What The Astronomer CEO Allegedly Said After Being Caught On Kiss Cam
As The Blast reported, Andrew Byron, the CEO of AI company Astronomer, was attending a Coldplay concert at Gillette Stadium in Boston on Tuesday night when the camera panned to him sitting with his arm wrapped around co-worker Kristin Cabot.
The moment, captured in real-time for thousands to see on the stadium's massive screen, left both executives visibly stunned, and has since gone viral.
CEO's Reaction Goes Viral After Kiss Cam Captures Cozy Moment With HR Director
According to the Daily Mail, Byron appeared to exclaim, "F-cking hell, it's me," upon realizing they were live on the big screen. Cabot responded with a calmer, yet equally telling, "This is awkward," as the pair quickly turned away from the camera.
Coldplay frontman Chris Martin didn't miss a beat, cheekily addressing the moment onstage, 'Oh look at these two! Oh what? Either they're having an affair, or they're just very shy.'
The viral video sent the internet into a frenzy, with viewers quick to note the body language and awkward retreat. Making matters murkier, public records suggest both Byron and Cabot are married, but not to each other. Each appears to live at a different address than their respective spouses.
The viral kiss cam moment has officially broken the internet, sparking a flood of memes, jokes, and cheeky commentary across social media. From sarcastic takes on "company culture" to GIFs of Chris Martin's perfectly timed reaction, users can't stop roasting the alleged office romance. As the clip continues to rack up millions of views, it's clear this surprise concert cameo has become the internet's latest obsession.
Just Days Before Kiss Cam Chaos, CEO Praised 'Huge Opportunity' On NYSE TV
Byron, who joined Astronomer as CEO in 2023, has helped lead the generative AI firm through explosive growth, with the company's flagship platform, Astro, reportedly seeing a 292% increase in revenue last year. The company, valued at over $1 billion, boasts clients like Uber, LinkedIn, and Ford, and recently celebrated a $93 million Series D funding round.
Just last week, Byron appeared on "NYSE TV" to promote Astronomer's achievements, calling the company's rise 'a huge opportunity' and 'very exciting.'
Astronomer Launches Internal Investigation Into Viral Kiss Cam Moment
In the wake of the viral Coldplay kiss cam incident, Astronomer has confirmed it is launching a formal internal investigation into the conduct of CEO Andrew Byron and Chief People Officer Kristin Cabot.
In a statement shared to LinkedIn, the billion-dollar AI software company addressed the growing controversy, writing, '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.'
The statement continued, 'The Board of Directors has initiated a formal investigation into this matter, and we will have additional details to share very shortly.'
CEO Once Praised HR Chief's 'Passion For Collaboration'
Back in November 2024, Byron praised Cabot's appointment to Chief People Officer in a glowing LinkedIn post, writing:
'Kristin's exceptional leadership and deep expertise in talent management, employee engagement, and scaling people strategies will be critical as we continue our rapid trajectory… her passion for fostering diverse, collaborative workplaces makes her a perfect fit for Astronomer.'
Cabot Once Praised Astronomer's Culture And Leadership Vision
Kristin Cabot also shared her enthusiasm about joining Astronomer as Chief People Officer, emphasizing her strategic approach to the role.
'I prefer to think of my role as people strategy versus traditional human resources, as the real magic happens when you align the people strategy with the business strategy,' she said at the time.
Cabot also praised the company's leadership and values, highlighting her early conversations with CEO Andrew Byron.
'There are plenty of companies out there where a leadership team doesn't recognize the value that a strong people leader and people team can bring to a company,' she explained. 'It's not just about benefits or catered lunches. There's so much more to it, and I was energized in my conversations with Andy and the Astronomer leadership team about the opportunities that exist here.'
Now, it's the 'collaboration' between the two executives that has the internet talking. Neither Astronomer nor the individuals involved have publicly addressed the viral moment.
