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  • PASSO CORESE, ITALY - 22 SEPTEMBER 2020: Francesca Gemma (30), an Amazon employee and union representative, poses for a portrait by the Amazon facility where she works in Passo Corese, just outside Rome,  on September 22nd 2020.<br />
<br />
When Francesca Gemma graduated from college in 2017, Amazon was the only company hiring. “On the first day the muscles of my legs felt like I had done a marathon, I couldn’t climb up the stairs,” she said. “It’s not for everyone, but it’s a job.”  Ms. Gemma, a union representative, said that orders at her fulfillment center skyrocketed during the lockdown and have remained high. She wondered why Amazon did not provide warehouse staff more in bonuses to share in the success. “Nothing remained for workers,” she said. <br />
<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200922_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M307...jpg
  • PASSO CORESE, ITALY - 22 SEPTEMBER 2020: Francesca Gemma (30), an Amazon employee and union representative, poses for a portrait by the Amazon facility where she works in Passo Corese, just outside Rome,  on September 22nd 2020.<br />
<br />
When Francesca Gemma graduated from college in 2017, Amazon was the only company hiring. “On the first day the muscles of my legs felt like I had done a marathon, I couldn’t climb up the stairs,” she said. “It’s not for everyone, but it’s a job.”  Ms. Gemma, a union representative, said that orders at her fulfillment center skyrocketed during the lockdown and have remained high. She wondered why Amazon did not provide warehouse staff more in bonuses to share in the success. “Nothing remained for workers,” she said. <br />
<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200922_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M307...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: A receiver processes Amazon packages at the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: A stower processes Amazon packages at the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: Diverters process Amazon packages at the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa De Nicola (62), owner of a clothing shop in Calitri who participated in the protest against the Amazon event, poses for a portrait in her shop in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. Luciano Capossela helped organize a protest of the Christmas festival with other local shop owners, who closed their stores for the night and blacked out their windows.  “If we keep going this way in 10 to 15 years we will only have Amazon and everything else will no longer exist,” he said.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa De Nicola (62), owner of a clothing shop in Calitri who participated in the protest against the Amazon event, poses for a portrait in her shop in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. Luciano Capossela helped organize a protest of the Christmas festival with other local shop owners, who closed their stores for the night and blacked out their windows.  “If we keep going this way in 10 to 15 years we will only have Amazon and everything else will no longer exist,” he said.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa De Nicola (62), owner of a clothing shop in Calitri who participated in the protest against the Amazon event, poses for a portrait in her shop in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. Luciano Capossela helped organize a protest of the Christmas festival with other local shop owners, who closed their stores for the night and blacked out their windows.  “If we keep going this way in 10 to 15 years we will only have Amazon and everything else will no longer exist,” he said.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Luciano Capossela (38), a jeweler who helped organise a protest against the Amazon event, poses for a portrait in his workshop in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. Luciano Capossela helped organize a protest of the Christmas festival with other local shop owners, who closed their stores for the night and blacked out their windows.  “If we keep going this way in 10 to 15 years we will only have Amazon and everything else will no longer exist,” he said.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Luciano Capossela (38), a jeweler who helped organise a protest against the Amazon event, poses for a portrait in his workshop in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. Luciano Capossela helped organize a protest of the Christmas festival with other local shop owners, who closed their stores for the night and blacked out their windows.  “If we keep going this way in 10 to 15 years we will only have Amazon and everything else will no longer exist,” he said.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Luciano Capossela (38), a jeweler who helped organise a protest against the Amazon event, poses for a portrait in his workshop in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. Luciano Capossela helped organize a protest of the Christmas festival with other local shop owners, who closed their stores for the night and blacked out their windows.  “If we keep going this way in 10 to 15 years we will only have Amazon and everything else will no longer exist,” he said.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Luciano Capossela (38), a jeweler who helped organise a protest against the Amazon event, is seen here at work in his workshop in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. Luciano Capossela helped organize a protest of the Christmas festival with other local shop owners, who closed their stores for the night and blacked out their windows.  “If we keep going this way in 10 to 15 years we will only have Amazon and everything else will no longer exist,” he said.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • PASSO CORESE, ITALY - 22 SEPTEMBER 2020: Francesca Gemma (30), an Amazon employee and union representative, poses for a portrait by the Amazon facility where she works in Passo Corese, just outside Rome,  on September 22nd 2020.<br />
