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July 8, 2025: Laura Loomer, Trump’s Blunt Instrument

 



Laura Loomer, Trump’s Blunt Instrument

 

The right-wing provocateur and Islamophobe has few friends in the West Wing but a big fan in the Oval Office.

 

Ken Bensinger Robert Draper

By Ken Bensinger and Robert Draper

Reporting from Washington and the Florida Gulf Coast

July 8, 2025

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/08/us/politics/laura-loomer-trump.html

 

Through battles big and small since President Trump took office, one intense conflict stands out for the president’s openness to once-fringe views and voices. It is the struggle by some of his aides to contain Laura Loomer.

 

Ms. Loomer, the right-wing agitator whose proud Islamophobia and self-styled role as an ideological purity enforcer have made her toxic to some members of Mr. Trump’s inner circle, got the upper hand in late March. Her posts on X about several National Security Council aides she deemed insufficiently loyal to Mr. Trump got his attention. He asked her by phone to come to the Oval Office the following week.

 

On April 2, Ms. Loomer sat with a thick folder on her lap, facing the president at the Resolute Desk. She elaborated on her findings about the deputy national security adviser, Alex Wong, who she pointed out had worked on the 2012 presidential campaign of Mitt Romney, a critic of Mr. Trump, and whose wife had clerked for Justice Sonia Sotomayor and been involved in the prosecution of the Jan. 6 defendants. She criticized a dozen other aides in the presence of several administration officials, including Michael Waltz, then the national security adviser, who had stepped in uninvited midway through the meeting.

 

After her presentation, Mr. Trump barked to Mr. Waltz, “I want all of them fired.” He dismissed the group and hugged Ms. Loomer on her way out. Mr. Wong survived the day, but six employees in Ms. Loomer’s folder were ousted.

 

Two months later, White House staffers scored a small victory. On June 11, Mr. Trump attended the opening night of “Les Miserables” at the Kennedy Center. So did Ms. Loomer, who ascended the stairway to the V.I.P. section, where the president awaited the curtain. But she was stopped at the top by a White House aide. Ms. Loomer insisted that she had permission to visit Mr. Trump’s section. The aide held his ground. A Kennedy Center employee joined the scene. For several minutes, the employee and the aide blockaded Ms. Loomer’s path to Mr. Trump. Finally, furious, she stormed back down the stairs.

 

But the slight has hardly deterred her from using her prominence on social media to promote her own take on supporting Mr. Trump’s agenda. Last week, in an apparent reference to the entire Hispanic population of the United States, she expressed relish over the prospect of people being eaten alive while trying to escape the swampland immigration detention facility known as “Alligator Alcatraz.”

 

“The good news is, alligators are guaranteed at least 65 million meals if we start now,” she posted on X.

 

In one of more than a dozen interviews with The New York Times for this article, Ms. Loomer, 32, dismissed the notion that she was an interloper who lacked credible standing with the president. “My point of access to the White House is Donald Trump,” she said. “And that’s really hard for people to comprehend.”

 

Within the White House, Ms. Loomer is regarded as an uncontrollable and toxic force whose deep loyalty to Mr. Trump is tempered by her tendency to turn on almost anyone, even her allies. No member of Mr. Trump’s inner circle in the West Wing would speak about her on the record. The same character traits that endear her to the president and lead him to call her several times a month — particularly her seemingly total lack of fear — make many top aides treat her gingerly, as if she might unpin a hand grenade.

 

She has filed a defamation lawsuit against the comedian Bill Maher and HBO for Mr. Maher’s suggestion on his show last September that Ms. Loomer was sexually involved with Mr. Trump. “Just because a woman is able to get access to the president, and she isn’t a millionaire and doesn’t work for the Republican Party, she must be sleeping with the president?” she said in another interview. “I don’t like using the term, because I don’t want to sound like a liberal, but there really is a lot of misogyny.”

 

Still, Ms. Loomer acknowledges that the president is central to her life. “President Trump comes first,” she says she has told her boyfriend, “and if you can’t handle that, then go find somebody else.” After one meeting with Mr. Trump in 2023, she wrote effusively on X, “I love him so much.”

 

Mr. Trump, for his part, frequently praises Ms. Loomer, calling her “a fantastic woman, a true patriot” at one rally and “amazing” at another.

 

“She’s got the same intensity Roy Cohn had,” said Stephen K. Bannon, the podcaster who was a senior adviser to the first Trump administration, referring to the pugilistic lawyer who helped Mr. Trump become a player in New York decades ago.

 

Ms. Loomer has taken great pains to make herself worthy of the part. She styles herself as Mr. Trump’s pre-eminent loyalist, declaring on X last month that “America First is whatever President Trump says it is.” And she’s hyper-conscious of the value Mr. Trump places on appearance. “Every time I go and see the president,” she said, “I always buy a new outfit, because I want to look my best.”

 

Her growing celebrity was on display one evening last month, when she dined at the Capital Grille, a prominent Washington steakhouse, with a Times reporter and her lawyer, Larry Klayman, who had spent the day helping his client prepare for her deposition in the suit against Mr. Maher. In the crowded dining room, Ms. Loomer traded warm hellos with Senator Ted Cruz, Republican of Texas, while James Blair, a White House deputy chief of staff, came to her table to give her a hug.

 

Over dinner, Ms. Loomer recalled that just 15 years earlier she had been an overweight teenager who “used to cry in the bathroom” because she couldn’t fit in trendy clothes. At times, she said, her weight exceeded 200 pounds; now she weighs about 125. Picking at her scallops, which she ordered despite her fondness for steak, Ms. Loomer added, “I’ve got to stay thin.”

 

In interviews, Ms. Loomer took exception to what she said was the characterization of her as a “conspiracy theorist and anti-Muslim activist.” Rather, she maintained, she was a person of considerable influence: “On a daily basis, I communicate with the most powerful and wealthiest people in the world.”

 

Both descriptions, of course, can be true.

 

Ms. Loomer once posted a video on X saying that the Sept. 11 attacks were “an inside job,” though she now says the post was misinterpreted. She routinely refers to Mr. Trump’s defeat in 2020 — the same year she lost a congressional race in Florida — as “the stolen election.” After losing in a congressional Republican primary two years later, Ms. Loomer refused to accept defeat, explaining on social media that, “YOU DO NOT CONCEDE WHEN THERE IS THEFT INVOLVED!”

 

Her anti-Islamic rhetoric has been even more prolific. She labeled herself a “#ProudIslamophobe” on Twitter in 2017, a year before the platform banned her for hateful speech toward Representative Ilhan Omar, a Minnesota Democrat who is one of the first two Muslim women elected to Congress.

 

“I don’t believe Islam is a real religion,” Ms. Loomer said, claiming baselessly that the Qatari government was “the biggest financier” of the Black Lives Matter movement. After Zohran Mamdani, a Muslim, won the recent Democratic mayoral primary in New York, she warned on X that “there will be another 9/11 in NYC and @ZohranKMamdani will be to blame.”

