Uncomfortable moment at Coldplay concert goes viral
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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.
A tech company is responding to two days of viral rumors linking its CEO and others to an embarrassing moment caught on camera during a Coldplay concert at Gillette Stadium.
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A New York-based tech firm has launched an investigation after its CEO and his co-worker were caught on camera cuddling during the Coldplay concert at Gillette Stadium in Foxboro.
Astronomer, the tech company that found itself launched into the public eye after its CEO was spotted on a Jumbotron video at a Coldplay concert earlier this week embracing an employee, issued a statement about the matter via LinkedIn.
Coldplay's Music of the Spheres world tour was held at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, MA, on Wednesday, July 16, and a camera scanning the crowd caught an awkward moment.
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During Coldplay’s Gillette Stadium show in Foxborough, Massachusetts, lead singer Chris Martin cracked a joke about a couple who dodged their moment on the jumbotron.
Coldplay brought the crowd to their feet, with everything from their newer synth-pop of “Music of the Spheres” to slower 2000s hits. They also brought The Weirdos. The post Review & setlist: Coldplay rolls the love (and some weirdness) into Gillette Stadium appeared first on Boston.
Astronomer CEO Andy Byron and HR officer Kristin Cabot famously saw Coldplay at Gillette Stadium on Wednesday, but Red Sox skipper Alex Cora was there too.
Tuesday night’s concert stretched Coldplay’s potential to different pockets of the pop universe, and demonstrated how much their palette has broadened since their mellow breakthrough hit, “Yellow.”
Twenty-five years since the release of their debut album “Parachutes,” Coldplay proved they know how to rock a crowd July 15 at Gillette Stadium.
On July 16, Chris Martin led crowds at Gillette Stadium, Massachusetts, through all of Coldplay ’s greatest hits, before turning the camera onto the audience. It’s a frequent segment throughout Coldplay gigs, a sort of roving “kiss cam” designed to spotlight particularly enthusiastic — or romantic — members of the crowd.