<br />
When Francesca Gemma graduated from college in 2017, Amazon was the only company hiring. “On the first day the muscles of my legs felt like I had done a marathon, I couldn’t climb up the stairs,” she said. “It’s not for everyone, but it’s a job.”  Ms. Gemma, a union representative, said that orders at her fulfillment center skyrocketed during the lockdown and have remained high. She wondered why Amazon did not provide warehouse staff more in bonuses to share in the success. “Nothing remained for workers,” she said. <br />
<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200922_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M307...jpg
  • PASSO CORESE, ITALY - 22 SEPTEMBER 2020: Francesca Gemma (30), an Amazon employee and union representative, poses for a portrait by the Amazon facility where she works in Passo Corese, just outside Rome,  on September 22nd 2020.<br />
<br />
When Francesca Gemma graduated from college in 2017, Amazon was the only company hiring. “On the first day the muscles of my legs felt like I had done a marathon, I couldn’t climb up the stairs,” she said. “It’s not for everyone, but it’s a job.”  Ms. Gemma, a union representative, said that orders at her fulfillment center skyrocketed during the lockdown and have remained high. She wondered why Amazon did not provide warehouse staff more in bonuses to share in the success. “Nothing remained for workers,” she said. <br />
<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200922_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M307...jpg
  • PASSO CORESE, ITALY - 22 SEPTEMBER 2020: Francesca Gemma (30), an Amazon employee and union representative, poses for a portrait by the Amazon facility where she works in Passo Corese, just outside Rome,  on September 22nd 2020.<br />
<br />
When Francesca Gemma graduated from college in 2017, Amazon was the only company hiring. “On the first day the muscles of my legs felt like I had done a marathon, I couldn’t climb up the stairs,” she said. “It’s not for everyone, but it’s a job.”  Ms. Gemma, a union representative, said that orders at her fulfillment center skyrocketed during the lockdown and have remained high. She wondered why Amazon did not provide warehouse staff more in bonuses to share in the success. “Nothing remained for workers,” she said. <br />
<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200922_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M307...jpg
  • PASSO CORESE, ITALY - 22 SEPTEMBER 2020: Francesca Gemma (30), an Amazon employee and union representative, poses for a portrait by the Amazon facility where she works in Passo Corese, just outside Rome,  on September 22nd 2020.<br />
<br />
When Francesca Gemma graduated from college in 2017, Amazon was the only company hiring. “On the first day the muscles of my legs felt like I had done a marathon, I couldn’t climb up the stairs,” she said. “It’s not for everyone, but it’s a job.”  Ms. Gemma, a union representative, said that orders at her fulfillment center skyrocketed during the lockdown and have remained high. She wondered why Amazon did not provide warehouse staff more in bonuses to share in the success. “Nothing remained for workers,” she said. <br />
<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200922_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M307...jpg
  • PASSO CORESE, ITALY - 22 SEPTEMBER 2020: Francesca Gemma (30), an Amazon employee and union representative, poses for a portrait by the Amazon facility where she works in Passo Corese, just outside Rome,  on September 22nd 2020.<br />
<br />
When Francesca Gemma graduated from college in 2017, Amazon was the only company hiring. “On the first day the muscles of my legs felt like I had done a marathon, I couldn’t climb up the stairs,” she said. “It’s not for everyone, but it’s a job.”  Ms. Gemma, a union representative, said that orders at her fulfillment center skyrocketed during the lockdown and have remained high. She wondered why Amazon did not provide warehouse staff more in bonuses to share in the success. “Nothing remained for workers,” she said. <br />
<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200922_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M307...jpg
  • PASSO CORESE, ITALY - 22 SEPTEMBER 2020: Francesca Gemma (30), an Amazon employee and union representative, poses for a portrait by the Amazon facility where she works in Passo Corese, just outside Rome,  on September 22nd 2020.<br />
<br />
When Francesca Gemma graduated from college in 2017, Amazon was the only company hiring. “On the first day the muscles of my legs felt like I had done a marathon, I couldn’t climb up the stairs,” she said. “It’s not for everyone, but it’s a job.”  Ms. Gemma, a union representative, said that orders at her fulfillment center skyrocketed during the lockdown and have remained high. She wondered why Amazon did not provide warehouse staff more in bonuses to share in the success. “Nothing remained for workers,” she said. <br />
