The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

The truth in Bezos spectacle

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Sometimes stories are simpler than they’re made out to be. That appears to be the case with Jeff Bezos.

When the National Enquirer reported that Bezos, the Amazon founder who is the world’s richest man, was having an extramarit­al affair and had sent racy texts, including photos of his penis, to his girlfriend, Bezos assembled a high-priced legal and PR team to mount an aggressive defense.

All of a sudden, sympatheti­c commentato­rs began suggesting Bezos had been hacked.

There was word that a “government entity” had gotten hold of the texts and photos.

There was dark speculatio­n of internatio­nal intrigue, that Saudi Arabia might have used the Enquirer to target Bezos, who owns The Washington Post, in retaliatio­n for the Post’s coverage of the murder of the columnist and Saudi regime critic Jamal Khashoggi.

And of course, President Trump played some sort of behind-the-scenes role.

Bezos orchestrat­ed it all, using his security consultant to feed informatio­n to his newspaper, and also writing a much-discussed personal statement published on Medium.

“This statement that (Bezos) has released tonight is absolutely extraordin­ary,” MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell said on Feb. 7, “and I think it is a gigantic moment, actually in this history of our digital communicat­ion, which everyone has known has been at risk for quite a while, that any one of us could be hacked. We could have private things revealed through stolen emails, stolen texts, that sort of thing. And here is someone who stands up and says, I’m not going to take it anymore.”

“The Saudis are being brazen,” MSNBC’s Chuck Todd said on Feb. 8. “We’ve caught them being brazen with Qatar. We’ve caught them being brazen with Jamal Khashoggi. This would not surprise if it ends up being more connected to them because they’ve been acting this way.”

The Bezos team spun quite a story. But holes quickly appeared in their handiwork.

In early March, The New York Times published a detailed look at how the longmarrie­d Bezos came to be involved with his girlfriend, former Los Angeles local news anchor Lauren Sanchez.

As the two got together, the paper reported, a smitten Sanchez was not shy about sharing intimate details of the relationsh­ip with her friends.

“By last year, they were having an affair,” the Times wrote.

“Three people in Ms. Sanchez’s extended social circle said she was giddy and in love, showing amorous texts to a number of Brentwood and Beverly Hills moms.”

Sanchez was, to say the least, not particular­ly discreet in handling the revealing texts and photos Bezos sent to her. And then there was, in the Times’ descriptio­n, Sanchez’s “fame-hungry brotherman­ager,” Michael Sanchez, described as a “loose cannon” and an “incorrigib­le gossip even in a town full of them.”

Now, The Wall Street Journal reports that Michael Sanchez, “a talent agent who has managed television pundits and reality-show judges,” has also “long been a source for the Enquirer.”

And, according to the paper, Michael Sanchez sold the Bezos texts to the Enquirer for $200,000.

Imagine that. Mogul sends deeply private texts to gossipy L.A. girlfriend who has gossipy, fame-hungry brother, and somehow it gets out! No Saudis required.

It is not unusual for men caught sexting with women not their wives to claim they have been hacked, or that their texts have somehow been stolen.

Remember that Anthony Weiner tried the same thing. But few have the resources of Jeff Bezos, and few could rely on so many media commentato­rs to spread the story.

At the same time, the Bezos spectacle also attracted the attention of more serious journalist­s, who found out that the real Bezos story is much simpler than all the Saudi speculatio­n.

It is, in fact, an old story, of people acting foolishly in the course of an extramarit­al affair.

All the money in the world couldn’t change that.

 ??  ?? Byron York Columnist
Byron York Columnist

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