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<!DOCTYPE html><html lang="en" dir="ltr"><head><meta charSet="utf-8"/><meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width,initial-scale=1"/><link rel="icon" href="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/_next/static/images/favicon-3888b0e329526a975703e3059a02b92d.ico"/><link rel="apple-touch-icon" href="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/_next/static/images/apple-touch-icon-default-b504d70343a9438df64c32ce339c7ebc.png"/><link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="76x76" href="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/_next/static/images/apple-touch-icon-76x76-d5accc11b8265af76495fbfa9d38dd3b.png"/><link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="120x120" href="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/_next/static/images/apple-touch-icon-120x120-419ba228184c040a691628d3dd82c206.png"/><link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="152x152" href="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/_next/static/images/apple-touch-icon-152x152-aafde20dd981a38fcd549b29b2b3b785.png"/><meta name="application-name" content="theatlantic"/><meta name="msapplication-TileColor" content="#FFFFFF"/><meta name="msapplication-TileImage" content="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/_next/static/images/apple-touch-icon-default-b504d70343a9438df64c32ce339c7ebc.png"/><meta property="og:site_name" content="The Atlantic"/><meta property="og:locale" content="en_US"/><meta property="fb:admins" content="577048155,17301937"/><meta property="fb:app_id" content="100770816677686"/><meta property="fb:pages" content="29259828486,1468531833474495,1061579677251147,457711054591520,370457103090695,1631141167169115,148681772342453,1510507419185410,128344747344340,128377530562508,236061986423933"/><meta name="p:domain_verify" content="68e1a0361a557708fefc992f3309ed70"/><meta name="twitter:site" content="@theatlantic"/><meta name="twitter:domain" content="theatlantic.com"/><script type="application/ld+json">{"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"WebSite","name":"The Atlantic","url":"https://www.theatlantic.com","inLanguage":"en-US","issn":"1072-7825","potentialAction":{"@type":"SearchAction","target":"https://www.theatlantic.com/search/?q={q}","query-input":"required name=q"}}</script><script type="application/ld+json">{"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"Organization","@id":"https://www.theatlantic.com/#publisher","name":"The Atlantic","url":"https://www.theatlantic.com","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","width":{"@type":"QuantitativeValue","unitCode":"E37","value":224},"height":{"@type":"QuantitativeValue","unitCode":"E37","value":224},"url":"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/assets/media/files/atlantic-logo--224x224.png"},"sameAs":["https://www.facebook.com/TheAtlantic","https://twitter.com/theatlantic"]}</script><style id="_vis_opt_path_hide">#paywall,#nonMeteredNudge,#gate {opacity:0;}</style><title>Confessions of a Luxury-Wedding Planner - The Atlantic</title><meta name="description" content="Confessions of a wedding planner"/><meta property="krux:title" content="Confessions of a Luxury-Wedding Planner - The Atlantic"/><meta property="krux:description" content="Confessions of a wedding planner"/><link rel="canonical" href="https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2023/07/luxury-wedding-planners-industrial-complex-cost/674169/"/><link rel="image_src" href="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/Hm7RqHWVFylQTJ4DC8FcVq95d_8=/0x43:2000x1085/1200x625/media/img/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_Weddings_topper_hor/original.jpg"/><meta name="author" content="Xochitl Gonzalez"/><link rel="ia:markup_url" href="https://www.theatlantic.com/facebook-instant/article/674169/"/><meta property="article:publisher" content="https://www.facebook.com/TheAtlantic/"/><meta property="article:opinion" content="false"/><meta property="article:content_tier" content="metered"/><meta property="article:tag" content="family"/><meta property="article:section" content="Culture"/><meta property="article:published_time" content="2023-06-16T11:00:00Z"/><meta property="article:modified_time" content="2023-06-16T21:57:38Z"/><meta name="robots" content="index, follow, max-image-preview:large"/><meta property="og:title" content="The Fake Poor Bride"/><meta property="og:description" content="Confessions of a wedding planner"/><meta property="og:url" content="https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2023/07/luxury-wedding-planners-industrial-complex-cost/674169/"/><meta property="og:type" content="article"/><meta property="og:image" content="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/Hm7RqHWVFylQTJ4DC8FcVq95d_8=/0x43:2000x1085/1200x625/media/img/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_Weddings_topper_hor/original.jpg"/><meta property="twitter:card" content="summary_large_image"/><link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="The Atlantic" href="/feed/all/"/><link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="Best of The Atlantic" href="/feed/best-of/"/><meta name="referrer" content="unsafe-url"/><meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-capable" content="yes"/><meta name="apple-mobile-web-status-bar-style" content="black"/><meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-title" content="The Atlantic"/><meta name="keywords" content="wedding planners, wedding planner, brides mother, luxury-wedding planner, sue.The work of a luxury-wedding planner, Daniele Castellano, professional wedding friend, much argument, custom-made chandeliers, none of the bride, Marcy Blums recent weddings, better way, couple plan, weddings, most expensive caterers, bride, football wedding, reality-TV show, younger sister, putting green, friendly one-upmanship, stunning event, new life, beginning of a couple, uncontrollable rise of wedding sprawlSo, mother of the bride, only wedding planner, homeless people, business partner, next day, least unfortunate notions, stylist Julie Sabatinos company, luxuriously good time, dreamy sailcloth tent, lavish wedding, day, Instagram-ready ombré, edible escort cards, work of art.One bride, most expensive help, Sunday mornings, New York City, better judgment, Last year, needy look, average wedding, single must-read, black-tie finery, People, first time.Our clients" itemID="#keywords"/><meta name="news_keywords" content="wedding planners, wedding planner, brides mother, luxury-wedding planner, sue.The work of a luxury-wedding planner, Daniele Castellano, professional wedding friend, much argument, custom-made chandeliers, none of the bride, Marcy Blums recent weddings, better way, couple plan, weddings, most expensive caterers, bride, football wedding, reality-TV show, younger sister, putting green, friendly one-upmanship, stunning event, new life, beginning of a couple, uncontrollable rise of wedding sprawlSo, mother of the bride, only wedding planner, homeless people, business partner, next day, least unfortunate notions, stylist Julie Sabatinos company, luxuriously good time, dreamy sailcloth tent, lavish wedding, day, Instagram-ready ombré, edible escort cards, work of art.One bride, most expensive help, Sunday mornings, New York City, better judgment, Last year, needy look, average wedding, single must-read, black-tie finery, People, first time.Our clients"/><link rel="preload" as="font" type="font/woff2" href="https://www.theatlantic.com/packages/fonts/garamond/AGaramondPro-Regular.woff2" crossorigin=""/><link rel="preload" as="font" type="font/woff2" href="https://www.theatlantic.com/packages/fonts/graphik/Graphik-Regular-Web.woff2" crossorigin=""/><link rel="preload" as="font" type="font/woff2" href="https://www.theatlantic.com/packages/fonts/graphik/Graphik-Semibold-Web.woff2" crossorigin=""/><link rel="preload" as="font" type="font/woff2" href="https://www.theatlantic.com/packages/fonts/logic/LogicMonospace-Medium.woff2" crossorigin=""/><link rel="preload" as="font" type="font/woff2" href="https://www.theatlantic.com/packages/fonts/logic/LogicMonospace-Regular.woff2" crossorigin=""/><script 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page" data-event-surface="article"><gpt-ad class="GptAd_root__2eqVh Leaderboard_root__nPXmd" format="leaderboard" sizes-at-0="" sizes-at-976="leaderboard"></gpt-ad><article class="ArticleLayout_article___LmDe article-content-body"><header class="ArticleHero_root__SkDn3" data-event-module="hero"><div class="ArticleHero_twoColumnLockupWrapper__kRvPn"><div class="ArticleHero_twoColArticleLockup__HVyOV"><div class="ArticleHero_rubric__TTaCW ArticleHero_twoColRubric__KPWjj"><div class="ArticleRubric_root__uEgHx" id="rubric"><a class="ArticleRubric_link__2zvFo" href="https://www.theatlantic.com/culture/" data-action="click link - section rubric" data-label="https://www.theatlantic.com/culture/" data-event-element="rubric">Culture</a></div></div><div class="ArticleHero_title__altPg"><h1 class="ArticleTitle_root__Nb9Xh ArticleTitle_featureOrTwoCol__4sJHf ArticleTitle_twoCol__KOGWs">The Fake Poor Bride</h1></div><div class="ArticleHero_dek__tzvz3"><p class="ArticleDek_root__R8OvU ArticleDek_twoCol__wvFaq">Confessions of a wedding planner</p></div><div class="ArticleHero_byline__vNW7C ArticleHero_twoColByline__OK4qj"><div class="ArticleBylines_root__CFgKs ArticleBylines_twoCol__rFQrb"><address id="byline">By <a class="ArticleBylines_link__IlZu4" href="https://www.theatlantic.com/author/xochitl-gonzalez/" data-action="click author - byline" data-label="https://www.theatlantic.com/author/xochitl-gonzalez/" data-event-element="author">Xochitl Gonzalez</a><div>Illustrations by Daniele Castellano</div></address></div></div></div><div class="ArticleLeadArt_root__3PEn8 ArticleLeadArt_twoCol__C5HFK"><figure class="ArticleLeadFigure_root__P_6yW"><div class="ArticleLeadFigure_media__LOlhI"><picture><img alt="illustrations of wedding vignettes patterned like toile de jouy wallpaper: couple in flower arch, private jet with stacks of linens, tower of appetizers, mother and daughter arguing over a bill, army of people holding up a wedding tent" class="Image_root__d3aBr ArticleLeadArt_image__R4iW6" sizes="(min-width: 1440px) 656px, (min-width:1024px) calc(50vw - 64px), (min-width: 768px) calc(50vw - 48px), (min-width: 375px) calc(100vw - 103px), (min-width: 320px) calc(100vw - 64px), calc(100vw - 48px)" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/zBp9HkBvrLt4dgOsw6Q4qLDvP3I=/0x0:1200x1500/296x370/media/img/2023/06/10/0723_Gonzalez_Weddings_topper/original.jpg 296w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/EzNbdmkLeOMiUbUcEIPvSOgVL6Q=/0x0:1200x1500/311x389/media/img/2023/06/10/0723_Gonzalez_Weddings_topper/original.jpg 311w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/mkSOwysdflkyCtBrVNEx2jLVMb0=/0x0:1200x1500/592x740/media/img/2023/06/10/0723_Gonzalez_Weddings_topper/original.jpg 592w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/U5xA5bu9H7_CUcKAI7ATJGl0YR4=/0x0:1200x1500/622x778/media/img/2023/06/10/0723_Gonzalez_Weddings_topper/original.jpg 622w, 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data-saferedirecturl="https://www.google.com/url?q=https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/sign-up/one-story-to-read-today/&amp;source=gmail&amp;ust=1687017456103000&amp;usg=AOvVaw2eo1-F6kyrzjmsnpMvdSO7" href="https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/sign-up/one-story-to-read-today/" target="_blank"><i>Sign up for it here.</i></a><i>      </i></small></p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI ArticleParagraph_dropcap__Xra23">S<span class="smallcaps">unday mornings</span>, for wedding planners, are reserved for prayer. Not because its a particularly pious profession but because thats the day when clients who were married on Saturday figure out if theyre happy or not. Should they choose unhappiness, Sunday is when they decide whom to blame. And Monday is when the emails come.</p><div class="ArticleRelatedContentModule_root__BBa6g"><section class="ArticleMagazinePromo_root__tMhiT" data-event-module="magazine promo"><div class="ArticleMagazinePromo_textWrapper__ENvJk"><h2 class="ArticleMagazinePromo_heading__T7X5B">Explore the July/August 2023 Issue</h2><p class="ArticleMagazinePromo_cta__FjmXl">Check out more from this issue and find your next story to read.</p></div><a class="ArticleMagazinePromo_link__epAjV" href="https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/toc/2023/07/" target="_blank" data-action="click button - magazine promo" data-label="https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/toc/2023/07/" data-event-element="view more">View More</a></section></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">I say “decide” because weddings are funny affairs—tense, expensive, fraught with emotion. They are revisited—by the couple, by the family, by the person paying the bills—time and again. They mark the beginning of a couples new life but sometimes of other things too: family feuds, broken friendships, a long hangover of fiscal regret. So even if the party went great, on Sunday the wedding planner prays.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Will the email be full of joy and praise? Or will it be one of complaint? Back when I was a luxury-wedding planner in New York City, my business partner and I once got an email from a bride, written as she helicoptered off to her honeymoon, saying that her wedding had been a “transcendent experience.” A call from the brides mother directly followed. “Repeat after me,” she said. “<i>I am bad at my job. I should never do this job again.</i>” Sometimes the clients just need to vent. Sometimes they threaten to sue.</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:14.50%"><img alt="section break image" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/cxZxuhehgJaDXNw_OiTLXQ_WZfk=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/kgBO3pp4bD3wCh6nsIxYMH9BWl4=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/Y6YkopKVpTmBtfjFwVZ54QdeJRM=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/axX6cw-DrblIJkLpOIKIHG1UqrI=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/RTo1Cg3Yoqhp9u0ImjUr5W8Ak-4=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/cxZxuhehgJaDXNw_OiTLXQ_WZfk=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg" width="655" height="95"/></picture></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI ArticleParagraph_dropcap__Xra23"><span class="smallcaps">The work of </span>a luxury-wedding planner is only partly about the planning. Yes, you help the couple plan what you hope will be a stunning event—but your main job is to be a professional wedding friend. Youre the person who cares if the bow on the favor has swallow or inverse tails, or if the maid of honor is being a passive-aggressive bitch when none of the brides other friends wants to talk about it anymore. The family is paying you to care as much as they do.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">When I became a wedding planner, no one in my own family could comprehend my utility. My grandparents, who raised me, had what was called a “<a data-event-element="inline link" href="https://www.theknot.com/content/what-is-football-wedding">football wedding</a>.” They rented the Veterans of Foreign Wars hall in Red Hook, Brooklyn, and piled tinfoil-wrapped heroes on a table. People would shout out what sandwich they wanted, and another guest would toss it across the room. “<a data-event-element="inline link" href="https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2023/04/wedding-events-engagement-shower-bachelor-bachelorette-party-rehearsal-dinner-reception/673691/">How complicated could a wedding be</a>?” they wondered. Had I chosen to be a professional mud wrestler, I do not think it could have confounded them more.</p><p id="injected-recirculation-link-0" class="ArticleRelatedContentLink_root__v6EBD" data-view-action="view link - injected link - item 1" data-event-element="injected link" data-event-position="1"><a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2023/04/wedding-events-engagement-shower-bachelor-bachelorette-party-rehearsal-dinner-reception/673691/">Read: The uncontrollable rise of wedding sprawl</a></p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">So whenever one of our events was featured in a bridal magazine, I would bring it to family occasions and show it off the way other people might show off pictures of their babies. “See,” I would say, pointing to a dreamy sailcloth tent glowing with custom-made chandeliers. “There was nothing but a field here. We built all of this.”