<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200922_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M307...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: A stower processes Amazon packages at the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: A stower processes Amazon packages at the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: Diverters process Amazon packages at the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: A stower processes Amazon packages at the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: A diverter processes Amazon packages at the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: An unloader and a receiver process Amazon packages at the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: A Water Spider unloads a truck of Amazon packages that will be processed at the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: An Amazon truck is seen here as it is being unloaded to the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: A Water Spider unloads a truck of Amazon packages that will be processed at the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa De Nicola (62), owner of a clothing shop in Calitri who participated in the protest against the Amazon event, poses for a portrait in her shop in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. Luciano Capossela helped organize a protest of the Christmas festival with other local shop owners, who closed their stores for the night and blacked out their windows.  “If we keep going this way in 10 to 15 years we will only have Amazon and everything else will no longer exist,” he said.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa De Nicola (62), owner of a clothing shop in Calitri who participated in the protest against the Amazon event, poses for a portrait in her shop in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. Luciano Capossela helped organize a protest of the Christmas festival with other local shop owners, who closed their stores for the night and blacked out their windows.  “If we keep going this way in 10 to 15 years we will only have Amazon and everything else will no longer exist,” he said.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa De Nicola (62), owner of a clothing shop in Calitri who participated in the protest against the Amazon event, poses for a portrait in her shop in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. Luciano Capossela helped organize a protest of the Christmas festival with other local shop owners, who closed their stores for the night and blacked out their windows.  “If we keep going this way in 10 to 15 years we will only have Amazon and everything else will no longer exist,” he said.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Luciano Capossela (38), a jeweler who helped organise a protest against the Amazon event, is seen here at work in his workshop in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. Luciano Capossela helped organize a protest of the Christmas festival with other local shop owners, who closed their stores for the night and blacked out their windows.  “If we keep going this way in 10 to 15 years we will only have Amazon and everything else will no longer exist,” he said.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: Diverters process Amazon packages at the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2020: An aerial of the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 17th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200917_NYT-Amazon-Italy_DJI_0...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2020: An aerial of the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 17th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200917_NYT-Amazon-Italy_DJI_0...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 16 SEPTEMBER 2020: An aerial of the Amazon delivery station in Arzano, just outside Naples, Italy, on September 16th 2020.<br />
<br />
Opened in 2019, the Amazon delivery station in Arzano was the first to open in Southern Italy. Here, an average of 30,000 to 50,000 Amazon packages are processed and delivered in the region.<br />
<br />
   plans to open two new fulfillment centers and seven delivery stations. Roughly 1,600 more people will be hired by the end of the year, pushing its full-time work force in Italy to 8,500 from less than 200 in 2011. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200916_NYT-Amazon-Italy_DJI_0...jpg
  • AVELLINIO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Ludovica Tomaciello (19), who is pursuing a language degree and a recenr Amazon customer, poses for a portrait. in Avellino, Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Ludovica Tomaciello had never shopped on Amazon before being trapped at her parents’ house in March during Italy’s coronavirus lockdown.  But even when stores reopened in May, Amazon remained her preferred way to shop because of the convenience, variety and prices, she said. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M304...jpg
  • AVELLINIO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Ludovica Tomaciello (19), who is pursuing a language degree and a recenr Amazon customer, poses for a portrait. in Avellino, Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Ludovica Tomaciello had never shopped on Amazon before being trapped at her parents’ house in March during Italy’s coronavirus lockdown.  But even when stores reopened in May, Amazon remained her preferred way to shop because of the convenience, variety and prices, she said. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M304...jpg
