Ivanka Trump didn’t just show up in Venice for Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez’s lavish wedding, according to one psychic, she may have been setting the stage for a career comeback.
The former first daughter wore a series of jaw-dropping looks for the celebration, including a salmon-pink Tony Ward Couture gown adorned with silver floral details and subtle cutouts. Ivanka mingled with a crowd that included Oprah, Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Brady, Orlando Bloom, and the entire Kardashian-Jenner family.
But while her stunning look and high-profile presence turned heads, clairvoyant Athos Salomé believes the trip was more than a fashion moment, it was, in his words, “just the first chapter.”
“Ivanka is not running away from the past," Salomé told the Daily Mail, explaining that "she’s trying to buy it back with a new storyline,” predicting her days in Venice could unlock major professional opportunities.
Salomé, who has been called “Living Nostradamus” for reportedly predicting the COVID-19 pandemic, Queen Elizabeth II’s death, and the Microsoft global outage, sees a 70 percent chance Ivanka will land at least one or two new contracts within 18 months.
His shortlist includes a third book, a docuseries, or even a sustainable fashion capsule. He believes a book is the most likely outcome. “By the second half of 2026, she should announce a book with Amazon Publishing,” he said.
“Premium publishers are looking for behind-the-scenes White House memoirs that don't exalt Trumpism, in line with the electoral climate of 2028, when the public will be hungry for ‘clean’ versions of history.’”
Ivanka has already published 'The Trump Card' in 2009 and 'Women Who Work' in 2017.
But that’s not all Salomé foresees, the psychic says there’s a 50 percent chance that Bezos’ guest list and Prime Video’s appetite for high-profile stories could lead to a short-format docu-series. “The connection with Jeff Bezos isn't just for selfies,” he added. “It offers direct access to Amazon Prime Video, whose catalogue has an appetite for behind-the-scenes content about public figures.”
He even envisions the concept, “four episodes on women’s philanthropy in emerging markets,” describing it as “an easy product to approve” and “excellent for image cleaning.”
As for a revival of her fashion line, Salomé gives that idea just a 25 percent chance of success, unless it’s a reimagined version. He recommends “a limited capsule collection with recycled fabrics and a carbon-neutral footprint, co-signed with a luxury maison.”