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Truth behind the Bezos lavish Venice wedding

Truth behind the Bezos lavish Venice wedding

News.com.aua day ago

In an arts centre slash club in Venice's least touristy neighbourhood they gather.
A high school teacher. A receptionist from a small hotel. A university researcher. They are here for one reason – to tell one of the richest men in the world where he can shove his superyacht.
In a matter of weeks the grassroots No Space For Bezos campaign, spearheaded by everyday locals, has become a global story and the wedding this weekend of Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez has become a tipping point.
The brewing public anger and antipathy towards tech billionaires has truly boiled over and they have become the bad guys of 2025.
It's not just about Bezos but also Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and Silicon Valley's 0.0001 per cent of the one per cent with their competing rockets that definitely aren't compensating for something.
Not that long ago these men were being hailed as visionaries and hoodie wearing prophets the subject of fawning Time covers but who are now some of the most publicly hated people on earth who don't have their nuclear stockpiles. (Yet.)
The techno-oligarchy? The Bezos wedding has crystallised the global turn against them.
In an increasingly polarised world where we are all segregated in our filter bubbles, there is, shock horror, a very clear trend in sentiment.
74 per cent of Americans disapprove of Zuckerberg and 67 per cent disapprove of Bezos, according to polling commissioned by the Tech Oversight Project this month.
Musk is disliked by 57 per cent of Americans, according to a survey from The Associated Press-NORC Centre for Public Affairs Research at around the same time.
Around the world, the campaigns against them is only growing.
In Marion in South Australia a proposal for a Tesla battery factory saw about 950 people going to the hassle of lodging submissions to try and block it.
Such was the vehemence, the Guardian reported, official records had to be redacted, with the paperwork including comments like 'Elon Musk and Tesla are a [redacted] on humanity', 'Elon Musk is a full blown [redacted],' and 'Elon Musk is a [redacted] human being and a [redacted]!'.
In London, for much of this year, real-looking ads began appearing at bus stops with slogans like 'ELON MUSK IS A BELLEND. Signed, the UK'.
They are the brainchild of a British group called Everybody Hates Elon that grew out of a 'ranty group chat' into such a force the New Yorker recently profiled them. In April, a private donor provided the group with a Tesla and invited the public to smash it. One hundred people turned up.
In New York, in April, the Washington Post reported on an 'anti-billionaire bash' that drew 50 people dressed up as Bezos, Zuckerberg and Sanchez to cheekily voice their antipathy towards this new class of men.
I'll keep going. Across the US, in states from California to Louisiana, to Nebraska, Utah and Texas more than 100,000 people got off their couches to support Senator Bernie Sanders and Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's recent 'Fight Oligarchy' tour.
Hollywood has picked up the anti-tech billionaire theme and is running with it.
One the buzziest movies of the moment is Succession creator Jesse Armstrong's Mountainhead about four tech bros who gather at a remote Utah mansion while an algorithm one of them created triggers global violence and apocalyptic danger.
Even the new Toy Story is joining in, with the baddie of the fifth movie, set to be big tech in the form of a tablet called Lillypad.
What has changed is that Bezos et al are longer seen as, or at least just, bright thinkers giving us exciting new digital toys, but men defined by naked grasping for more sticky billions and unmitigated, unchecked self-entitlement.
