retirement tax strategies so that they can save and keep more as they save for and transition to retirement."
ABOUT ED SLOTT AND COMPANY, LLC: Ed Slott and Company, LLC is the nation's leading provider of technical IRA education for financial advisors, CPAs, and attorneys. Ed Slott's Elite IRA Advisor Group SM is comprised of more than 475 of the nation's top financial professionals who are dedicated to the mastery of advanced retirement account and tax planning laws and strategies. Slott is a nationally recognized IRA distribution expert, best-selling author, and professional speaker. His latest books include The New Retirement Savings Time Bomb (Penguin Random House, 2021), Ed Slott's Retirement Decisions Guide: 2022 Edition (IRAHelp, 2022), and Fund Your Future: A Tax-Smart Savings Plan in Your 20s and 30s (IRAHelp, 2021). He has hosted several public television programs, including his latest, Ed Slott's Retirement Freedom! (2022), is a Professor of Practice at The American College of Financial Services and a columnist for AARP . Visit irahelp.com for more information.
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