  • AVELLINIO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Ludovica Tomaciello (19), who is pursuing a language degree and a recenr Amazon customer, poses for a portrait. in Avellino, Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Ludovica Tomaciello had never shopped on Amazon before being trapped at her parents’ house in March during Italy’s coronavirus lockdown.  But even when stores reopened in May, Amazon remained her preferred way to shop because of the convenience, variety and prices, she said. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M304...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: Residents of Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, are seen here by the historical center on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Mayor of Calitri Michele di Maio (61) poses for a portriat in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • AVELLINIO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Ludovica Tomaciello (19), who is pursuing a language degree and a recenr Amazon customer, poses for a portrait. in Avellino, Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Ludovica Tomaciello had never shopped on Amazon before being trapped at her parents’ house in March during Italy’s coronavirus lockdown.  But even when stores reopened in May, Amazon remained her preferred way to shop because of the convenience, variety and prices, she said. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M304...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_DJI_0...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_DJI_0...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: A man and his mother walk in the coutryside of Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: A man enters a cafe in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: A woman walks in the historical center of Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: An elderly man walks in the historical center of  Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020:An abandoned poultry shop is on sale here in the historical center of Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: An abandoned building for sale is seen here in the historical center of Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: A woman walks in the historical center of Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2020: A woman walks in the historical center of Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 18th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200918_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M306...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 SEPTEMBER 2020: Salvatore Ciliberti (31), retrieves his Amazon order at an Amazon locker is seen here in the outskirts of Naples, Italy, on September 16th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200916_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Mayor of Calitri Michele di Maio (61) poses for a portriat in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Mayor of Calitri Michele di Maio (61) poses for a portriat in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Mayor of Calitri Michele di Maio (61) poses for a portriat in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • CALITRI, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Mayor of Calitri Michele di Maio (61) poses for a portriat in Calitri, a village of 4,000 people in southern Italy, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
In Calitry Amazon sponsored a local Christmas festival last year as part of a marketing campaign to show it could reach even the most isolated areas. It paid for a big Christmas tree in the town square and provided gifts to local children. The town’s mayor hoped it would lead more local artisans and farmers to sell their products through Amazon. <br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 SEPTEMBER 2020: Salvatore Ciliberti (31), retrieves his Amazon order at an Amazon locker is seen here in the outskirts of Naples, Italy, on September 16th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200916_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • MONTECORVINO ROVELLA, ITALY - 16 SEPTEMBER 2020: An Amazon contractor delivers a package in Montecorvino Rovella, Italy, on September 16th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200916_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 SEPTEMBER 2020: An Amazon locker is seen here in a supermarker in the outskirts of Naples, Italy, on September 16th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200916_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 SEPTEMBER 2020: An Amazon locker is seen here in a supermarker in the outskirts of Naples, Italy, on September 16th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200916_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 SEPTEMBER 2020: An Amazon locker is seen here in the outskirts of Naples, Italy, on September 16th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200916_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • MONTECORVINO ROVELLA, ITALY - 16 SEPTEMBER 2020: An Amazon customers receives a package in Montecorvino Rovella, Italy, on September 16th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200916_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • MONTECORVINO ROVELLA, ITALY - 16 SEPTEMBER 2020: An Amazon contractor delivers a package in Montecorvino Rovella, Italy, on September 16th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200916_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 SEPTEMBER 2020: An Amazon locker is seen here in the outskirts of Naples, Italy, on September 16th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200916_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • GRAGNANO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Pasta maker Antonino Moccia (47), poses for a portrait at La Fabbrica della Pasta di Gragnano, his family owned pasta factory in Gragnano, a hilltop town near the Amalfi Coast with a 500-year history of pasta manufacturing, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • GRAGNANO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: The Caccavella pasta is seen here at La Fabbrica della Pasta di Gragnano, a family owned pasta factory in Gragnano, a hilltop town near the Amalfi Coast with a 500-year history of pasta manufacturing, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • GRAGNANO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Workers select and package pasta at La Fabbrica della Pasta di Gragnano, a family owned pasta factory in Gragnano, a hilltop town near the Amalfi Coast with a 500-year history of pasta manufacturing, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M304...jpg