 

Her 1.7 million followers on her reactivated X account include Vice President JD Vance; Secretary of State Marco Rubio; Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth; Kash Patel, the F. B.I. director; Susie Wiles, the White House chief of staff; and Stephen Miller, the president’s chief domestic policy adviser. Republican political candidates clamor for her endorsement; last month Mr. Vance invited Ms. Loomer to meet with him in his office.

 

As she patrolled the halls of Capitol Hill one recent morning, armed only with a mobile phone, it was easy to spot the look of terror spreading on the faces of Republicans who crossed her path: Nobody wants to be the next lawmaker to be labeled a disloyal RINO, or Republican in Name Only, by Ms. Loomer.

 

“She’s like a child wielding a loaded firearm called Twitter,” said Tucker Carlson, the right-wing media host, whom Ms. Loomer recently attacked on social media for criticizing U.S. military involvement in the war between Israel and Iran. “I don’t blame her. I blame the adults who take her seriously.”

 

Being feared more than loved appears to suit Ms. Loomer. “I don’t want to be friends with people,” she said. “That’s why I’ve got four dogs.”

 

She lives with her rescue dogs on Florida’s Gulf Coast in a modest red brick ranch-style rental, splitting the costs with her live-in boyfriend. One bedroom has been converted into a studio for her twice-weekly podcast, “ Loomer Unleashed,” which has 80,000 followers on Rumble. The walls are filled with photographs of herself in combative moments, including when she was ushered out of a House hearing in 2018 for disrupting the testimony of Jack Dorsey, the Twitter chief executive.

 

That freeze-frame seems apt for a person who remains defiantly outside the mainstream. She is still locked out of her original Facebook and Instagram accounts. She is under the binding terms of a settlement not to speak disparagingly about the Council on American-Islamic Relations and is paying the nonprofit $1,200 a month to reimburse it for legal costs and other fees after a lawsuit she filed was dismissed as meritless. (Ms. Loomer is currently suing her original lawyer in that case for malpractice and will use any proceeds to help pay her debt to CAIR.) She was denied a concealed-carry firearms permit in Florida.

 

Ms. Loomer professes indifference. “At the end of the day,” she said, “I play for an audience of one.”

 

‘If Anybody Is a Victim, It’s Me’

Ms. Loomer has spent most of her life searching for an audience of any kind.

 

She grew up in Tucson, Ariz., in a tumultuous household. When she was 11, her parents divorced. Five months later, one of her two younger brothers, who had already been hospitalized multiple times “due to uncontrollable behavior problems,” according to medical records, attacked her mother and was placed in a government group home. A decade after that, the same brother tried to choke his father to death and was charged with aggravated domestic assault, although he eventually pleaded guilty to a lesser crime.

 

By the time Ms. Loomer was 12, her mother had ceased playing a meaningful role in her life. Eventually a state court awarded full custody to her father, Jeffrey, a rheumatologist. In an interview, Dr. Loomer said that he saw only one solution to maintaining peace in the household, which was to keep the violent child under his watch while sending his daughter and youngest son off to boarding school.

 

“If anybody is a victim, it’s me,” Ms. Loomer said of her upbringing. She spoke of binge-eating and suffering severe anxiety and depression throughout her adolescence, as well as feeling ignored. “I was subjected to a lot of adversities that a lot of other people would not have been able to overcome, and I’m proud of myself for that. I think I did a good job.”

 

At the Orme School, a small racially and ethnically diverse coed institution in Mayer, Ariz., which had an annual tuition of around $38,000 and alumni including Ronald Reagan’s daughter Patti, Ms. Loomer did what she could to fit in. She was manager of the football and rodeo teams and forged a warm friendship with her roommate, who was Black. But according to two of her former classmates, she began openly espousing anti-Islam ideas, insisting that the Quran taught its followers to be terrorists and that Barack Obama, then president, was Muslim.

 

“Laura often expressed extreme views,” one of the classmates, Hasan Barkcin, who was born in Turkey and is Muslim, recalled. “I’d correct her, she’d say, ‘OK, got it,’ and then she’d go back to repeating the same misinformation.”

 

Ms. Loomer said she first started thinking about Islam after the Sept. 11 attacks, when she was 8. She often justifies her attacks on Muslims by invoking her religion: Though she admits she’s not particularly observant, she calls herself a “feisty Jewess” and frequently wears a Star of David pendant around her neck.

 

Her father said he disagrees with her stance on Islam. “I am not opposed to any religion,” Dr. Loomer said in an interview.

 

At Orme, Ms. Loomer expressed the desire to be famous and aspired to be valedictorian, according to another classmate. She came close, but fell short, and was disappointed again when she wasn’t admitted to Dartmouth, a school her father attended.

 

Instead, she spent a semester at Mount Holyoke College and then transferred to Barry University in South Florida, where she majored in broadcast journalism, immersed herself in conservative politics and became the campus president of the College Republicans.

 

Her campus activism drew the attention of James O’Keefe, the founder of the right-wing undercover media group Project Veritas. Mr. O’Keefe hired Ms. Loomer at the beginning of 2015, a few months before she graduated. Her first stunt for the group, in which she infiltrated Black Lives Matter gatherings and recorded people making unflattering comments about the Rev. Al Sharpton, netted a front-page story in The New York Post.

 

But over time, her anti-Muslim rants began to catch up with her. By 2019, she was banned by every major social media network and even by the car services Uber and Lyft after she posted that “I never want to support another Islamic immigrant driver.” At just 25, Ms. Loomer had lost her megaphone and feared that her media career was over.

 

“It was a massive blow to Laura,” said Shane Cory, a digital fund-raising specialist who assisted Ms. Loomer in amassing online donors to support her activities, which included handcuffing herself to Twitter’s New York City headquarters with a yellow Star of David affixed to her clothes in late 2018.

 

That same year Ms. Loomer relocated to Palm Beach, and in 2019 she prepared a run for Congress. Political neophyte though she was, she proved to be an energetic campaigner and fund-raiser, enough so to win the Republican primary and gain Mr. Trump’s endorsement. Still, she lost by close to 20 points in a deep-blue district in 2020 to the Democratic incumbent, Representative Lois Frankel.

 

She lost again in 2022, this time in the Republican primary in a different district, to the incumbent, Representative Daniel Webster. Mr. Trump had refrained from endorsing anyone in the primary, which Mr. Webster won by nearly seven points. Ms. Loomer claimed fraud and refused to acknowledge defeat. Mr. Webster’s campaign said in a statement that she had “lost all sight of truth and reality.”

 

She emerged from the 2022 contest broke and despondent, but soon found two lifelines. One was the new owner of Twitter, Elon Musk, who began restoring banned accounts, including hers, soon after taking over the company. The second was a deal she struck with Rumble, a right-wing video streaming platform, that paid her $15,000 a month to make content with a Vero Beach, Fla., media company.

