logo
So, you're a disgraced CEO. What now?

So, you're a disgraced CEO. What now?

Times3 days ago
Suppose you are a tech executive who has just become known, to a global audience, via a viral video in which it appears that you are having an extra-marital affair with your head of human resources.
You now have a Wikipedia page, based entirely around this incident at a Coldplay concert in which you appeared for a moment with your apparent paramour on a giant screen, before desperately attempting to duck out of sight.
Suppose, in fact, that your name is Andy Byron, the former chief executive of the tech company Astronomer.
Can a tech executive recover and get back to doing what he loves, leading a team all laser-focused on AI-powered data-management tools? There is a phalanx of executive coaches and 'reputation repair' specialists who are ready with some advice.
First, the bad news. 'Andy Byron has made every PR error possible,' says Matt Yanofsky, head of a brand and strategy group called The Moment Lab in Montreal. 'His obvious way forward was to claim that he is a private citizen and this has nothing to do with his successful business,' Yanofsky says. 'There was an alternative world where he had people like Bari Weiss [the provocative, heterodox writer and founder of The Free Press] defending him for an invasion of privacy.'
Instead, Byron tendered his resignation and the board of Astronomer accepted it over the weekend, saying his behaviour had not lived up to their standards.
'The reality is he's made the situation worse for himself because he used a 20th-century corporate solution for a 21st-century problem,' Yanofsky says. 'In corporate settings apologies are used against you. He must now own this … Now he must [think about working] to clean up his reputation.'
To do this, 'he needs to borrow the Bill Clinton playbook', says Jonathan Bernstein, founder of Bernstein Crisis Management. 'I have used this many times as an example in training. After his disaster with Monica Lewinsky he basically flew below the radar as much as a former president can, for quite some time, and just got involved in doing good things … being of service to humanity.'
It does not sound terribly easy.
'You've got to go do work,' says Lacey Leone McLaughlin, an executive coach known for reading the riot act to Hollywood bosses who need to be shown the error of their ways. 'People aren't going to forget that there was this thing … That doesn't mean that this person is not skilled at their role,' she says. 'What it means is this person is struggling with the other side of the business, which is the leadership, which is the people side.'
The other problem is the instant recall of search engines, months after the story is forgotten. Steven Giovinco, founder of Recover Reputation, whose clients come to him for help in restoring their good name online, devotes part of his efforts to trying 'to push [the controversy] down off the first page [of search results]. It's really hard to do but it's possible. It usually takes, on average, six months. In this case it might take longer.'
In the case of Byron, 50, there is now a Wikipedia profile built on the coverage he received after he appeared on the big screen at the Coldplay concert in Massachusetts last week.
'But an editor has nominated it for deletion,' says Giovinco.
A debate is under way even as we speak, about whether Byron's page should be there at all. 'All of the sourcing in this article stems from a rather viral news story about him being caught on camera, apparently with a colleague and affair partner, rather than coverage indicating more lasting notability,' writes an editor named Molly White. Wikipedia's rules governing biographies of living people advise against entries on those who appear in the news in relation to a single event.
