The Most Over-the-Top Celebrity Weddings of All Time
On Tuesday, June 30, a fleet of tractor trailers began unloading what appeared to be set pieces at Madison Square Garden. One, labeled “garden party,” drew special attention. Was this “garden party” the ultimate party at the ultimate Garden? With rumors swirling that Taylor Swift is set to wed Travis Kelce in a Fourth of July weekend ceremony at the 20,000-seat arena, fans went feral. If the duo does wed at the iconic venue (a.k.a. Taylor’s place of work), it would be unconventional, if not unprecedented. And if all of the pomp and circumstance were part of an elaborate smokescreen created to hold the media’s attention while Tayvis married elsewhere, well now that would just be classic Taylor. Either way, it wouldn’t be the first time celebs went to great lengths to throw the perfect over-the-top wedding. The excitement has us reminiscing on some of the most memorable celebrity weddings of all time. From Jennifer Aniston and Brad Pitt’s Malibu fairy-tale event to Liza Minnelli and David Gest’s fun-house-mirror of an extravaganza, these 10 ceremonies have become modern pop-culture touchstones.
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Madonna and Sean Penn (1985)
Image Credit: Laura Luongo/Liaison/Getty Images After meeting on the set of her “Material Girl” music video, rising Queen of Pop Madonna and breakout big-screen bad boy Sean Penn began dating in 1985. Six months later, on Aug. 16 (Madonna’s 27th birthday), the two wed in a lavish Malibu ceremony. Two hundred and twenty guests (including Rosanna Arquette, Christopher Walken, Carrie Fisher, Andy Warhol, Diane Keaton, and Tom Cruise) stood poolside at real-estate developer Dan Unger’s $6.5 million home to watch the two exchange vows above the Pacific Ocean. Escorted by her father, the bride wore a custom strapless gown created by her Madonna Live: The Virgin Tour designer Marlene Stewart, while the groom donned an off-the-rack Versace tux. After a brief ceremony, Penn lifted his new wife’s veil, and the couple shared a kiss as the theme from “Chariots of Fire” played. Later, there was sushi, there was Cristal, there was catering by Spago. In other words, it was the most 1980s wedding of the 1980s. It was also one of the first to be besieged by helicopters hovering not-so-high above the event, carrying tabloid photographers hoping to get their money shot. The cutthroat battle set a dangerous precedent for celebrity wedding coverage that has some couples so concerned about privacy they go to extreme lengths to protect it. Like renting out Madison Square Garden and/or staging a fake event. Maybe.
JFK Jr. and Carolyn Bessette (1996)
Image Credit: Arnaldo Magnani/Liaison/Getty Images On Sept. 21, 1996, America’s chosen royals were married in a secret ceremony on Cumberland Island, Georgia. Kennedy had fallen in love with the tiny coastal town years prior to meeting his bride, but she, too, became enamored of the remote locale. Most of the island has been deemed a national park, so the couple held the reception (and housed their 40 guests) at its sole commercial property, the Greyfield Inn. As for their vows, JFK Jr. insisted they take place at the island’s First African Baptist Church. The owner of the Greyfield later recounted that he had shared a story with Kennedy about how the deacon of the church held an island-wide ceremony in honor of Robert F. Kennedy when he was assassinated in 1968. The story touched the younger Kennedy, and he wanted to honor the church by marrying there. The wedding took six months to plan, including the creation of Bessette’s gown, a simple, bias-cut dress designed by friend and former Calvin Klein colleague Narciso Rodriguez. It’s hard to understand if you weren’t there (kids), but this was the ultimate Nineties wedding. From Bessette-Kennedy’s understated-yet-elegant look (the simple slip dress! The bare face with a bold lip! The loose bun!) to the bare-bones candlelit chapel, it was both a time capsule and a timeless affair.
David and Victoria Beckham (1999)
Image Credit: John Giles/PA Images/Getty Images In this grand marriage of pop music and athletics, Posh and Becks tied the knot at Ireland’s Luttrellstown Castle on July 4, 1999, with only 29 guests in attendance, because they’re low-key like that. Just kidding! After two became one, they partied down with nearly 300 of their closest friends, including the Spice Girls and Elton John. For the reception, Victoria changed out of her custom six-figure Vera Wang champagne strapless wedding gown (complete with a 20-foot train … and a tiara) and joined David in donning his and hers purple numbers by designer Antonio Berardi. It was in those memorable matching lewks that they would take their rightful place on, ahem, matching gold thrones. The duo would go on to celebrate their 25th anniversary in 2024 by posting their present-day selves in the same outfits with Victoria captioning the shoot, “Yep, still got it!” And yes, the thrones did make the grid.
Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston (2000)
Image Credit: Dave Hogan/Getty Images It was the turn of the century, and the world was breathing a sigh of relief that Y2K hadn’t knocked our global systems offline. We rejoiced with boy-band music, butterfly clips, and a parasocial relationship with two of Hollywood’s biggest stars: box-office golden boy Brad Pitt and Rachel Green herself, Jennifer Aniston. We waited with bated breath for a wedding. We prayed Aniston would get the baby we all so desperately wanted her to desperately want. And on July 29, 2000, we got half our wish. The California-cool couple said “I do” in front of 200 friends and family members on a cliff overlooking the Pacific Ocean (in the backyard of a Malibu estate belonging to TV producer Marcy Carsey). The guest list was star-studded, and the musical lineup included Melissa Etheridge, a Greek bouzouki band (to honor Aniston’s heritage), and a 40-person gospel choir. Somewhere between the 50,000 flowers, lobster-heavy catering spread, and, yes, countless helicopters overhead (tents were erected to shield the event from photogs), the duo made it official. Until ending their union in 2005 amid rumors, well founded, that Pitt and his Mr. and Mrs. Smith co-star Angelina Jolie had started a relationship on set. Pitt would go on to make it official with Jolie in 2014, and Aniston would marry actor Justin Theroux in 2018. When both of those unions subsequently dissolved, the memory of Brad and Jen’s idyllic Malibu wedding had fans hoping for a reunion. Alas, those hopes were dashed.
Liza Minnelli and David Gest (2002)
Image Credit: Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images On March 16, 2002, pop culture was given one of its greatest moments when multihyphenate Liza Minnelli married producer Davd Gest at New York’s Marble Collegiate Church. The two tied the knot after only a few months of knowing one another, but their wedding was an all-star affair. Minnelli’s ivory and crystal dress was designed by Bob Mackie and beloved celebrity makeup artist, the late Kevyn Aucoin, was responsible for her bridal beat. The pair were registered at Bergdorf Goodman and Tiffany & Co. Their wedding party was 36 people deep. The reception included performances from 45 acts. In other words, this thing was real. But what played out felt like scene from a David Lynch film. Minnelli had two maids of honor, one of whom was Elizabeth Taylor. Her bridesmaids included Gina Lollobrigida, Petula Clark, and Mia Farrow. (Also, singer Mya, who was only 22 at the time.) Gest’s best men were Tito and Michael Jackson. And then there was the kiss. After saying their vows, Gest planted such an aggressive smacker on Minnelli’s lips that she would later write in her memoir, “Like a shark mangling a piece of meat. Ugh! I felt degraded.” It’s no wonder the two parted ways in 2003 (though their contentious divorce would go on four more years). Now, all that’s left are memories and that iconic photo of the happy couple flanked by Elizabeth Taylor and Michael Jackson.
Kid Rock and Pamela Anderson (2006)
Image Credit: ERIC ESTRADE/AFP/Getty Images While many remember Pamela Anderson’s iconic bikini-clad wedding to Tommy Lee (held on a beach in Mexico just 96 hours after meeting), her marriage to Kid Rock was equally unhinged (and underdressed). First linked to one another in 2001, the pair were engaged in 2002, only to call things off in 2003. But they fell back into each other’s arms in July of 2006. Later that month (yes, we said month) the couple were married on a yacht in St. Tropez. The groom wore a fedora (not a shirt) and the bride wore … another bikini. On Aug. 2, the pair had a legally binding (and clothed — we hope?) ceremony at the Beverly Hills Courthouse. Shortly thereafter, on Aug. 17, the pair took the stage at Nashville’s Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge honky tonk (she in a white Juicy Couture tracksuit, he in his signature white tank) to say “I do” yet again, before Kid Rock serenaded his bride with “Some Kind of Wonderful.” Unfortunately, the third time was not the charm. Anderson filed for divorce on Nov. 27 of that year, with her rep noting, “It was not a happy Thanksgiving.”
Beyoncé and Jay-Z (2008)
Image Credit: Lester Cohen/WireImage Little did we all know that on April 4, 2008, music’s royal couple said “I do” in New York City. The music moguls are famously private about their private life, and their wedding was no exception. In fact, they held the intimate gathering at home, a.k.a. Jay-Z’s 13,500-square-foot penthouse in TriBeCa. Intimate doesn’t always mean small, though. The 3,000-square-foot living room (where the ceremony took place) was covered in a tent filled with flowers, candles, branches, and crystal icicles to create a winter wonderland theme. The couple also had 70,000 white dendrobium orchids flown in from Thailand. Beyoncé wore a gown designed by her mom, Tina Knowles, and the 40 guests included her Destiny’s Child bandmates, as well as Gwenyth Paltrow and Chris Martin. Phones were collected as attendees arrived, so that no pictures could be leaked. And it worked! None of us knew the two were hitched until 2011, when Bey revealed her wedding dress in a video for Live at Roseland. Three years later, Jay-Z included clips of their ceremony during the pair’s joint On the Run tour.
Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon (2008)
Image Credit: Dominique Charriau/WireImage After a whirlwind six-week romance, the singer and the comedian made their are-they-or-aren’t-they relationship official with a surprise wedding on April 30, 2008. Held at Carey’s private Bahamian estate, the nuptials were a complete shock to the dozen guests who had been flown in for what they thought was a music video shoot. The two wed at sunset on the beach, with Carey donning a simple white Nile Cmylo slip dress and Cannon in a Balenciaga tuxedo. Later, they joined their guests for a lobster feast which they washed down with bottles of Dom Pérignon. Carey, who famously loves an anniversary, found a soulmate in Cannon: The two renewed their vows every year after (until their 2016 divorce), including in a ceremony officiated by Rev. Al Sharpton, at the Eiffel Tower in Paris, and at Disneyland (they had the park closed for the occasion), where they dressed as a prince and princess.
Kim Kardashian and Kanye West (2014)
Image Credit: Mike Coppola/Getty Images Custom designer gowns! Historically significant venues! An E! camera crew! Kim and Kanye’s wedding had all the makings of a modern-day fairy tale. Planned almost entirely by West, the multiday event spanned two countries and two chartered planes. Two hundred guests were invited to the rehearsal dinner, for which West rented out all of the Palace of Versailles. Like, the whole thing. Dinner was served in the palace’s Hall of Mirrors, where everyone enjoyed a surprise performance from Lana del Rey. The next day, the whole gang was flown to Florence to watch Kim and Kanye exchange vows at Forte di Belvedere. Kim walked down the aisle in a custom lace Givenchy gown designed by Riccardo Tisci, estimated to have cost about $500,000. (The couple’s 11-month-old daughter North also wore Givenchy.) She was escorted by Caitlin Jenner, while being serenaded by Andrea Bocelli, which would later give us the iconic scene from The Kardashians in which Kim and Kourtney are feuding about the latter’s choice to marry Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker in Italy with a performance by the same Italian tenor in 2022, in which Kim declared: “Who performed at my wedding? Andrea Bocelli. Who performed at Kourtney’s wedding? Andrea Bocelli. You stole my fucking wedding country and my wedding performer.”
Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez (2025)
Image Credit: MARCO BERTORELLO/AFP/Getty Images America’s sweethearts wed in Venice, Italy, on June 27, 2025, after a lavish three-day celebration fit for George and Amal Clooney. (No, seriously, it was basically an Amazon dupe of the A-listers’ own three-day Venetian nuptials.) On the big day, the bride wore a corseted, mermaid-style wedding dress custom-designed by Dolce & Gabbana, featuring hand-appliquéd Italian lace and 180 silk chiffon-covered buttons. The gown was inspired by one worn by Sophia Loren in the 1958 film Houseboat. (Sanchez told Vogue ahead of her wedding that the look was more modest than her usual style, saying, “It is a departure from what people expect.”) The wedding, which was rumored to have cost around $55 million, saw its share of celeb guests, including Oprah, most of the Kar-Jenners (suddenly Kim was cool with someone stealing her wedding country), and climate-change activist and actor Leonardo DiCaprio. We continue to wish the couple our best and many happy (free) returns.
Twins top prospect Walker Jenkins carries young fan off field after collapse during national anthem
Story byMinnesota Twins minor leaguer Walker Jenkins stepped up before Tuesday's St. Paul Saints game in a way that had nothing to do with his top prospect status.
Jenkins, the No. 14 overall prospect in baseball, according to MLB Pipeline, went viral on Wednesday via a video that showed him taking care of a young fan who collapsed while standing with the players during the national anthem.
AdvertisementAdvertisementJenkins noticed the fan wobbling and was soon carrying him off the field, eventually giving him to a staff member at the dugout.
The Saints, the Twins' Triple-A affiliate, confirmed Wednesday morning that the boy, named Lincoln, is doing well and has received some team merchandise.
After helping Lincoln, Jenkins proceeded to go 3-for-5 with a double, triple and three runs scored in a 12-6 win over the Buffalo Bisons. He was a home run shy of the cycle.
The Twins selected Jenkins fifth overall out of South Brunswick High School in North Carolina in the 2023 MLB Draft. He quickly developed into one of the best prospects in the minors, showcasing five-tool talent while playing well above his age at each level.
