7 Things to Know About MacKenzie Scott, the Woman Who Has Donated 6 Billion Dollars in 2020

It’s quite a contrast to her ex-husband, the 56-year-old Bezos, who in the past few years has bought mansions in Washington, D.C. and Beverly Hills as well as a a multi-apartment complex on Manhattan’s Central Park South and a 300,000-acre property in Texas; partied in St-Tropez and St.  Barts with Sanchez; showed off his newly buff body in $260 Vilebrequin swim shorts that quickly became an Internet sensation; and has methodically squeezed every last dollar out of his Amazon employees while fighting their efforts to unionize.

And as Chuck Collins, director of the Program on Inequality and the Common Good at the Institute for Policy Studies, wrote at CommonDreams, Scott—a relative newcomer on the billionaire-giving scene—has quickly made herself the role model for others to follow. “She’s now made two bold moves, putting to shame the other 650 U.S. billionaires who haven’t figured out comparable ways to boldly share,” he wrote. 

Here is everything we know about MacKenzie Scott and her journey to becoming one of the world’s most notable philanthropists.

She was there at the very beginning 

Jeff Bezos and MacKenzie Scott met in 1992, when they were both at the New York hedge fund D.E. Shaw, working out of adjoining offices, and then married a year later. In 1994, they quit their jobs and moved to Seattle to start Amazon (then conceived as an online bookseller) from the garage of their new home. “I picked books as the first, best product to sell online after making a list of, like, 20 different products,” Bezos told an interviewer in 1997. On the way to Washington, MacKenzie drove while Jeff worked on their business plan, tapping it out on his laptop. According to a 1999 Wired interview, MacKenzie negotiated Amazon’s first freight contracts, doing so while working out of a Starbucks café in a local Barnes & Noble.

She is a published author

Scott, writing as MacKenzie Bezos, is the author of two well-regarded novels: The Testing of Luther Albright, which was named a Los Angeles Times “book of the year” in 2005, and Traps, published eight years later, and which Kirkus Reviews called a “cleverly orchestrated, cool-toned” tale. In 2013, Scott told Vogue that it had taken 10 years and “a lot of tears” to finish her first novel. “Granted, she was doing other things during that time,” added her interviewer Rebecca Johnson, “moving cross-country, giving birth to four children (three boys and a girl, ranging in age from seven to twelve), helping her husband start a fledgling business called Amazon.com.” 

She had good mentors

Scott, who grew up in San Francisco—the daughter of a financial planner and a stay-at-home mother and local philanthropist—attended Hotchkiss and then Princeton, a school she later said she chose partly for the chance to study fiction under the writer Toni Morrison, who once called Scott “one of the best students I’ve ever had in my creative-writing classes . . . really one of the best.” It was Morrison who connected Scott with Amanda “Binky” Urban, the famed literary agent, at the beginning of her writing career.

The split with Bezos was apparently an amicable one

They didn’t quite call it a “conscious uncoupling,” but Bezos and Scott pulled off their divorce without public acrimony; a considerable feat given its frenzied tabloid coverage. (In February of 2019, Bezos accused the National Enquirer of trying to extort him by threatening to publish compromising photos that Bezos had texted to Sanchez.) In a tweet, Jeff said he and MacKenzie had decided to “continue our shared lives as friends”:

A few months later, MacKenzie posted a tweet of her own:

She quickly pledged to give away her fortune

Just months after her divorce, Scott signed on to the Giving Pledge, a commitment to give away at least half of one’s money. Led by Bill and Melinda Gates, the Giving Pledge has been described as “today’s Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller,” and its purpose is to remake global philanthropy by encouraging earlier, bigger, and more public giving, particularly from the new generation of tech billionaires. (Notably, the couple did not sign the pledge while married, and Bezos himself has not done so since the divorce, though he and MacKenzie did make some notable donations while they were together.) “We each come by the gifts we have to offer by an infinite series of influences and lucky breaks we can never fully understand. In addition to whatever assets life has nurtured in me, I have a disproportionate amount of money to share,” Scott said in a letter announcing her commitment. “My approach to philanthropy will continue to be thoughtful. It will take time and effort and care.”

Who has gotten the money so far?

Scott made gifts to more than a dozen historically Black colleges and universities, as well as community and technical colleges and schools serving Native Americans, women, urban, and rural students. Among the groups she singled out in her Medium post, and urged others to donate to, were the Center for Disaster Philanthropy, the Chicago Community Loan Fund, Feeding America, the Navajo and Hopi Families COVID-19 Relief Fund, and HBCUs ranging from Dillard University to Mississippi’s Tougaloo College.

She’s not done yet

According to Forbes, Scott is now the third-richest woman in the world, just behind L’Oreal heir Françoise Bettencourt Meyers and Walmart heir Alice Walton. The magazine estimates her current net worth at $55.1 billion (after her most recent donations), which means Scott has a lot more charitable giving in her future if she sticks to her pledge to give at least half her fortune away. And it seems like she will: As Scott wrote on Medium in July, she is determined “to give the majority of my wealth back to the society that helped generate it, to do it thoughtfully, to get started soon, and to keep at it until the safe is empty.” She added: “This work is ongoing and will last for years.”