Zuckerberg, a man who reportedly used to shout 'domination' at the end of staff meetings, was recently photographed landing in a helicopter on his superyacht and does interviews wearing a $1.3 million watch.
Musk has 14 children and had a go at dismantling Washington because it took his political liking.
Fundamentally, they treat the world and the people in it like their playthings.
Bezos wanted to stage what sounds like a little, wee coup of Venice so he could celebrate his second marriage.
Musk dumped nearly $440 million into Donald Trump's campaign and, many believe, swung the election in the favour of a man with 34 felony convictions and who was found by a New York court in 2022 of having sexually abused writer E. Jean Carroll in the 90s.
In 2018, Facebook admitted the platform had been used to incite violence in Myanmar. The year before, the country's military unleashed a sweeping campaign of massacres, rape, and arson, according to Human Rights Watch.
Zuckerberg, Bezos, Musk and countless other billionaires zip around the planet in carbon emission spewing private jets and have homes, boats, choppers and transport fleets that have to be counted by the dozen.
Basically, they come across as people with absolutely zero regard for what their actions, business and choices might be doing to lesser mortals.
They act like demi-deities.
Now it feels like all of this has boiled over in Venice. It turns out that even hundreds of billions of dollars and your own space force can't guarantee you the wedding of your dreams.
This week, Everyone Hates Elon joined in on the action, banding together with Greenpeace to take over Venice's famed San Marco square with an enormous banner reading 'If you can rent Venice for your wedding, you can pay more tax'.
At the time of writing, the anti-Bezos movement appears to be winning. In a matter of weeks the group of everyday Venetians have forced a man with more money than Midas armed with a tungsten Amex to, at the 11th hour, rip up his plans and move the reception to a far less historic backup venue.
(Think more concrete by the cubic tonne and less Cannaregio-ish.)
This weekend the Bezos-Sanchezes will be forced to toast one another in a building in the city's Arsenale area, full of warehouses, and not the majestic 16th-century Scuola Grande della Misericordia after protesters threatened to block canal access with hundreds of inflatable crocodiles.
'Obscene wealth,' Marta Sottoriva, a 34-year-old Venetian protester told the Guardian, should not 'allow a man to rent a city for three days'.
And 'obscene' is exactly the word. This wedding, by some accounts, will cost $71 million. Sanchez will have 27 outfits, reportedly. More than 90 private jets are currently parked on the runway at the Marco Polo airport. It has been rumoured that the bridegroom has flown in ex-marines to secure the event where 200 guests, including Queen Rania of Jordan, Leonardo DiCaprio and Ivanka Trump, will stay in $16,000-a-night hotel rooms. Kardashians?
They've got two.
All of this in a tiny city where 1000 council homes have been abandoned and are crumbling for lack of funds.
You have to wonder how well the Bezos-Sanchezs have thought about their plans.
Reportedly also on the schedule, a pyjama party, a foam party and a Great Gatsby -theme event.
Things don't turn out too swell for Jay Gatsby, shot dead, the famed novel in part, a take down of the rich.
This year F. Scott Fitzgerald's classic turns 100 and in it he writes of a super wealthy couple who are 'careless people'.
'They smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness … and let other people clean up the mess they had made'.
Maybe Jeff should buy himself the book.

