Jeff Bezos ditched Google Camp to meet Lauren Sanchez’s parents
Jeff Bezos was invited to Google Camp — but scrapped that plan in order to meet girlfriend Lauren Sanchez’s parents, Page Six has learned.
The Amazon founder scored an invite to the pretentious meet-up with Prince Harry et al, but logistics were too difficult to make it to Italy, according to Amazon sources, as he had a date to meet Lauren’s parents for the first time.
We previously reported that Bezos was recently introduced to Sanchez’s eldest son, Nikko Gonzalez, in NYC.
And late last week, we’re told, he was inducted into the “Circle of Trust” after meeting her parents, Eleanor and Ray Sanchez.
All four have an obsession with flying — former TV host Lauren is a helicopter pilot, while her dad is a flight instructor and still owns a flight school in Albuquerque, NM.
Eleanor also has a pilot’s license. Bezos, of course, is plowing millions into his space company, Blue Origin.
To celebrate the Fourth of July in the Big Apple, Lauren even took her man for a ride in a helicopter she flew along with a co-pilot.
This all leads Amazon sources to ponder how long it will be before the couple say “I do.”
The duo flaunted their love last month in a very public display of affection at Wimbledon.
Lauren, her parents, her sister Elena and pals then flew to Canton, Ohio, to watch her ex Tony Gonzalez — Nikko’s dad — be inducted into the NFL Hall of Fame this weekend, according to one of Lauren’s girlfriends.
While Bezos wasn’t at Google Camp, last month he and Sanchez did go to the Sun Valley conference in Idaho.
It’s all a far cry from just a few months ago, when the couple stayed apart for 45 days amid the scandal of their affair.
The drama settled down after the security team responsible for protecting Bezos’ privacy cleared Lauren’s brother, Michael, of any involvement in the leak of the billionaire’s nude selfies to the National Enquirer
But insiders said the feds are still digging into who did leak the photos — which is key to Bezos’ extortion allegations against AMI, the parent company of the Enquirer.
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