BREAK NEW: After Being Caught on Kiss Cam at Coldplay Concert, an Astronomy Inc. Staffer Speaks Out — But It’s the CEO’s Reaction That Ignites Outrage

NOT THE GUY FROM COLDPLAY GIG': Wrong Andy Byron Goes Viral Amid 'Kiss Cam  Row' | US Buzz - Times Now

Earlier this week, a single viral post on X (formerly Twitter) garnered over 11 million views within 24 hours — and it all started with a kiss cam, a Coldplay concert, and a now-unemployed employee of the tech company Astronomy Inc.

The post, written by a user who identified themselves only as a former event coordinator at Astronomy, recounted a shocking turn of events that felt like something out of a Netflix drama.

The user began by stating, “Today I was fired from Astronomy. I was in charge of organizing company events. Turns out, the CEO and Head of HR were having an affair — and got caught on kiss cam at the Coldplay concert, the same concert I booked tickets for as a team bonding activity.”

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As the concert crowd cheered for each couple shown on screen, the camera landed on the Astronomy executives. To the horror of some staffers who recognized them, the two locked lips, seemingly unaware that multiple employees — including the post’s author — were in the audience.

The moment was awkward at best, humiliating at worst. Within hours, clips of the incident began circulating online, sparking a frenzy of speculation and gossip.

The real blow came the next day.

According to the former employee’s now-viral account, they were summoned for an abrupt meeting with HR — the very person involved in the kiss cam incident — and were terminated “for creating an inappropriate situation that exposed the company to reputational risk.” No warnings. No formal review. Just a swift dismissal.

Nhân viên bị sa thải vì đặt vé concert cho CEO và giám đốc nhân sự

What followed was a tidal wave of outrage on social media. Thousands of users began reposting the story, with hashtags like #KissCamGate and #AstronomyDrama trending globally. While many empathized with the employee, who said they were “just doing their job,” others turned their attention to the CEO, demanding accountability and questioning the company’s internal ethics and power dynamics.

Screenshots of the kiss cam footage juxtaposed with images of the company’s annual code of conduct began making rounds. Many users pointed out the hypocrisy: “So employees can’t date one another without reporting it, but the CEO and Head of HR can engage in a public affair — and then punish someone else for it?”

The silence from Astronomy’s official channels didn’t help.

Astronomer CEO Andy Byron raved about Kristin Cabot months before being  caught on Coldplay kiss cam

As criticism intensified, users began digging into the company’s public-facing values — among them: “transparency,” “respect,” and “team-first leadership.” One commenter wrote, “You preach ethics but punish the one person who tried to bring people together. This isn’t just petty — it’s a masterclass in corporate retaliation.”

It wasn’t until 48 hours later that the CEO finally released a brief internal memo, which, perhaps unintentionally, added more fuel to the fire. In the memo — which was quickly leaked online — the CEO wrote: “In an age of social media virality, perceptions matter. Our responsibility is to protect the company brand and maintain professional standards. Difficult decisions must be made.”

The memo made no mention of the affair, nor did it acknowledge the employee’s claims directly. The lack of accountability — paired with the defensive tone — triggered even more backlash.

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“It’s the audacity for me,” one user posted. “You get caught making out with HR on a jumbotron, and then fire the person who planned the event?”

Another added: “You didn’t protect the company brand — you became a meme. And you blamed the intern?”

Legal experts chimed in too, with some pointing out that if the employee’s account was accurate, they may have grounds for wrongful termination. “If someone is fired to cover up executive misconduct, that opens the door to legal exposure,” wrote one employment lawyer on LinkedIn.

As the former employee’s post continued to trend, they updated their followers with a brief but hopeful message: “I’m taking a short break to process things. But I’ll bounce back.”

Phản ứng của vị CEO bị bắt quả tang ngoại tình ngay tại concert

And bounce back they likely will — with hundreds of replies offering job leads, freelance opportunities, and emotional support. Some users even launched a GoFundMe to help them while they searched for new employment.

In an unexpected twist, the Coldplay concert — originally meant to celebrate team spirit — became the flashpoint for exposing what many are now calling a toxic workplace culture within one of tech’s most talked-about startups. What was supposed to be a fun night out ended in scandal, a firing, and a public relations nightmare.

As for the CEO and Head of HR? Neither has addressed the allegations directly, and both remain employed at the time of writing. But with mounting pressure, internal unrest, and external scrutiny, that may soon change.

In a world where every camera can become a courtroom and every tweet a headline, this story stands as a cautionary tale: sometimes the biggest scandals start with the smallest gestures — like a kiss.

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