</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:74.96%"><img alt="illustration of tower of appetizers" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/UvXz02fgBaJcqwUQQApPkLPcRlo=/0x0:5565x4174/655x491/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_buffet/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/r2obzb8UynFCHXn4nBiKYNsEY0M=/0x0:5565x4174/750x562/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_buffet/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/Hw2IE5cACukhxE4Yn18hb6wnUOo=/0x0:5565x4174/850x637/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_buffet/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/AveZSN2cZtvCqamwzY8frOcq8qg=/0x0:5565x4174/928x696/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_buffet/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/gehuoiXFw2etNrAbk19JqYtcckI=/0x0:5565x4174/1310x982/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_buffet/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/UvXz02fgBaJcqwUQQApPkLPcRlo=/0x0:5565x4174/655x491/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_buffet/original.jpg" width="655" height="491"/></picture><figcaption class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_caption__HZqXW ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7">Daniele Castellano</figcaption></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Unfortunately, this only added to the confusion. “Dont they realize they could have bought a house with all of this money?”</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">I would have to explain that my clients didnt need a house. They already had one. They probably had several.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">A few years after the recession, I did a lavish wedding on Long Island. The bride was stressing about putting a custom lining on her invitations that would add another couple thousand to the already large stationery bill. She and the groom had been given a seven-figure sum to spend both on their wedding and on buying and decorating their new home, and the bride had a thing for mid-century-modern furniture. Was the liner worth more than a Wassily chair? She went back and forth, back and forth. I couldnt say a thing, but finally her mother reached her limit: “Were rich!” she cried out in exasperation. “Get the liners!”</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Months later, the same mother, while admiring the tent we had spent days erecting for the reception, said, in total seriousness, “I hate that its only being used for one night. I wish we could find some homeless people to stay here when were done.”</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:14.50%"><img alt="section break image" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/J3bVUY7IB4CnBddrZ4B31gIEcIM=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/Fbe0nq_S1Ua3bTjw8WaKL00nobc=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/rwb2xbS_gSoUInOT_G-CNK_h-nc=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/UT3a4-kS4wY3__hI3B6zNL7gwck=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/_BXavZNEN_HunLXS4lvg2O_AyXU=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/J3bVUY7IB4CnBddrZ4B31gIEcIM=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg" width="655" height="95"/></picture></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI ArticleParagraph_dropcap__Xra23"><span class="smallcaps">I once got a call</span> from a woman in a panic: Her daughter was getting married in a few weeks and she needed my partner and me to save this wedding. She offered no further details over the phone, insisting that we come uptown to her apartment so she could properly convey the scale of the conundrum. Right before she hung up the phone she whispered, “By the way, Im very, very rich.”</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">And she was! She lived in one of those opulent places with an elevator that opened up into the apartment itself, because thats how sprawling it was. A maid in a uniform greeted us and escorted us down a long, art-lined hallway and into the library, where the mother of the bride was waiting.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">She explained the dilemma. Her daughter was embarrassed by her familys wealth, and had been living as a closeted rich person for years—her friends had no idea. The bride had refused to let her mother have anything to do with the wedding, because if her mom got involved, the jig would be up. Everyone would see shed just been cosplaying poverty. And so, armed with information from the internet and her mothers checkbook, the young woman had gone off and planned what she imagined was an “average wedding.”</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">With the event just weeks away, the mother had started poking around and realized, <i>This is terrible!</i> Her daughter didnt just have conflicted ideas about her own privilege. She also had bad taste—or at least unfortunate notions of what the “average” bride wants at her wedding: things like jam jars for wineglasses, picnic tables for seating, a limited bar.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Her daughter could pretend all she wanted, the mother said, but their friends and family knew that they were rich and were <a data-event-element="inline link" href="https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2017/07/how-the-american-wedding-became-performance-art/533733/">expecting a nice affair</a>. After much argument, they compromised: They would hire a wedding planner. And the only wedding planner in all of New York they could agree on was me, probably because while many of my competitors were specializing in opulence, I had cornered the market in “understated luxury.”</p><p id="injected-recirculation-link-1" class="ArticleRelatedContentLink_root__v6EBD" data-view-action="view link - injected link - item 2" data-event-element="injected link" data-event-position="2"><a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2017/07/how-the-american-wedding-became-performance-art/533733/">Read: How “I do” became performance art</a></p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">The mother insisted that we meet right away because the bride was planning to reach out and hire us the next day, and the mother wanted me to be clear on how it was going to work. My job, in addition to making sure the wedding was not an embarrassment, was to say yes to everything the daughter asked for. If the bride questioned what something cost, I was to say it was “already included in the contract.” The mother didnt care how expensive anything was; she would cover it secretly. Did this sound crazy? Absolutely. Did I need the money? Yes.</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:14.50%"><img alt="section break image" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/oVr3jn8MS-PLGzmM-yeCNzzxRm4=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/nr0KyhIOiaqvwsCm9ku96_Iyals=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/OIIKcczoIuFXW9Q2wCuxqYEMoV4=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/7cYzWb93bT5qurVNqAltGu1bceU=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/nQ_4HpliG8VEK6kPGFI4DlVD-aE=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/oVr3jn8MS-PLGzmM-yeCNzzxRm4=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg" width="655" height="95"/></picture></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI ArticleParagraph_dropcap__Xra23"><span class="smallcaps">I was amazed </span>by how well the strategy worked. “You could serve these baby lamb chops,” I would say, to which the bride would reply, “But is that going to be more expensive than pigs in a blanket?,” and I would assure her, as I had been hired to do, that everything was in the contract.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">But then one day the bride proclaimed her desire to reduce the carbon footprint of the wedding by having edible escort cards. The escort card is the folded-over piece of card stock that tells a guest where to sit. The bride had the idea to stick toothpicks with little tags showing the names and table numbers into bacon-wrapped dates, combining appetizer and escort card and thus saving the environment.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">I nodded yes, and then emailed the mother in a panic, something to the effect of: “Its going to look like a table full of floating turds! What are we going to do?”</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">“For Christs sake, why cant you be my daughter?” she wrote back.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">The mother said shed grown up poor like me but, unlike me, had married well. “Marry rich!” she would tell me. “Its so fun!” I still havent had a chance to give this a try, but I suspect that shes right. We agreed: When you have more money than God, what better way to spend some of it than to throw other people a luxuriously good time?</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Anyway, they say that there are no accidents, but the daughter, in town for wedding things, logged on to her mothers computer and saw our entire exchange. She insisted, quite understandably, that I be fired immediately.</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:14.50%"><img alt="section break image" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/VerIPxdUBLgFqV8AqBELbGl33-o=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/t0POgDniUsURG1ABj9waXUHDOL4=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/lbfI3n6HVRlPPKClH0BrMJnDokw=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/4v1CB9gI9vjFFLMa9ceeaTL64kM=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/htNPmqL9cemRegMTW2DVDJEaZN8=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/VerIPxdUBLgFqV8AqBELbGl33-o=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg" width="655" height="95"/></picture></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI ArticleParagraph_dropcap__Xra23"><span class="smallcaps">When my business </span>partner and I began planning weddings, in 2003, America was in a wedding craze, nurtured by an abundance of magazines: <i>Brides</i>, <i>Modern Bride</i>, <i>Elegant Bride</i>, <i>Town &amp; Country Weddings</i>, <i>Inside Weddings</i>, <i>InStyle Weddings</i>. <i>The Wedding Planner</i> had hit theaters in 2001. Then we had <i>Bridezillas</i> and <i>Whose Wedding Is It Anyway?</i> Soon you could scour wedding blogs all night: Style Me Pretty and Weddingbee and The Bridal Bar (and my very own blog at the time, Always a Blogsmaid). On the Fridays before weddings, I used to binge-watch <i>Say Yes to the Dress</i> to calm my nerves—at least these werent my clients.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Weddings have always been luxury goods. And like all luxury goods, theyve been coveted, emulated, and knocked off by the masses. Even white dresses became a thing only after Queen Victoria was married in one in 1840. Wedding envy is as old as weddings themselves, but it was supercharged by <a data-event-element="inline link" href="https://www.npr.org/2018/06/07/592401053/the-knot-carley-roney-david-liu">the mid-90s dawn of TheKnot.com</a>. Weddings as we know them today—with their Instagram-ready ombré floral arrangements and embroidered custom veils and pom-pom farewells—began with an online group of brides-to-be called the Knotties.</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:56.18%"><img alt="illustration of wedding couple under arch of flowers" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/sYBJouJXTeqOl7GFj52qPpyuAxg=/0x0:6263x3523/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_couple/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/CwovwieRqRY-Eg4sqvYDt7am1FQ=/0x0:6263x3523/750x421/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_couple/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/LQSC-WGqaWhDpV57jX7d7OkdC1o=/0x0:6263x3523/850x478/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_couple/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/qhauX9Udep8KbHjZ-3T25AfF5Ic=/0x0:6263x3523/928x521/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_couple/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/pz8XTxuyjDZZaMDjDi957md4Fug=/0x0:6263x3523/1310x736/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_couple/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/sYBJouJXTeqOl7GFj52qPpyuAxg=/0x0:6263x3523/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_couple/original.jpg" width="655" height="368"/></picture><figcaption class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_caption__HZqXW ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7">Daniele Castellano</figcaption></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Someone with a name like JuneJerseyBride334 would post photos of, say, her bedazzled escort and menu cards.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">“Are we supposed to have menu cards?” SomethingBlue305 might ask. “I dont have menu cards.”</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">“If I can get DH to splurge, Im gonna get some!” FallForTedForever might add. “Printing these pics and stealing all your cute ideas!”</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">The Knot offered brides-to-be advice about budgets and listings of potential vendors, but it was the chat rooms—and the camaraderie and friendly one-upmanship found there—that kept users coming back. The Knot created a community; it made being a bride an identity. And it transformed weddings into a competitive sport.</p><aside class="ArticlePullquote_root__YtnHv">Last year, approximately 13,000 weddings in America cost $1 million or more.</aside><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">An especially beautiful wedding might be featured on the site, or picked up by The Knots magazine. Soon more and more people began planning weddings not just around their guests experience of one special day, but around how the images of that day would look to strangers online. By 2010, I had clients walking in asking about our publicity strategy: <i>Where do you plan on sending the photos once the wedding is done?</i></p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">That was the year Instagram was founded, making it far easier for couples to share their content themselves. Thirteen years later, couples can hire a professional wedding social-media adviser, a service that can cost up to $3,000. A company such as Maid of Social will develop a “strategy” for your wedding, attend and photograph it, and post the shots to your Snapchat and Instagram accounts, hashtags included—“because the day you just spent 14 months planning should be seen by the world.”</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Being a bride used to mean being royalty for a day. Now it means being a celebrity. Either way, the only sure path to really distinguish yourself—to capture the oohs and the aahs and the attention—is to spend a lot of money.</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:14.50%"><img alt="section break image" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/l7yPkiSdQ3aoD68tIYU24Iwsb_A=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/FCxGEL1fg9Uw0FF8Mj9Iv_nGeUk=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/l2RK6eksEuBaWbyjCWJ28zTtslU=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/adpkakgFKS78q22SNF_jNvrDb5U=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/jj_Q2bTgIwJc8BQUk2wyiKIjeDg=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/l7yPkiSdQ3aoD68tIYU24Iwsb_A=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg" width="655" height="95"/></picture></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI ArticleParagraph_dropcap__Xra23"><span class="smallcaps">The average wedding </span>in America <a data-event-element="inline link" href="https://www.theknot.com/content/wedding-data-insights/real-weddings-study">costs about $30,000</a>. Historically, money for weddings was cobbled together through savings and gifts from parents, but today <a data-event-element="inline link" href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2019/06/19/married-debt-couples-are-taking-out-loans-pay-their-weddings/">many of the celebrations are debt-financed affairs</a>. Surveys have found that roughly 30 to 45 percent of couples report taking on credit-card or other debt to pay for them. Wedding loans—personal loans marketed to engaged couples—can carry interest rates as high as 30 percent.