Coldplay, kiss cam and Astronomer
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LONDON (AP) — A routine moment of crowdwork at a Coldplay concert went viral last week when a couple tried to avoid the spotlight after they were caught hugging on the jumbotron. Internet sleuths quickly figured out that they were the CEO and chief people officer of a little-known tech company called Astronomer.
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As the Coldplay kiss-cam couple fades, Chris Martin has the same routine, the woman who shot video has made no money and we're all just horrible, awful people.
Coldplay dedicated a cover of Black Sabbath's 1972 ballad "Changes" to the late Ozzy Osbourne at their concert at Nissan Stadium in Nashville on Tuesday, July 22. "We'd like to dedicate this whole show to the incredible genius,
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When the KissCam at a Coldplay concert last week landed on a couple who suspiciously escaped their embrace and tried (but failed) to duck out of the spotlight, the internet immediately got to work.
Stephen Colbert spoofed that viral Coldplay concert clip with help from several fellow late-night hosts, plus Lin-Manuel Miranda and Weird Al.
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One video—a CEO cuddling his HR chief at a Coldplay concert—did what no politician, pundit, or post ever could: it united a nation in meme-fueled disbelief.
While Astronomer CEO Andy Byron resigned over the weekend after he was seen wrapping his arms around executive Kristin Cabot at a concert, she appears to still be with the company as new leadership is
The two colleagues caught canoodling at a Coldplay concert have both now left their roles at Astronomer amid the 'cheating' scandal as they go viral for their reactions