Coldplay, kiss cam and Astronomer
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In the internet age, cameras are always rolling. It’s leading to a new era of interpersonal surveillance, which Astronomer CEO Andy Byron is the new focus of.
The Phillie Phanatic — and the Phillies organization — had fun Friday night at the expense of the man and woman who were awkwardly caught at the Coldplay concert frantically trying to avoid being seen on the “kiss cam” in videos that became a viral sensation.
Millions of people have viewed clips of a couple appearing to duck for cover after they were featured cuddling on the big screen at a Coldplay concert, prompting lead singer Chris Martin to speculate that they may be having an affair.
The Phillies delivered their take on the story that won’t die. They recreated the viral Coldplay concert “kiss cam” moment as part of Friday night’s game against the Angels. During the middle of the contest,
Astronomer does work in data integration and management for companies like Apple and Ford. You probably haven’t heard of them until now.
BOSTON -- The employer of a CEO reportedly seen in a viral "kiss cam" moment at a recent Coldplay concert says it is launching an investigation into the incident. Astronomer, a New York City-based data company, said in a statement Friday that a "formal investigation" has been launched by its board of directors.
The Coldplay concert kiss cam incident is the most viral moment of 2025. It’s also a video game now, sort of. Coldplay Canoodlers was thought up by Jonathan Mann, best known as the guy who has uploaded a new song to YouTube every day for over a decade (Remember “GTA: This Is Why We vVdeo Gaming?
Astronomer tech company denies fake apology statement that went viral following Coldplay's Kiss Cam incident where Chris Martin called out executives for an alleged affair.