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How did Jeff Bezos become a billionaire?
How did Jeff Bezos become a billionaire?

Herald Sun

time18 hours ago

  • Herald Sun

How did Jeff Bezos become a billionaire?

It's incredible to think that Jeff Bezos started Amazon as an online bookstore from his Seattle garage in 1994. Fast forward three decades later, and the 61-year-old multi-billionaire is the third richest person in the world with a staggering $340 billion in the bank, multiple business interests, philanthropic endeavours and his very own space company, Blue Origin. But how did he become one of the world's most influential people? We take a look at the business of being Mr Jeff Bezos. According to Forbes, as of May 2025, Bezos's estimated net worth stood at $340 billion, making him the third richest person in the world behind Elon Musk ($650 billion) and Mark Zuckerberg ($370 billion). He was the wealthiest person from 2017 to 2021, according to Forbes and the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. AMAZON In 1994, a then 30-year-old Bezos and then wife MacKenzie Scott ditched their Wall Street jobs and moved to Seattle to start an online book business out of their garage. (They devised the company's business plan during the cross country drive from New York to Seattle.) Bezos' fascination with the internet's potential led him to start the company, which he and Scott called Amazon. In just a few years, the company had expanded beyond books and, In the three decades since it began, has changed the face of online shopping, becoming the largest retailer online and became the model for internet sales globally. Bezos stepped down as CEO in 2021, transitioning into the Executive Chairman of Amazon's board, a position he still holds. Bezos reflected on Amazon's success and why he took the risk and left Wall Street for a start-up working out of his garage. 'I wanted to project myself forward to age 80 and say, 'OK, now I'm looking back on my life. I want to have minimised the number of regrets I have,'' he said in an interview. 'I knew that when I was 80, I was not going to regret having tried this. I was not going to regret trying to participate in this thing called the internet, that I thought was going to be a really big deal. I knew that if I failed, I wouldn't regret that. But I knew the one thing I might regret is not ever having tried.' REAL ESTATE Bezos loves his very lavish homes, building up a diverse property portfolio with properties across the US. (Incredibly, a recent report listed him as the 23rd largest landowner in America, owning a staggering 420,000 acres.) As for those homes, Bezos owns a luxurious estate in Beverly Hills. He purchased the 10-acre property from David Geffen for $250 million in 2020, setting a record for the most expensive residential real estate transaction in Los Angeles at the time. The estate, built in the 1930s, is a symbol of Hollywood's Golden Age and was originally owned by Jack L. Warner, co-founder of Warner Bros. When he's in New York, he can take his pick of three apartment penthouses (totalling $123 million). Then there's a compound of three properties totalling $365 million on Indian Creek Island off Miami, also known as 'Billionaire Bunker', and no wonder, given Bezos' neighbours include David and Victoria Beckham (when they're in Miami) Ivanka and Jared Kushner, former NFL star, Tom Brady, and Spanish singing star, Julio Iglesias. And if that's not enough, he's got an estate in Seattle and two mansions in Washington DC. There's also the $120 million 14-acre property on Maui and his crowning joy, a 400,000-acre Texas ranch, known as Corn Ranch or Launch Site One. This vast property, located in Hudspeth and Culberson Counties in West Texas, serves as the launch site for his space company, Blue Origin. FURTHER BUSINESS INTERESTS The multi-billionaire's business interests are still centred around Amazon, which he founded and where he remains the executive chairman. He also founded and leads the aerospace company Blue Origin. Bezos, through his investment firm Bezos Expeditions, has invested in a wide range of companies across various sectors. Some notable investments include Airbnb, Uber, Blue Origin, The Washington Post (he bought the revered masthead in 2013), and Perplexity. Bezos Expeditions also manages his personal wealth and investments. PHILANTHROPY His philanthropic focus areas include climate change, homelessness, and education, particularly early childhood education. He has pledged $15 billion to the Bezos Earth Fund to address climate change and nature-related issues. Additionally, his Bezos Day One Fund is dedicated to supporting organisations that address homelessness and creating new preschools in low-income areas. Bezos has stated his intention to give away the bulk of his wealth during his lifetime. BLUE ORIGIN Bezos founded Blue Origin in 2000 after a childhood obsession with space. His goal is to enable a future where millions of people live and work in space, primarily to preserve and sustain earth. He has put billions into the endeavour. But there have been a few snags along the way. The ill-fated 12-second Blue Origin flight – manned by now-wife Sanchez, Katy Perry and Gayle King among others – was a major PR disaster for the brand, with critics slamming the trip as tone-deaf and expensive. FAMILY Bezos married MacKenzie Scott in 1993 after meeting a year earlier at D.E. Shaw, an investment management firm in New York. They are the parents of four children: three sons, and a daughter adopted from China. Only their eldest son's name – Preston Bezos – has been made public. The couple split in 2019 after 25 years together amid rumours of Bezos' alleged affair with American media personality, Lauren Sanchez. In the split, Bezos kept 75 per cent of the couple's Amazon stock with Scott getting the remaining 25 per cent ($54 billion). Bezos also kept the couple's voting rights at Amazon. Scott has since given away a reported $29 billion to charity and philanthropic causes through her organisation, Yield Giving. Bezos married Sanchez on Friday at a lavish wedding in Venice. Originally published as Billionaire Bezos and how he built his mega empire

Bezos, Sanchez to exchange vows in star-studded Venice
Bezos, Sanchez to exchange vows in star-studded Venice

The Advertiser

time21 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Bezos, Sanchez to exchange vows in star-studded Venice