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">At the same time, <a data-event-element="inline link" href="https://www.vox.com/2017/6/7/15740564/luxury-weddings">ultra-luxurious weddings</a>—the kind no one needs credit cards to pay for—have become a bigger slice of the market. Last year, approximately 13,000 weddings in America cost $1 million or more, according to the consulting firm Think Splendid. Which means that each week across America, some 250 millionaire and billionaire families are setting trends the rest of us should never dream of emulating.</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:56.18%"><img alt="illustration of bird-shaped flowers holding adding-machine tape in their beaks" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/9agpQVfHWJ_3-mjF-UAj4iPbePI=/0x0:4452x2504/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_decorations/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/HelwqRCSlt2sjqbL6yIOE-lD7cM=/0x0:4452x2504/750x421/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_decorations/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/CHIaobMASMCpNGPccsu_y_HenY4=/0x0:4452x2504/850x478/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_decorations/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/OjkB698HZXOHYAHjB8D1Oye9sdo=/0x0:4452x2504/928x521/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_decorations/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/ZZIc-IcH_Fa3ZDprgKgKIR69Dm0=/0x0:4452x2504/1310x736/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_decorations/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/9agpQVfHWJ_3-mjF-UAj4iPbePI=/0x0:4452x2504/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_decorations/original.jpg" width="655" height="368"/></picture><figcaption class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_caption__HZqXW ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7">Daniele Castellano</figcaption></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">At one of Marcy Blums recent weddings, on a private estate in Palm Beach, Florida, she built her clients a miniature golf course. A video of guests put-putting around in their black-tie finery is available on Instagram, where Blum has more than 100,000 followers. Blum has been planning weddings for more than 30 years and has worked for moguls including George Soros and LeBron James. Like a lot of people in this industry, she wasnt born rich; she was raised in the Bronx by a salesman and a schoolteacher. But shes rarely intimidated. Say youre talking to Bill Gates, she told me: “He may be the smartest person in the world, but what does he know about lighting or a table setting?” Blum was my mentor<span class="caps"></span>Ive spent more nights than I can count crying on her sofa—and is still a close friend.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">The golf course wasnt just some holes and a putting green: She and her design partners also created a concession stand, provided custom pencils and scorecards (inscribed with <span class="smallcaps">Talk Birdie to Me</span>), and had staff dressed up as caddies offering putting tips.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Blum declined to tell me how much the mini golf added to the budget. But some of her clients spend $2 million or $3 million on their wedding—about $8,000 a head. Some spend more, but she didnt want to elaborate—“I dont want people to think Im that expensive before they call me,” she said with a laugh.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">What does all this money go to? Primarily: infrastructure. The least sexy things are the most expensive—landscaping to clear a field; electrical lines to get power to said field; tent companies to erect a clearspan or sailcloth structure for 300 people and then to heat or cool it; lighting to illuminate it; driftwood flooring; restroom trailers; decorations to make the trailers look like elegant powder rooms; another tent for the caterer; refrigerated trucks to keep the food cold; propane stoves to get it hot; even more landscaping to level another field far away where the vendors vehicles can be parked.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">For all of this you need many, many, many workers. Blums weddings might employ up to 40 vendors, each with its own staff—hundreds and hundreds of bodies, mostly blue-collar laborers, many of them immigrants. All of these people can be there for upwards of a week working around the clock. Its sort of like being in the circus.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">The day of the wedding, her clients will fly in professional dressers like the ones who work for the stylist Julie Sabatinos company, The Stylish Bride. Sabatinos website refers to her dressers as “ladies in waiting” and shows them wearing white gloves and little aprons. The starting rate for just one is $2,450; a luxury wedding sometimes has 10. They sew and they press and they “do the bow ties,” Blum told me; theyll pin garments into place and follow the bride around with a water bottle with a straw in it so she can drink without ruining her lipstick.</p><p id="injected-recirculation-link-2" class="ArticleRelatedContentLink_root__v6EBD" data-view-action="view link - injected link - item 3" data-event-element="injected link" data-event-position="3"><a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2023/05/branded-wedding-favors-intentions/673963/">Read: The wedding trend couples love and guests hate</a></p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Throughout this time, Blum usually employs security guards and a cybersecurity firm to keep hackers out of the guest list. Theres a caterer to provide staff meals, and an on-site calligrapher to accommodate any last-minute changes to the seating chart. She even employs a “concierge event meteorologist”—Andrew Leavitt of Ironic Reports—to help prepare for the possibility of a “rain call”: the dreaded moment when the planner needs to inform the bride that the outdoor celebration she dreamed of needs to move inside. Leavitt will call “every, like, 15 minutes” to update her on a possible storm front: “Its moving this way; its moving that way.”</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Weather, after all, is the one thing Marcy Blum cant control.</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:14.50%"><img alt="section break image" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/cxZxuhehgJaDXNw_OiTLXQ_WZfk=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/kgBO3pp4bD3wCh6nsIxYMH9BWl4=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/Y6YkopKVpTmBtfjFwVZ54QdeJRM=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/axX6cw-DrblIJkLpOIKIHG1UqrI=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/RTo1Cg3Yoqhp9u0ImjUr5W8Ak-4=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/cxZxuhehgJaDXNw_OiTLXQ_WZfk=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg" width="655" height="95"/></picture></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI ArticleParagraph_dropcap__Xra23"><span class="smallcaps">Early in my </span>wedding-planning days, I signed on to do the reality-TV show <i>Whose Wedding Is It Anyway?</i> I didnt care about the fame, but I wanted more clients. If there were an Emmy for reality-TV performance, I couldve won it. Enthusiastic, romantic, anxious that everything go exactly as planned, I had clipboards and checklists and said things like “This is what I live for” when my clients gushed over their reception room. I could do 20 takes of me entering a bakery to see a cake, looking both ecstatic and urgently concerned, and each was like the first time.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Our clients who agreed to do the show werent billionaires—they were normal people. They liked getting a little taste of stardom, sure, but mostly they wanted upgrades on things like flowers and lighting—a nice wedding on camera. The producers, of course, wanted something different. Nice weddings are nice. Messy weddings are great TV.</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:56.18%"><img alt="illustration of two women yelling and arguing over long adding-machine receipt" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/EwlXy9JgAtuR7w_eOcmmnma5u78=/0x0:5012x2819/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_fight/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/a6HrS0uVS1sSvNoo53wo1smJJaQ=/0x0:5012x2819/750x421/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_fight/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/GvUFp_bYjYHTOzJP78JK2Ow6O4A=/0x0:5012x2819/850x478/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_fight/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/VniBZzeXsZYIkR1rO7nXQnwY_aQ=/0x0:5012x2819/928x521/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_fight/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/iD9b7TTyTFaaCZdn9GJd4w5VUqM=/0x0:5012x2819/1310x736/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_fight/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/EwlXy9JgAtuR7w_eOcmmnma5u78=/0x0:5012x2819/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_fight/original.jpg" width="655" height="368"/></picture><figcaption class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_caption__HZqXW ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7">Daniele Castellano</figcaption></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">For my first reality-TV wedding, there I was—at a catering hall deep in New Jersey wearing a very unfortunate blue-velvet blazer—trying hard to seem calm while frantically calling the florist, who had gone missing. After many hours and excuses, he did eventually show up—but with at least one fewer centerpiece than promised. Naturally, the producers wanted us back.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">We did <i>Whose Wedding Is It Anyway?</i> a couple more times, but as I got better at my job, I had a harder time pretending to be overwhelmed or anxious about things I could do in my sleep. Our last foray into television came in 2014. It was a chance to star in a new show whose concept was extreme weddings. We were assigned a ceremony for 70 guests at the base of a dormant volcano in Hawaii. The shoot involved the bride entering by helicopter and six hours of setup and taping under the hot sun on black lava with no restroom. The entire thing went off smoothly. But reality TV doesnt appreciate expertise—we knew theyd never pick up the show.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">In any case, my off-screen weddings were providing plenty of drama.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">I once worked with a bride who had all of her wedding gifts sent to our office. I was confused until I realized that it gave her an excuse to keep stopping by. She knew that her fiancé was cheating on her, and she needed someone to talk with about it. They still got married, though, and had a resplendent wedding brunch. (I love a wedding brunch.)</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Another bride could not settle on a design scheme, and was growing intensely frustrated. She said something like “I just dont like pink. Never show me anything pink!” She had sent me a dozen images of things she loved, all of which involved the color pink. She was wearing head-to-toe pink. Even her phone was pink. “I think you love pink,” I said, as I looked her dead in the eye. “You actually love pink.” She ended up having a pink wedding.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">At my final meeting with one couple, they kept talking about how they wanted to put “edibles” on the bar. I had designed a gorgeous wedding for them, with a custom chuppah and matching chandelier hand-built by an artist in Brooklyn, and a bunch of Edible Arrangements on the bar would completely destroy the vibe. I tried very hard to be polite about it. “People have strong opinions about edibles,” I said. This was true about chocolate-covered pineapple slices, and it was also true about weed gummies.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Another couple was getting married on an enormous estate, and the father of the bride decided, against his better judgment, to go all in on making it the wedding of his daughters dreams. He would use this occasion to give her every outrageous thing shed ever asked for in her life. We hid that pony for days.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">When the weddings were over, many of our couples would take us out for a reunion meal, where they would spend hours reminiscing and reliving their favorite moments. Sometimes these nights were fun; sometimes, less so. I got divorced right before one of these dinners, and over appetizers the bride asked me what had gone wrong. “I guess I just felt dead inside,” I said. Later, she followed me to the ladies room. When I came out of the stall, she was waiting for me. “I feel dead inside too,” she said.</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:14.50%"><img alt="section break image" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/J3bVUY7IB4CnBddrZ4B31gIEcIM=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/Fbe0nq_S1Ua3bTjw8WaKL00nobc=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/rwb2xbS_gSoUInOT_G-CNK_h-nc=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/UT3a4-kS4wY3__hI3B6zNL7gwck=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/_BXavZNEN_HunLXS4lvg2O_AyXU=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/J3bVUY7IB4CnBddrZ4B31gIEcIM=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg" width="655" height="95"/></picture></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI ArticleParagraph_dropcap__Xra23"><span class="smallcaps">The term </span><i>the<span class="smallcaps"><i> </i></span>wedding-industrial complex</i> entered the vernacular in 2007, around when Rebecca Mead published her takedown of the wedding industry, <a data-event-element="inline link" href="https://tertulia.com/book/one-perfect-day-the-selling-of-the-american-wedding-rebecca-mead/9780143113843?affiliate_id=atl-347"><i>One Perfect Day</i></a>.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Mead was a cynic about the entire endeavor. She seemed to think that levelheaded couples should just take themselves to a courthouse and get on with their life while other, flightier fiancés were seduced by wedding professionals eager to swindle them out of their hard-earned cash. “These people think of themselves as providing a service that is needed,” Mead <a data-event-element="inline link" href="https://www.salon.com/2007/05/21/mead_weddings/">told <i>Salon</i></a>. “But theyre also creating that need and generating the desire, and theyre certainly aware of it; the best ones are very clever marketers.”</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">But this was the era of the McMansion, the big-screen TV, the luxury handbag—insatiable consumer desire was hardly limited to weddings, or created by wedding planners. As Jodi Kantor <a data-event-element="inline link" href="https://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/13/books/review/Kantor-t.html">pointed out in her review</a>, “Were all nouveau riche now.” When the recession hit shortly thereafter—disproving that assumption—Meads take solidified in the popular imagination. Years later, articles still warn couples about wedding “taxes” and “premiums” and ways to avoid being “scammed by the wedding industry.”</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Its not the wedding professionals fault that weddings are expensive. The fact is that weddings are luxuries, not necessities. It costs a lot to make something look nice; it costs even more to make it <i>feel</i> nice—to make sure all your guests are comfortable, and well fed, and entertained. A wedding is not a photograph of a wedding. A wedding—a good wedding—is immersive theater, a living, breathing work of art.</p><aside class="ArticlePullquote_root__YtnHv">One bride knew that her fiancé was cheating on her. They still got married, though, and had a resplendent wedding brunch.</aside><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">But Mead wasnt wrong that wedding professionals are clever marketers. A handful of people dominate the luxury end of the market, and the trends they pioneered have taken widespread hold. Julie Sabatino basically invented wedding styling in the early aughts. Back then, when she told people what she did, they assumed she was a hairstylist, she told me. Today wedding stylists have cropped up all across the country, most charging a fraction of what she does.