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Inside the 12 hours it took for an awkward moment at a Coldplay concert to go viral
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一段在Coldplay演唱会上被拍到的“亲吻时刻”视频迅速在网络上传播,将科技公司CEO安迪·拜伦及其HR主管克里斯汀·卡伯特推到了风口浪尖。这段15秒的视频在TikTok上走红,引发了大量网友的关注和猜测。随后,网络侦探们迅速锁定当事人身份,并开始在社交媒体上进行评论和传播。事件的发酵不仅成为了企业丑闻,还引发了关于社交媒体传播速度、网络暴力、隐私以及企业声誉的广泛讨论。最终,CEO引咎辞职,而这家科技公司却意外地获得了前所未有的关注。

⭐ 视频传播的起点与病毒式扩散:一段在Coldplay演唱会上,CEO安迪·拜伦与HR主管克里斯汀·卡伯特在“亲吻时刻”被镜头捕捉到的片段,在TikTok上被用户Grace Springer发布后迅速走红。最初的视频只有15秒,但其引发的连锁反应远超预期,通过算法推荐和用户转发,迅速传播至全球。

🔍 网络身份锁定与舆论发酵:视频发布后不久,网络用户便通过各种线索(如评论区信息、Google Trends数据)成功识别出视频中的人物是 Astronomer 公司的CEO安迪·拜伦和HR主管克里斯汀·卡伯特。随后,他们的社交媒体账号以及拜伦妻子的账号成为网友评论和讨论的焦点,信息迅速从“尴尬互动”演变成“企业丑闻”。

📈 社交媒体的放大效应与多重议题:该事件成为社交媒体力量的典型案例,展示了信息传播的速度和影响力。它不仅涉及个人隐私、职场伦理,还触及了公众对CEO的看法、网络窥探(surveillance state)以及“幸灾乐祸”(sachenfreude)等社会现象,吸引了媒体和品牌(如Netflix)的关注和评论。

⚖️ 事件的后果与意外的“红利”:事件最终导致了CEO安迪·拜伦的辞职,公司也对此事进行了内部调查。然而,对于Astronomer公司而言,这次意外的曝光也让这家原本不知名的数据创业公司获得了极大的品牌曝光度,其联合创始人甚至表示,虽然不希望以这种方式,但公司因此成为了“家喻户晓的名字”。

A video went viral last week of Andy Byron, the former CEO of Astronomer, embracing the company's HR chief, Kristin Cabot, at a Coldplay concert.

By now, we've all seen the Coldplay kiss cam fiasco.

What happened in the hours and days afterward is a case study in how fast someone's 15 seconds of fame (or infamy) can truly ricochet around the world.

A tech CEO and his HR head were caught embracing on the jumbotron at Gillette Stadium. They looked horrified and quickly untangled, with the woman turning away and the man dodging the camera. Front man Chris Martin suggested they could be having an affair.

The fleeting moment — a fraction of a nightly segment during which Martin addresses various members of the audience — stuck with some concertgoers. In the early morning hours following the show, at least a few took to the internet to post about it.

A Reddit user who said they attended the show asked if anyone else was wondering about the couple. One TikTok user said Martin had caught "a couple having an affair" at the show, and another said that they were "constantly refreshing the TikTok search in hopes that someone recorded the couple caught red-handed at the Coldplay concert tonight."

They were in luck. Grace Springer, who had fewer than 15,000 TikTok followers at the time, had been recording in the hopes of landing on the jumbotron herself and capturing the moment.

Shortly before 1 a.m. ET on Thursday, she posted a 15-second clip on TikTok captioned "trouble in paradise??"

"In the moment when I filmed it, I didn't think much of it," Springer, who didn't respond to a request for comment from Business Insider, said during an interview on the British daytime program "This Morning." "But it wasn't until after the concert, where I was debriefing the moment with my friends, and I said, 'Let's review the footage, let's see if it really looks that bad.' And I think it does."

Then the algorithm did its thing, pushing the video onto For You pages the world over.

The TikTok spread like wildfire.

It didn't take long for internet sleuths to identify the pair as Andy Byron, the then-CEO of tech upstart Astronomer, and Kristin Cabot, Astronomer's head of HR. Their names came up in the comments of Springer's TikTok video, though it was unclear who was the first to recognize them because the platform doesn't display the timestamp of comments.

By 3 a.m., two hours after Springer posted the video, people were starting to look them up by name, according to data from Google Trends, which monitors search volume.

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The story had changed from an awkward interaction to a corporate scandal.

Soon, people all over the world — from Ireland to Singapore — would know their names.

"It's really sort of as we're waking up into the day on the 17th, where we see it start to spread," Molly Dwyer, the head of insights for social media monitoring company Peak Metrics, told Business Insider.

The amateur internet sleuths then deployed their talents to find the pair's social profiles and those of Byron's wife. Commenters began bombarding Byron and Cabot's profiles, as well as those of Astronomer, which had turned off the ability to comment on posts across channels by Thursday afternoon

Meme accounts had a heyday.

"That's sort of the bread and butter of clickbait content — laughing at people's poor decisions — and the fact that then it plays into an anti-corporate element just further fanned the flames," Dwyer said. He noted that there has been an uptick in interest in content that is opposed to CEOs. "It was sort of a perfect storm of things that are really viral on social media right now, all coming together."

Storyful, a social-media research company, used ticket stubs and raw footage from Springer to corroborate she was at the concert, according to John Hall, an editor for the site. One by one, mainstream news organizations around the world started covering the story.

The online chatter kicked into high gear later on Thursday. Peak Metrics tracked 30,000 X posts in the 11 a.m. hour. Byron's name had been Googled more than 2 million times by that afternoon, and more than $65,000 was traded on Polymarket about his chances of remaining as CEO and predictions about his marital status.

Brands like Netflix and Nando's jumped in, posting reactions to the clip or commenting on Springer's videos on social media. Think pieces about the surveillance state, sachenfreude, corporate America, and Coldplay proliferated.

The saga shows how quickly a single moment can take on a life of its own in the social media age — a lesson others have learned before.

While it seemed everyone had something to say, the pair at the center of it all stayed silent. (A fake apology from Byron that quoted the Coldplay song "Fix You" spread on Thursday afternoon before the company said it wasn't real.)

Astronomer, a then little-known data startup, broke the silence on Friday with a statement that said the board was investigating the matter. Later that day, Byron was placed on leave. By Saturday, he'd resigned, and one of the company's cofounders, Pete DeJoy, had taken his place.

The company found a silver lining in the scandal.

"The events of the past few days have received a level of media attention that few companies—let alone startups in our small corner of the data and AI world—ever encounter," DeJoy wrote in a LinkedIn post on Monday. "The spotlight has been unusual and surreal for our team and, while I would never have wished for it to happen like this, Astronomer is now a household name."

As with any viral moment, the attention was fleeting — and one that must've caught Coldplay off guard, too.

"We'd like to say hello to some of you in the crowd," Martin said on Saturday, when the band took the stage for the first time since Wednesday's concert.

Then a warning: "We're going to use our cameras and put some of you on the big screen. If you haven't done your makeup, do your makeup now."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Coldplay演唱会 科技CEO 社交媒体 病毒视频 企业丑闻
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