AdvertisementAdvertisementThis season, Jenkins, 21, is slashing .273/.394/.436 in 30 games with the Saints.
Philadelphia 76ers among teams expressing interest in LeBron James: Source
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LeBron James and Joel Embiid shake hands after a February game between the Lakers and Sixers. Adam Pantozzi / Getty Images
By Tony JonesJuly 1, 2026 8:39 pm EDT UpdatedThe Philadelphia 76ers have expressed interest in acquiring free agent forward LeBron James, a league source who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe ongoing deliberations told The Athletic.
On the heels of Wednesday night’s blockbuster trade for Jaylen Brown — which sent Paul George and multiple draft picks to the Boston Celtics — the Sixers have thrown their hat into the proverbial ring for the star forward, who became an unrestricted free agent after eight seasons with the Los Angeles Lakers.
Philadelphia makes sense from a basketball perspective. The 76ers have enough scoring, depth and ballhandling at the top of the roster to allow James to ease into a role. And with James — or even without him — Philadelphia projects as a championship contender. The Golden State Warriors, Cleveland Cavaliers and Miami Heat are also considered among the frontrunners for James’ services.
James, 41, remains an All-Star-caliber player and one of the league’s most impactful talents. The 76ers were eliminated in the second round of last season’s playoffs by the New York Knicks, who went on to win the NBA championship.
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Tagged To: NBAPhiladelphia 76ersPacers' Ivica Zubac Trade Looks Even Better After Lakers Acquire Walker Kessler
Pacers' Ivica Zubac Trade Looks Even Better After Lakers Acquire Walker Kessler
Indiana was heavily linked to Walker Kessler before the trade deadline, but acquiring Ivica Zubac instead may have been one of the franchise's smartest decisions.Alex Golden|
In this story:
Indiana PacersLos Angeles LakersUtah JazzLos Angeles ClippersOn Wednesday, July 1, 2026, the Los Angeles Lakers agreed to a lucrative four-year, $130M deal with Utah Jazz big man Walker Kessler. Los Angeles and Utah have agreed to complete a sign-and-trade that will send Kessler to the Lakers for two unprotected first-round picks in 2031 and 2033, and two first-round pick swaps in 2028 and 2030.
This is a massive haul that the Lakers are paying to solidify the now and future of their center position, going after the best five man on the open market. Indiana was once rumored to have interest in the Jazz's big man during the NBA Trade Deadline period, but Utah reportedly declined the Pacers offer. This was the exact same offer that Indiana ended up sending the Los Angeles Clippers for Ivica Zubac.

While there are reasons to believe that trading for Kessler would have been the better move for Indiana, there is no denying that Indiana in retrospect made the right move in February. While Kessler is a solid young player with plenty of room to grow, he is making an average annual value of $32.5M. Indiana's big man, Ivica Zubac is making $20.3M this season, and $21.7M the folliwing season according to SpoTrac.com.
Being able to acquire a center that is just as good, or slightly even better for $11M less this season is a steal in itself, and it allowed the Pacers more financial flexibility to sign another free agent in the offseason.

If the Pacers had acquired Kessler at the trade deadline and agreed to the same exact deal the Lakers agreed to, Indiana would have been a first-apron team, and would not have been able to inked Kelly Oubre Jr. to the two-year, $17M contract they signed him to -- unless they elected to move off of Jarace Walker's $8.4M contract.
Nobody knew exactly how much Kessler would demand on the open market, and maybe the Lakers had to overpay to keep the Jazz from matching the offer, but for a Pacers team that is trying to win a championship next season, adding Zubac and Oubre Jr. for almost $4M less than what the Lakers will be paying Kessler in his first season was a no-brainer decision.

At the end of the day, the Pacers feel the best way to build a roster is with depth. By focusing in on acquiring a player at the Trade Deadline who fits perfectly into their budget, fills a hole on their roster, and has the skillset to elevate this team's ceiling, Indiana was not only able to address their starting center need, but their backup wing depth.
The Pacers front office of Kevin Pritchard, Chad Buchanan, and Ted Wu have done a terrific job of targeting the right players with the right skillset to ensure that this team is strong enough to compete in the improved Eastern Conference. There would have been other holes to fill had Indiana tied itself to an overpay for Walker Kessler, especially when it can get similar -- if not better-- production from Ivica Zubac for $11M less per season.
You can follow me on X @AlexGoldenNBA and listen to my daily podcast, Setting The Pace, wherever you get your podcasts.