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Michael Waiser is among the most expensive caterers—“stupid expensive,” Ive heard people call him. His food—foraged mushrooms under a quail egg and shaved black truffles, <i>leche de tigre</i> with plantain threads, that sort of thing—is all kosher, and starts at about $550 a head. He started out working the New York kosher-catering circuit in the days when kosher was not exactly a coveted culinary experience. But Waiser realized that affluent Jewish foodies—just like their wealthy gentile peers—wanted something special.</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:56.18%"><img alt="illustration of private jet with woman in heels descending stairs with towering stack of folded linens" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/trUKEm8CQ9KDSQDJ0cfj-SScFjI=/0x0:3662x2059/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_jet/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/qLNp4_IXT-OjWqhYl0-dDM3CU_o=/0x0:3662x2059/750x421/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_jet/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/k2N66IYEmgm75Jf8ZbSPfBA4h1k=/0x0:3662x2059/850x478/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_jet/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/IDupqXz2uFDQPyGiBUfVexIx7nw=/0x0:3662x2059/928x521/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_jet/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/4_y76r1fqgjUASAZ2klagRnzjXg=/0x0:3662x2059/1310x736/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_jet/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/trUKEm8CQ9KDSQDJ0cfj-SScFjI=/0x0:3662x2059/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_jet/original.jpg" width="655" height="368"/></picture><figcaption class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_caption__HZqXW ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7">Daniele Castellano</figcaption></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Allan Zepeda immigrated to Brooklyn when he was 3 and started taking photos for the youth group at his Pentecostal church—hes entirely self-taught. “Thanks for calling the Latin kid,” he said when I reached out. He photographed the weddings of Sheryl Sandberg and Serena Williams. His destination-wedding rates now begin at $50,000. Beautiful images are only part of his success; couples love him because he treats them all like <i>Vogue</i> models.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">The thing all of these people understand is that “billionaires buy experiences; they dont buy things,” as Rishi Patel, a luxury-wedding designer based in Chicago, told me. And one of those experiences is having a very good time planning their wedding.</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:14.50%"><img alt="section break image" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/oVr3jn8MS-PLGzmM-yeCNzzxRm4=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/nr0KyhIOiaqvwsCm9ku96_Iyals=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/OIIKcczoIuFXW9Q2wCuxqYEMoV4=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/7cYzWb93bT5qurVNqAltGu1bceU=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/nQ_4HpliG8VEK6kPGFI4DlVD-aE=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/oVr3jn8MS-PLGzmM-yeCNzzxRm4=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg" width="655" height="95"/></picture></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI ArticleParagraph_dropcap__Xra23"><span class="smallcaps">The mother </span>of<span class="smallcaps"> </span>the fake poor bride, it turned out, couldnt bring herself to fire me. Wed had a blast together upgrading the brides budget-conscious, twee affair into a jewel box of an event, and we werent ready to quit. Instead, we came up with a ruse—even more elaborate than the first—to get us through the wedding day.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">I had one of my employees pretend to work for the caterer, and—Im not particularly proud of this—we introduced the bride and this woman, assuring her that I was no longer involved. Except that I absolutely was. And nothing the bride and this woman talked about held any water, because the only thing that mattered was what happened between me and her mother. And what was happening was a lot. We ordered custom furniture to maximize the space in the room. We brought in an enhanced cooling system. We had the floor refinished so no one would trip.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">On the day of the event, after straightening every fork and folding every hemstitched linen napkin, I made myself invisible. I left everything in the trusted hands of a few of my staff members, who were disguised as waiters. I posted myself in a restaurant a few blocks away and fielded the mothers hysterical texts: “Shes going to find out! Shes going to find out what weve been doing!”</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">I assured her that this charade would soon be behind us. But I didnt realize the reason she was certain her daughter would find out was that she was going to get drunk and tell her. Halfway through the reception, she pulled the bride aside and confessed the entire scheme. The bride saw red. She was surrounded by traitors on her wedding day! Her own mother was sneaking behind her back, carrying on an adulterous mother-daughter affair with the wedding planner!</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">At the end of the night, my phone buzzed one last time: “She knows everything. This is goodbye!”</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:14.50%"><img alt="section break image" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/VerIPxdUBLgFqV8AqBELbGl33-o=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/t0POgDniUsURG1ABj9waXUHDOL4=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/lbfI3n6HVRlPPKClH0BrMJnDokw=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/4v1CB9gI9vjFFLMa9ceeaTL64kM=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/htNPmqL9cemRegMTW2DVDJEaZN8=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/VerIPxdUBLgFqV8AqBELbGl33-o=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg" width="655" height="95"/></picture></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI ArticleParagraph_dropcap__Xra23"><span class="smallcaps">“We are always </span>gonna be the help,” Michael Waiser told me. “Im probably the most expensive help there is. But Im the help, right? And I think that you have to remember that.”</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">By 2015, I was burned out. Not so much by the weddings themselves as by the role I had to play. Shortly after Donald Trump declared his presidential candidacy in a statement full of anti-Mexican sentiment, this half-Chicana wedding planner found herself at a Friday-night tasting listening to how excited the brides and grooms families were about the venue and the band and the food and … future President Donald Trump. Real friends could have said what they thought. But wedding friends—hired friends—had to go on with the show.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">It is easier to get a divorce than to quit a wedding. I know because I successfully did the former but never the latter, and I liked my ex-husband a lot more than any of the brides I tried to walk away from. Almost always, the conflict came down to the budget: The bride wanted something she couldnt afford, and instead of accepting that, she decided I was incompetent.</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:56.18%"><img alt="illustration of army of people with ropes holding up wedding tent" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/t4jCcPV6mLpBCgwZbu6LratmpsA=/0x0:4716x2652/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_Tent/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/dGPuDQH-sAnG7rHmu0tzz7Vz7So=/0x0:4716x2652/750x421/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_Tent/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/JTgwhWx6vUyQc8Ouv4T6iLrVUO0=/0x0:4716x2652/850x478/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_Tent/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/ocjPSYWlI4AZNmjlTMyjNVr3p4A=/0x0:4716x2652/928x521/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_Tent/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/_WxxxiQZHoEvyieujOBrHeeE7Jc=/0x0:4716x2652/1310x736/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_Tent/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/t4jCcPV6mLpBCgwZbu6LratmpsA=/0x0:4716x2652/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_Tent/original.jpg" width="655" height="368"/></picture><figcaption class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_caption__HZqXW ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7">Daniele Castellano</figcaption></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Some of my most abusive clients were the ones who were stretching themselves, going into debt to have the wedding that they wanted the world to see them have. But unlike bags or jewelry, you cant really knock off a nice wedding. Things would get more and more tense, and finally we would call a meeting. This should be a joyous experience, and it was clear they werent happy. We should just part ways and refer them to—and the brides lip would start quivering.<i> Were sorry. Please dont leave us.</i></p><p id="injected-recirculation-link-3" class="ArticleRelatedContentLink_root__v6EBD" data-view-action="view link - injected link - item 4" data-event-element="injected link" data-event-position="4"><a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2022/04/marriage-problems-fight-dishes/629526/">Read: The marriage lesson that I learned too late</a></p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">I was used to my wealthy clients thinking they could bend reality to their will, but I got truly taken advantage of only once. The bride called us to say that she and her younger sister were both getting married in the same year at the same venue. For what seemed like obvious reasons, she did not want to work with the same planner as her baby sibling. I quoted her our rates and there was silence.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Her sisters planner, she said then, was cheaper—something like $12,000 less.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">To which I replied: Good for your sister!</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">We nevertheless agreed to meet, and by the end of our coffee date, I could see by the needy look in her eyes that she wanted me to be her wedding best friend—the one person who didnt care about what her sister was doing with her wedding; the one person who didnt care that her sister was getting married, period.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Her mother called: They loved me, but the issue was that the other planner cost less. Again I said: Good for you; they were welcome to use that planner for both events. But they wanted me. Eventually, they signed the contract and sent in the first of several deposits.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Two weeks before the wedding, we called to remind them that the final payment of $10,000 hadnt come in yet. They said the check was in the mail. Two days before we left to begin setting up, we tried to charge their card on file, but it was no longer valid. When we rang, they told us they would give us a check when we arrived. Three days into the tent installation, when we would ask for payment, the mother or father would say they would go to the house right away and get it. Each time, they would get distracted. On the day of the wedding, we still hadnt been paid, and debated what to do. It wasnt like they didnt have the money. Obviously we would show up. When we asked the father for the check, he barked at us: <i>How dare we harass him on his daughters wedding day?</i></p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">But the day after, when we arrived to break down the party, the family was nowhere to be found. No check, no credit-card number. We made the trip back to New York bathed in shame. Thirteen years in the business, and wed been played by multimillionaires.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">That Sunday we prayed extra hard, but on Monday the brides father reached out. He had made an itemized list of minor infractions that he believed entitled him to withhold our last payment. Ive blocked out exactly what they were, but they were absurd—napkins not up to snuff, lights flickering in the restroom trailer. I called him and said this was simply not right. We had done what we were hired to do. But he had decided, it seemed clear to me, that if the little sisters wedding planner was taking less, I would have to take less as well, contract be damned.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Go ahead and fight me, he said. “Ill have so much fun spending my money suing you.”</p><div class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_root__2_ZBX ArticleInlineImageFigure_alignWell__H5__7"><figure class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_figure__EoCc0" style="--imageWidth:655px;max-width:655px"><picture class="ArticleInlineImageFigure_picture__HoflP" style="padding-bottom:14.50%"><img alt="section break image" loading="lazy" class="Image_root__d3aBr Image_lazy__tutlP ArticleInlineImageFigure_image__kflyc" sizes="(min-width: 729px) 655px, (min-width: 576px) calc(100vw - 48px), 100vw" srcSet="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/l7yPkiSdQ3aoD68tIYU24Iwsb_A=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/FCxGEL1fg9Uw0FF8Mj9Iv_nGeUk=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/l2RK6eksEuBaWbyjCWJ28zTtslU=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/adpkakgFKS78q22SNF_jNvrDb5U=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/jj_Q2bTgIwJc8BQUk2wyiKIjeDg=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 1310w" src="https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/l7yPkiSdQ3aoD68tIYU24Iwsb_A=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg" width="655" height="95"/></picture></figure></div><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI ArticleParagraph_dropcap__Xra23"><span class="smallcaps">The biggest wedding </span>in the news lately, between Brooklyn Beckham, the son of a Spice Girl and a soccer star, and Nicola Peltz, the daughter of a billionaire, cost $3 million to $5 million, the tabloids say, and <a data-event-element="inline link" href="https://www.thecut.com/2023/03/brooklyn-beckham-nicola-peltz-wedding-planner-lawsuit.html">ended in lawsuits and scandal</a>—the brides father is suing two wedding planners who briefly worked for him; the planners have countersued. But every time I read about it, I find myself thinking of the hundreds of people whose labor made it all happen.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Critics who roll their eyes at wedding excess seem to forget that this excess creates a lot of jobs. So much of the work behind a wedding is invisible, but its done by real people, people who suffer when the wedding industry goes downhill. Wedding planners and designers and florists and caterers ate a lot of soup during the recession. They did the same during the pandemic. Both times, it was the rich who came back first, like a spring thaw.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Rishi Patel was the designer on the Peltz wedding. He told me that after large projects, he often gives his clients a book with sketches of everything he made for their wedding—the chuppah, the table settings, the stage where they took their vows—and a note at the front that says something like <i>I hope you are as proud as I am that you were able to employ 200 people for these two weeks</i>. He and Marcy Blum are among the many luxury-wedding professionals who have started posting behind-the-scenes videos of their events on Instagram, to humanize the amount of work that goes into them.</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">Blum does this, she told me, in part because critics are always saying things like “There are all these hungry people in the world, all the homeless people. You could have fed 8 million people with that wedding.” Her clients already give millions to charity, she said. For someone like that, she asked, “what are they supposed to do—have a picnic? What is a quote-unquote appropriate amount to spend on your childs wedding?”