- The former Yahoo CEO was spotted at San Diego Zoo on Sunday with her family
- She was joined by her husband Zachary Bogue and their three young children
- The 42-year-old was pictured helping her children cut up their lunch when they eventually took a break from seeing the animals
- Marissa was later spotted carrying her tired son through the zoo
- She left her position at Yahoo in January with a $23million severance package along with $186million in stock options
Unemployment appears to be treating Marissa Mayer well.
The former Yahoo CEO was spotted at San Diego Zoo on Sunday enjoying a family day out with her husband Zachary Bogue and their three young children.
The 42-year-old, who left her position in January with a $23million severance package along with $186million in stock options, watched on as her children helped feed the zoo’s elephants.
The former Yahoo CEO was spotted at San Diego Zoo on Sunday enjoying a family day out with her husband Zachary Bogue and their three young children
Her family were later spotted sitting down for an outdoor lunch as the doting mother cut up her children’s food for them.
Mayer, who wore black trousers and a colorful print top, was pictured carrying her seemingly tired son through the zoo at one point throughout the day.
The ex-CEO has a son and twin daughters with her Silicon Valley investor husband who she married in 2009.
The outing comes after Mayer testified to lawmakers earlier this month over the Yahoo hacks that occurred during her five-year tenure.
The 42-year-old was spotted carrying her son Macallister through the zoo while her husband Zachary Bogue carried one of their twin daughters
Her family were later spotted sitting down for an outdoor lunch as the former Yahoo executive tucked into some fries
The doting mother was spotted cutting up her children’s food for them as they sat at a large outdoor table within the zoo
Mayer apologized to the billions of Yahoo users who had their names, email addresses, phone numbers birth dates and security questions and answers stolen by the hackers.
She told lawmakers that the threat from state-sponsored hackers has changed the playing field so dramatically that even the best-defended companies can fall victim.
‘As we all have witnessed: no company, individual or even government agency is immune from these threats,’ Mayer said.
Mayer is part of a long line of company executives and former executives who have made their way to Capitol Hill in recent years to explain how their company fell victim to a cyber attack.
Marissa, who wore black trousers and a colorful print top, was given sanitizer from zoo staff after she and her children helped feed the elephants