โŒ

Normal view

Received before yesterday

I regret seeing that Coldplay 'kiss cam' video

17 July 2025 at 22:25
chris martin singing
Chris Martin of Coldplay performs at a concert where you should feel free to canoodle in peace.

Robert Okine/Getty Images

  • You've probably seen the Coldplay "kiss cam" moment that has ricocheted around the internet.
  • A tech CEO and his head of HR appear to embrace, then look mortified after seeing themselves on cam.
  • I wish I didn't know anything about any of this โ€” I wish none of us did.

I don't want to know what you did at a Coldplay concert. I don't want to know who you were there with, what the track list was. I don't even want to know you went!

And if it turns out that you were caught on camera in a passionate embrace with a coworker? I mean, sure, I'm curious. I love gossip! But I'm not sure I should know about that. And that goes double if I don't know you in real life.

On Thursday, as I'm sure you know by now, a "kiss cam" video went viral from a Coldplay concert outside Boston on Wednesday night. In the clip, two audience members stand against a railing, the man with his arms around the woman. They look to be in their late 40s or early 50s, fit and attractive, enjoying the musical stylings of arguably Britain's greatest rock act of the 21st century.

As soon as they realize they're on the Jumbotron, the woman turns to hide her face, and the man ducks. You overhear front-man Chris Martin say into the microphone, "Either they're having an affair, or they're just very shy."

Yikes!

The clip appeared to show Astronomer CEO Andy Byron embracing the company's head of HR, Kristin Cabot. Neither has commented on the clip.

I'm not sure how people online figured out who these people were. Was it by using a controversial facial-recognition tool like PimEyes? Or was it from someone who knows them in real life who identified them?

The thing is, I don't know these people. (Neither, probably, do you.) I don't know their lives. I have no idea what was really going on. Astronomer execs, board members, and founders haven't returned BI's requests for comment, as my colleagues Madeline Berg and Tim Paradis report.

I can say that the online attention they've received is certainly distressing to them โ€” on top of a situation that may also already be very distressing in other ways.

The issue might have some legs from an HR standpoint: If a company CEO is embracing his head of personnel at a concert, could that raise some issues? Sure! That's for the company and its execs to figure out. But otherwise, who cares? I don't.

I just spent almost every day of the last six weeks watching some of the most depraved people on Earth frolic around in swimwear and occasionally hump under thick duvets on "Love Island." I'm not going to suddenly go morality police to say that two Coldplay-loving consenting adults is the biggest scandal I can imagine.

And, to me, there's a potentially unsettling element of potential surveillance. As 404 Media wrote:

The same technologies used to dox and research this CEO are routinely deployed against the partners of random people who have had messy breakups, attractive security guards, people who look "suspicious" and are caught on Ring cameras by people on Nextdoor, people who dance funny in public, and so on. There has been endless debate about the ethics of doxing cops and ICE agents and Nazis, and there are many times where it makes sense to research people doing harm on behalf of the state or who are doing violent, scary things in to innocent people.

It is another to deploy these technologies against random people you saw on an airplane or who had a messy breakup with an influencer.

Again, we're not sure what happened here or how these people were apparently identified. But I don't think it's any of our business โ€” barring something illegal โ€” what happens at a concert. Could it violate a company's rules? Yes, but then the company can deal with it.

By the way: Why the heck does Coldplay have a kiss cam, anyway?

Read the original article on Business Insider

How to get Maroon 5 tickets: Final concert dates for 2025

5 June 2025 at 21:13

When you buy through our links, Business Insider may earn an affiliate commission. Learn more

Maroon 5 Live in Concert at Northwell at Jones Beach Theater
Maroon 5 will be visiting major cities across Asia before returning to Vegas to resume their residency in 2025.

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Live Nation

Maroon 5's Las Vegas Residency and brief tour have come to a close for 2025, but it's not too late to see the band live if you're desperate for tickets. They still have one performance scheduled for the year, and we'll be keeping tabs on any new Maroon 5 tour details as they go live.

Originally formed in 1994, Maroon 5 celebrated 30 years together as they kicked off their Las Vegas residency in the summer at the Dolby Live at Park MGM in 2024. The new tour, referred to in shorthand as "M5LV: The Las Vegas Residency," is an extension of their 16-show residency from the previous year.

We've got you covered if you're looking for how to get tickets to Maroon 5's concert tour. Here's our breakdown of Maroon 5's show schedule, purchasing details, and original and resale ticket price comparisons. You can also browse ticket specifics at your leisure on StubHub and Vivid Seats.

Maroon 5 2025 tour schedule

Maroon 5's tour has come to a close so far for 2025, leaving only the band's summer appearance at Dick's Sporting Goods Open left to buy tickets for. We'll keep this story updated with new concert tour details as they go live.

DateCityStubHub pricesVivid Seats pricesTime
July 11, 2025Endicott, New York$116$1309 p.m.

How to buy tickets for the Maroon 5 2025 concert tour

You can buy standard original tickets for Maroon 5's 2025 concert tour on Ticketmaster and Live Nation. However, the quantity of remaining original tickets continues to decrease as each concert date approaches.

How much are Maroon 5 tickets?

With only the Dick's Sport Goods Open left for Maroon 5's 2025 schedule, the most affordable tickets for the band start at $116 from StubHub and $130 from Vivid Seats.

Who is opening for Maroon 5's tour?

Maroon 5 doesn't have any opening acts for its Las Vegas residency concert dates, and the band has not announced any opening acts for its international tour dates.

Will there be international tour dates?

Maroon 5's tour has concluded for 2025, leaving no international tour dates for fans to attend as of writing.

Read the original article on Business Insider

โŒ