White, 32, a writer and long-time Wikipedia editor, says she also flagged for deletion an article about Astronomer. 'Normally there's a seven-day period where people are able to weigh in,' she tells me over the phone. 'After that period has elapsed, an outside, uninvolved administrator will come in,' she says. This person judges which side of the argument accords with Wikipedia's policies.
Byron, if he is following the debate, may find it at once reassuring and disheartening. Some of those who want to keep his entry compare it to another about a woman from Tennessee who became an internet celebrity after giving a very frank and graphic interview about fellatio on a YouTube channel.
'Andy Byron is not a historical figure, nor has he had any significant impact on society/history/humanity,' writes someone in the 'delete' camp. 'No one had ever heard of Mr Byron until this caught-on-camera incident … This is Wikipedia, folks, not Jerry Springer.'
These debates now matter, to reputation specialists, due to the rise of AI-powered search engines, says Bennett Kleinberg, founder of Jupiter Strategies. 'The robots have to pay to read The Times of London,' he says. 'But everything on Wikipedia is in the public domain … The content on Wikipedia is driving so much of the content that is ultimately displayed, in AI.'
This, he says, 'is one of the reasons Wikipedia has become so important for people who work in corporate reputation'. He thinks the entry on Byron should be deleted.
What about Byron's comeback, in this land of second chances? David Duffy, co-founder of the Corporate Governance Institute which trains board directors, says that while Byron's personal reputation 'has been shredded, his business reputation might be damaged a little bit, but I don't think it's going to be severely damaged'.
Should he write a book? Life After the Jumbotron? The Guy Who Came In from the Coldplay?
Duffy thinks he might, setting out the lessons. 'That's one idea. It's not going to be the Bible. But it could be 150-200 pages. Get someone to ghost-write it,' he says. 'Coldplay: What I've Learnt, you know, something like that.'
• At least the Coldplay kiss cam couple weren't caught singing the wrong lyrics
Though it might not help matters with his family. McLaughlin, the executive coach, says there is also a danger that it might strike the wrong note. 'Whatever they do, it has to be authentic,' she says. 'This is about being human and recognising that they made a mistake, but also managing it and moving forward with grace. I think it can't feel inauthentic, and in some ways, I think a book or an article or all those things won't necessarily feel like that, to some.'
Another possible approach is laid out by Yanofsky, the marketing and PR expert. 'From a personal point of view, I disagree with private citizens [becoming] famous for an unintentional viral moment,' he says. 'From a PR point of view, we are so past the point of this debate … private citizens need to be aware of what they do in public. You never know who is recording you. Perhaps Andy can move forward by doing [public service announcements] about the dangers of doing this, or be a spokesman for an Ashley Madison-type company. Shamelessness may be his best path forward.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Vagina eggs, naked cooking, KissCam gags: what's next for Gwyneth Paltrow?
Vagina eggs, naked cooking, KissCam gags: what's next for Gwyneth Paltrow?