</p><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI">You might not be surprised to hear that after the mother of my fake poor bride told me it was farewell forever, it wasnt quite. I got some emails, the occasional text. The strange part about it is, although I believed the bride had every right to be upset, I never felt guilty for what we did. And I suspect that her mother didnt either. Our bond had nothing to do with how she felt about her daughter, and everything to do with how she felt about her money: just fine. She not only didnt mind having it; she didnt mind spending it.</p><hr class="ArticleLegacyHtml_root__oTAAd ArticleLegacyHtml_standard__Qfi5x"/><p class="ArticleParagraph_root__wy3UI"><small><em>This article appears in the <a data-event-element="inline link" href="https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/toc/2023/07/">July/August 2023</a> print edition with the headline “Confessions of a Luxury-Wedding Planner.” When you buy a book using a link on this page, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting </em>The Atlantic<em>. </em></small></p><div class="ArticleBody_divider__Xmshm" id="article-end"></div></section><div data-event-module="footer"><div class="ArticleWell_root__MEFqL"><div></div></div><div></div></div><gpt-ad class="GptAd_root__2eqVh ArticleInjector_root__fjDeh s-native s-native--standard s-native--streamline" format="injector" sizes-at-0="mobile-wide,native,house" targeting-pos="injector-most-popular" sizes-at-976="desktop-wide,native,house"></gpt-ad><div class="ArticleInjector_clsAvoider__pXehw" style="--placeholderHeight:90px"></div></article><div></div></main><div></div><div></div></div><script id="__NEXT_DATA__" type="application/json">{"props":{"isLoggedIn":false,"hasPaywallAccess":false,"hasAdFree":false,"pageProps":{"id":"MagazineArticle:674169","isTnfCompatible":true,"layout":"twocol","hasMeter":true,"url":"https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2023/07/luxury-wedding-planners-industrial-complex-cost/674169/","dateModified":"2023-06-16T21:57:38Z","__typename":"MagazineArticle","urqlState":{"518600586":{"data":"{\"article\":{\"__typename\":\"MagazineArticle\",\"id\":\"MagazineArticle:674169\",\"pdfUrl\":\"\",\"categories\":[{\"slug\":\"features\",\"__typename\":\"Category\"},{\"slug\":\"one-story-read-today\",\"__typename\":\"Category\"},{\"slug\":\"top-20\",\"__typename\":\"Category\"},{\"slug\":\"top-40\",\"__typename\":\"Category\"},{\"slug\":\"top-60\",\"__typename\":\"Category\"}],\"content\":[{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003csmall\u003e\u003ci\u003eThis article was featured in One Story to Read Today, a newsletter in which our editors recommend a single must-read from \u003c/i\u003eThe Atlantic\u003ci\u003e, Monday through Friday. \u003c/i\u003e\u003ca data-event-element=\\\"inline link\\\" data-saferedirecturl=\\\"https://www.google.com/url?q=https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/sign-up/one-story-to-read-today/\u0026amp;source=gmail\u0026amp;ust=1687017456103000\u0026amp;usg=AOvVaw2eo1-F6kyrzjmsnpMvdSO7\\\" href=\\\"https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/sign-up/one-story-to-read-today/\\\" target=\\\"_blank\\\"\u003e\u003ci\u003eSign up for it here.\u003c/i\u003e\u003c/a\u003e\u003ci\u003e      \u003c/i\u003e\u003c/small\u003e\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":\"DROPCAP\",\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"S\u003cspan class=\\\"smallcaps\\\"\u003eunday mornings\u003c/span\u003e, for wedding planners, are reserved for prayer. Not because its a particularly pious profession but because thats the day when clients who were married on Saturday figure out if theyre happy or not. Should they choose unhappiness, Sunday is when they decide whom to blame. And Monday is when the emails come.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleRelatedContentModule\",\"contentType\":\"MAGAZINE\",\"index\":0},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"I say “decide” because weddings are funny affairs—tense, expensive, fraught with emotion. They are revisited—by the couple, by the family, by the person paying the bills—time and again. They mark the beginning of a couples new life but sometimes of other things too: family feuds, broken friendships, a long hangover of fiscal regret. So even if the party went great, on Sunday the wedding planner prays.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Will the email be full of joy and praise? Or will it be one of complaint? Back when I was a luxury-wedding planner in New York City, my business partner and I once got an email from a bride, written as she helicoptered off to her honeymoon, saying that her wedding had been a “transcendent experience.” A call from the brides mother directly followed. “Repeat after me,” she said. “\u003ci\u003eI am bad at my job. I should never do this job again.\u003c/i\u003e” Sometimes the clients just need to vent. Sometimes they threaten to sue.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/CGr6wxYuvrQn1XjdoQejJ1qUyd0=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":96,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/CGr6wxYuvrQn1XjdoQejJ1qUyd0=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/5YPlyYkTZwN3KcV5b8D8GdtlezI=/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"\",\"altText\":\"section break image\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/cxZxuhehgJaDXNw_OiTLXQ_WZfk=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":95,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/cxZxuhehgJaDXNw_OiTLXQ_WZfk=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/kgBO3pp4bD3wCh6nsIxYMH9BWl4=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/Y6YkopKVpTmBtfjFwVZ54QdeJRM=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/axX6cw-DrblIJkLpOIKIHG1UqrI=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/RTo1Cg3Yoqhp9u0ImjUr5W8Ak-4=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":\"DROPCAP\",\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003cspan class=\\\"smallcaps\\\"\u003eThe work of \u003c/span\u003ea luxury-wedding planner is only partly about the planning. Yes, you help the couple plan what you hope will be a stunning event—but your main job is to be a professional wedding friend. Youre the person who cares if the bow on the favor has swallow or inverse tails, or if the maid of honor is being a passive-aggressive bitch when none of the brides other friends wants to talk about it anymore. The family is paying you to care as much as they do.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"When I became a wedding planner, no one in my own family could comprehend my utility. My grandparents, who raised me, had what was called a “\u003ca data-event-element=\\\"inline link\\\" href=\\\"https://www.theknot.com/content/what-is-football-wedding\\\"\u003efootball wedding\u003c/a\u003e.” They rented the Veterans of Foreign Wars hall in Red Hook, Brooklyn, and piled tinfoil-wrapped heroes on a table. People would shout out what sandwich they wanted, and another guest would toss it across the room. “\u003ca data-event-element=\\\"inline link\\\" href=\\\"https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2023/04/wedding-events-engagement-shower-bachelor-bachelorette-party-rehearsal-dinner-reception/673691/\\\"\u003eHow complicated could a wedding be\u003c/a\u003e?” they wondered. Had I chosen to be a professional mud wrestler, I do not think it could have confounded them more.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleRelatedContentLink\",\"idAttr\":\"injected-recirculation-link-0\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003ca href=\\\"https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2023/04/wedding-events-engagement-shower-bachelor-bachelorette-party-rehearsal-dinner-reception/673691/\\\"\u003eRead: The uncontrollable rise of wedding sprawl\u003c/a\u003e\",\"index\":0},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"So whenever one of our events was featured in a bridal magazine, I would bring it to family occasions and show it off the way other people might show off pictures of their babies. “See,” I would say, pointing to a dreamy sailcloth tent glowing with custom-made chandeliers. “There was nothing but a field here. We built all of this.”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/y5ZoXDPRNKsTAxj3QsBlccWD0t4=/665x499/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_buffet/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":499,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/y5ZoXDPRNKsTAxj3QsBlccWD0t4=/665x499/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_buffet/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/75A7eZZPGamFGwXBIuhu6v9HCHQ=/1330x998/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_buffet/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"Daniele Castellano\",\"altText\":\"illustration of tower of appetizers\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/UvXz02fgBaJcqwUQQApPkLPcRlo=/0x0:5565x4174/655x491/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_buffet/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":491,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/UvXz02fgBaJcqwUQQApPkLPcRlo=/0x0:5565x4174/655x491/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_buffet/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/r2obzb8UynFCHXn4nBiKYNsEY0M=/0x0:5565x4174/750x562/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_buffet/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/Hw2IE5cACukhxE4Yn18hb6wnUOo=/0x0:5565x4174/850x637/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_buffet/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/AveZSN2cZtvCqamwzY8frOcq8qg=/0x0:5565x4174/928x696/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_buffet/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/gehuoiXFw2etNrAbk19JqYtcckI=/0x0:5565x4174/1310x982/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_buffet/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Unfortunately, this only added to the confusion. “Dont they realize they could have bought a house with all of this money?”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"I would have to explain that my clients didnt need a house. They already had one. They probably had several.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"A few years after the recession, I did a lavish wedding on Long Island. The bride was stressing about putting a custom lining on her invitations that would add another couple thousand to the already large stationery bill. She and the groom had been given a seven-figure sum to spend both on their wedding and on buying and decorating their new home, and the bride had a thing for mid-century-modern furniture. Was the liner worth more than a Wassily chair? She went back and forth, back and forth. I couldnt say a thing, but finally her mother reached her limit: “Were rich!” she cried out in exasperation. “Get the liners!”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Months later, the same mother, while admiring the tent we had spent days erecting for the reception, said, in total seriousness, “I hate that its only being used for one night. I wish we could find some homeless people to stay here when were done.”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/2DiJ7nHwM0IxKdlbVVhJa6z9AQM=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":96,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/2DiJ7nHwM0IxKdlbVVhJa6z9AQM=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/gobQFIGXlB0yo57fpO79F3WCbmE=/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"\",\"altText\":\"section break image\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/J3bVUY7IB4CnBddrZ4B31gIEcIM=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":95,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/J3bVUY7IB4CnBddrZ4B31gIEcIM=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/Fbe0nq_S1Ua3bTjw8WaKL00nobc=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/rwb2xbS_gSoUInOT_G-CNK_h-nc=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/UT3a4-kS4wY3__hI3B6zNL7gwck=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/_BXavZNEN_HunLXS4lvg2O_AyXU=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":\"DROPCAP\",\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003cspan class=\\\"smallcaps\\\"\u003eI once got a call\u003c/span\u003e from a woman in a panic: Her daughter was getting married in a few weeks and she needed my partner and me to save this wedding. She offered no further details over the phone, insisting that we come uptown to her apartment so she could properly convey the scale of the conundrum. Right before she hung up the phone she whispered, “By the way, Im very, very rich.”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"And she was! She lived in one of those opulent places with an elevator that opened up into the apartment itself, because thats how sprawling it was. A maid in a uniform greeted us and escorted us down a long, art-lined hallway and into the library, where the mother of the bride was waiting.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"She explained the dilemma. Her daughter was embarrassed by her familys wealth, and had been living as a closeted rich person for years—her friends had no idea. The bride had refused to let her mother have anything to do with the wedding, because if her mom got involved, the jig would be up. Everyone would see shed just been cosplaying poverty. And so, armed with information from the internet and her mothers checkbook, the young woman had gone off and planned what she imagined was an “average wedding.”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"With the event just weeks away, the mother had started poking around and realized, \u003ci\u003eThis is terrible!\u003c/i\u003e Her daughter didnt just have conflicted ideas about her own privilege. She also had bad taste—or at least unfortunate notions of what the “average” bride wants at her wedding: things like jam jars for wineglasses, picnic tables for seating, a limited bar.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Her daughter could pretend all she wanted, the mother said, but their friends and family knew that they were rich and were \u003ca data-event-element=\\\"inline link\\\" href=\\\"https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2017/07/how-the-american-wedding-became-performance-art/533733/\\\"\u003eexpecting a nice affair\u003c/a\u003e. After much argument, they compromised: They would hire a wedding planner. And the only wedding planner in all of New York they could agree on was me, probably because while many of my competitors were specializing in opulence, I had cornered the market in “understated luxury.”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleRelatedContentLink\",\"idAttr\":\"injected-recirculation-link-1\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003ca href=\\\"https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2017/07/how-the-american-wedding-became-performance-art/533733/\\\"\u003eRead: How “I do” became performance art\u003c/a\u003e\",\"index\":1},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"The mother insisted that we meet right away because the bride was planning to reach out and hire us the next day, and the mother wanted me to be clear on how it was going to work. My job, in addition to making sure the wedding was not an embarrassment, was to say yes to everything the daughter asked for. If the bride questioned what something cost, I was to say it was “already included in the contract.” The mother didnt care how expensive anything was; she would cover it secretly. Did this sound crazy? Absolutely. Did I need the money? Yes.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/oaipaIwx_Uf4KRJZ_R6ech_fYSM=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":96,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/oaipaIwx_Uf4KRJZ_R6ech_fYSM=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/rFCzj6GLkZ3-aIQaQteLgFp3488=/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"\",\"altText\":\"section break image\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/oVr3jn8MS-PLGzmM-yeCNzzxRm4=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":95,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/oVr3jn8MS-PLGzmM-yeCNzzxRm4=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/nr0KyhIOiaqvwsCm9ku96_Iyals=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/OIIKcczoIuFXW9Q2wCuxqYEMoV4=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/7cYzWb93bT5qurVNqAltGu1bceU=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/nQ_4HpliG8VEK6kPGFI4DlVD-aE=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":\"DROPCAP\",\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003cspan class=\\\"smallcaps\\\"\u003eI was amazed \u003c/span\u003eby how well the strategy worked. “You could serve these baby lamb chops,” I would say, to which the bride would reply, “But is that going to be more expensive than pigs in a blanket?,” and I would assure her, as I had been hired to do, that everything was in the contract.