 

Repositioning herself as Mr. Trump’s fiercest advocate, she focused on attacking Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida — who figured to be Mr. Trump’s chief rival for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination. Over the next 18 months, her attacks were relentless; she once went so far as to suggest that the breast cancer experienced by Casey DeSantis, the governor’s wife, had “been over exaggerated in a desperate effort to get votes.”

 

In February 2023, Ms. Loomer had just returned from staging a ruckus at a book-signing event for Mr. DeSantis when her cellphone announced that an “unknown caller” was on the line. “Hello Laura, it’s your favorite president,” Mr. Trump said on the other end. “I love what you did today.” It was the first time the former president had called her, and he asked her to come visit him in person.

 

“I was so excited,” Ms. Loomer recalled. Weeks later, she drove to Mar-a-Lago, Mr. Trump’s club in Palm Beach, where Mr. Trump met her, accompanied by Ms. Wiles.

 

The former president encouraged Ms. Loomer to take another shot at Congress. She demurred and said returning Mr. Trump to the White House took precedence. Mr. Trump turned to Ms. Wiles, according to two people with knowledge of the conversation, and said: “Let’s hire her. Let’s put her on the campaign.”

 

Ms. Loomer filled out a W-9 tax form and was told that her start date would be April 1, 2023. But April 1 came and went. The next week, The Times reported that Mr. Trump was considering hiring Ms. Loomer, and by the end of the day, a campaign official announced that the job offer had been withdrawn.

 

“I was so depressed,” Ms. Loomer said. “I cried so much. I locked myself in my apartment for like a month. I lost like 15 pounds.”

 

She has been outside looking in ever since.

 

‘Pleasure in Humiliating People’

This March, Sergio Gor, the White House’s director of personnel, called Ms. Loomer and asked her to pay a visit. Ms. Loomer was delighted. From her perspective, this could mean only one thing: that she was finally about to be offered a White House job. She booked a flight to Washington and met in Mr. Gor’s office adjacent to the White House. To her chagrin, Mr. Gor wanted only to engage in small talk.

 

Sitting in her hotel room, fuming, Ms. Loomer began digging into Mr. Wong’s background, combing through websites looking for signs of disloyalty. Her best work, she said, comes “in the aftermath of when I’ve been disrespected.”

 

She then set her sights on two holdovers from the Biden administration, Gen. Timothy D. Haugh, the director of the National Security Agency and U.S. Cyber Command, and his deputy, Wendy Noble. Both were fired after her Oval Office meeting with Mr. Trump in early April.

 

Weeks later, the White House withdrew the nomination of Janette Nesheiwat, the sister-in-law of Mr. Waltz, for surgeon general after Ms. Loomer savaged her on social media as “not ideologically aligned” with Mr. Trump.

 

It is hard to say how decisive a role Ms. Loomer played in these personnel decisions. Asked to put a number on the job casualties — which she calls “scalps” — that she could take credit for, Ms. Loomer replied, “I don’t even know.”

 

But she added: “I really enjoy and take great pleasure in humiliating people who suck at their job.”

 

Mr. Trump publicly denied that she had influenced his decision to fire the National Security Council aides, and White House officials have suggested that Ms. Loomer has tended to claim credit for work done quietly in the administration. But some close allies of the president believe that there are those in the government who have furtively supplied Ms. Loomer with information so she can do their dirty work of publicly disparaging certain personnel for them.

 

Ms. Loomer spends at least 14 hours every day on her phone, scrolling through X, reading hundreds of incoming text messages, taking phone calls and pounding out lengthy posts.

 

While researching a prospective appointee or a perceived adversary of Mr. Trump, she relies on basic online tools, including Google, LinkedIn, Instagram and the Federal Election Commission website. In her quest to find damning information, she will often focus on the subject’s spouse and their children.

 

For example, she seized on the background of the wife of Stanley Woodward, who has defended allies of Mr. Trump in court and is awaiting Senate confirmation to be associate attorney general. Ms. Loomer determined that Mr. Woodward’s wife, Kristin McGough Woodward, was a lawyer who supported the Black Lives Matter movement.

 

“In any revolution, you do have a purity police,” Mr. Bannon said.

 

But Ms. Loomer’s influence has limits. Mr. Woodward is still on track for confirmation despite Ms. Loomer’s protestations. She has not succeeded in dislodging Morgan Ortagus, the deputy U.S. special envoy to the Middle East, whom Ms. Loomer has personally disliked for years and has described as being “all about self enrichment” and “AMERICA LAST.”

 

Stefanie Spear, the deputy chief of staff to Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has been accused by Ms. Loomer of being a “Marxist” but she remains in her job. For that matter, Ms. Loomer said that she finds Mr. Kennedy to be “a very problematic person” who “is running a shadow presidential campaign” from his office. But Mr. Kennedy’s job seems safe for the moment, as does that of Attorney General Pam Bondi, whom Ms. Loomer derisively refers to as “Pam Blondi.”

 

On Monday evening, Ms. Loomer posted on X that Ms. Bondi needed to resign for not delivering promised new information about the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein.

 

Today Ms. Loomer derives her living from the attention economy, gaining paying subscribers on X as well as donors from everyday provocations. On a hot Thursday last month on Capitol Hill, she and her employee Charles Downs accosted several members of Congress, shooting video as they asked them whether they would support designating the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist organization. Two House Democrats, Representatives Maxine Waters of California and Daniel Goldman of New York, did what they could to ignore her. A third, Representative Ted Lieu of California, said that he would have to do some reading on the matter.

 

Ms. Loomer separately tasked Mr. Downs with lying in wait outside a House committee hearing room for Ms. Omar, a holding pattern that consumed more than three hours until the congresswoman finally materialized in the corridor. To Mr. Downs’s repeated question about the Muslim Brotherhood, she responded, “Enjoy your clicks, have a nice day!”

 

Even many Republicans Ms. Loomer approached, like Representatives Mary Miller of Illinois and Andy Ogles of Tennessee, regarded her tentatively, as if she might just bite. She received a warmer welcome from Representative Nancy Mace of South Carolina. Ms. Loomer entered Ms. Mace’s office with a beagle named Oliver rescued from a military testing laboratory to accentuate her recent success in persuading the Navy to halt such testing on dogs and cats.

 

“You’d be a hero,” Ms. Loomer said, urging Ms. Mace to lead Congress in designating the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization. Ms. Mace pledged to do so. Later, Ms. Loomer said that she and Ms. Mace “have a mutual hatred of Marjorie,” referring to another close female ally of the president, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia.

It has not escaped Ms. Loomer’s notice that many of her peers in the MAGA ecosystem have become rich. Recently, in hopes of improving her financial fortunes, she started a consulting business, Loomered Strategies, with a business partner in New York State.

 

“I’m kind of like pivoting,” she said. “I do journalism, but also I’m now going to be doing a lot of advising in terms of opposition research, executive-level vetting and advocacy.” She says that she has five clients and that overall her activities earn a gross income of about $300,000.

