University of California System Net Position 2025: $11.06B
Retirement System Financial Report 2024-2025
Annenberg School for Communication Building
The Annenberg Family’s Philanthropy
The Annenberg family fortune, rooted in the gritty world of early 20th-century publishing, was transformed from controversial origins into a respected legacy through strategic and generous philanthropy, particularly at the University of Southern California.
Moses Annenberg built his wealth in the 1920s and 1930s through horse-racing publications like the Daily Racing Form, which served the gambling industry, and newspapers such as The Philadelphia Inquirer. His 1939 tax evasion conviction cast a long shadow. Walter Annenberg inherited and expanded this empire, launching TV Guide and Seventeen magazine before selling his holdings for billions in 1988.
Walter began “cleaning” the family name decades earlier. In 1971–1972, he donated $8 million to establish the Annenberg School for Communication at USC. Subsequent gifts, including over $100 million from the Annenberg Foundation and Wallis Annenberg’s $50 million lead gift for Wallis Annenberg Hall in 2014, brought the family’s total contributions to USC above $350 million.
These investments in education, communication, and public service reframed the Annenbergs as visionary benefactors. By attaching their name to gleaming campus buildings and cutting-edge programs, they distanced the fortune from its racing-and-tabloid roots and aligned it with knowledge, ethics, and civic good. In this way, philanthropy did not merely spend wealth—it laundered and elevated it into enduring institutional prestige.
“University of California System makes bold commitment to 100 percent clean electricity”
USC Facilities Planning & Management
“University of Southern California – Jumping off the High Dive!”@USC_Athletics @USCswim
print(“Water”)https://t.co/xVyyOlBmTP pic.twitter.com/C63PG9GQKQ— Standards Michigan (@StandardsMich) September 3, 2022






