Coldplay, Chris Martin and jumbotron
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What to know about the CEO caught embracing an employee on the Jumbotron at a Coldplay concert
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.
A scandal sparked by a couple of indiscreet Coldplay fans is providing fodder for country musicians at their own recent shows.
Legal experts make it clear that Andy Byron has no grounds to sue Coldplay over his cheating being caught on camera.
The hosts of "The View" were certainly as delighted by the unexpected cheating scandal exposed at a Coldplay concert last week as most of the internet, but admittedly, the women felt guilty about it.
Coldplay's concert at Gillette Stadium on Wednesday took an unexpected turn when a couple caught on the jumbotron sparked debate online.
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The IT company CEO captured in a widely circulated video showing him embracing an employee at a Coldplay concert has resigned. Andy Byron resigned from his job as CEO of Cincinnati-based Astronomer Inc., according to a statement posted on LinkedIn by the company Saturday.
Case in point: the married tech company founder who was caught cuddling a woman who was not his wife on the Jumbotron during a Coldplay concert in Foxborough last week.