Between 1985, when he made his professional debut at age 18, to his retirement two decades later, “Iron” Mike Tyson made somewhere between $300 million and $400 million. At the height of his career, a single fight was worth $30 million. But during that time, Kid Dynamite bought mansions, cars and Bengal tigers. In late 2003, Tyson walked into a Las Vegas jewelry store and bought a $174,000 gold chain with 80 carats in diamonds. Eight months later, Tyson filed for bankruptcy. The New York Times reported that he was $23 million in debt, owing the U.S. and British governments $17 million in taxes, three-quarters of a million dollars to seven law firms and $300,000 for limo services. Tyson later appeared in a cameo in the hit comedy “The Hangover,” which parodied his high-flying lifestyle. But the former champ also appeared on “The View,” where he told the hosts he was living paycheck to paycheck but had found happiness with his third wife. “I’m totally destitute and broke,” Tyson said. “But I have an awesome life.”