 

Even when working with clients, Ms. Loomer remains mindful of her primary audience. A rare slip came in May, when her anti-Islam impulses led her to criticize the Trump administration for accepting a luxury 747 from the Qatari government, which she labeled “jihadists in suits.”

 

Mr. Trump called her the next day from Air Force One en route to Saudi Arabia and, according to several people with knowledge of the exchange, conveyed his deep displeasure with her. She apologized in a lengthy post on X in which she also reminded others of her special access to the president: “I know I could have probably just had a private conversation about the plane instead.”

 

Ms. Loomer said that she has had at least four conversations with Mr. Trump since that time and is confident that their relationship is as strong as ever, despite continuing efforts by some White House aides to marginalize her. She is less sanguine about what lies ahead.

 

“I feel like Western civilization is in a death spiral,” she said, likening Mr. Trump with the lone source of light in an otherwise dark world. “Eventually, a candle burns out. But it’s a slow burn.”

 

And once that dim source of optimism was snuffed out? “I don’t know what my life is going to look like when President Trump is out of office,” she said.

 

Robert Draper is based in Washington and writes about domestic politics. He is the author of several books and has been a journalist for three decades.

Laura Loomer's Plastic Surgery Transformation Is Shocking

Someone Has to Be Happy. Why Not Lauren Sánchez Bezos?




Someone Has to Be Happy. Why Not Lauren Sánchez Bezos?

 

As half of an unfathomably powerful couple, Mrs. Sánchez Bezos seems to have influenced the uber-rich to stop apologizing, and start enjoying themselves.

 

By Amy Chozick

April 11, 2026

 https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/11/business/lauren-sanchez-bezos-jeff-bezos.html?searchResultPosition=3


A lot of things make Lauren Sánchez Bezos ridiculously happy. Helicopters. Fashion. Protecting the narwhal. Her little sister, Elena. Her five best girlfriends. And, of course, her new husband, Jeff Bezos.

 

She and Mr. Bezos do everything together. On a typical day, the newlyweds wake up around 6 in their new, roughly $230 million compound on Indian Creek, an exclusive private island in Miami often called “Billionaire Bunker.” They don’t touch their phones. Instead, they begin each day by listing 10 things they’re grateful for — and they can’t repeat what they named the day before.

 

From there, the couple drink their morning coffee in a sunroom and watch the sun rise: hers from a mug that reads “Woke Up Sexy as Hell Again,” his from one she got him that spells HUNK in symbols from the periodic table. They play pickleball. Six days a week, they work out for an hour with a private trainer. “He looks good, doesn’t he?” Mrs. Sánchez Bezos said of her new husband, in an interview in Miami in January. She slow-nodded, repeating, “He looks good.”

 

By now, it is hard to conjure the version of Mr. Bezos that existed before. Mildly awkward; faintly hermetic in Seattle. The logistical mastermind of two-day shipping. Now, he is gym-hardened, frequently shirtless, captured mid-laugh in paparazzi photos, canoodling on his megayacht, a man who has discovered joy, love and cosmetic dermatology.

 

Mrs. Sánchez Bezos has, in turn, adopted some Jeff-isms, like Amazon corporate rituals — such as requesting memos no more than six-pages long ahead of meetings at the Bezos Earth Fund, where she is the vice chair.

 

The couple is now best thought of as a unit. “I talk about everything with him. Everything! Jeff is my best friend, and I don’t say that lightly,” Mrs. Sánchez Bezos said.

 

Mr. Bezos, the world’s third-richest man, relies on her advice on nearly everything — and vice versa. For instance, in early March, Mrs. Sánchez Bezos published her second children’s book, “The Fly Who Flew Under the Sea,” about Flynn, a dyslexic fly whose wrong turn leads to an undersea adventure. Mr. Bezos edited the book, suggesting a change to the illustrated submarine on the cover. “He said it should be fantastical, not realistic,” Mrs. Sánchez Bezos said. “Sometimes I listen. Sometimes I don’t.” She changed it.

 

I met Mrs. Sánchez Bezos in January at an Argentine restaurant in Miami Beach; a security guard named John arrived first to scope out the place. If Mrs. Sánchez Bezos is alone, she can often blend in, but if Mr. Bezos is on her arm, all hell breaks loose. She had been across the street at a J.P. Morgan leadership conference, where Mr. Bezos had spoken the day before about Project Prometheus, his new artificial intelligence start-up, with $6.2 billion in funding.

 

In person, Mrs. Sánchez Bezos is surprisingly tiny, less lacquered than the glossy images that circulate online. She picked out a window booth, and when the hostess said it was reserved, she smiled. “Oh,” she said. “I want to know who’s sitting there.” She tossed her black Birkin bag, adorned with each of her children’s names and a Flynn the Fly keychain, on another corner table and asked the server his name. (“That’s Luciano,” she said to me. “He’s from Argentina.”) When somebody suddenly turned the music up, Mrs. Sánchez Bezos shimmied and joked: “Want me to dance on the table? That gets a lot of attention.”

 

You would think that marrying into obscene wealth would transform a person, but in this case, Mrs. Sánchez Bezos appears less changed than her husband; the world has long been her Everything Store. Even before she married Mr. Bezos, whose net worth is estimated to be roughly $250 billion, Mrs. Sánchez Bezos liked to think she was 20 percent happier than the average person. Even when she was 18, crashing in a cousin’s garage in Carson, Calif., after she hadn’t gotten her dream job as a Southwest Airlines flight attendant because she was a few pounds over the weight limit, she was still basically happy.

 

“If baseline is here,” Mrs. Sánchez Bezos said, holding her hand about chest height, “I’m up here,” with her other hand above her head.

 

The couple had recently returned from Seattle, where Mr. Bezos celebrated his 62nd birthday by making pancakes for all of their seven children from previous marriages. Mrs. Sánchez Bezos, 56, adores kids. Having them. Raising them. Encouraging other people to have them. Over several interviews, she repeatedly urged me to have another baby. “Do it!” she said. “I would have another one tomorrow. Tomorrow.” I finally asked if she and Mr. Bezos were considering it, as a couple of her friends had suggested to me. “I would have a baby tomorrow,” she repeated, with a coy smile. (A spokeswoman later called to say Mrs. Sánchez Bezos was not having a baby.)

 

But honestly, why not? Mrs. Sánchez Bezos has shown that with the right attitude and mind-boggling wealth, anything is possible. Space travel. The Met Gala. Fertility after 50.

 

Her happiness is infectious, undeniable, world-historical. Mrs. Sánchez Bezos treats the pursuit — and spreading — of joy as a kind of mandate. But when one of the world’s wealthiest people radiates this much happiness, is it celebration, or provocation? Is she just rubbing it in?

 

There’s a perception that Mrs. Sánchez Bezos started rolling with the A-list only after marrying Mr. Bezos, but it’s actually the other way around. Back when Mr. Bezos’ connection to Hollywood largely consisted of his deep involvement with adapting the theological nuances of Middle-earth into a billion-dollar television version of J.R.R. Tolkien’s novel “The Lord of the Rings,” Mrs. Sánchez Bezos was already known in Los Angeles as a networker. A modern-day Brentwood Country Mart Babe Paley who counts Kris Jenner, Katy Perry, Leonardo DiCaprio and Lydia Kives, wife of the superconnector Michael Kives, among her close friends.