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"But then one day the bride proclaimed her desire to reduce the carbon footprint of the wedding by having edible escort cards. The escort card is the folded-over piece of card stock that tells a guest where to sit. The bride had the idea to stick toothpicks with little tags showing the names and table numbers into bacon-wrapped dates, combining appetizer and escort card and thus saving the environment.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"I nodded yes, and then emailed the mother in a panic, something to the effect of: “Its going to look like a table full of floating turds! What are we going to do?”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"“For Christs sake, why cant you be my daughter?” she wrote back.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"The mother said shed grown up poor like me but, unlike me, had married well. “Marry rich!” she would tell me. “Its so fun!” I still havent had a chance to give this a try, but I suspect that shes right. We agreed: When you have more money than God, what better way to spend some of it than to throw other people a luxuriously good time?\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Anyway, they say that there are no accidents, but the daughter, in town for wedding things, logged on to her mothers computer and saw our entire exchange. She insisted, quite understandably, that I be fired immediately.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/eupyP27CQgwzyKIKeSAODFnwFuQ=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":96,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/eupyP27CQgwzyKIKeSAODFnwFuQ=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/MTXkwlnOmGnas6SWO-i-E-oKki4=/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"\",\"altText\":\"section break image\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/VerIPxdUBLgFqV8AqBELbGl33-o=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":95,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/VerIPxdUBLgFqV8AqBELbGl33-o=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/t0POgDniUsURG1ABj9waXUHDOL4=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/lbfI3n6HVRlPPKClH0BrMJnDokw=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/4v1CB9gI9vjFFLMa9ceeaTL64kM=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/htNPmqL9cemRegMTW2DVDJEaZN8=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":\"DROPCAP\",\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003cspan class=\\\"smallcaps\\\"\u003eWhen my business \u003c/span\u003epartner and I began planning weddings, in 2003, America was in a wedding craze, nurtured by an abundance of magazines: \u003ci\u003eBrides\u003c/i\u003e, \u003ci\u003eModern Bride\u003c/i\u003e, \u003ci\u003eElegant Bride\u003c/i\u003e, \u003ci\u003eTown \u0026amp; Country Weddings\u003c/i\u003e, \u003ci\u003eInside Weddings\u003c/i\u003e, \u003ci\u003eInStyle Weddings\u003c/i\u003e. \u003ci\u003eThe Wedding Planner\u003c/i\u003e had hit theaters in 2001. Then we had \u003ci\u003eBridezillas\u003c/i\u003e and \u003ci\u003eWhose Wedding Is It Anyway?\u003c/i\u003e Soon you could scour wedding blogs all night: Style Me Pretty and Weddingbee and The Bridal Bar (and my very own blog at the time, Always a Blogsmaid). On the Fridays before weddings, I used to binge-watch \u003ci\u003eSay Yes to the Dress\u003c/i\u003e to calm my nerves—at least these werent my clients.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Weddings have always been luxury goods. And like all luxury goods, theyve been coveted, emulated, and knocked off by the masses. Even white dresses became a thing only after Queen Victoria was married in one in 1840. Wedding envy is as old as weddings themselves, but it was supercharged by \u003ca data-event-element=\\\"inline link\\\" href=\\\"https://www.npr.org/2018/06/07/592401053/the-knot-carley-roney-david-liu\\\"\u003ethe mid-90s dawn of TheKnot.com\u003c/a\u003e. Weddings as we know them today—with their Instagram-ready ombré floral arrangements and embroidered custom veils and pom-pom farewells—began with an online group of brides-to-be called the Knotties.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/Np0ciI6X9w5bJXFqS7YrY6ZeC74=/665x374/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_couple/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":374,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/Np0ciI6X9w5bJXFqS7YrY6ZeC74=/665x374/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_couple/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/oqEJQDX8HpsanpHnhKU9ljws9jY=/1330x748/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_couple/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"Daniele Castellano\",\"altText\":\"illustration of wedding couple under arch of flowers\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/sYBJouJXTeqOl7GFj52qPpyuAxg=/0x0:6263x3523/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_couple/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":368,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/sYBJouJXTeqOl7GFj52qPpyuAxg=/0x0:6263x3523/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_couple/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/CwovwieRqRY-Eg4sqvYDt7am1FQ=/0x0:6263x3523/750x421/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_couple/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/LQSC-WGqaWhDpV57jX7d7OkdC1o=/0x0:6263x3523/850x478/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_couple/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/qhauX9Udep8KbHjZ-3T25AfF5Ic=/0x0:6263x3523/928x521/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_couple/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/pz8XTxuyjDZZaMDjDi957md4Fug=/0x0:6263x3523/1310x736/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_couple/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Someone with a name like JuneJerseyBride334 would post photos of, say, her bedazzled escort and menu cards.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"“Are we supposed to have menu cards?” SomethingBlue305 might ask. “I dont have menu cards.”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"“If I can get DH to splurge, Im gonna get some!” FallForTedForever might add. “Printing these pics and stealing all your cute ideas!”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"The Knot offered brides-to-be advice about budgets and listings of potential vendors, but it was the chat rooms—and the camaraderie and friendly one-upmanship found there—that kept users coming back. The Knot created a community; it made being a bride an identity. And it transformed weddings into a competitive sport.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticlePullquote\",\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Last year, approximately 13,000 weddings in America cost $1 million or more.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"An especially beautiful wedding might be featured on the site, or picked up by The Knots magazine. Soon more and more people began planning weddings not just around their guests experience of one special day, but around how the images of that day would look to strangers online. By 2010, I had clients walking in asking about our publicity strategy: \u003ci\u003eWhere do you plan on sending the photos once the wedding is done?\u003c/i\u003e\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"That was the year Instagram was founded, making it far easier for couples to share their content themselves. Thirteen years later, couples can hire a professional wedding social-media adviser, a service that can cost up to $3,000. A company such as Maid of Social will develop a “strategy” for your wedding, attend and photograph it, and post the shots to your Snapchat and Instagram accounts, hashtags included—“because the day you just spent 14 months planning should be seen by the world.”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Being a bride used to mean being royalty for a day. Now it means being a celebrity. Either way, the only sure path to really distinguish yourself—to capture the oohs and the aahs and the attention—is to spend a lot of money.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/pAGmlORG3vNJRcLEnjtwdlVQfAw=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":96,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/pAGmlORG3vNJRcLEnjtwdlVQfAw=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/tvAxidxqsaOzJdZ0lG-RHADbOPg=/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"\",\"altText\":\"section break image\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/l7yPkiSdQ3aoD68tIYU24Iwsb_A=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":95,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/l7yPkiSdQ3aoD68tIYU24Iwsb_A=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/FCxGEL1fg9Uw0FF8Mj9Iv_nGeUk=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/l2RK6eksEuBaWbyjCWJ28zTtslU=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/adpkakgFKS78q22SNF_jNvrDb5U=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/jj_Q2bTgIwJc8BQUk2wyiKIjeDg=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":\"DROPCAP\",\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003cspan class=\\\"smallcaps\\\"\u003eThe average wedding \u003c/span\u003ein America \u003ca data-event-element=\\\"inline link\\\" href=\\\"https://www.theknot.com/content/wedding-data-insights/real-weddings-study\\\"\u003ecosts about $30,000\u003c/a\u003e. Historically, money for weddings was cobbled together through savings and gifts from parents, but today \u003ca data-event-element=\\\"inline link\\\" href=\\\"https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2019/06/19/married-debt-couples-are-taking-out-loans-pay-their-weddings/\\\"\u003emany of the celebrations are debt-financed affairs\u003c/a\u003e. Surveys have found that roughly 30 to 45 percent of couples report taking on credit-card or other debt to pay for them. Wedding loans—personal loans marketed to engaged couples—can carry interest rates as high as 30 percent.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"At the same time, \u003ca data-event-element=\\\"inline link\\\" href=\\\"https://www.vox.com/2017/6/7/15740564/luxury-weddings\\\"\u003eultra-luxurious weddings\u003c/a\u003e—the kind no one needs credit cards to pay for—have become a bigger slice of the market. Last year, approximately 13,000 weddings in America cost $1 million or more, according to the consulting firm Think Splendid. Which means that each week across America, some 250 millionaire and billionaire families are setting trends the rest of us should never dream of emulating.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/JeEp9Qxn6XElBB-_nmPxhOlwQiA=/665x374/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_decorations/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":374,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/JeEp9Qxn6XElBB-_nmPxhOlwQiA=/665x374/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_decorations/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/bUiYXEIA_eW2lnGnCA2RzswCHSA=/1330x748/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_decorations/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"Daniele Castellano\",\"altText\":\"illustration of bird-shaped flowers holding adding-machine tape in their beaks\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/9agpQVfHWJ_3-mjF-UAj4iPbePI=/0x0:4452x2504/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_decorations/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":368,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/9agpQVfHWJ_3-mjF-UAj4iPbePI=/0x0:4452x2504/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_decorations/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/HelwqRCSlt2sjqbL6yIOE-lD7cM=/0x0:4452x2504/750x421/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_decorations/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/CHIaobMASMCpNGPccsu_y_HenY4=/0x0:4452x2504/850x478/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_decorations/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/OjkB698HZXOHYAHjB8D1Oye9sdo=/0x0:4452x2504/928x521/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_decorations/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/ZZIc-IcH_Fa3ZDprgKgKIR69Dm0=/0x0:4452x2504/1310x736/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_decorations/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"At one of Marcy Blums recent weddings, on a private estate in Palm Beach, Florida, she built her clients a miniature golf course. A video of guests put-putting around in their black-tie finery is available on Instagram, where Blum has more than 100,000 followers. Blum has been planning weddings for more than 30 years and has worked for moguls including George Soros and LeBron James. Like a lot of people in this industry, she wasnt born rich; she was raised in the Bronx by a salesman and a schoolteacher. But shes rarely intimidated. Say youre talking to Bill Gates, she told me: “He may be the smartest person in the world, but what does he know about lighting or a table setting?” Blum was my mentor\u003cspan class=\\\"caps\\\"\u003e—\u003c/span\u003eIve spent more nights than I can count crying on her sofa—and is still a close friend.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"The golf course wasnt just some holes and a putting green: She and her design partners also created a concession stand, provided custom pencils and scorecards (inscribed with \u003cspan class=\\\"smallcaps\\\"\u003eTalk Birdie to Me\u003c/span\u003e), and had staff dressed up as caddies offering putting tips.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Blum declined to tell me how much the mini golf added to the budget. But some of her clients spend $2 million or $3 million on their wedding—about $8,000 a head. Some spend more, but she didnt want to elaborate—“I dont want people to think Im that expensive before they call me,” she said with a laugh.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"What does all this money go to? Primarily: infrastructure. The least sexy things are the most expensive—landscaping to clear a field; electrical lines to get power to said field; tent companies to erect a clearspan or sailcloth structure for 300 people and then to heat or cool it; lighting to illuminate it; driftwood flooring; restroom trailers; decorations to make the trailers look like elegant powder rooms; another tent for the caterer; refrigerated trucks to keep the food cold; propane stoves to get it hot; even more landscaping to level another field far away where the vendors vehicles can be parked.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"For all of this you need many, many, many workers. Blums weddings might employ up to 40 vendors, each with its own staff—hundreds and hundreds of bodies, mostly blue-collar laborers, many of them immigrants. All of these people can be there for upwards of a week working around the clock. Its sort of like being in the circus.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"The day of the wedding, her clients will fly in professional dressers like the ones who work for the stylist Julie Sabatinos company, The Stylish Bride. Sabatinos website refers to her dressers as “ladies in waiting” and shows them wearing white gloves and little aprons. The starting rate for just one is $2,450; a luxury wedding sometimes has 10. They sew and they press and they “do the bow ties,” Blum told me; theyll pin garments into place and follow the bride around with a water bottle with a straw in it so she can drink without ruining her lipstick.