Times

time17 minutes ago

  • Times

Vagina eggs, naked cooking, KissCam gags: what's next for Gwyneth Paltrow?

So Gwyneth Paltrow has filmed a tongue-in-cheek advert for … guess who? Astronomer, the company you had never heard of before two of the tech company's senior employees were caught cheating, on kiss cam, at a Coldplay concert 12 days ago. Media coverage of this event has put it up there with the moon landings on the unforgettable 'Did you see?' chart. It's a cultural happening so we should have predicted that sooner or later Paltrow — the ultimate cultural influencer, not to mention the ex-wife of Coldplay's frontman, Chris Martin — would pop up to put her spin on things. In the spoof ad Paltrow appears alongside the caption 'Temporary Spokesperson' supposedly to answer some of the 'many questions Astronomer has been getting in recent days' (starting with 'What the actual f ***?'). It's not really funny (don't bother googling), but it demonstrates the power of Gwyneth's reach. Like it or not, we live in a world where roughly once a month Paltrow makes some intervention, posts a picture or gives an interview that confirms her position as Woman With Her Finger on the Zeitgeist. In April she was on the cover of Vanity Fair talking about her wellness brand Goop and supposed rivalry with the new lifestyle peddler Meghan Markle, taking care to wish her well in the spirit of David Attenborough endorsing the efforts of a fourth form biology class. In June she posted on Instagram a video of herself standing in front of a cooker naked but for a pair of boxer shorts, rustling up her trademark 'boyfriend breakfast' (and we've only just stopped talking about whether shorts PJs work on fiftysomethings). This week brings an unusually big Paltrow dump as Amy Odell's (unauthorised) biography hits the shelves on Tuesday and while we've definitely heard a lot of it before, everyone's craning for titbits. I don't like it, as it happens, and I try not to look. I am very much in the category of low maintenance women who think: Gwyneth Paltrow, who cares? Quite good in Emma, lost it around the time of the vagina egg, got the unshakeable American confidence that they love on chat shows (does anyone remember the time she called her grandmother 'a real c***' in a Chelsea Handler interview?) but that makes our toes curl. She's hard to love, let's face it, but she's got the can't look away factor. We want to know more and added to that we're keen to pick up some conclusive dirt to justify our suspicions that behind the wholesome image Gwynnie might be a mean girl. • How Gwyneth Paltrow rescued Astronomer over Coldplay scandal Ideally, I'd like to hear that she had a hair-pulling fight with Jennifer Aniston; wears gloves and a surgical balaclava in bed; fired four nannies in the space of four months — that sort of thing. This is a fat biography, which has been serialised in the Mail, so surely the bumper muck rake we've been hoping for. Top of the shock revelations is that Paltrow's nickname for her ex-friend Winona Ryder was 'Vagina Ryder'. She smoked! Until Madonna told her not to. When she was going out with Brad Pitt in the mid-Nineties she was irked by his lack of sophistication and complained that when ordering caviar she had to explain 'This is beluga, this is oscietra' (hate that). She told Aerin Lauder years after their break up that 'he's dumber than a sack of s***' and there was a rumour that people thought she may have cheated on him with John Hannah while making Sliding Doors. Hmm. Bit harsh, but so far not a lot to go on if you're trying to work up some good old-fashioned celebrity loathing. She was just 22 when she was dating Pitt, and I've interviewed him and can confirm that while he's very charming and easy on the eye you wouldn't want him doing the map reading. There is some evidence of a lack of empathy and GSOH, however. Her father once told her she was turning into a bit of an arsehole, and there was that stuff about how she would rather die than let her kids eat cup-a-soup (what next? Angel Delight? Dairylea?). • What the Coldplay kiss cam couple tells us about the rich Likewise, you cannot warm to a boss who finds pee on the loo seat in the ladies at work and feels moved to write 'someone tinkled' in the company Slack channel, as Gwynnie did. Goop's chief content officer, now retired, has talked about developing a 'critical and punishing attitude' to her body while working for Paltrow's company and you don't have to be a vaginal egg refusenik to know that's legally checked speak for Paltrow can be a difficult perfectionist. What else would you expect from the 52-year-old pioneer of Big Wellness? But she can be funny. We're reminded in the book of the Utah ski accident trial in 2023 — which Paltrow attended wearing a stealth-wealth wardrobe that sold out every day, looking bored and haughty — that she managed to charm the jury. No one at home didn't smile when she explained, deadpan, that she had suffered because, 'Well, I lost half a day of skiing.' Odder still, by the end of the trial the details of her family holiday (the resort bill came to $9,000) seemed normal for not normals and everyone was willing her to win so she could get back to being unashamedly rich, successful, hoity toity and in control. The jury's still out as to whether we like or don't like her. We've sort of agreed to admire her.

Astronomer HR exec Kristin Cabot's 'party girl' past revealed: Friends in shock over her glow-up… but hidden clue proves Coldplay kiss cam saga isn't over
Astronomer HR exec Kristin Cabot's 'party girl' past revealed: Friends in shock over her glow-up… but hidden clue proves Coldplay kiss cam saga isn't over

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Astronomer HR exec Kristin Cabot's 'party girl' past revealed: Friends in shock over her glow-up… but hidden clue proves Coldplay kiss cam saga isn't over

Former Astronomer exec Kristin Cabot may have ditched her wedding ring, but she's still wearing her heart around her neck amid the Coldplay kiss cam fallout, the Daily Mail can reveal. The erstwhile ex head of people was spotted for the first time since the scandal in the same layered necklaces that she wore during her infamous concert appearance with married boss Andy Byron.