 

“People act like he’s my new friend,” Mrs. Sánchez Bezos said of Mr. DiCaprio. “No, I’ve known Leo since I was 25. Twenty-five.”

 

In June, Mr. Bezos and Mrs. Sánchez Bezos wed in a lavish three-day bacchanal in Venice. The weekend included a prewedding foam party on Mr. Bezos’ superyacht and water taxis that ferried 200 guests — including Sydney Sweeney, Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump, Queen Rania of Jordan, and five members of the Kardashian-Jenner family — across the Venetian lagoon to watch the couple exchange vows on San Giorgio Maggiore. To some, it was a tone-deaf display of staggering wealth at a time of historic inequality.

 

Mrs. Sánchez Bezos gets choked up talking about what the public didn’t see: the toasts by all their children; the high school friends of Mr. Bezos’ whom nobody bothered to photograph. Phones were banned from the ceremony and reception. But “no NDAs!” Mrs. Sánchez Bezos said, referring to nondisclosure agreements. “They’re our friends! And you did not see one picture come out of that wedding.”

 

This is a frequent lament from her: that people don’t see the couple’s actual life. “What you see is 5 percent of my life,” Mrs. Sánchez Bezos said. (At The New York Times’s 2024 DealBook Summit, Mr. Bezos said he “gave up on being well understood a long time ago.”)

 

Hours after she said “I do,” Mrs. Sánchez Bezos wiped her entire Instagram account. “I did a whole reset,” she said. “You’re still yourself, but you are different.” A stream of bikini selfies and bachelorette shots was replaced by a single photo of herself in a demure lace wedding gown with a traditional veil. Would marrying into extreme wealth at a moment of rage over inequality chasten Mrs. Sánchez Bezos? Would she embrace cashmere and the muted wardrobe of quiet luxury? Retreat into the refined, semi-reclusive existence of the uber-rich, where foam is on an amuse-bouche, not Sydney Sweeney?

 

After all, for decades, there was an unspoken bargain with America’s ultra-moneyed. They could enjoy unimaginable privilege as long as they projected austerity or stayed largely out of the limelight. Warren Buffett in a modest home in Omaha. Mark Zuckerberg in hoodies and an Acura. They mostly left the conspicuous displays of the good life — over-the-top birthday parties, flashy cars, cosmetic enhancements — to celebrities and reality-TV stars.

 

But Mrs. Sánchez Bezos is nothing if not a woman intent on sampling the full menu. She hasn’t just changed Mr. Bezos into a man who hosts Kris Jenner’s James Bond-themed 70th birthday party at his Los Angeles home: Sometimes it seems she’s taken the entire culture with her.

 

After years defined by financial crisis, pandemic lockdowns and moral earnestness, unabashed rich-person exuberance is back with a Blue Origin bang, a Mar-a-Lago makeover of the White House and a Zuckerberg rap cover. The Bezos’ marriage seems, at times, as much a cultural inflection point as a love story — the moment American money stopped apologizing and decided it might as well enjoy itself.

“They are to quiet luxury what Las Vegas is to the Mormon Church,” said Graydon Carter, the longtime Vanity Fair editor.

 

“They have this symbiotic relationship with the press and their haters,” said Janice Min, the chief executive of Ankler Media, known for its buzzy Hollywood newsletter, and a former editor of Us Weekly. “The haters feed them, and it feels like the more outrage they create, the more they double down.”

 

From the outset, the couple have embraced spectacle. When The National Enquirer dropped an 11-page, salacious exposé of their affair in 2019, Mr. Bezos didn’t hide behind legalese. He came out slugging, accusing the tabloid’s parent company of political motives and arguing that his ownership of The Washington Post, with its “Democracy Dies in Darkness” posture during President Trump’s first term, had made him a target.

 

Today, the talk is less about Mr. Bezos’ adversarial relationship with Mr. Trump and more about his supposedly cozy one. After years of hostility — much of it tied to Mr. Trump’s attacks on The Post — the temperature between the two men has cooled. Mr. Bezos personally intervened to stop a planned endorsement of Kamala Harris by the paper, according to newsroom employees. (He argued in a note to readers that “presidential endorsements do nothing to tip the scales of an election,” and “create a perception of bias.”) He then attended Mr. Trump’s inauguration last year, seated front and center. Amazon paid roughly $40 million to license “Melania,” a documentary about the first lady — a move that some critics saw as an attempt to curry favor with President Trump.

 

The détente comes as Democrats have aggressively targeted Amazon’s market power, and other tech titans have embraced the Trump presidency. Mr. Bezos’ former wife, MacKenzie Scott, has given much of her fortune to liberal causes, but he has long held broadly libertarian views. Lately, he seems more comfortable expressing them. Last year, Mr. Bezos instructed The Post’s opinion pages to advocate “personal liberties and free markets.”

 

 

When she was married to the Hollywood agent Patrick Whitesell, Mrs. Sánchez Bezos attended President Barack Obama’s first inauguration, and she gave money to Democratic candidates, including Ms. Harris in 2019 and Senator Cory Booker in 2018, according to OpenSecrets, a group that tracks political spending. When I asked her opinion of Mr. Trump, Mrs. Sánchez Bezos, who is breezy and agile at pivoting back to the fun topics, waved me off. “I am not talking politics,” she said. “No, no, no, no, no. No way.”

 

People close to Mrs. Sánchez Bezos often argue that it’s not fair to criticize her for her husband’s political and business decisions. The frequent refrain is, “What does that have to do with Lauren?” But that is the downside to being a conjoined organism to a master of the universe: It all has to do with you.

 

In January, the couple made the couture rounds in Paris. Mrs. Sánchez Bezos was dripping in vintage Dior with fur and diamonds. She stepped out of a chauffeured Mercedes in a blood-red Schiaparelli skirt suit alongside Anna Wintour. The trip happened to coincide with an announcement that Amazon planned to lay off 16,000 employees. It was a juxtaposition that some TikTok users compared to “The Hunger Games.” (Mr. Bezos stepped down as chief executive of Amazon in 2021, though he remains executive chairman and its largest individual shareholder.)

 

A few weeks later, The Post, which Mr. Bezos bought in 2013, laid off about a third of its newsroom. Senators Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders — and seemingly every journalist with a social media account — criticized Mr. Bezos’ ownership, accusing him of gutting the paper that broke the Watergate scandal. Chuck Todd, the former NBC host, said Mr. Bezos was “leaning into the evil, rich-guy stereotype.” Many saw the move as a deliberate effort to appease Mr. Trump. And Mrs. Sánchez Bezos was considered to be complicit. During Paris Fashion Week, Blakely Neiman Thornton, an internet personality and fashion critic, called Mrs. Sánchez Bezos “capitalism’s concubine” in a post.

