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Coldplay to reissue albums on records made from recycled plastic bottles

Coldplay to reissue albums on records made from recycled plastic bottles

The EcoRecords are claimed to reduce carbon emissions during the manufacturing process by 85% compared with traditional vinyl production.
Jen Ivory, managing director of the band's label Parlophone, said: 'We are incredibly proud to partner with artists such as Coldplay who share our commitment to a more sustainable future for music.
'The shift to EcoRecord LP for their releases is a testament to what's possible when innovation meets intention.
'It's not just about a new product, it's about pioneering manufacturing that significantly reduces environmental impact, providing fans with the same high-quality audio experience while setting a new standard for physical music production.'
Each 140g LP is made up of approximately nine recycled bottles, after they are cleaned, processed into small pellets and then moulded into records.
Coldplay will re-release debut album Parachutes (2000), A Rush of Blood To The Head (2002), X&Y (2005), Viva La Vida Or Death And All His Friends (2008), Mylo Xyloto (2011), Ghost Stories (2014), A Head Full Of Dreams (2015), Everyday Life (2019) and Music Of The Spheres (2021) in the series.
The band's latest album Moon Music, released last year, has already been released on an EcoRecord LP.
It comes after Coldplay claimed they had exceeded their climate change target while attempting to put on one of the greenest tours in history.
In 2024, the group claimed its CO2 emissions were 59% less for the first two years of their Music Of The Spheres Tour compared to their stadium tour from 2016 to 2017, surpassing an initial 50% target.
The group used rechargeable batteries fuelled by renewable sources for the shows along with other efforts.
Coldplay have long campaigned for climate action, with frontman Chris Martin saying in 2019 they would not launch a globe-trotting tour for their album Everyday Life due to environmental concerns.
In October last year, Martin claimed his band would stop making albums after their 12th record, with Moon Music being their 10th.
All of the London-formed band's albums have reached number one on the UK albums chart and the group have also had two number one singles in Viva La Vida and Paradise.
The latest series of reissues will be released on August 15 with pre-orders open on Coldplay's website.
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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

time2 hours 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.

Gwyneth Paltrow 'hired' as spokesperson for Astronomer after Coldplay scandal
Gwyneth Paltrow 'hired' as spokesperson for Astronomer after Coldplay scandal

Daily Mirror

time10 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Gwyneth Paltrow 'hired' as spokesperson for Astronomer after Coldplay scandal

Gwyneth Paltrow has made a surprise appearance as a 'spokesperson' for tech firm Astronomer, after its former CEO and head of HR were embroiled in a scandal at a Coldplay gig Gwyneth Paltrow, the Oscar-winning actress and ex-wife of Coldplay's Chris Martin, made an unexpected appearance on Astronomer's LinkedIn page this week. She delivered a tongue-in-cheek message as the company's self-proclaimed "temporary spokesperson" in the aftermath of a viral workplace scandal involving its former CEO. ‌ The video was posted following public scrutiny surrounding the former Astronomer CEO and the Head of HR. The pair resigned after they were caught on the kiss-cam at a Coldplay concert in Boston on July 16. Their awkward reaction caught the attention of Coldplay frontman Chris Martin, Paltrow's former husband, who joked on stage that the pair were either "having an affair or just shy". ‌ ‌ Both of them stepped down from their positions a few days later amidst backlash and allegations that the incident revealed deeper problems within the tech firm. Neither has responded to our request for comment or spoken publicly about the matter. In what seems to be an attempt to inject some humour into the situation, Astronomer shared a video of Paltrow in a mock corporate setting, reports the Mirror US. "Thank you for your interest in Astronomer. Hi, I'm Gwyneth Paltrow," she announces in the video, dressed in a button-down blue shirt. ‌ "I've been hired on a very temporary basis to speak on behalf of the 300-plus employees at Astronomer. Astronomers have received a lot of questions in the last few days, and they wanted me to answer the most common ones. "Yes! Astronomer is the best place to run Apache Airflow," she responded to a query. ‌ "We've been thrilled that so many people have a newfound interest in data workflow automation. As for the other questions we've received. Yes, there is still room available at our Beyond Analytics event in September. "We will now be returning to what we do best, delivering game-changing results for our customers. Thank you for your interest in Astronomer." The tongue-in-cheek video sparked a reaction in the comment section. ‌ "Thanks, but I still don't know what Astronomer or TechChoice do," one commenter penned. Another wrote, "And an Astronomer shows how it can see beyond a sky full of stars! Cold! Well played! !". "Clever way to reach the right audience, unexpected but memorable. Though I have to say, the question and answer felt like they were on different airflows entirely. Unless that was the point... to show how things that drift off still find their way back?" a third chimed in.