Indian film company to rerelease romantic drama with AI ‘happy ending'
Indian film company to rerelease romantic drama with AI ‘happy ending'

The Guardian

time4 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Indian film company to rerelease romantic drama with AI ‘happy ending'

An Indian film company is rereleasing a 2013 romantic drama with an alternate artificial intelligence ending without the involvement of its director, in what could be the first instance of its kind in global cinema. Raanjhanaa, a Hindi-language film about the doomed romance between a Hindu man and a Muslim woman, will return to cinemas on 1 August under its Tamil-language title Ambikapathy. The film's original tragic ending will be replaced by a 'happy' one. Pradeep Dwivedi, the chief executive of Eros Media Group, defended its decision, saying technological innovation was part of the company's long-term creative and commercial vision. He said the alteration was an 'exploratory baby step' and confirmed that Eros was 'significantly evaluating' its library of more than 3,000 releases for similar AI treatments. 'If the technology allows us to do something and we can do something good with it, why not?' he said. 'There has to be a symbiotic understanding of what the technology allows, what the creative process can foster, and what the audience accepts.' The rerelease has drawn strong criticism from the film's director, Aanand L Rai, who said he learned of the move through media reports. 'I'm heartbroken that this is the future we're heading toward, where intent and authorship are disposable,' Rai told the Press Trust of India. 'All I can do is dissociate myself from such a reckless and dystopian experiment.' He said his team had contacted the Indian Film and Television Directors' Association and was exploring legal options. Neither he nor the guild responded to the Guardian's request for comment at the time of publication. The film starred the Tamil actor Dhanush and the Bollywood actor Sonam Kapoor as the star-crossed interfaith couple, one of whom dies in the original ending. Eros's catalogue includes Indian classics such as Sholay, Mother India, Om Shanti Om, and Bajirao Mastani. Its streaming service, Eros Now, hosts more than 11,000 digital titles. Dwivedi said Ambikapathy was produced entirely in-house with human supervision, and was being presented as an optional alternative rather than a replacement of the original film. Posters for the rerelease describe the ending as AI-powered, although Eros declined to confirm whether similar disclaimers will appear within the film itself. Dwivedi said the director's criticisms were 'emotional' and omitted relevant legal context. He pointed to an ongoing corporate dispute between Eros and Colour Yellow Productions, the studio co-founded by Rai. In an email to the Guardian, Colour Yellow's chief operating officer, Harini Lakshminarayan, said the company's partnership with Eros ended 'some time ago' due to operational challenges. 'To call this a 'respectful creative reinterpretation' while excluding the very people who made the film over a decade ago is deeply contradictory,' she wrote. She said the incident underscored 'the urgent need for fair, transparent protocols' on the use of AI, especially with archival material. 'If a finished film can be altered and rereleased without the director's knowledge, it sends out a clear and very troubling message – that the film-maker's voice is dispensable.' The film critic Sucharita Tyagi said: 'Most directors in India don't even own the rights to their films,' referencing examples such as Vasan Bala's Peddlers, which Eros International has still not released to the public after acquiring Indian distribution rights in 2012. 'If they decide to AI alter Peddlers and then release it, then it's a different film altogether.' The release has also raised questions about how the film's new 'happy ending' may reinterpret its interfaith storyline, a sensitive topic in India's political and cultural landscape. 'The film works because these are people trying to defy social norms,' said Tyagi. 'To now decide what a 'happy ending' looks like, 13 years later, is scary.' Ambikapathy is scheduled to open before Rai's latest feature, Tere Ishk Mein, also starring Dhanush and due for release in November. Rai has described the new film previously as being 'from the world of Raanjhanaa' but not a sequel. Eros, which holds the rights to Raanjhanaa, has denied any connection between the two projects. The rerelease comes amid growing experimentation with AI across the global film industry. In Hollywood, AI has been used for voice cloning, dubbing and visual effects, including accent enhancement in The Brutalist and simulating the voice of Anthony Bourdain in the 2021 documentary Roadrunner. Concerns about AI-generated scripts and the use of actors' likenesses were key issues in the 2023 writers' and actors' strikes.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store