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and journalist Lauren Sanchez are set to exchange marriage vows at a ceremony in Venice, part of a three-day wedding extravaganza that has attracted dozens of celebrity guests but also protests by local activists. Bezos, 61, and Sanchez, 55, will exchange rings on the small island of San Giorgio, opposite St Mark's Square on Friday, accompanied by singing from Matteo Bocelli, son of the famous Italian pop-opera tenor Andrea Bocelli. The ceremony will have no legal status under Italian law, a senior city hall official told Reuters, suggesting that the couple may have already legally wed in the United States, avoiding the bureaucracy associated with an Italian marriage. The festivities, estimated to cost around $A75 million, culminate on Saturday with a party in a former medieval shipyard where Lady Gaga and Elton John are reportedly set to perform. Bill Gates, Orlando Bloom, Tom Brady, the queen of Jordan, Oprah Winfrey, Kris Jenner and Kim and Khloe Kardashian as well as Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner and Domenico Dolce from Dolce & Gabbana are among the 200-250 guests. Amid tight security, there have been glimpses of the celebrities moving around town, the women in summer dresses and high heels stepping somewhat gingerly off boats ferrying them around the city's canals. Celebrations began on Thursday evening in the cloisters of Madonna dell'Orto, a medieval church in the central district of Cannaregio that hosts masterpieces by 16th-century painter Tintoretto. "This magical place has gifted us unforgettable memories," the bride and groom said on their wedding invitation, in which they asked for "no gifts" and pledged three million euros ($A5.4 million) in charity donations for three Venetian institutions. Businesses have welcomed the glitz and glamour but it is being resisted by a local protest movement whose members resent what they see as Venice being gift-wrapped for ultra-rich outsiders. Bezos is No. 4 on Forbes' billionaires list. Giulia Cacopardo, a 28-year-old representative of the "No Space for Bezos" movement, complained that the needs of ordinary people were being neglected in a city that is a tourist magnet and fast depopulating largely due to the soaring cost of living. Venice's city centre has less than 50,000 residents, compared to almost 100,000 in the late 1970s. "When you empty a city of its inhabitants, you can turn it into a stage for big events," Cacopardo told Reuters. "(But) the money that Bezos spends on this wedding does not end up in the pockets of Venetians. The owners of luxury hotels are not Venetians." A planned anti-Bezos march has forced the move of Saturday's party to a more secluded part of Venice, the Arsenale former shipyard. But politicians, hoteliers and other Venice residents are happy about the wedding, saying that such events do more to support the local economy than the multitudes of day-trippers who normally overrun the city. "We are happy and honoured to welcome Jeff Bezos and his consort Lauren Sanchez," said Mayor Luigi Brugnaro, who sent white roses to the bride and a maxi-bottle of Amarone luxury red wine to the groom. Bezos, Amazon's executive chair, got engaged to Sanchez in 2023, four years after the collapse of his 25-year marriage to MacKenzie Scott. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and journalist Lauren Sanchez are set to exchange marriage vows at a ceremony in Venice, part of a three-day wedding extravaganza that has attracted dozens of celebrity guests but also protests by local activists. Bezos, 61, and Sanchez, 55, will exchange rings on the small island of San Giorgio, opposite St Mark's Square on Friday, accompanied by singing from Matteo Bocelli, son of the famous Italian pop-opera tenor Andrea Bocelli. The ceremony will have no legal status under Italian law, a senior city hall official told Reuters, suggesting that the couple may have already legally wed in the United States, avoiding the bureaucracy associated with an Italian marriage. The festivities, estimated to cost around $A75 million, culminate on Saturday with a party in a former medieval shipyard where Lady Gaga and Elton John are reportedly set to perform. Bill Gates, Orlando Bloom, Tom Brady, the queen of Jordan, Oprah Winfrey, Kris Jenner and Kim and Khloe Kardashian as well as Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner and Domenico Dolce