As Coldplay frontman Chris Martin reminds us, lights will guide us home. But will they fix society’s penchant for hypocrisy and witch hunts against total strangers? Unlikely.
By now, everyone with an internet connection has seen the jumbotron video that led to cheating allegations involving the former CEO of tech company Astronomer Inc. and the company’s chief people officer.
During a recent Coldplay show, the pair were caught in what appeared to be a romantic embrace on the big screen at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts. Their unsuccessful attempts to shield themselves from the display and the more than 66,000 fans in attendance caught Martin’s notice, who joked, “Either they’re having an affair or they’re just very shy.”
At least one concertgoer captured the moment on her cellphone and posted it to TikTok, where it was shared and reshared millions upon millions of times.
Some might argue that it feels good to expose and drag a couple of alleged cheaters who many believe got exactly what they deserved.
The news cycle, memes and parodies that immediately ensued have been impossible to avoid. Some might argue that it feels good to expose and drag a couple of alleged cheaters who many believe got exactly what they deserved. (So far at least one half of the “kiss cam” couple is already feeling more tangible consequences; Astronomer CEO Andy Byron resigned over the weekend.) But I’m far more disturbed by the nature and scope of the backlash.
To be clear, I have profound empathy for the families at the center of this mess. Thankfully, I was an adult before I learned about how my own family was rocked by infidelity years earlier. Every detail shared with me was shocking, sordid and sad. But I got to process it privately. There was no rabid internet mob waiting to make my family suffer as much, and for as long, as possible.
Decades later, I would find myself in therapy dealing with the fallout of a dysfunctional childhood, in all its gory detail. But it was never because the court of public opinion inserted itself into my home life.
To say that the families at the center of this spectacle — and most unfortunately, their children — are likely to be humiliated and traumatized is an understatement. The damage is done. I don’t envy their loved ones and what they must be going through as a result of this event, made worse by the morality brigade that sped to find their social media profiles and post messages of sympathy, self-righteousness or spite — all equally unhelpful. The social media user who posted the original clip has expressed few regrets for upending a series of lives, her Venmo and Cash App handles on full display.








