Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, as a Master of the Universe, is used to being in control of a situation.
But
now, after announcing the pending divorce from MacKenzie Bezos, his
wife of 25 years, the Amazon founder finds his personal life splattered
across the pages of the National Enquirer and, subsequently, the
internet and media landscape.
Such a development may be not only personally troublesome and embarrassing, but also potentially an issue for Amazon itself.
CEOs
and business executives "don’t like allowing the world to see what is
going on in their personal lives," said Sheri Warsh, partner at Chicago
law firm Levenfeld Pearlstein who has represents high-profile trust
and estate litigation clients.
"Whether they are CEOs or movie stars or
celebrities, we do our best to keep it out of the courts so the world
doesn't see what is going on."
However, in Bezos' case, it's too late. The Enquirer
has published a four-month investigation in which it acquired text
messages supposedly shared between the Amazon CEO and former Fox L.A. TV
anchor Lauren Sanchez, a family acquaintance with whom he reportedly
developed a relationship.
One message the Enquirer includes in its report, a snapshot of which is published online
and the rest in its current printed issue, has Bezos saying,
"“I love
you, alive girl. I will show you with my body, and my lips and my eyes,
very soon.”
Sanchez, 49, is the wife of Hollywood
talent agent Patrick Whitesell. She and Whitesell, who owned a home in
Seattle and have socialized with the Bezoses in the past, are also
divorcing, according to several outlets including People.com.
Also
a helicopter pilot with her own aerial production firm, Sanchez was
hired to shoot aerial shots for Blue Origin, a private space company
Bezos founded in 2000, the New York Post reported. Bezos' wife, MacKenzie, knew the two were dating, the Post reported, citing an unnamed person close to Bezos.
Bezos,
who also owns The Washington Post, told the Enquirer through an
attorney that he “supports journalistic efforts and does not intend to
discourage reporting about him.”
Drew Herdener,
vice president of global corporate and operations communications for
Amazon, told USA TODAY: "Jeff remains focused and engaged on all things
Amazon."
Still, it remains possible that publicity
surround the breakup could potentially affect what appeared to be an
amicable divorce, based on the public statement about their plans posted Wednesday on Twitter.
Since Bezos
is the world's richest person, worth an estimated value of $137
billion, the divorce settlement has the potential to be the largest ever
and, should it grow contentious, could lead to additional laundry
airing and asset forfeiture.
"Any human being, when
they see negative press about themselves or their family it’s going to,
or could, bring up resentment or anger, which may make an amicable
relationship not so amicable any more," Warsh said.
And
the blowback could go beyond the Bezos' divorce to the Amazon
boardroom. "It ultimately could lead to discord within the company,"
said Juda Engelmayer, a crisis management expert and president of New
York public relations firm HeraldPR. If Bezos is not, "focusing on the
business then you are not good for the shareholders And if he is doing
things that are taking his mind off of that, he can end up getting
himself into a bit more trouble."
Such public
airings have led to disruptions for other executives in the past. Nearly
two decades ago, former General Electric Chairman Jack Welch saw his
life become tabloid fodder when his second wife, Jane Beasley Welch,
filed for divorce from him in 2002 after she found out he had an affair
with the then-editor of the Harvard Business Review (he subsequently
married the woman, Suzy Wetlaufer).
After Beasley
Welch's court filing, newspapers wrote about the $1.2 million in annual
perks the Welches received, including company plane access, a Central
Park West apartment, five country club memberships, sports tickets, and
wait staff at four other homes – at a time when corporate largess was
under attack. Welch was forced to give up or pay for many of the perks
and settled out of court with Beasley Welch, who had sought $130 million
of his $450 million net worth.
More recently,
Intel CEO Brian Krzanich resigned in June 2018 as his past history of an
affair with an employee was publicized in stories in The Wall Street Journal and other outlet.
Krzanich, the company said, violated a non-fraternization policy
enacted in 2011. The affair, which had ended, began before the policy
was enacted and before Krzanich became CEO, which happened in 2013.
"Nobody
likes their dirty laundry to be aired in public and yet it’s kind of
the price of celebrity, whether you’re in Hollywood or you’re a rock
star or a media mogul like (Rupert) Murdoch and Bezos, who's so wealthy
with the huge success of Amazon and then his role (as owner) at The
Washington Post," said Rem Rieder, a former USA TODAY media columnist
who now teaches journalism at Widener University in Chester,
Pennsylvania.
While tabloids "live for this,"
Rieder doesn't see the incident "really blowing up Amazon or the Post. I
think that would be a stretch."
source : https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/business/2019/01/12/amazon-ceo-jeff-bezos-sees-personal-life-divorce-dating-publicized/2546441002/
0 komentar:
Post a Comment
I just a newbie and student, don't using this article for criminal