 

The constant criticism wears on her, Mrs. Sánchez Bezos said. “I can never imagine writing something mean on somebody’s Instagram,” she added. “It would actually break my heart. I want positive: You look great. You’re amazing. I want to just give everyone flowers. Why wouldn’t you?” Recently, her eldest son, Nikko, whom she shares with the former National Football League tight end Tony Gonzalez, installed an app on her phone to block her from using social media during the day.

 

When I asked about the layoffs at The Post — the union implored its members to tag Mrs. Sánchez Bezos in a social media campaign protesting newsroom cuts — she turned cautious again. “I was a journalist, and I know how important journalism is,” she said. “But I don’t make those business decisions, so I really can’t answer them.”

 

Several friends of the couple told me the same thing: If they had been married back then, Mr. Bezos never would have bought a newspaper. He would have bought an N.F.L. team. Like a normal billionaire.

 

If Kate Middleton Were a Kardashian

Another day in January, I met Mrs. Sánchez Bezos at the Santa Monica Airport in California, near where she keeps a sleek, black Bell 429 helicopter. If there’s one thing she wants people to know, it’s that she is a helicopter pilot, a rarity in the notoriously male-dominated industry. She and Mr. Bezos first fell in love when she flew him around in a helicopter like this one. “I feel most myself in the air,” Mrs. Sánchez Bezos said. “It’s like controlled excitement.” (It’s also a bit of a press strategy for her: She took a Vogue reporter on a trip like this one, too.)

 

The daughter of middle-class Mexican American parents in Albuquerque, Mrs. Sánchez Bezos always exhibited a driven, buzzing restlessness, which she now chalks up in part to her A.D.H.D. diagnosis. When the Southwest Airlines flight attendant dream died, she pivoted to broadcast journalism. “People are like, oh, what has she ever done,” she said. “And it’s like, oh, my gosh, I’ve had an entire career that I was super proud of.”

 

As a co-anchor on “Good Day L.A.,” Mrs. Sánchez Bezos went skydiving on camera. At “Extra,” she interviewed Cher and Bill Clinton. She hosted the first season of “So You Think You Can Dance” and auditioned twice to co-host “The View,” but didn’t get the job. (“That was rough, by the way,” she said.)

 

In 2005, Mrs. Sánchez Bezos married Mr. Whitesell, previously the executive chairman of Endeavor, the sports and entertainment conglomerate. He’s something like the Tom Brady of Hollywood agents, with a client list that has included Ben Affleck, Matt Damon and Hugh Jackman.

 

In 2012, at 42, she got the itch to fly, and later founded Black Ops Aviation, an aerial production company. Friends say Mrs. Sánchez Bezos has always been savvy about her image. She would urge the tabloids to cover her red-carpet appearances, deftly turn on the charm for the paparazzi and reach out to trade reporters to write about her helicopter production company.

 

The day we met, the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association asked her to speak to a group of mostly Black and Latino high school students interested in careers in aviation. She arrived in an S.U.V. with a small entourage, glammed down in a ponytail, a brown leather bomber jacket and aviator sunglasses.

 

When she works these nonprofit events, it’s a little like if Kate Middleton were a Kardashian. She’s a big hugger, pulling teenagers in to ask their names and what they’re studying. A pilot handed her a book he wrote, adding, “It’s available on Amazon.” She held it up for the cameras. “Got to support the family business!” she said.

 

It was an overcast day, but Mrs. Sánchez Bezos was optimistic. “The clouds aren’t that dense! We can cut right through them!” she said, settling into the buttery leather pilot’s seat. She banked past the Hollywood sign and over verdant hills dotted with mansions and tennis courts. “That’s Beverly Hills,” she said. “Would you look at those homes!”

 

In May, Mr. Bezos and Mrs. Sánchez Bezos will serve as honorary chairs of the Met Gala. Amazon sponsored the event in 2012, and the couple attended it in 2024. But serving as lead sponsors is a different animal, essentially anointing them fashion royalty. The announcement of the sponsorship was met with abject horror by fashion industry insiders, who said the couple had “hijacked” the gala.

 

Mrs. Sánchez Bezos told me that Ms. Wintour had reached out directly to ask if the couple would back the fund-raiser. “Anna called me, and I was like, ‘Anna who?’” Mrs. Sánchez Bezos joked, then called it “such an honor.”

 

Ms. Wintour said the gala this year required a high-octane chair. “Lauren is a force,” she wrote in an email. “The Costume Institute’s exhibition this year is an enormous, complicated project in a new gallery at the heart of the museum, and I thought the gala needed that energy.” (When I asked Mrs. Sánchez Bezos about rumors that she and her husband were buying Vogue’s parent company, Condé Nast, she teased, “I wish!” She then said, “No.”)

 

Mrs. Sánchez Bezos has appeared in Vogue twice, including a cover spread on her wedding, and she recently enlisted stylist-to-the-stars Law Roach to help her with her image in advance of the Met Gala. Ms. Wintour was once famously averse to featuring large-busted women in the magazine, I pointed out. Mrs. Sánchez Bezos shrugged. “Maybe she likes them now,” she said.

 

A lot of the snark about her appearance and her clothes feels rooted in racial stereotypes, she argued. “It’s the shape of my body,” she said. “Is someone going to give me a gunnysack and ask me to put a belt on it and cinch it? I’m Latin. I’m Latin. I’m Latin.”

 

That’s not to say she isn’t aware of the backlash to her look. Mrs. Sánchez Bezos thought she had dressed conservatively for Mr. Trump’s second inauguration, in a white Alexander McQueen pantsuit. “I was super proud of myself,” she said. When the event suddenly moved indoors, she removed her coat. The blazer opened, revealing a lace bra. Since they were seated directly behind Mr. Trump, the bra was in pretty much every photo of the event. “I get it,” she said. “No lace at the White House. Noted.”

 

Can Happiness Scale?

In September, Mrs. Sánchez Bezos headed to the Winthrop STEM Elementary Magnet School in New London, Conn. She had just signed on as a “literacy ambassador” for Scholastic and would be reading to kindergartners from her first book, “The Fly Who Flew to Space,” about Flynn, the dyslexic fly. The book is in some ways autobiographical. Mrs. Sánchez Bezos struggled in school and always thought she was dumb, until a college teacher recognized that she had dyslexia. “I grew up literally thinking I was the stupidest person on the planet,” she told me. “I got kicked off the cheerleading squad because I couldn’t even keep a 2.0 G.P.A. Who can’t keep a 2.0?”

 

“I was one bad decision away from something really bad, a bad life,” she said. (She’s joked with friends that she could’ve wound up a stripper.) It wasn’t until she met Mr. Bezos that she truly felt intelligent. “He literally tells me all the time, ‘You’re one of the smartest women I know,’” she said.

 

Today, she reads technical papers about the cost of nuclear and geothermal power as part of her work at the Bezos Earth Fund. “She wants to have an opinion and speak about these things intelligently,” said Tom Taylor, chief executive of the fund and a longtime Amazon executive who is close to Mr. Bezos.

