I was in Venice for Jeff Bezos' wedding. Taylor Swift's anticipated NYC bash has 1 annoying thing in common.
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce will reportedly marry at Madison Square Garden on July 4. It's a similar flex to Jeff Bezos taking over Venice.
- Joshua Nelken-Zitser reported on Jeff Bezos' Venice wedding. Taylor Swift's feels oddly familiar.
- Streets nearby Madison Square Garden, reportedly the couple's venue, closed on Friday.
- It looks like turning public landmarks into private wedding venues is the latest billionaire flex.
Police-cordoned streets. Paparazzi packed into tiny press pens, long lenses trained on A-listers. Locals and tourists changing travel plans in the sweltering heat as the city makes way for the year's highest-profile wedding.
No, not Manhattan, where New Yorkers are waiting to see if Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce will really get married at Madison Square Garden this weekend, but Venice last June, where I reported on Lauren Sánchez and Jeff Bezos' lavish wedding.
A different summer, a different billionaire couple, but the same flex: transforming a world famous landmark into a private wedding venue.
Taylor Swift's wedding is reminiscent of Jeff Bezos' Venice party
Bezos and Sánchez's wedding was impossible to miss while walking along the canals of Venice, even after they moved their celebration from the iconic Scuola Grande della Misericordia to a venue further from the city's center. There were fears there would be a big showdown between anti-billionaire activists and the couple, involving inflatable alligators, but the venue move put that particular protest on hold.
Police officers at a security checkpoint ahead of Jeff Bezos' wedding in Venice, June 2025.
Bloomberg/Getty Images
In blisteringly hot and uncomfortably humid weather in the peak of Venice's tourist season, I watched police cordon off cobbled streets normally filled with tourists and locals, while paparazzi blocked narrow walkways opposite luxury hotels in the hope of catching a shot of celebrity guests. I'm pretty sure I saw Sydney Sweeney and Khloe Kardashian leaving a hotel by water taxi.
Sánchez and Bezos leaving a tented area at the Aman Hotel in Venice, on June 25, 2025.
STEFANO RELLANDINI/AFP via Getty Images
Over the weekend, protesters sporadically climbed up poles or unfurled anti-Bezos banners at St Mark's Square, Venice's main piazza. While I was surprised to find many Venetians who were largely indifferent toward the wedding, others were furious. To them, their city had become a playground for the ultra-wealthy, with some of its most famous cultural landmarks being given up as backdrops for a private celebration.
Now it's New York City's turn. The New York Police Department confirmed to Business Insider that, starting at 1 p.m. on Friday, five streets were closed to vehicles, two to pedestrians, four had managed access, and certain entrances to Moynihan Train Hall and Penn Station were also closed for an unnamed event. Big weddings happen in New York City and Venice all the time, very rarely — if ever — do they result in road closures.
Preparations for an Swift and Kelce's rumored Madison Square Garden wedding.
ANGELA WEISS / AFP via Getty Images
The Long Island Rail Road, the busiest commuter line in North America, announced "access restrictions at the request of the NYPD," and urged those traveling through Penn Station to "consider traveling through Grand Central or Atlantic Terminal."
The security announcements. The photos of cordons going up. The secrecy surrounding an event in the heart of an iconic city. The inevitable online complaints from frustrated locals. It all took me straight back to Venice.
Multiple tented entrances are seen outside Madison Square Garden, the reported venue for the wedding celebrations of Swift and Kelce, in New York City on July 3, 2026.
ANGELA WEISS / AFP via Getty Images
A private Caribbean island or country estate might offer privacy, but an iconic landmark gives something else: the luxury of celebrating a private occasion at a spot known by millions who could never dream of hiring it themselves.
Both couples sought to give something back to the cities, respectively. Bezos and Sánchez donated €3 million to Venetian institutions, including organizations studying the city's fragile lagoon system and UNESCO's Venice office. Swift and Kelce, meanwhile, have made charitable donations to nonprofits in New York City, including a local food bank.
Whether this weekend is remembered for generosity or gridlock will depend on who you ask. For the guests, it'll be a celebration of the Swift-Kelce Love Story. For those rerouting through Midtown during a heat wave, it may feel more like a Cruel Summer.
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