The on-duty lock operator described the yacht as the largest he had seen in fourteen years as it approached slowly, as these things always do at the Ballard Locks. When Launchpad, Mark Zuckerberg’s 387-foot Feadship, which is estimated to be worth $300 million, drifted into Lake Union on Tuesday night, the crowd along the walkway had gotten so dense that you could feel something being held in the air. The crew was told to pay their taxes by someone. Some just gazed. The hull’s bumpers were roughly the size of compact SUVs.
Depending on your point of view, the timing was either spectacular or hideous. A few hours prior, Meta had submitted documents revealing 1,395 layoffs throughout the state of Washington, including 699 in Bellevue, 259 in Seattle, 206 in Redmond, and an additional 231 remote workers dispersed throughout the area. A superyacht the length of a football field sailed past the windows of some of the people losing their jobs, and in one afternoon, about a fifth of Meta’s entire Washington workforce vanished.

There was no Zuckerberg on board. When questioned, crew members shook their heads, and flight trackers put the Meta CEO somewhere nearer Monterey, California. Anyone looking at his Instagram could see him working out in a camouflage vest in a dimly lit gym that seemed to mock self-control. Flying the Marshall Islands flag, Launchpad had probably traveled north for the standard marine maintenance Lake Union is renowned for, such as crew changes, hull repairs, and the unglamorous logistics that keep a 24-knot boat operating. That didn’t make the image any softer.
It’s difficult not to interpret the scene as a theatrical production that the city declined to host. Although Seattle’s relationship with big tech has always been complex—admiring, reliant, and occasionally resentful—the optics of a vessel connected to billionaires parking itself in the middle of the city’s tech corridor during a week of layoffs went beyond resentment. Near the waterfront trail, Nimmy Simon said, “I think it’s a little insensitive,” to a local reporter. “And by little I mean a lot.” On Reddit, where the majority of people initially appeared to be learning about the boat, that line quickly gained popularity.
The 8,000-person reduction linked to what the company refers to as “AI-related restructuring” includes Meta’s layoffs. The year’s capital expenditures could total up to $145 billion, with a large portion going toward data centers, GPU clusters, and the costly, drawn-out plumbing of the AI arms race. The math is brutal in its simplicity: every billion dollars invested in infrastructure must come from somewhere, and in recent years, it has come from the pay lines of technical writers, data scientists, software engineers, and marketing teams. Although Meta had previously eliminated 331 jobs in January and over a hundred the week before Christmas, this round had a significant impact.
An important point made by Seattle University economist Nick Huntington-Klein is that a well-paying job in Bellevue does not support a single household. It provides food for a daycare, a yoga studio, a dentist office, and a sandwich shop. He remarked, “You can see those effects happening most directly and quickly,” pointing out that Bellevue’s concentration of cuts makes it more difficult to absorb the ripple. The people who run the dry cleaner next to Meta’s Bellevue campus already know what’s coming, despite the tendency in tech-layoff coverage to abstract the damage into spreadsheets and severance packages.
On Wednesday morning, a crew member polished the bow while Launchpad sat at its dock. The four heavy-duty engines, the hot tub, and the covered pool on the back deck didn’t demand attention. In any case, it got it. As you watch this happen, you get the impression that the way these symbols land has changed. A yacht used to seem like a curiosity when it arrived in a working city. It seemed more like a punctuation mark on a sentence that no one wanted to complete this week. That image is now part of the city’s tech narrative, regardless of whether the boat quietly disappears or remains during the World Cup season.
