Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez marry in Venice
- Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez were married on Friday in a lavish wedding held on San Giorgio Maggiore, a private island in Venice, Italy.
- Their relationship became public in 2019 and led to an engagement in May 2023, following Sanchez's divorce from her 13-year marriage.
- The multi-day wedding included around 200 guests, such as Oprah Winfrey, Kim Kardashian, Leonardo DiCaprio, Ivanka Trump, and others arriving by private jets and yachts.
- Luca Zaia, Veneto's governor, estimated the wedding costs between €40 million and €48 million, while Bezos donated $3 million to three Venetian environmental organizations.
- The wedding sparked protests from local organizations over overtourism and exploitation concerns but was defended as an economic boon for Venice by regional authorities.
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Merchant in Venice: Glamor, buzz, furor mark Bezos wedding
VENICE, Italy — The sky itself was no limit for billionaire Jeff Bezos and fiancée Lauren Sanchez, who both have traveled into space. The couple held their wedding ceremony on Friday night, and Sanchez—who now identified herself on Instagram as Lauren Sanchez Bezos—posted a photo of herself beaming in a white, classic mermaid-line gown as […]...Keep on reading: Merchant in Venice: Glamor, buzz, furor mark Bezos wedding
Jeff Bezos-Lauren Sánchez Wedding in Photos: Celebrity Arrivals and Venice Protests
Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez descended on Venice, Italy, this week, alongside with approximately 200 guests, as the billionaire and former journalist got married. The pair were met with “No Space for Bezos” protests, which succeeded in forcing the couple to move part of their celebration ahead of the main event Friday, June 27. The pair reportedly planned to get married in Cannaregio, in the center of the city. But mounting calls against their …
The founder of Amazon billionaire Jeff Belos and his fiancée, television host, Lauren Sanchez, were married. The closed ceremony took place on 27 June in Venice, on the island of San Giorgio Majore, in San Marco. This event was preceded by city protests, which lasted several days: the Venetians believed that they had "removed" the city, which was already suffering from excessive attention (the tourists were so large that it encouraged rising hou…
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