from Dolce & Gabbana are among the 200-250 guests. Amid tight security, there have been glimpses of the celebrities moving around town, the women in summer dresses and high heels stepping somewhat gingerly off boats ferrying them around the city's canals. Celebrations began on Thursday evening in the cloisters of Madonna dell'Orto, a medieval church in the central district of Cannaregio that hosts masterpieces by 16th-century painter Tintoretto. "This magical place has gifted us unforgettable memories," the bride and groom said on their wedding invitation, in which they asked for "no gifts" and pledged three million euros ($A5.4 million) in charity donations for three Venetian institutions. Businesses have welcomed the glitz and glamour but it is being resisted by a local protest movement whose members resent what they see as Venice being gift-wrapped for ultra-rich outsiders. Bezos is No. 4 on Forbes' billionaires list. Giulia Cacopardo, a 28-year-old representative of the "No Space for Bezos" movement, complained that the needs of ordinary people were being neglected in a city that is a tourist magnet and fast depopulating largely due to the soaring cost of living. Venice's city centre has less than 50,000 residents, compared to almost 100,000 in the late 1970s. "When you empty a city of its inhabitants, you can turn it into a stage for big events," Cacopardo told Reuters. "(But) the money that Bezos spends on this wedding does not end up in the pockets of Venetians. The owners of luxury hotels are not Venetians." A planned anti-Bezos march has forced the move of Saturday's party to a more secluded part of Venice, the Arsenale former shipyard. But politicians, hoteliers and other Venice residents are happy about the wedding, saying that such events do more to support the local economy than the multitudes of day-trippers who normally overrun the city. "We are happy and honoured to welcome Jeff Bezos and his consort Lauren Sanchez," said Mayor Luigi Brugnaro, who sent white roses to the bride and a maxi-bottle of Amarone luxury red wine to the groom. Bezos, Amazon's executive chair, got engaged to Sanchez in 2023, four years after the collapse of his 25-year marriage to MacKenzie Scott. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and journalist Lauren Sanchez are set to exchange marriage vows at a ceremony in Venice, part of a three-day wedding extravaganza that has attracted dozens of celebrity guests but also protests by local activists. Bezos, 61, and Sanchez, 55, will exchange rings on the small island of San Giorgio, opposite St Mark's Square on Friday, accompanied by singing from Matteo Bocelli, son of the famous Italian pop-opera tenor Andrea Bocelli. The ceremony will have no legal status under Italian law, a senior city hall official told Reuters, suggesting that the couple may have already legally wed in the United States, avoiding the bureaucracy associated with an Italian marriage. The festivities, estimated to cost around $A75 million, culminate on Saturday with a party in a former medieval shipyard where Lady Gaga and Elton John are reportedly set to perform. Bill Gates, Orlando Bloom, Tom Brady, the queen of Jordan, Oprah Winfrey, Kris Jenner and Kim and Khloe Kardashian as well as Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner and Domenico Dolce from Dolce & Gabbana are among the 200-250 guests. Amid tight security, there have been glimpses of the celebrities moving around town, the women in summer dresses and high heels stepping somewhat gingerly off boats ferrying them around the city's canals. Celebrations began on Thursday evening in the cloisters of Madonna dell'Orto, a medieval church in the central district of Cannaregio that hosts masterpieces by 16th-century painter Tintoretto. "This magical place has gifted us unforgettable memories," the bride and groom said on their wedding invitation, in which they asked for "no gifts" and pledged three million euros ($A5.4 million) in charity donations for three Venetian institutions. Businesses have welcomed the glitz and glamour but it is being resisted by a local protest movement whose members resent what they see as Venice being gift-wrapped for ultra-rich outsiders. Bezos is No. 4 on Forbes' billionaires list. Giulia Cacopardo, a 28-year-old representative of the "No Space for Bezos" movement, complained that the needs of ordinary people were being neglected in a city that is a tourist