Just in case Taylor and Travis ever decide they are never ever getting back together, Rambling talked to some prenup lawyers. Ezra Shaw/Getty Images; Getty Images (3) Share on Facebook Share on X Share to Flipboard Send an Email Show additional share options Share on LinkedIn Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share on Tumblr Share on Whats App Print the Article Post a Comment You Belong With Me, But Not Without a Prenup Logo text When news broke that Travis Kelce had popped the question to Taylor Swift, another somewhat less romantic question soon started spreading across the internet: What will their prenup look like? Kelce, of course, is no pauper - the Kansas City Chiefs tight end has an estimated net worth of $70 million. But he is marrying the 2,331st richest person on earth, who commands $1.6 billion of her own. That, according to the lawyers Rambling Reporter consulted on the matter, makes this merger particularly tricky, at least from a financial point of view. Related Stories Music NFL Chief Roger Goodell on Speculation Taylor Swift Could Be This Year's Super Bowl Halftime Performer: "She Would Be Welcome at Any Time" Lifestyle Travis Kelce Speaks Out on Taylor Swift Engagement: "It's Exciting Times" For starters, both parties will need to document every single penny they have - and all their debts, too - as they enter the marriage. That's a tougher task for Swift, who likely has many revenue streams running her empire, replete with multiple subsidiaries within each of those. "I can't imagine the amount of paperwork and the amount of professionals that are involved in [arranging] that," says April Zonnis, a family law attorney and partner at Century City's Summers Levine. "I'm doing a divorce now where the wife is a billionaire, and her disclosures are just beyond comprehension." Swift and Kelce also will need to decide what state's jurisdiction their prenup will be in. New York is a frontrunner, as it distributes marital property equitably rather than 50-50, like California. However, "there doesn't seem to be a huge benefit for either one of them creating a large marital estate because their estates are so large already," explains Marc Garelick, managing partner of Garelick Family Law. "Though Travis may feel differently about that than Taylor does." And what about all those royalties Swift will continue to rake in from her vast premarital music catalog? Will they suddenly become marital property? "No," Zonnis assures Rambling. "Any income derived from your separate property continues to be your separate property." All too well in case of a future split: Taylor gets the cats, Travis keeps the cleats, and both parties will likely hold on to their own individual fortunes. David Geffen may want to take some notes. - OREN PELEG Kanye's Gutted Malibu Mansion Is Back on the Market (Plumbing Now Included) There ought to be a word for what Kanye West did to that magnificent Tadao Ando-designed masterpiece on Malibu Road. Archi-cide? Reno-icide? Home-icide? Whatever you call it, the temple-like beachfront mansion that West purchased in 2021 for $57 million - and then proceeded to strip bare, removing windows, plumbing and electricity, leaving it an uninhabitable concrete shell, before selling it three years later for a mere $21 million - is back on the market. Asking price: $34.9 million. Prospective buyers will be relieved to hear that some amenities have been restored to their original condition. Indeed, the real estate group that purchased it from West, Belwood Investments, sunk a reported $8.5 million into putting back plumbing and electricity for what they no doubt hoped would be the ultimate house flip. Earlier this year, it looked like Belwood had found a buyer, Montana-based developer Andrew Mazzella, who reportedly agreed to a cash purchase for something like $30 million. But this summer that deal unraveled, with both sides lobbing accusations of bad faith and questionable financing. Despite its troubled history - and lofty price tag - some high-end property experts assure Rambling that the place eventually will find a buyer. "We were all quite shocked by what was done to this architectural masterpiece," says Barron N. Hilton, co-founder of the luxury real estate firm Hilton Hilton (also Paris and Nicky's brother). "But it's Malibu. This stretch of the coastline is as coveted as it gets. It'll eventually get sold." Everybody Gets a Subpoena! Blake Lively's Lawyers Cast a Wide Net At the risk of getting dragged into court, Rambling has to ask - what's up with Blake Lively these days? In July, the actress' legal team fired off a fleet of subpoenas - many by email - to no less than 107 media personalities both big (like Perez Hilton, who is fighting his summons in court, and supposedly Megyn Kelly, who shot back that Lively was a "narcissistic bully," despite Lively's spokesperson denying Kelly was ever subpoenaed) and microscopic (like a 28-year-old single mom in Kansas with just one follower on Yo