  • GRAGNANO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Pappardelle pasta are seen here at La Fabbrica della Pasta di Gragnano, a family owned pasta factory in Gragnano, a hilltop town near the Amalfi Coast with a 500-year history of pasta manufacturing, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M304...jpg
  • GRAGNANO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Pasta maker Antonino Moccia (47), poses for a portrait at La Fabbrica della Pasta di Gragnano, his family owned pasta factory in Gragnano, a hilltop town near the Amalfi Coast with a 500-year history of pasta manufacturing, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • GRAGNANO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: An employee organises the pasta on display here at the shop of La Fabbrica della Pasta di Gragnano, a family owned pasta factory in Gragnano, a hilltop town near the Amalfi Coast with a 500-year history of pasta manufacturing, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • GRAGNANO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: The Caccavella pasta is seen here at La Fabbrica della Pasta di Gragnano, a family owned pasta factory in Gragnano, a hilltop town near the Amalfi Coast with a 500-year history of pasta manufacturing, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • GRAGNANO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Workers select and package pasta at La Fabbrica della Pasta di Gragnano, a family owned pasta factory in Gragnano, a hilltop town near the Amalfi Coast with a 500-year history of pasta manufacturing, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M304...jpg
  • GRAGNANO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020:  A worker places a label on a package of pappardelle pasta here at La Fabbrica della Pasta di Gragnano, a family owned pasta factory in Gragnano, a hilltop town near the Amalfi Coast with a 500-year history of pasta manufacturing, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M304...jpg
  • GRAGNANO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Pasta maker Antonino Moccia (47), puts a wrack of pasta to driver in a cell at La Fabbrica della Pasta di Gragnano, his family owned pasta factory in Gragnano, a hilltop town near the Amalfi Coast with a 500-year history of pasta manufacturing, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M304...jpg
  • GRAGNANO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Chili pepper linguini pasta are seen here as they dry in a cell at La Fabbrica della Pasta di Gragnano, a family owned pasta factory in Gragnano, a hilltop town near the Amalfi Coast with a 500-year history of pasta manufacturing, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M304...jpg
  • GRAGNANO, ITALY - 15 SEPTEMBER 2020: Pasta maker Antonino Moccia (47), poses for a portrait at La Fabbrica della Pasta di Gragnano, his family owned pasta factory in Gragnano, a hilltop town near the Amalfi Coast with a 500-year history of pasta manufacturing, on September 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200915_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M305...jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: An Amazon videomaker shooting backstage videos of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" is here on the dock of Palazzo Cavalli-Franchetti while a scene is being filmed on a barge on the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_9114.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: (L-R) Tenor and conductor Placido Domingo (75), actor Gael Garcia Bernal (37) and actress Monica Bellucci (51) and are here on a barge and set before shooting a scene of an episode of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" on the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_8829.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: A barge and set where a scene of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" is filmed with actors Gael Garcia Bernal and Monica Bellucci, navigates through the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_9322.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: Actress Monica Bellucci (51) steps out of Palazzo Cavalli-Franchetti to shoot a scene of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" in which he will interpret himself in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_9253.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: (R-L) Tenor and conductor Placido Domingo (75), actress Monica Bellucci (51) and actor Gael Garcia Bernal (37) shoot a scene of an episode of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" on a barge and set navigating on the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_9217.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: (L-R) Actor Gael Garcia Bernal (37), actress Monica Bellucci (51) and tenor and conductor Placido Domingo (75) shoot a scene of an episode of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" on a barge and set navigating on the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_9188.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: Cew members shoot and direct a scene filmed on a barge and set with actors Gael Barcia Bernal and Monica Bellucci on the Grand Canal, by the Accademia bridge in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_9178.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: Cew members shoot and direct a scene filmed on a barge and set with actors Gael Barcia Bernal and Monica Bellucci on the Grand Canal, by the Accademia bridge in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_9165.