magnet and fast depopulating largely due to the soaring cost of living. Venice's city centre has less than 50,000 residents, compared to almost 100,000 in the late 1970s. "When you empty a city of its inhabitants, you can turn it into a stage for big events," Cacopardo told Reuters. "(But) the money that Bezos spends on this wedding does not end up in the pockets of Venetians. The owners of luxury hotels are not Venetians." A planned anti-Bezos march has forced the move of Saturday's party to a more secluded part of Venice, the Arsenale former shipyard. But politicians, hoteliers and other Venice residents are happy about the wedding, saying that such events do more to support the local economy than the multitudes of day-trippers who normally overrun the city. "We are happy and honoured to welcome Jeff Bezos and his consort Lauren Sanchez," said Mayor Luigi Brugnaro, who sent white roses to the bride and a maxi-bottle of Amarone luxury red wine to the groom. Bezos, Amazon's executive chair, got engaged to Sanchez in 2023, four years after the collapse of his 25-year marriage to MacKenzie Scott. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and journalist Lauren Sanchez are set to exchange marriage vows at a ceremony in Venice, part of a three-day wedding extravaganza that has attracted dozens of celebrity guests but also protests by local activists. Bezos, 61, and Sanchez, 55, will exchange rings on the small island of San Giorgio, opposite St Mark's Square on Friday, accompanied by singing from Matteo Bocelli, son of the famous Italian pop-opera tenor Andrea Bocelli. The ceremony will have no legal status under Italian law, a senior city hall official told Reuters, suggesting that the couple may have already legally wed in the United States, avoiding the bureaucracy associated with an Italian marriage. The festivities, estimated to cost around $A75 million, culminate on Saturday with a party in a former medieval shipyard where Lady Gaga and Elton John are reportedly set to perform. Bill Gates, Orlando Bloom, Tom Brady, the queen of Jordan, Oprah Winfrey, Kris Jenner and Kim and Khloe Kardashian as well as Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner and Domenico Dolce from Dolce & Gabbana are among the 200-250 guests. Amid tight security, there have been glimpses of the celebrities moving around town, the women in summer dresses and high heels stepping somewhat gingerly off boats ferrying them around the city's canals. Celebrations began on Thursday evening in the cloisters of Madonna dell'Orto, a medieval church in the central district of Cannaregio that hosts masterpieces by 16th-century painter Tintoretto. "This magical place has gifted us unforgettable memories," the bride and groom said on their wedding invitation, in which they asked for "no gifts" and pledged three million euros ($A5.4 million) in charity donations for three Venetian institutions. Businesses have welcomed the glitz and glamour but it is being resisted by a local protest movement whose members resent what they see as Venice being gift-wrapped for ultra-rich outsiders. Bezos is No. 4 on Forbes' billionaires list. Giulia Cacopardo, a 28-year-old representative of the "No Space for Bezos" movement, complained that the needs of ordinary people were being neglected in a city that is a tourist magnet and fast depopulating largely due to the soaring cost of living. Venice's city centre has less than 50,000 residents, compared to almost 100,000 in the late 1970s. "When you empty a city of its inhabitants, you can turn it into a stage for big events," Cacopardo told Reuters. "(But) the money that Bezos spends on this wedding does not end up in the pockets of Venetians. The owners of luxury hotels are not Venetians." A planned anti-Bezos march has forced the move of Saturday's party to a more secluded part of Venice, the Arsenale former shipyard. But politicians, hoteliers and other Venice residents are happy about the wedding, saying that such events do more to support the local economy than the multitudes of day-trippers who normally overrun the city. "We are happy and honoured to welcome Jeff Bezos and his consort Lauren Sanchez," said Mayor Luigi Brugnaro, who sent white roses to the bride and a maxi-bottle of Amarone luxury red wine to the groom. Bezos, Amazon's executive chair, got engaged to Sanchez in 2023, four years after the collapse of his 25-year marriage to MacKenzie Scott.

