Coldplay, Chris Martin and Jumbotron Song
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What to know about the CEO caught embracing an employee on the jumbtron at a Coldplay concert
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.
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.
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Amazon S3 on MSNColdplay's Chris Martin Pokes Fun At Viral 'Jumbotron Song' Drama
Chris Martin jokingly warned fans about ‘The Jumbotron Song’ at Coldplay’s Madison, Wisconsin show, their first gig since the viral Boston show moment. The viral moment came when a couple on the Jumbotron were later revealed as co-workers involved in an affair.
The sold-out Camp Randall Stadium concert in Madison July 19 was the first following that awkward Coldplay concert moment that's gone viral.
REO Speedwagon's Bruce Hall adapted the lyrics from the band's 1980 hit 'Take It on the Run' to fit one of the week's buzziest viral stories.
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Coldplay's concert at Gillette Stadium on Wednesday took an unexpected turn when a couple caught on the jumbotron sparked debate online.
Well, something of the sort occurred at the Coldplay concert at Gillette Stadium Wednesday night and “awkward” doesn’t begin to describe the moment.
Astronomer CEO Andy Byron's alleged affair exposed at a Coldplay concert becomes sports world joke as the Phillies and other teams reference the controversy.