 

Last year, Mr. Bezos tapped Mr. Taylor, who ran the Alexa division at Amazon, to lead the fund, which operates less like a traditional nonprofit than an extension of Mr. Bezos’ worldview: that invention and technological progress can often lift more people than simply cutting a check. In addition to more traditional climate initiatives, it is investing in satellite systems to detect wildfires, deploying A.I. tools to Indigenous tribes for reforestation and to Alaskan fishermen to monitor illegal fishing. Mrs. Sánchez Bezos recently visited a remote island off Costa Rica to meet rangers who work to protect hammerhead sharks and sea turtles.

 

The nonprofit has so far distributed at least $2.4 billion in grants, making Mr. Bezos “among the biggest climate philanthropists around,” said David Callahan, author of “The Givers: Wealth, Power, and Philanthropy in a New Gilded Age.”

 

And yet, he added, Mr. Bezos’ charitable work lags compared with his tiny cadre of peers. “He’s a big philanthropist, just not relative to his fortune.”

 

And he is frequently compared with his former wife, Ms. Scott, who has upended traditional philanthropy, giving away roughly $26 billion of her fortune, quietly and with few conditions.

 

Ms. Scott seems to be following in the grand tradition of the American uber-rich who burnished their reputations via noblesse oblige, established in our last Gilded Age of Carnegies and Rockefellers. Their descendants have continued the mission.

 

Mr. Bezos and Mrs. Sánchez Bezos can seem more allied with the rising class of billionaires who, frustrated with the glacial pace of nonprofits, want to improve the world with privately funded ventures, like their space company or their A.I. explorations. “So, 10,000 years ago, or whenever it was, somebody invented the plow, and we all got richer,” Mr. Bezos said at a tech conference last year.

 

In a joint interview with Mrs. Sánchez Bezos in November 2022, Mr. Bezos said he would give away a majority of his then-roughly $124 billion fortune. Today, he has more than double that amount. Mrs. Sánchez Bezos would like to expand the couple’s footprint, but emphasized a deliberate approach. “Philanthropy is a job,” she said. “You have to vet everyone, make sure the money is being used in the right way.”

 

The couple’s charitable giving has been closely linked to their social and celebrity ties. This summer, Mrs. Sánchez Bezos, with the Earth Fund, and Mr. DiCaprio’s Re:wild organization will announce a joint commitment to save species near extinction. In 2021, Mr. Bezos and Mrs. Sánchez Bezos started the Bezos Courage and Civility Award, giving José Andrés, Dolly Parton and Van Jones each $100 million to grant to charities and nonprofits of their choosing. Later, Mrs. Sánchez Bezos’ longtime friend Eva Longoria was given $50 million for similar work. More recently, smaller, targeted grants have included $5 million to Jonathan Haidt, the social psychologist and prominent critic of social media’s effect on young people.

 

“With that kind of money, you can’t just sprinkle it around at galas,” said Mr. Callahan, who also edits Inside Philanthropy.

 

This tension may be at the heart of what unsettles some of Mrs. Sánchez Bezos’ critics. Fairly or not, she’s often compared with Ms. Scott — bookish, private and almost defiantly out of the spotlight. Whereas Mrs. Sánchez Bezos embraces philanthropy, but also the pleasure that comes with wealth — the visibility, the proximity to power, the fashion, the fun.

 

She is fluent in fame. But power is a whole other language, especially as one half of a couple whose reach rivals that of a nation-state. She wants to spread happiness into every room she enters, but happiness can’t scale. Happiness can’t pay the rent.

 

Back at the elementary school in Connecticut, Mrs. Sánchez Bezos told the students about going to space on Mr. Bezos’ private Blue Origin rocket. “I went to space with Katy Perry,” she said. “Yes! How fun is that? It was like a girls’ trip to space.” The flight was widely mocked as a “boondoggle,” an emblem of late-stage “end times” excess.

 

Mrs. Sánchez Bezos, however, does not traffic in cynicism. “It was the coolest thing ever,” she told the students. A little boy raised his hand to ask if she’s ever been to another planet.

 

“No,” Mrs. Sánchez Bezos replied. “Sometimes it feels like I’m on another planet — but no.”

June 14, 2025: A Dream Wedding for Jeff Bezos in Venice? No Way, Locals Say

 



A Dream Wedding for Jeff Bezos in Venice? No Way, Locals Say

 

The lavish nuptials, scheduled for this month, have raised the hackles of some residents exasperated by their city becoming a playground for the rich.

 


Elisabetta Povoledo

By Elisabetta Povoledo

Reporting from Venice

June 14, 2025

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/14/world/europe/venice-bezos-sanchez-wedding-amazon.html

 

If a bunch of irate Venetians have their way, the star-studded dream wedding that Jeff Bezos, the Amazon founder, and his fiancée, Lauren Sánchez, are planning in the ancient city at the end of June could be a nightmare.

 

On Friday evening, representatives of various citizens groups gathered in a square near Rialto Bridge and vowed to organize a series of protests on June 26, 27 and 28, when hundreds of guests are expected to descend on the lagoon city for the lavish nuptials of Mr. Bezos and Ms. Sánchez, a journalist.

 

Though details of the festivities have been wrapped in secrecy, “we have our moles,” said Federica Toninello, a protest organizer, revealing that one of the venues could be the The Misericordia, a former charity turned events hall. “Bezos will never get to the Misericordia,” she vowed, urging the roughly 300 people present to take a stand. “We will line the streets with our bodies, block the canals with lifesavers, dinghies and our boats,” she said to loud applause.

 

She spoke under a large banner that read: “No Space [an image of a spaceship] For Bezos,” playing on his ownership of Blue Origin, the spaceflight venture. “We have to block Bezos, we have to block this idea of this city” as a tourist haven that has driven up housing costs so that most ordinary Venetians can no longer afford to live here, she said.

 

Representatives for Mr. Bezos and Ms. Sánchez did not respond to a request for comment.

 

Their wedding coincides with peak season in Venice, as tens of thousands of visitors arrive in the city daily, prompting City Hall to impose a controversial entry fee on weekends and holidays. Protesters said they were also concerned that the logistics of the wedding, including security for some top-tier guests, will further disrupt the life of Venice’s dwindling resident population.

 

The guest list is not public, but Vogue reported that it could include Katy Perry, some of the Kardashians and Eva Longoria, all friends of the bride-to-be. And TMZ reported that Oprah Winfrey and Gayle King had been invited.

 

Reported estimates of what the wedding might cost range from as low as 10 million euros to as high as $21.5 million. Part of that cost involves taking a fleet of water taxis out of circulation.

 

One taxi driver who will be involved in transporting guests for the wedding said he had been booked to be on call from June 25 to June 30.

 

City hall officials said that only 30 of the city’s 280 water taxis had been booked, and that as Venice was accustomed to hosting major events, citizens would not be inconvenienced. More than 600 couples marry each year in Venice, “recognized as a city of love on an international level,” and this was just one wedding more, the statement said.

