Saturday, June 28, 2025

One Big Beautiful Billionaire Bezos Wedding in Venice

Bezos Wedding Base: The Aman Venice, set inside Palazzo Papadopoli on the Grand Canal
Photo: Cat Bauer
(Venice, Italy) It is astonishing to witness the almost non-stop English-language news about the Bezos wedding unfolding right in front of our eyes here in Venice. The media has taken frenzied reports about the Bezos wedding to a new level and warped reality into something unrecognizable. You would think nothing else was happening on the planet these days (like the US bombing Iran's nuclear sites, war in Ukraine, genocide in Gaza, etc.). 

Reality check: the average person walking the calli of Venice would not know there was a celebrity wedding going on. It is not impacting everyday life in Venice the way over-tourism and the lack of affordable housing does. Besides, everyday in life in Venice often includes yachts and celebrities arriving for events like the Venice Film Festival and the opening of the Venice Art and Architecture Biennale. Weddings take place every day in Venice -- getting married in the lagoon is the dream of many couples. 

In 2014, the Clooney wedding took place in the same place as the Bezos wedding, at Palazzo Papadopoli. Instead of protests, a group of locals used the extra media attention to form the Unlock Your Love project. We went around Venice snapping off hundreds of "love" locks that ignorant tourists had attached to Venice's bridges. 

In 2011, Lanza & Baucina, the same wedding planners that did the Bezos wedding, designed the billionaire Agarwal wedding, complete with elephant and Shakira, and no one said a word. 

In 2009, Salma Hayek had her big second-wedding bash with billionaire husband François-Henri Pinault and a bunch of celebrities, including Bono. The week after, the then-Prince Charles and Camilla arrived, with Charles contemplating "living like a Venetian" for a time.  

The point is that celebrities and dignitaries and billionaires arrive in Venice all the time, and it's been that way for millennia. In 1433, Cosimo de' Medici, one of the world's richest men, stayed in the Benedictine monastery on the very Island of San Giorgio Maggiore where the Bezos wedding took place. Medici was so rich that he was credited for kickstarting the Renaissance. 

And Jakob Fugger (1459-1525), also known as Jakob the Rich, came of age in Venice at the Fondaco dei Tedeschi. Fugger's wealth adjusted to 2015 was estimated to be around $400 billion. Fugger was so rich that he loaned the Vatican the money to build St. Peter's Basilica and the Sistine Chapel.

Random tourists kiss for Unlock Your Love project during 2014 Clooney wedding
Photo: Cat Bauer
Last week, before the Bezos wedding, a few small groups of anti-Bezos protestors with handmade "No Space for Bezos" banners gathered to protest something -- I was not sure what, and I don't think they were, either. The handful of protestors were suddenly splashed across the international news as if there was a major upraising in Venice. It was blown up all out of proportion, and seemed very weird.

A few days later, the locals were joined by professional outside activists, who know a good protest opportunity when they see one. The outsiders brought professional banners to promote their own causes. The media mistakenly reported that those outside protestors were locals, which they were not.

When I told one Venetian woman, a hotel owner, I was going to write something about the wedding, she said, "Tell them that Venetians are used to aristocrats shopping next to them at the market. After the flood in November 2012, everyone helped each other, rich and poor. I don't know a single Venetian who agrees with the protestors. They are only two people and basta. We don't care."

Personally, I think there is plenty of space for Bezos, and I am glad that lagoon is still a crucial spot on the global chessboard. Venice knows how to host popes and emperors, kings and queens, sheiks, high-level forums, and G7 summits. A bunch of billionaires already own a bunch of property here. 

And you can visit the wedding venues on your own, you just couldn't barge into the Cini Foundation during the wedding celebration. But you can't barge into the Cini Foundation during many private occasions.  
 
Michelangelo river boat & Were Dreams yacht in Venice lagoon
Photo: Cat Bauer
I think yachts liven up the lagoon and am happy to see them here. And it is not true that the yachts have taken up all the berths. Docked in front of the Were Dreams yacht was the riverboat Michelangelo, which you regulars will remember was slammed by the massive MSC Opera Cruise ship five years ago back in June 2019. Now, the Michelangelo is back in business, fully recovered, and the cruise ships are no longer barrelling down the Giudecca Canal. 

In fact, I've always supported the No Grandi Navi movement and Tommaso Cacciari, one of the protest leaders, as did masses of locals. I first covered the No Grandi Navi protests back in 2012, which felt organic and true. Back then there were real outside forces that latched onto the protests and tried to create division in Venice.

These days, Cacciari seems to be part of the No Space for Bezos protests, which, to me, seem forced and manufactured. Again, I feel that Venetians are being used by outside forces. I mentioned this to a prominent Venetian Friday evening at a local event, and he said that he agreed and could not wait for the wedding to be over.
 
The anti-Bezos protestors claimed victory when one of the wedding venues was changed from the Scuola Grande della Misericordia to Arsenale. The protests may have had something to do with it, but I don't think that was the main reason for the venue change. 

On June 22, 2025, the US bombed three of Iran's nuclear sites as part of the Iran-Israel war. 

In response, on June 23, Iran launched missiles at the US military base in Qatar. 

Did you know there are two military bases about an hour outside Venice? The US Army Garrison is in Vicenza, and the US Air Force base is in Aviano. Fun fact: B61 nuclear bombs are stored in underground storage systems inside aircraft shelters at Aviano. 

On June 23, the wedding venue was changed from Misericordia to Arsenale, which, to me, is a much nicer (and safer) location. The ancient shipyard is funky and full of life because La Biennale is always doing something inside the space, like dance, theater, and music performances. It converts to a press room during Art and Architecture openings. In fact, last year, Diane von Furstenburg had her DVF Awards at Arsenale, complete with excellent dinner -- I ran into Oprah Winfrey and Gayle King in the ladies room!