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleRelatedContentLink\",\"idAttr\":\"injected-recirculation-link-2\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003ca href=\\\"https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2023/05/branded-wedding-favors-intentions/673963/\\\"\u003eRead: The wedding trend couples love and guests hate\u003c/a\u003e\",\"index\":2},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Throughout this time, Blum usually employs security guards and a cybersecurity firm to keep hackers out of the guest list. Theres a caterer to provide staff meals, and an on-site calligrapher to accommodate any last-minute changes to the seating chart. She even employs a “concierge event meteorologist”—Andrew Leavitt of Ironic Reports—to help prepare for the possibility of a “rain call”: the dreaded moment when the planner needs to inform the bride that the outdoor celebration she dreamed of needs to move inside. Leavitt will call “every, like, 15 minutes” to update her on a possible storm front: “Its moving this way; its moving that way.”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Weather, after all, is the one thing Marcy Blum cant control.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/CGr6wxYuvrQn1XjdoQejJ1qUyd0=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":96,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/CGr6wxYuvrQn1XjdoQejJ1qUyd0=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/5YPlyYkTZwN3KcV5b8D8GdtlezI=/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"\",\"altText\":\"section break image\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/cxZxuhehgJaDXNw_OiTLXQ_WZfk=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":95,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/cxZxuhehgJaDXNw_OiTLXQ_WZfk=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/kgBO3pp4bD3wCh6nsIxYMH9BWl4=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/Y6YkopKVpTmBtfjFwVZ54QdeJRM=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/axX6cw-DrblIJkLpOIKIHG1UqrI=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/RTo1Cg3Yoqhp9u0ImjUr5W8Ak-4=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":\"DROPCAP\",\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003cspan class=\\\"smallcaps\\\"\u003eEarly in my \u003c/span\u003ewedding-planning days, I signed on to do the reality-TV show \u003ci\u003eWhose Wedding Is It Anyway?\u003c/i\u003e I didnt care about the fame, but I wanted more clients. If there were an Emmy for reality-TV performance, I couldve won it. Enthusiastic, romantic, anxious that everything go exactly as planned, I had clipboards and checklists and said things like “This is what I live for” when my clients gushed over their reception room. I could do 20 takes of me entering a bakery to see a cake, looking both ecstatic and urgently concerned, and each was like the first time.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Our clients who agreed to do the show werent billionaires—they were normal people. They liked getting a little taste of stardom, sure, but mostly they wanted upgrades on things like flowers and lighting—a nice wedding on camera. The producers, of course, wanted something different. Nice weddings are nice. Messy weddings are great TV.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/NebKGVbbiV3VQPeGNOra_8Hv4G8=/665x374/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_fight/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":374,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/NebKGVbbiV3VQPeGNOra_8Hv4G8=/665x374/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_fight/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/cQjk_f6MdulmAaygM7V3fab80XA=/1330x748/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_fight/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"Daniele Castellano\",\"altText\":\"illustration of two women yelling and arguing over long adding-machine receipt\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/EwlXy9JgAtuR7w_eOcmmnma5u78=/0x0:5012x2819/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_fight/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":368,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/EwlXy9JgAtuR7w_eOcmmnma5u78=/0x0:5012x2819/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_fight/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/a6HrS0uVS1sSvNoo53wo1smJJaQ=/0x0:5012x2819/750x421/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_fight/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/GvUFp_bYjYHTOzJP78JK2Ow6O4A=/0x0:5012x2819/850x478/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_fight/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/VniBZzeXsZYIkR1rO7nXQnwY_aQ=/0x0:5012x2819/928x521/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_fight/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/iD9b7TTyTFaaCZdn9GJd4w5VUqM=/0x0:5012x2819/1310x736/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_fight/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"For my first reality-TV wedding, there I was—at a catering hall deep in New Jersey wearing a very unfortunate blue-velvet blazer—trying hard to seem calm while frantically calling the florist, who had gone missing. After many hours and excuses, he did eventually show up—but with at least one fewer centerpiece than promised. Naturally, the producers wanted us back.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"We did \u003ci\u003eWhose Wedding Is It Anyway?\u003c/i\u003e a couple more times, but as I got better at my job, I had a harder time pretending to be overwhelmed or anxious about things I could do in my sleep. Our last foray into television came in 2014. It was a chance to star in a new show whose concept was extreme weddings. We were assigned a ceremony for 70 guests at the base of a dormant volcano in Hawaii. The shoot involved the bride entering by helicopter and six hours of setup and taping under the hot sun on black lava with no restroom. The entire thing went off smoothly. But reality TV doesnt appreciate expertise—we knew theyd never pick up the show.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"In any case, my off-screen weddings were providing plenty of drama.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"I once worked with a bride who had all of her wedding gifts sent to our office. I was confused until I realized that it gave her an excuse to keep stopping by. She knew that her fiancé was cheating on her, and she needed someone to talk with about it. They still got married, though, and had a resplendent wedding brunch. (I love a wedding brunch.)\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Another bride could not settle on a design scheme, and was growing intensely frustrated. She said something like “I just dont like pink. Never show me anything pink!” She had sent me a dozen images of things she loved, all of which involved the color pink. She was wearing head-to-toe pink. Even her phone was pink. “I think you love pink,” I said, as I looked her dead in the eye. “You actually love pink.” She ended up having a pink wedding.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"At my final meeting with one couple, they kept talking about how they wanted to put “edibles” on the bar. I had designed a gorgeous wedding for them, with a custom chuppah and matching chandelier hand-built by an artist in Brooklyn, and a bunch of Edible Arrangements on the bar would completely destroy the vibe. I tried very hard to be polite about it. “People have strong opinions about edibles,” I said. This was true about chocolate-covered pineapple slices, and it was also true about weed gummies.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Another couple was getting married on an enormous estate, and the father of the bride decided, against his better judgment, to go all in on making it the wedding of his daughters dreams. He would use this occasion to give her every outrageous thing shed ever asked for in her life. We hid that pony for days.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"When the weddings were over, many of our couples would take us out for a reunion meal, where they would spend hours reminiscing and reliving their favorite moments. Sometimes these nights were fun; sometimes, less so. I got divorced right before one of these dinners, and over appetizers the bride asked me what had gone wrong. “I guess I just felt dead inside,” I said. Later, she followed me to the ladies room. When I came out of the stall, she was waiting for me. “I feel dead inside too,” she said.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/2DiJ7nHwM0IxKdlbVVhJa6z9AQM=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":96,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/2DiJ7nHwM0IxKdlbVVhJa6z9AQM=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/gobQFIGXlB0yo57fpO79F3WCbmE=/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"\",\"altText\":\"section break image\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/J3bVUY7IB4CnBddrZ4B31gIEcIM=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":95,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/J3bVUY7IB4CnBddrZ4B31gIEcIM=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/Fbe0nq_S1Ua3bTjw8WaKL00nobc=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/rwb2xbS_gSoUInOT_G-CNK_h-nc=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/UT3a4-kS4wY3__hI3B6zNL7gwck=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/_BXavZNEN_HunLXS4lvg2O_AyXU=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider2/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":\"DROPCAP\",\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003cspan class=\\\"smallcaps\\\"\u003eThe term \u003c/span\u003e\u003ci\u003ethe\u003cspan class=\\\"smallcaps\\\"\u003e\u003ci\u003e \u003c/i\u003e\u003c/span\u003ewedding-industrial complex\u003c/i\u003e entered the vernacular in 2007, around when Rebecca Mead published her takedown of the wedding industry, \u003ca data-event-element=\\\"inline link\\\" href=\\\"https://tertulia.com/book/one-perfect-day-the-selling-of-the-american-wedding-rebecca-mead/9780143113843?affiliate_id=atl-347\\\"\u003e\u003ci\u003eOne Perfect Day\u003c/i\u003e\u003c/a\u003e.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Mead was a cynic about the entire endeavor. She seemed to think that levelheaded couples should just take themselves to a courthouse and get on with their life while other, flightier fiancés were seduced by wedding professionals eager to swindle them out of their hard-earned cash. “These people think of themselves as providing a service that is needed,” Mead \u003ca data-event-element=\\\"inline link\\\" href=\\\"https://www.salon.com/2007/05/21/mead_weddings/\\\"\u003etold \u003ci\u003eSalon\u003c/i\u003e\u003c/a\u003e. “But theyre also creating that need and generating the desire, and theyre certainly aware of it; the best ones are very clever marketers.”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"But this was the era of the McMansion, the big-screen TV, the luxury handbag—insatiable consumer desire was hardly limited to weddings, or created by wedding planners. As Jodi Kantor \u003ca data-event-element=\\\"inline link\\\" href=\\\"https://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/13/books/review/Kantor-t.html\\\"\u003epointed out in her review\u003c/a\u003e, “Were all nouveau riche now.” When the recession hit shortly thereafter—disproving that assumption—Meads take solidified in the popular imagination. Years later, articles still warn couples about wedding “taxes” and “premiums” and ways to avoid being “scammed by the wedding industry.”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Its not the wedding professionals fault that weddings are expensive. The fact is that weddings are luxuries, not necessities. It costs a lot to make something look nice; it costs even more to make it \u003ci\u003efeel\u003c/i\u003e nice—to make sure all your guests are comfortable, and well fed, and entertained. A wedding is not a photograph of a wedding. A wedding—a good wedding—is immersive theater, a living, breathing work of art.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticlePullquote\",\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"One bride knew that her fiancé was cheating on her. They still got married, though, and had a resplendent wedding brunch.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"But Mead wasnt wrong that wedding professionals are clever marketers. A handful of people dominate the luxury end of the market, and the trends they pioneered have taken widespread hold. Julie Sabatino basically invented wedding styling in the early aughts. Back then, when she told people what she did, they assumed she was a hairstylist, she told me. Today wedding stylists have cropped up all across the country, most charging a fraction of what she does.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Michael Waiser is among the most expensive caterers—“stupid expensive,” Ive heard people call him. His food—foraged mushrooms under a quail egg and shaved black truffles, \u003ci\u003eleche de tigre\u003c/i\u003e with plantain threads, that sort of thing—is all kosher, and starts at about $550 a head. He started out working the New York kosher-catering circuit in the days when kosher was not exactly a coveted culinary experience. But Waiser realized that affluent Jewish foodies—just like their wealthy gentile peers—wanted something special.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/VSpjvvEmVhsBjhgmqcb9YrB0he4=/665x374/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_jet/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":374,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/VSpjvvEmVhsBjhgmqcb9YrB0he4=/665x374/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_jet/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/pyaoiuoW2n0PyRKZ53YSxffOCrg=/1330x748/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_jet/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"Daniele Castellano\",\"altText\":\"illustration of private jet with woman in heels descending stairs with towering stack of folded linens\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/trUKEm8CQ9KDSQDJ0cfj-SScFjI=/0x0:3662x2059/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_jet/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":368,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/trUKEm8CQ9KDSQDJ0cfj-SScFjI=/0x0:3662x2059/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_jet/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/qLNp4_IXT-OjWqhYl0-dDM3CU_o=/0x0:3662x2059/750x421/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_jet/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/k2N66IYEmgm75Jf8ZbSPfBA4h1k=/0x0:3662x2059/850x478/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_jet/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/IDupqXz2uFDQPyGiBUfVexIx7nw=/0x0:3662x2059/928x521/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_jet/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/4_y76r1fqgjUASAZ2klagRnzjXg=/0x0:3662x2059/1310x736/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_jet/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Allan Zepeda immigrated to Brooklyn when he was 3 and started taking photos for the youth group at his Pentecostal church—hes entirely self-taught. “Thanks for calling the Latin kid,” he said when I reached out. He photographed the weddings of Sheryl Sandberg and Serena Williams. His destination-wedding rates now begin at $50,000. Beautiful images are only part of his success; couples love him because he treats them all like \u003ci\u003eVogue\u003c/i\u003e models.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"The thing all of these people understand is that “billionaires buy experiences; they dont buy things,” as Rishi Patel, a luxury-wedding designer based in Chicago, told me. And one of those experiences is having a very good time planning their wedding.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/oaipaIwx_Uf4KRJZ_R6ech_fYSM=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":96,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/oaipaIwx_Uf4KRJZ_R6ech_fYSM=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/rFCzj6GLkZ3-aIQaQteLgFp3488=/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"\",\"altText\":\"section break image\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/oVr3jn8MS-PLGzmM-yeCNzzxRm4=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":95,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/oVr3jn8MS-PLGzmM-yeCNzzxRm4=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/nr0KyhIOiaqvwsCm9ku96_Iyals=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/OIIKcczoIuFXW9Q2wCuxqYEMoV4=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/7cYzWb93bT5qurVNqAltGu1bceU=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/nQ_4HpliG8VEK6kPGFI4DlVD-aE=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider3/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":\"DROPCAP\",\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003cspan class=\\\"smallcaps\\\"\u003eThe mother \u003c/span\u003eof\u003cspan class=\\\"smallcaps\\\"\u003e \u003c/span\u003ethe fake poor bride, it turned out, couldnt bring herself to fire me. Wed had a blast together upgrading the brides budget-conscious, twee affair into a jewel box of an event, and we werent ready to quit. Instead, we came up with a ruse—even more elaborate than the first—to get us through the wedding day.