 

Some Venetians think it’s one wedding too many. On Thursday, activists unfurled a large banner with a bold red X over Mr. Bezos’ name from the steeple of the Church of San Giorgio Maggiore, on an island that will be another of the Bezos-Sánchez wedding venues.

 

“Let’s make sure that Venice is not remembered as a postcard venue where Bezos had his wedding but as the city that did not bend to oligarchs,” said Na Haby Stella Faye, another protester. “We have a chance to disrupt a ten million dollar wedding — let’s do it.”

 

Elisabetta Povoledo is a Times reporter based in Rome, covering Italy, the Vatican and the culture of the region. She has been a journalist for 35 years.

June 25, 2025: The Bezos-Sánchez Wedding and the Triumph of Tacky

 



Opinion

Guest Essay

The Bezos-Sánchez Wedding and the Triumph of Tacky

 

June 25, 2025

By Amy Odell

Ms. Odell is the author of “Anna: The Biography.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/25/opinion/jeff-bezos-lauren-sanchez-wedding.html?searchResultPosition=5

 

Some of the world’s richest people are gathering for the wedding of Jeff Bezos, the world’s third-richest man, in one of the world’s most touristy cities, Venice, and it’s easy to ask: What happened to understatement and restraint? In the run-up to the wedding, Mr. Bezos was photographed by paparazzi on the deck of his yacht with his intended, Lauren Sánchez, both in their swimsuits, frolicking in foam like a couple of college kids on spring break. Meanwhile, missiles and bombs have been falling just a few time zones away.

 

Not so long ago, members of high society were fixated on trying to low-key their way out of the perils of income inequality. Minimalism and quiet luxury were in vogue. But in the wake of President Trump’s second election, it’s the luxe life at full volume. He gilded the White House, turning it into a rococo Liberace lair. Swaggy and braggy have replaced stealth wealth. Flaunting it is in. For women, that means sequins, diamonds, tight silhouettes and big hair. TikTok’s latest star, Becca Bloom, has drawn millions of fans by regularly sharing videos of her lavish jewelry and Hermès shopping hauls. Even the bandage dress is trending again. The breast implant business just keeps getting bigger and is expected to reach $4.6 billion by 2030, up from nearly $3 billion in 2024.

 

For men, it means a hypermasculine look: muscles and slicked-back hair; tight, tailored suits with big Windsor knots.

 

And now there are the Bezos-Sánchez nuptials, the most internationally notable ruling-class wedding since the Ambani-Merchant union last year in India. It’s already drawn protesters determined to make Venice the city “that did not bend to oligarchs.” (The couple had to move their main reception to a new location to avoid activists who threatened to fill the canals with inflatable crocodiles.) Since news of Mr. Bezos and Ms. Sánchez’s relationship broke in a tabloid scandal in early 2019, Ms. Sánchez has become an object of public fascination, her every movement parsed by tabloids and gossipmongers. With this much attention, she’s become one of the most visible women on (or off, as it may be) the planet, and therefore a significant fashion influencer.

 

Her fiancé, who shed his nerdy image and baggy office clothes for a personal-trained body, tight polo shirts and aviators, has already been anointed an unlikely style icon. Like the MAGA bros who favor traditional suiting and clean-shaven faces, his athleisure emphasizes his power, not cutting-edge fashion sense.

 

Ms. Sánchez, too, dresses to emphasize her clout. She’s long preferred belts with noticeable-from-a-distance hardware, embellished dresses, stiletto heels, low-cut necklines, high-cut hemlines and big jewelry. Her engagement ring is thought to be in the vicinity of 30 carats and to have cost somewhere between $3 million and $5 million, but it was easily dwarfed by the diamond-encrusted choker she wore to a gala in Cannes recently, with a stone that looked to be the size of a bike reflector. There was nothing low-key about her recent flaunty Paris bachelorette party, which was attended by stars such as Kim Kardashian and Kris Jenner, and included a visit to the Hermès store with executives from the brand.

 

The luxury industry — which faces its first slowdown in 15 years, according to a recent study — has economic interest in embracing Ms. Sánchez, who represents the wealthy Very Important Clients who make up 2 percent of luxury customers and 40 percent of sales. “The customer driving global luxury is quite tacky in a lot of cases, and no one really admits it,” an unnamed fashion investor told The Cut for a 2024 article about this crucial group of shoppers. V.I.C.s are always looking for a reason to get decked out in their designer finest, social norms and sensitivities be damned, and Ms. Sánchez seems to embody the idea that if you’re rich enough, you may as well.

 

What has fascinated the public about Ms. Sánchez, like any number of women who personify a certain period, is how she puts herself together. Seemingly unafraid to flout sartorial norms, she attended a state dinner at the White House in 2024 wearing a gown with a sheer lace corseted bodice, causing People to wonder if the dress broke “White House protocol.” She later attended Mr. Trump’s inauguration with what looked like lingerie peeking out of her white blazer, leaving a Vogue headline to note that she “forgoes inauguration style codes.” She never conformed to the look of oversize minimalism popularized in the 2010s by the designer Phoebe Philo for Céline, still revered by elite crowds who live in places like Manhattan and Montecito, Calif., and fancy themselves practitioners of good taste.

 

Ms. Sánchez’s journey from the tabloids to the pages of Vogue, which did a splashy feature on her in its December 2023 issue, has fascinated and repelled onlookers, the same way Ms. Kardashian’s entree to the magazine — and therefore to the fashion world — did when she landed on its cover for the first time in April 2014, pegged to her marriage to Kanye West. Ms. Kardashian had been a tabloid star for many years, but until that point, Vogue hadn’t been featuring her much.

 

After the cover dropped, people threatened to cancel their subscriptions. But it was a provocation worth making, Vogue’s editor in chief, Anna Wintour, later said. “I was told that it was trashy, that it was beneath us, what was Vogue coming to?” she recalled. “We were trying to respond to what we saw — a couple being [an] undeniable force in our culture, and they were part of the conversation at that time.” The same could be said about Ms. Sánchez and Mr. Bezos now. Unsurprisingly, Vogue has reportedly been talking with the couple about an exclusive.

 

Ms. Sánchez brings to mind another unlikely Vogue subject: Ivana Trump. Ms. Wintour gave her a cover in 1990, shortly before her divorce from Mr. Trump, after worrying, as I reported in a biography of Ms. Wintour, that she was “too tacky.” Around the time the cover came out, Ms. Trump was criticized for “dressing like a Christmas tree.” The issue’s newsstand sales of 750,000 copies easily justified Ms. Wintour’s decision.

 

As much as those with more understated taste might turn up their noses at the crassness of the Bezos-Sánchez wedding’s display, tacky is very clearly carrying the day. Maybe hating on tacky oligarchs is itself just elitist. It’s doubtful anyone attending the wedding cares very much what those of us who weren’t invited think, anyway.