Published 22 minutes ago
ALEX GOLDENI was born in Indianapolis, Indiana and I am the host and creator of Setting The Pace: A Pacers Podcast. I have been covering the team since 2015, and talking about them on the podcast since 2018. I have been a credentialed media member since 2023.
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NPR’s Alito retirement blunder raises eyebrows after reporter’s ‘not plausible’ explanation stuns media world
NPR’s Alito retirement blunder raises eyebrows after reporter's ‘not plausible’ explanation stuns media world- US News
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Skip to main content MediaNPR’s Alito retirement blunder raises eyebrows after reporter’s ‘not plausible’ explanation stuns media world
By Brian Flood, Fox News Published July 1, 2026, 7:55 p.m. ETSee more of our coverage in your search results.
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The strange explanation surrounding NPR’s erroneous story about Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito’s retirement has raised more questions about the journalism debacle.
NPR was forced to retract a story Tuesday by legal affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg, who wrongly reported that Alito was retiring. NPR published the story headlined, “Justice Samuel Alito, who wrote the opinion overturning Roe v. Wade, retires,” but quickly replaced it with an editor’s note insisting it was “erroneously published.”
NPR top editor Thomas Evans issued a statement calling the botched report a “misunderstanding” and said Totenberg would appear on “All Things Considered” to explain how the gaffe occurred.
But NPR Public Editor Kelly McBride addressed the situation before Totenberg appeared on-air and wrote that Totenberg “misheard” an announcement by Chief Justice John Roberts and simply thought he said Alito was retiring.
Totenberg then appeared on “All Things Considered” Tuesday and provided a different explanation for the “rookie mistake” that contradicted her own public editor. The 82-year-old Totenberg, who has been a working journalist for over five decades, read a letter she wrote to Alito apologizing for the mistake.
“Dear Justice Alito, there are no words to adequately apologize for today’s error in reporting your retirement. It was entirely my fault,” Totenberg said.
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“I rushed out of the courtroom after the opinion announcements, and when I realized that the usual rush of folks after a few minutes had not happened, I asked somebody what was going on inside, to which the answer was, ‘retirement announcements.’ I didn’t hear the ‘s’ on ‘announcements,’ and I assumed, something no reporter should ever do, that you were retiring,” Totenberg continued. “It was the worst professional mistake of my more than 50 years in journalism. I could go on, but I don’t know what else to say, except that I am so, so sorry.”
NPR was then forced to issue its second correction of the day, this time to McBride’s story about Totenberg’s misstep. McBride initially wrote that Totenberg misheard Justice Roberts, but the veteran reporter admitted on-air that she instead heard “somebody” say a retirement was being announced.
“This story was updated to include Totenberg’s description of her error, as broadcast on ATC. She did not personally hear the announcement from the chief justice,” the correction stated.
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Alito’s retirement would have massive implications if it happened, as President Donald Trump would be in position to have a fourth Supreme Court pick over his two terms.
Totenberg’s puzzling explanation not only contradicted McBride but also stunned media observers from across the industry. CNN media reporter Brian Stelter posted her apology on X and was promptly met with confusion.
Axios reporter Alex Thompson replied, “I don’t understand,” to which Stelter added, “I don’t either.” Others suggested that Totenberg might have jumped the gun on a looming announcement and many wondered why a veteran journalist would have published a pre-written bombshell without clear confirmation.
Bethany Mandel added, “Her version of events is not plausible. She heard the word retirement and assumed Alito and published a whole story?”
“That is not an explanation. It’s either a lie or unforgivable incompetence for which she must be fired,” Miranda Devine responded.
Former CBS News reporter Scott MacFarlane wrote, “This is staggering. Just… gobsmacking.”
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“The Press Box” host Bryan Curtis added, “This is a different level of screw-up than a pre-write accidentally getting pubbed.”
Many others took to X with thoughts:
NPR has said the process for posting breaking news will be reviewed. In the meantime, McBride blasted her colleague.
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“As Totenberg said on air later in the day, ‘It was a rookie mistake.’ But had a rookie made such a mistake, he or she would have been dismissed. To make such an assumption is inexplainable,” McBride wrote.
NPR did not immediately respond to a series of Fox News Digital questions, including whether Totenberg would be disciplined and how the process for posting breaking news will change.
Alito, an appointee of President George W. Bush, has fueled speculation about his retirement because of two factors: his age and the length of his tenure on the bench. The 76-year-old justice has been part of the court for more than 20 years.
Republicans currently control the U.S. Senate and White House, so a hypothetical Trump nominee wouldn’t need Democratic support to get confirmed.
Fox News Digital’s Rachel Wolf, Alec Schemmel and Ashley Oliver contributed to this report.
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