Jeff Bezos's Wedding Invite: A Billionaire Dream Dressed in Eco-Friendly Delights

It’s being billed as the wedding of the decade, a spectacle of wealth and power set against the romantic backdrop of Venice. The union of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, 61, and former journalist Lauren Sánchez, 55, this weekend is more than just a party. It’s a coronation for a new kind of royalty. This marriage confirms the reality that tech luminaries now dominate all spheres of social life, flaunting their immense wealth with the glamour once reserved for Hollywood and monarchs.
The Bloomberg Billionaires Index tells the story: eight of the world’s top 10 richest people are tech moguls. This wedding is intended to be the ultimate symbol of that power, an uninhibited tech industry proudly displaying its dominance in a shower of glitter.
The festivities, taking place between June 26 and 28, have drawn around 200 hand-picked VIPs. The guest list is a fusion of new power and old glamour, including Kim Kardashian, Leonardo DiCaprio, Oprah Winfrey, George and Amal Clooney, and Mick Jagger, according to reports. Also spotted arriving were the U.S. President’s daughter Ivanka Trump with her husband Jared Kushner, and Queen Rania of Jordan.
The logistics of the event are as staggering as the guest list. According to Italian daily Il Corriere della Sera, 95 private jets have requested permission to land at Venice’s airport. At least seven mega-yachts will be in attendance, including Bezos’s own superyacht, the Koru, which is already anchored off the island of San Giorgio Maggiore. To ferry these guests, nearly all of the city’s water taxis have been requisitioned.
This overwhelming display has sparked a backlash from locals, who worry the billionaire flotilla will make their city, already struggling with over-tourism, even more uninhabitable. Posters declaring “No space for Bezos” have appeared around the city. Amid the protests and security concerns, the main party was reportedly moved from a 16th-century building to the Venice Arsenale, a medieval complex that is more easily controlled.
For an event of such breathtaking excess, the invitation sent to guests strikes a carefully curated tone of humble philanthropy.
“We are excited for you to join us!” begins the invitation, which was posted on social media. “We have one early request: please, no gifts.”
Here is a copy of Lauren Sanchez and Jeff Bezos' wedding invitation. Thoughts? pic.twitter.com/Za1Rkbc7PZ
— Theresa Longo Fans (@BarkJack_) June 24, 2025
Instead of presents, Bezos and Sánchez informed their guests that they are making contributions in their names to UNESCO’s Venice office “to safeguard this city’s irreplaceable cultural heritage” and to other local associations for environmental research and sustainability. The text reads like a billionaire-era version of noblesse oblige, a subtle way to embed philanthropy into luxury and rebrand Venice itself as their chosen cause.
The card’s design reinforces this soft-focus message. Adorned with delicate illustrations of pastel-colored butterflies, falling stars, and gondolas on the city’s canals, it feels more like a page from a children’s storybook than an invitation to a power-couple wedding. The point seems clear: soften the excess, aestheticize the wealth, and wrap the entire affair in a cloak of transcendence and charity. It’s a PR ballet, a luxury wedding attempting to greenwash itself by inviting guests to feel like they’re part of the solution, not the problem.
In a world where billionaires increasingly shape public narratives, not just through wealth but through weddings, rockets, and even policies, this is a carefully curated spectacle that merges old-world glamour with modern-day branding.
The wedding signals a generational shift in power. Tech billionaires are no longer confined to code and boardrooms. With this wedding, Bezos is planting a flag squarely in the world of glamor, influence, and narrative control.
And while Venice will recover from the weekend’s disruption, the message of the wedding is likely to echo long after the gondolas leave: this is the new elite, and they want to be seen.