Truth behind the Bezos lavish Venice wedding
Truth behind the Bezos lavish Venice wedding

News.com.au

timea day ago

  • News.com.au

Truth behind the Bezos lavish Venice wedding

In an arts centre slash club in Venice's least touristy neighbourhood they gather. A high school teacher. A receptionist from a small hotel. A university researcher. They are here for one reason – to tell one of the richest men in the world where he can shove his superyacht. In a matter of weeks the grassroots No Space For Bezos campaign, spearheaded by everyday locals, has become a global story and the wedding this weekend of Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez has become a tipping point. The brewing public anger and antipathy towards tech billionaires has truly boiled over and they have become the bad guys of 2025. It's not just about Bezos but also Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and Silicon Valley's 0.0001 per cent of the one per cent with their competing rockets that definitely aren't compensating for something. Not that long ago these men were being hailed as visionaries and hoodie wearing prophets the subject of fawning Time covers but who are now some of the most publicly hated people on earth who don't have their nuclear stockpiles. (Yet.) The techno-oligarchy? The Bezos wedding has crystallised the global turn against them. In an increasingly polarised world where we are all segregated in our filter bubbles, there is, shock horror, a very clear trend in sentiment. 74 per cent of Americans disapprove of Zuckerberg and 67 per cent disapprove of Bezos, according to polling commissioned by the Tech Oversight Project this month. Musk is disliked by 57 per cent of Americans, according to a survey from The Associated Press-NORC Centre for Public Affairs Research at around the same time. Around the world, the campaigns against them is only growing. In Marion in South Australia a proposal for a Tesla battery factory saw about 950 people going to the hassle of lodging submissions to try and block it. Such was the vehemence, the Guardian reported, official records had to be redacted, with the paperwork including comments like 'Elon Musk and Tesla are a [redacted] on humanity', 'Elon Musk is a full blown [redacted],' and 'Elon Musk is a [redacted] human being and a [redacted]!'. In London, for much of this year, real-looking ads began appearing at bus stops with slogans like 'ELON MUSK IS A BELLEND. Signed, the UK'. They are the brainchild of a British group called Everybody Hates Elon that grew out of a 'ranty group chat' into such a force the New Yorker recently profiled them. In April, a private donor provided the group with a Tesla and invited the public to smash it. One hundred people turned up. In New York, in April, the Washington Post reported on an 'anti-billionaire bash' that drew 50 people dressed up as Bezos, Zuckerberg and Sanchez to cheekily voice their antipathy towards this new class of men. I'll keep going. Across the US, in states from California to Louisiana, to Nebraska, Utah and Texas more than 100,000 people got off their couches to support Senator Bernie Sanders and Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's recent 'Fight Oligarchy' tour. Hollywood has picked up the anti-tech billionaire theme and is running with it. One the buzziest movies of the moment is Succession creator Jesse Armstrong's Mountainhead about four tech bros who gather at a remote Utah mansion while an algorithm one of them created triggers global violence and apocalyptic danger. Even the new Toy Story is joining in, with the baddie of the fifth movie, set to be big tech in the form of a tablet called Lillypad. What has changed is that Bezos et al are longer seen as, or at least just, bright thinkers giving us exciting new digital toys, but men defined by naked grasping for more sticky billions and unmitigated, unchecked self-entitlement. Zuckerberg, a man who reportedly used to shout 'domination' at the end of staff meetings, was recently photographed landing in a helicopter on his superyacht and does interviews wearing a $1.3 million watch. Musk has 14 children and had a go at dismantling Washington because it took his political liking. Fundamentally, they treat the world and the people in it like their playthings. Bezos wanted to stage what sounds like a little, wee coup of Venice so he could celebrate his second marriage. Musk dumped nearly $440 million into Donald Trump's campaign and, many believe, swung the election in the favour of a man with 34 felony convictions and who was found by a New York court in 2022 of having sexually abused writer E. Jean Carroll in the 90s. In 2018, Facebook admitted the platform had been used to incite violence in Myanmar. The year before, the country's military unleashed a sweeping campaign of massacres, rape, and arson, according to Human Rights Watch. Zuckerberg, Bezos, Musk and countless other billionaires zip around the planet in carbon emission spewing private jets and have homes, boats, choppers and transport fleets that have to be counted by the dozen. Basically, they come across as people with absolutely zero regard for what their actions, business and choices might be doing to lesser mortals. They act like demi-deities. Now it feels like all of this has boiled over in Venice. It turns out that even hundreds of billions of dollars and your own space force can't guarantee you the wedding of your dreams. This week, Everyone Hates Elon joined in on the action, banding together with Greenpeace to take over Venice's famed San Marco square with an enormous banner reading 'If you can rent Venice for your wedding, you can pay more tax'. At the time of writing, the anti-Bezos movement appears to be winning. In a matter of weeks the group of everyday Venetians have forced a man with more money than Midas armed with a tungsten Amex to, at the 11th hour, rip up his plans and move the reception to a far less historic backup venue. (Think more concrete by the cubic tonne and less Cannaregio-ish.) This weekend the Bezos-Sanchezes will be forced to toast one another in a building in the city's Arsenale area, full of warehouses, and not the majestic 16th-century Scuola Grande della Misericordia after protesters threatened to block canal access with hundreds of inflatable crocodiles. 'Obscene wealth,' Marta Sottoriva, a 34-year-old Venetian protester told the Guardian, should not 'allow a man to rent a city for three days'. And 'obscene' is exactly the word. This wedding, by some accounts, will cost $71 million. Sanchez will have 27 outfits, reportedly. More than 90 private jets are currently parked on the runway at the Marco Polo airport. It has been rumoured that the bridegroom has flown in ex-marines to secure the event where 200 guests, including Queen Rania of Jordan, Leonardo DiCaprio and Ivanka Trump, will stay in $16,000-a-night hotel rooms. Kardashians? They've got two. All of this in a tiny city where 1000 council homes have been abandoned and are crumbling for lack of funds. You have to wonder how well the Bezos-Sanchezs have thought about their plans. Reportedly also on the schedule, a pyjama party, a foam party and a Great Gatsby -theme event. Things don't turn out too swell for Jay Gatsby, shot dead, the famed novel in part, a take down of the rich. This year F. Scott Fitzgerald's classic turns 100 and in it he writes of a super wealthy couple who are 'careless people'. 'They smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness … and let other people clean up the mess they had made'. Maybe Jeff should buy himself the book.

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