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"I had one of my employees pretend to work for the caterer, and—Im not particularly proud of this—we introduced the bride and this woman, assuring her that I was no longer involved. Except that I absolutely was. And nothing the bride and this woman talked about held any water, because the only thing that mattered was what happened between me and her mother. And what was happening was a lot. We ordered custom furniture to maximize the space in the room. We brought in an enhanced cooling system. We had the floor refinished so no one would trip.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"On the day of the event, after straightening every fork and folding every hemstitched linen napkin, I made myself invisible. I left everything in the trusted hands of a few of my staff members, who were disguised as waiters. I posted myself in a restaurant a few blocks away and fielded the mothers hysterical texts: “Shes going to find out! Shes going to find out what weve been doing!”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"I assured her that this charade would soon be behind us. But I didnt realize the reason she was certain her daughter would find out was that she was going to get drunk and tell her. Halfway through the reception, she pulled the bride aside and confessed the entire scheme. The bride saw red. She was surrounded by traitors on her wedding day! Her own mother was sneaking behind her back, carrying on an adulterous mother-daughter affair with the wedding planner!\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"At the end of the night, my phone buzzed one last time: “She knows everything. This is goodbye!”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/eupyP27CQgwzyKIKeSAODFnwFuQ=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":96,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/eupyP27CQgwzyKIKeSAODFnwFuQ=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/MTXkwlnOmGnas6SWO-i-E-oKki4=/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"\",\"altText\":\"section break image\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/VerIPxdUBLgFqV8AqBELbGl33-o=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":95,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/VerIPxdUBLgFqV8AqBELbGl33-o=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/t0POgDniUsURG1ABj9waXUHDOL4=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/lbfI3n6HVRlPPKClH0BrMJnDokw=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/4v1CB9gI9vjFFLMa9ceeaTL64kM=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/htNPmqL9cemRegMTW2DVDJEaZN8=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider4/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":\"DROPCAP\",\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003cspan class=\\\"smallcaps\\\"\u003e“We are always \u003c/span\u003egonna be the help,” Michael Waiser told me. “Im probably the most expensive help there is. But Im the help, right? And I think that you have to remember that.”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"By 2015, I was burned out. Not so much by the weddings themselves as by the role I had to play. Shortly after Donald Trump declared his presidential candidacy in a statement full of anti-Mexican sentiment, this half-Chicana wedding planner found herself at a Friday-night tasting listening to how excited the brides and grooms families were about the venue and the band and the food and … future President Donald Trump. Real friends could have said what they thought. But wedding friends—hired friends—had to go on with the show.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"It is easier to get a divorce than to quit a wedding. I know because I successfully did the former but never the latter, and I liked my ex-husband a lot more than any of the brides I tried to walk away from. Almost always, the conflict came down to the budget: The bride wanted something she couldnt afford, and instead of accepting that, she decided I was incompetent.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/1UcIPU6KbUZRqs677y0JjFSeuAE=/665x374/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_Tent/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":374,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/1UcIPU6KbUZRqs677y0JjFSeuAE=/665x374/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_Tent/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/98fcVBtx5O8eLJ2hqqB289tu4GI=/1330x748/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_Tent/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"Daniele Castellano\",\"altText\":\"illustration of army of people with ropes holding up wedding tent\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/t4jCcPV6mLpBCgwZbu6LratmpsA=/0x0:4716x2652/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_Tent/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":368,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/t4jCcPV6mLpBCgwZbu6LratmpsA=/0x0:4716x2652/655x368/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_Tent/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/dGPuDQH-sAnG7rHmu0tzz7Vz7So=/0x0:4716x2652/750x421/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_Tent/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/JTgwhWx6vUyQc8Ouv4T6iLrVUO0=/0x0:4716x2652/850x478/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_Tent/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/ocjPSYWlI4AZNmjlTMyjNVr3p4A=/0x0:4716x2652/928x521/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_Tent/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/_WxxxiQZHoEvyieujOBrHeeE7Jc=/0x0:4716x2652/1310x736/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_LuxuryWedding_Tent/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Some of my most abusive clients were the ones who were stretching themselves, going into debt to have the wedding that they wanted the world to see them have. But unlike bags or jewelry, you cant really knock off a nice wedding. Things would get more and more tense, and finally we would call a meeting. This should be a joyous experience, and it was clear they werent happy. We should just part ways and refer them to—and the brides lip would start quivering.\u003ci\u003e Were sorry. Please dont leave us.\u003c/i\u003e\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleRelatedContentLink\",\"idAttr\":\"injected-recirculation-link-3\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003ca href=\\\"https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2022/04/marriage-problems-fight-dishes/629526/\\\"\u003eRead: The marriage lesson that I learned too late\u003c/a\u003e\",\"index\":3},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"I was used to my wealthy clients thinking they could bend reality to their will, but I got truly taken advantage of only once. The bride called us to say that she and her younger sister were both getting married in the same year at the same venue. For what seemed like obvious reasons, she did not want to work with the same planner as her baby sibling. I quoted her our rates and there was silence.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Her sisters planner, she said then, was cheaper—something like $12,000 less.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"To which I replied: Good for your sister!\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"We nevertheless agreed to meet, and by the end of our coffee date, I could see by the needy look in her eyes that she wanted me to be her wedding best friend—the one person who didnt care about what her sister was doing with her wedding; the one person who didnt care that her sister was getting married, period.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Her mother called: They loved me, but the issue was that the other planner cost less. Again I said: Good for you; they were welcome to use that planner for both events. But they wanted me. Eventually, they signed the contract and sent in the first of several deposits.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Two weeks before the wedding, we called to remind them that the final payment of $10,000 hadnt come in yet. They said the check was in the mail. Two days before we left to begin setting up, we tried to charge their card on file, but it was no longer valid. When we rang, they told us they would give us a check when we arrived. Three days into the tent installation, when we would ask for payment, the mother or father would say they would go to the house right away and get it. Each time, they would get distracted. On the day of the wedding, we still hadnt been paid, and debated what to do. It wasnt like they didnt have the money. Obviously we would show up. When we asked the father for the check, he barked at us: \u003ci\u003eHow dare we harass him on his daughters wedding day?\u003c/i\u003e\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"But the day after, when we arrived to break down the party, the family was nowhere to be found. No check, no credit-card number. We made the trip back to New York bathed in shame. Thirteen years in the business, and wed been played by multimillionaires.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"That Sunday we prayed extra hard, but on Monday the brides father reached out. He had made an itemized list of minor infractions that he believed entitled him to withhold our last payment. Ive blocked out exactly what they were, but they were absurd—napkins not up to snuff, lights flickering in the restroom trailer. I called him and said this was simply not right. We had done what we were hired to do. But he had decided, it seemed clear to me, that if the little sisters wedding planner was taking less, I would have to take less as well, contract be damned.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Go ahead and fight me, he said. “Ill have so much fun spending my money suing you.”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleWellInlineImage\",\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/pAGmlORG3vNJRcLEnjtwdlVQfAw=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg\",\"width\":665,\"height\":96,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/pAGmlORG3vNJRcLEnjtwdlVQfAw=/665x96/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/tvAxidxqsaOzJdZ0lG-RHADbOPg=/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 2x\",\"attributionText\":\"\",\"altText\":\"section break image\",\"captionText\":\"\",\"crop\":{\"url\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/l7yPkiSdQ3aoD68tIYU24Iwsb_A=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg\",\"width\":655,\"height\":95,\"srcSet\":\"https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/l7yPkiSdQ3aoD68tIYU24Iwsb_A=/0x0:1330x192/655x95/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 655w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/FCxGEL1fg9Uw0FF8Mj9Iv_nGeUk=/0x0:1330x192/750x109/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 750w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/l2RK6eksEuBaWbyjCWJ28zTtslU=/0x0:1330x192/850x123/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 850w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/adpkakgFKS78q22SNF_jNvrDb5U=/0x0:1330x192/928x135/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 928w, https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/jj_Q2bTgIwJc8BQUk2wyiKIjeDg=/0x0:1330x192/1310x190/media/img/posts/2023/06/0723_Gonzalez_divider5/original.jpg 1310w\",\"reducedMotionSrcSet\":null,\"__typename\":\"BasicCrop\"},\"clickthroughUrl\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":\"DROPCAP\",\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003cspan class=\\\"smallcaps\\\"\u003eThe biggest wedding \u003c/span\u003ein the news lately, between Brooklyn Beckham, the son of a Spice Girl and a soccer star, and Nicola Peltz, the daughter of a billionaire, cost $3 million to $5 million, the tabloids say, and \u003ca data-event-element=\\\"inline link\\\" href=\\\"https://www.thecut.com/2023/03/brooklyn-beckham-nicola-peltz-wedding-planner-lawsuit.html\\\"\u003eended in lawsuits and scandal\u003c/a\u003e—the brides father is suing two wedding planners who briefly worked for him; the planners have countersued. But every time I read about it, I find myself thinking of the hundreds of people whose labor made it all happen.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Critics who roll their eyes at wedding excess seem to forget that this excess creates a lot of jobs. So much of the work behind a wedding is invisible, but its done by real people, people who suffer when the wedding industry goes downhill. Wedding planners and designers and florists and caterers ate a lot of soup during the recession. They did the same during the pandemic. Both times, it was the rich who came back first, like a spring thaw.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Rishi Patel was the designer on the Peltz wedding. He told me that after large projects, he often gives his clients a book with sketches of everything he made for their wedding—the chuppah, the table settings, the stage where they took their vows—and a note at the front that says something like \u003ci\u003eI hope you are as proud as I am that you were able to employ 200 people for these two weeks\u003c/i\u003e. He and Marcy Blum are among the many luxury-wedding professionals who have started posting behind-the-scenes videos of their events on Instagram, to humanize the amount of work that goes into them.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"Blum does this, she told me, in part because critics are always saying things like “There are all these hungry people in the world, all the homeless people. You could have fed 8 million people with that wedding.” Her clients already give millions to charity, she said. For someone like that, she asked, “what are they supposed to do—have a picnic? What is a quote-unquote appropriate amount to spend on your childs wedding?”\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"You might not be surprised to hear that after the mother of my fake poor bride told me it was farewell forever, it wasnt quite. I got some emails, the occasional text. The strange part about it is, although I believed the bride had every right to be upset, I never felt guilty for what we did. And I suspect that her mother didnt either. Our bond had nothing to do with how she felt about her daughter, and everything to do with how she felt about her money: just fine. She not only didnt mind having it; she didnt mind spending it.\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleLegacyHtml\",\"tagName\":\"HR\",\"idAttr\":\"\",\"className\":\"\",\"style\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"\"},{\"__typename\":\"ArticleParagraphContent\",\"subtype\":null,\"idAttr\":\"\",\"innerHtml\":\"\u003csmall\u003e\u003cem\u003eThis article appears in the \u003ca data-event-element=\\\"inline link\\\" href=\\\"https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/toc/2023/07/\\\"\u003eJuly/August 2023\u003c/a\u003e print edition with the headline “Confessions of a Luxury-Wedding Planner.” When you buy a book using a link on this page, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting \u003c/em\u003eThe Atlantic\u003cem\u003e. \u003c/em\u003e\u003c/small\u003e\"}],\"editorialProject\":null,\"primaryCategory\":{\"__typename\":\"Channel\",\"displayName\":\"Culture\",\"url\":\"https://www.theatlantic.com/culture/\",\"slug\":\"culture\"},\"reviews\":[],\"embeds\":[],\"authors\":[{\"id\":\"Author:27201\",\"displayName\":\"Xochitl Gonzalez\",\"url\":\"https://www.theatlantic.com/author/xochitl-gonzalez/\",\"biography\":{\"default\":\"\u003ca href=\\\"https://www.theatlantic.com/author/xochitl-gonzalez/\\\" class=\\\"author-link\\\" data-label=\\\"https://www.theatlantic.com/author/xochitl-gonzalez/\\\" data-action=\\\"click author - name\\\" \u003eXochitl Gonzalez\u003c/a\u003e is a staff writer at \u003cem\u003eThe Atlantic\u003c/em\u003e. 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