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: (R-L) Actress Monica Bellucci (51), conductor and tenor Placido Domingo (75) and actor Gael Garcia Bernal (37) wait on the set and barge before shooting a scene of an episode of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" on the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_9089.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: Actress Monica Bellucci (51) steps out of Palazzo Cavalli-Franchetti to shoot a scene of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" in which he will interpret himself in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_9048.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: Actress Monica Bellucci (50, center) send a video message to a fan during a beak in between scenes of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle", as conductor and tenor Placido Domingo (75, left) looks at her, at Palazzo Cavalli-Franchetti in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_9008.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: Two monitors set up in Palazzo Cavalli-Franchetti show a scene of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle", with actress Monica Bellucci and conductor and tenor Placido Domingo, as it is being filmed outside on a barge floating on the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_8966.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: Two monitors set up in Palazzo Cavalli-Franchetti show a scene of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle", with actress Monica Bellucci and conductor and tenor Placido Domingo, as it is being filmed outside on a barge floating on the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_8950.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: Background actors watch a scene of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" from Palazzo Palazzo Cavalli-Franchetti  as it is being filmed on a barge and set floating on the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_8883.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: Production and crew members stand by the exit of Palazzo Palazzo Cavalli-Franchetti as they look at the set and barge floating on the Grand Canal where a scene of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" will be shot. in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_8875.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: (L-R) Tenor and conductor Placido Domingo (75), actor Gael Garcia Bernal (37) and actress Monica Bellucci (51) and are here on a barge and set together with crew and production members before shooting a scene of an episode of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" on the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_8832.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: Actress Monica Bellucci (51) waits on the set and barge before shooting a scene of an episode of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" on the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_8819.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: Actress Monica Bellucci (51) waits on the set and barge before shooting a scene of an episode of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" on the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160714_NYT-Domingo_5M3_8808.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: Actress Monica Bellucci (51) puts on make-up set on a set and barge with actor Gael Garcia Bernal (37, 2nd from right) before shooting a scene of an episode of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" on the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160713_NYT-Domingo_5M3_8738.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: (L-R) Director Paul Weitz (50) gives directions to actor Gael Garcia Bernal (37) and actress Monica Bellucci (51) on a barge and set before shooting a scene of an episode of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" on the Grand Canal in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160713_NYT-Domingo_5M3_8695.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: (R-L) Tenor and conductor Placido Domingo (75, interpreting himself) and actor Gael Garcia Bernal (37, interpreting conductor Rodrigo de Souza) shoot a scene of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" at Palazzo Cavalli-Franchetti in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160713_NYT-Domingo_5M3_8461.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: (R-L) Tenor and conductor Placido Domingo (75, interpreting himself) and actor Gael Garcia Bernal (37, interpreting conductor Rodrigo de Souza) shoot a scene of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" at Palazzo Cavalli-Franchetti in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160713_NYT-Domingo_5M3_8389.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: Tenor and conductor Placido Domingo (75, center) chats with actor Gael Garcia Bernal (left) before shooting together a scene of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" in which Domingo will interpret himself, at the Palazzo Cavalli-Franchetti in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160713_NYT-Domingo_5M3_8257.jpg
  • VENICE, ITALY - 13 JULY 2016: Tenor and conductor Placido Domingo (75, center) chats with director Paul Weitz (50, left) before shooting a scene of the third season of "Mozart in the Jungle" in which he will interpret himself, at the Palazzo Cavalli-Franchetti in Venice, Italy, on July 13th 2016.<br />
<br />
Mozart in the Jungle is an award-winning television series produced by Picrow for Amazon Studios. The pilot was written by Roman Coppola, Jason Schwartzman, and Alex Timbers and directed by Paul Weitz. The story was inspired by Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music, oboist Blair Tindall's 2005 memoir of her professional career in New York.
    CIPG_20160713_NYT-Domingo_5M3_8172.jpg
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