On June 25, the Bezos wedding guests started arriving, including President Trump's daughter, Ivanka Trump, her husband, Jared Kushner, and their three children. 


Media covering Bezos wedding - Photo: Cat Bauer
I was curious about the reason for the global frenzy, so I visited some media people (not paparazzi) who were set up across the Grand Canal from Palazzo Papadopoli, where the Bezos are based.  I asked a fellow with a mike where he was from.

"Germany. Where are you from?"

"I'm American, but I live here. I'm a writer. Why are you here? Why all the media attention?"

The fellow chuckled. "Good question. They sent me here for three days and put me up in a very nice hotel, which is not cheap. This is not something that I usually cover. I'll talk to you in a second because right now I'm going on air and need to focus."

I waited.  

After a few minutes, he took a breath. "They're coming back to me so I still can't talk."

"Just two quick questions, and then I'll leave. How long ago did they give you this assignment?"

"A day, but that's normal."

"What do you usually cover?"

"The war in Ukraine. Bombing in Iran. Gaza. Stuff like that."

"That's what I thought. Thanks. Have fun!"

Aman Venice, prime location: Grand Canal at Rialto
Photo: Cat Bauer
Something I do agree with the protestors about is that Bezos has way too much money. That is not the fault of Venice -- it is up to the United States to regulate him. The US must change the laws so that one individual cannot accumulate so much wealth. Bezos must pay tax and give back to the country that made him billions. And not just Bezos... 

It seemed like someone had come up with the tagline “No Space For Bezos” and then they tried to jam the narrative to fit that framework. After the protests managed to focus on the vast discrepancies of wealth between the few and the many, and how billionaires spend their money (does one really need a sailing yacht longer than a football field?), the global conversation became more interesting, and we can thank Venice for that.

Gondola in front of Island of San Giorgio Maggiore
Photo: Cat Bauer
The government of the Republic of Venice was ruled by an aristocratic oligarchy, a group of noble families, headed by a Doge. For the most part, they were extremely wealthy merchants and all had the same equal title of "Nobleman." The title was abbreviated N.H., Nobilis Homo for men, and N.D. Nobilis Domina for women. 

The Venetian nobility not only set the rules for the Republic, they also kept each other in check. Legend says that the reason that gondolas are black was because they had become too ostentatious when families tried to outdo each other with their wealth.

From the book, Venice, A Documentary History 1450-1630, edited by David Chambers and Brian Pullan:

"English travellers were impressed by the tendency of Venetian...nobles to go in for conspicuous investment in building or parks, in things that lasted and could be kept in families, rather than for conspicuous consumption on clothing, feasting and large retinues of servants." 

Since 1299, laws had been issued to restrain ostentation and lavish spending. By 1515, things had gotten so far out of hand that a special magistracy was created by the Venetian Senate to enforce them. 

"A MAGISTRACY TO ADMINISTER SUMPTUARY LAWS, 1515

It can be plainly seen, and it has come to our attention, that in the city of Venice there is much gross and unnecessary expenditure on meals and banquets, on the adornment of women, and on the decoration of houses, so that fortunes are squandered and a bad example is set to those who seek to live modestly. It is proper, therefore, especially in these hard times, to make every effort to put these matters right, and so do honour to the majesty of God."
By 1562, wedding feasts themselves were regulated by the Venetian government. 
"THE REGULATION OF BANQUETS, 1562
From a Senate decree of 8 October 1562

BE IT THEREFORE DETERMINED that, at nuptial feasts, at banquets for public and private parties, and indeed at any meal of meat, not more than one course of roast and one of boiled meat may be provided... Wild birds and animals, Indian cocks and hens, and doves shall be strictly forbidden... Oysters may be served only at private meals for twenty persons or less, and not at larger banquets or feasts..."

The impossible city of Venice was born over 1,600 years ago in the middle of a lagoon, the product of the powerful creativity and ingenuity of humankind. 

I like to believe that the sacred majesty of Venice's architecture, built on the highest principles by enlightened beings, affects the souls those who visit. It's good for the spirit just to walk the twists and turns of the ancient labyrinth of Venice.  

Vintage Amazon Mouse Pad

Amazon was founded by Jeff Bezos and his then-wife, MacKenzie Scott, back on July 5, 1994, when the Internet was tiny and squealy. The majority of the public wasn't online, but writers were, and MacKenzie Scott was a writer. When Amazon first starting selling books online back in 1995, many of its first customers were writers. We thought it was revolutionary and cool. 

Amazon was so small back then that it gave a Christmas present to all of us who had bought a book that first year: a mouse pad with a quote by Groucho Marx:

Outside of a dog,
a book is man's best friend.
Inside of a dog,
it's too dark to read.
Groucho Marx

I'll bet the mouse pad gift was MacKenzie Scott's idea. Maybe it was Jeff's, but if not, he did go along with it. The good will of writers gave Amazon a strong foundation, and we loved being appreciated with a mouse pad. It was a novel gift back then.

Zaleti from Rosa Salva
Venice was told by the media how Bezos had used mostly local businesses to execute the wedding, including goodie bags for the wedding guests from the Venetian pasticceria, Rosa Salva. 

You know what I think would be a nice gesture of appreciation? If Bezos bought all the residents of Venice (less than 50,000 people) breakfast at any Rosa Salva in the historic center on July 5, the 31st anniversary of the founding of Amazon. Coffee, plus a certain selection of sweets, no takeaway. You must show your carta d'identità as proof of residency.
 
Venetians enjoy Rosa Salva, too.

Ciao from Venezia,
Cat Bauer
Venetian Cat - The Venice Blog