Coldplay 'kiss cam' situation underlines a lesson I learned
Digest more
If this past week has proved anything, it’s that everyone loves a 'silly season' story, especially one involving mischief, awkwardness and that peculiarly British emotion: embarrassment. The now-infamous Coldplay ‘kiss cam’ moment has already given rise to a deluge of memes.
Kristin Cabot, the chief people officer of the New York-based tech company Astronomer, has resigned from her role after she was spotted embracing the company's CEO at a Coldplay concert.
1d
Philstar.com on MSNColdplaygate: Crisis management in the viral ageIt was supposed to be just another Coldplay concert: music, lights and a feel-good atmosphere. But when the stadium “kiss cam” at Gillette Stadium landed on Andy Byron, CEO of Astronomer and Kristin Cabot,
If combining the words “kiss cam”, “Coldplay”, “Astronomer” and “affair” means nothing to you, you have managed to be blissfully unaware of the internet’s weekend meltdown over a very public spectacle.
Lessons from the kiss cam scandal, a perhaps deceptively bright economic picture, new taxes on office snacks, OpenAI adds consulting.
The couple — identified as married Astronomer CEO Andy Byron and the firm’s chief human resources officer, Kristin Cabot — scrambled to hide their faces when they were caught on the jumbotron canoodling at Gillette Stadium near Boston on Wednesday night.
Avoiding Kiss Cam seems to have become important after Andy Byron, CEO of Astronomer, and Kristin Cabot, the company’s Chief People Officer, were caught on a kiss cam at a Coldplay concert. The viral video sparked speculation of an affair.