Astronomer's 'clever' PR move embracing CEO scandal
Astronomer's 'clever' PR move embracing CEO scandal

BBC News

time12 hours ago

  • BBC News

Astronomer's 'clever' PR move embracing CEO scandal

The US tech firm whose CEO and chief people officer resigned after being caught on camera embracing at a Coldplay concert has released a tongue-in-cheek promotional video featuring Gwyneth Paltrow as a "temporary spokesperson".In the 60-second clip posted on Astronomer's X account, Hollywood star Paltrow - who was married to Coldplay frontman Chris Martin for more than 10 years - says she wants to answer "the most" common questions the company has recently been first of these questions, appearing as captions on screen, reads "OMG! What the actual f", to which Paltrow responds: "Yes, Astronomer is the best place to run Apache Airflow", she ends the answer by claiming the company is "thrilled so may people have a "newfound interest in data workflow automation."When a follow up question asks how the company's social media team is "holding" after the clip went viral, Paltrow says spaces are still available for a forthcoming conference. Paltrow signs off the clip, which has been viewed over 27 million times by thanking viewers for their "interest in Astronomer", saying the company will now be returning "to what it does best." "It's a really clever video," Jordan Greenaway, CEO of PR firm Profile says. "Everyone has heard about this scandal, everyone has seen the video. But if you'd gone down the street and asked someone who the CEO of Astronomer was, they'd say 'the guy in the Coldplay video', but if you then asked 'what does Astronomer actually do or sell, they would probably say 'they're kind of a tech company.'" Greenaway says the video going viral probably won't have too much of a negative impact on Astronomer going forward, as the viral scandal "doesn't strike at the heart of the quality of their product." He says the company's goal was to create brand awareness amongst the mass public so the company isn't just known as the one whose CEO had an affair. "I know there are some PRs whose default it is to lean into humour to bridge the scandal and get over the hump.""In most cases that doesn't work."But this is what Astronomer is attempting to do in this case," he says. "Rather than sidestepping things, they're jumping in with both feet. That's often a good strategy when a crisis is so big and well-known that you cannot easily duck it." Greenaway compares it to the horsemeat scandal of 2013, when horsemeat was discovered in beef products across Europe, and says "it would not have been right to dress that up in humour by posing as a horse, for example, and giving a response."That could lead to your customers saying "this is something that attacked the quality of your product, and you're making light of it." The nature of this scandal gives Astronomer the flexibility to approach their response with a bit more humour because the company sells a data service, Greenaway continues. "They're not making fun of the quality of their product, they're making fun of their CEO, who has now resigned." But Greenaway says while Astronomer can come out of this relatively unscathed, that isn't the case for Andy Byron. "He and his reputation are a different matter," he says. "If Andy Byron had made light of this, that would have been very unfair and very unethical, because he was the one undertaking in the bad behaviour." Byron had been CEO of Astronomer for two years when he and Kristin Cabot were caught on the giant screen at the Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts on 16 July. Greenaway says he would have taken "by and large the same strategy," that Astronomer has had he been involved in a situation like this. "I would have got rid of the CEO sooner. If possible I would have liked to have shown these type of leadership ethics at Astronomer are unacceptable. "But in terms of moving the discussion back to the company, and what it actually does, I don't think this is a bad way to go about it."I don't know if I would have had the courage to do what they are doing, but I hope I would have." Interest in Astronomer, which describes itself as "the best place to run Apache Airflow" - a product not developed by Astronomer - increased hugely since the clip of its former CEO went viral, with some unverified reports suggesting a spike of 15,000% in visits to the company's website. The company was founded in 2018, and provides services for companies that want to leverage Artificial Intelligence (AI). Astronomer says it has worked with Apple, Ford and Uber, the Wall Street Journal reports. Pete DeJoy, co-founder and chief product officer has been appointed as the company's interim CEO, and can at least see a positive to all the attention on his company. "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," he wrote on LinkedIn. The only previous statement the company had made was on X, two days after the Coldplay concert. "Astronomer is committed to the values and culture that have guided us since our founding. Our leaders are expected to set the standard in both conduct and accountability," it said, while announcing a formal investigation had been launched. Seeing the moment Byron and Cabot hid from the camera from his position on stage, Coldplay's Chris Martin said: "Either they're having an affair, or they're just very shy."And if you're wondering what kind of PR impact this had on Paltrow's famous ex-husband and his band, Greenaway thinks it's neutral. "I don't think it increases awareness of them... the public at large have one thing in their head, and that's the Kiss Cam video. That drowns out all the other stuff."

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