Solve the daily Crossword
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
This 12 Dividend Stock Portfolio Will Pay Your Bills
Most dividend stocks pay quarterly—but your bills don't. Rent, groceries, gas, surprise car repairs… life doesn't come once every three months. That's why some investors are building what's called a Weekly Paycheck Portfolio—a curated list of dividend-paying stocks staggered to deliver consistent income every week of the year. With the right mix of stocks across sectors and dividend schedules, you can build a dividend portfolio that not only delivers frequent income but grows it over time. These 12 stocks yield nearly four times the S&P 500 average and offer solid dividend growth. Here's how to build your own weekly dividend machine. Building a Dividend Portfolio that Pays the Bills I'll reveal my 12-stock portfolio as an example but the idea here is so simple and allows you to switch out your favorite dividend stocks. Most dividend stocks pay out each year on extremely consistent schedules. Dividend investors love that certainty and consistency so directors of these companies try to declare and pay those dividends on the same week every three months, some even down to the same day. That means, after putting together your list of dividend stocks, you can use a resource like the Historical Data tab on Yahoo Finance to see when each has paid dividends in the past. Once you have a list of when your favorite dividend stocks go ex-dividend, you can plan it out so you have stocks that will pay you every week of the year. Cisco Systems (CSCO) Dividend Yield: 2.4% Ex-Dividend Schedule: First week of Jan, Apr, Jul, Oct Cisco offers a modest yield—but as a tech company, it's unusually generous. The company is well-positioned in the AI-driven data center boom with solutions in switching, routing, and cybersecurity. Cisco has raised its dividend consistently and shares are up 50% in five years. EOG Resources (EOG) Dividend Yield: 3.4% Ex-Dividend Schedule: Second week of Jan, Apr, Jul, Oct A natural gas powerhouse, EOG is benefiting from increased LNG export infrastructure. Its dividend has grown at 20% annually, and analysts forecast double-digit upside in shares. That's on top of 143% share price growth over five years. AbbVie (ABBV) Dividend Yield: 3.5% Ex-Dividend Schedule: Third week of Jan, Apr, Jul, Oct This pharma giant has become a dividend investor favorite thanks to its blockbuster pipeline, including Skyrizi and Rinvoq. AbbVie's strong growth and 12% price target upside make it worth the a look. Ford Motor (F) Dividend Yield: 6.9% Ex-Dividend Schedule: Fourth week of Jan, Apr, Jul, Oct Ford is deep value right now, trading at just 0.25x sales. While earnings are forecast to dip, the F-150 remains the best-selling truck in America. Any relief in input costs or sales rebound could re-ignite the stock, and the 6.9% dividend sweetens the wait. Kinder Morgan (KMI) Dividend Yield: 4.0% Ex-Dividend Schedule: First week of February, May, August, November With 80,000 miles of oil and gas pipeline, Kinder Morgan generates steady fees independent of commodity prices. The stock offers dependable income, modest growth, and analysts see 12% upside to the shares. Duke Energy (DUK) Dividend Yield: 3.5% Ex-Dividend Schedule: Second week of Feb, May, Aug, Nov Duke provides electricity and gas to more than 9 million customers across the southeastern U.S. With rising power demand driven by data centers, the company offers stability and potential for 10–20% share price appreciation. I love talking stocks and that face-to-face community we're building on the YouTube channel. Join the Bow Tie Nation and check out all the 2025 stock picks on Let's Talk Money! Prudential Financial (PRU) Dividend Yield: 5.0% Ex-Dividend Schedule: Third week of Feb, May, Aug, Nov Prudential brings international diversification with half its earnings overseas, especially in Japan and Brazil. Analysts see a 10% upside, and its 5% dividend with 4% growth rate makes it a top pick among insurers. NextEra Energy (NEE) Dividend Yield: 3.3% Ex-Dividend Schedule: Fourth week of February, May, August, November NextEra combines the scale of a major utility with a fast-growing renewables portfolio. It's grown its dividend at a 10% annual pace, and with 28GW in clean energy backlog, future growth looks strong even if yield is middle-of-the-pack. Regions Financial (RF) Dividend Yield: 4.2% Ex-Dividend Schedule: First week of Mar, Jun, Sep, Dec This regional bank has scaled well and consistently raised its dividend by 10% annually. Regulatory easing and a higher rate environment could push shares well above their current analyst target of $24 per share. Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) Dividend Yield: 2.5% Ex-Dividend Schedule: Second week of Mar, Jun, Sep, Dec HPE's merger with Juniper and strength in AI-driven server growth make it a hidden tech dividend play. While dividend growth has been slow at 1.6%, accelerating cash flows should drive both payouts and price higher. Altria Group (MO) Dividend Yield: 7.0% Ex-Dividend Schedule: Third week of Mar, Jun, Sep, Dec Despite declining cigarette volumes, Altria has grown total volume through heated tobacco and nicotine pouches. The dividend is king here, and with a 7% yield, investors are getting paid well to wait. Medtronic (MDT) Dividend Yield: 3.2% Ex-Dividend Schedule: Fourth week of Mar, Jun, Sep, Dec With a #1 or #2 position in all three of its core MedTech markets and AI-enabled devices already approved, Medtronic combines innovation and consistency. While growth has lagged recently, the stock remains a steady payer with upside potential. This 12-stock portfolio yields approximately 4.1%, nearly four times the broader market average—with an average dividend growth rate above 6% a year. It includes a mix of sectors for safety, income, and potential appreciation. That means you'll get dependable dividend checks every week of the year, from high-yield staples like Altria and Ford to steady growers like NextEra and Medtronic. It's not a get-rich-quick strategy—but it is a get-paid-every-week strategy. Disclosure: My Weekly Dividend Cash Portfolio that Pays the Bills is written by Joseph Hogue, CFA who is a former equity analyst and economist. Born and raised in Iowa, after serving in the Marine Corps, Joseph worked in corporate finance and real estate before starting a career in investment analysis. He has appeared on Bloomberg and CNBC and led a team of equity analysts for a venture capital research firm. He holds a master's degree in business and the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation. Positions in stocks mentioned: F, MO, ABBV Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
CoreWeave shares climb on $1.5 billion debt offering amid AI expansion
-- CoreWeave Inc (NASDAQ:CRWV) shares jumped on Monday after the AI infrastructure provider unveiled plans to raise $1.5 billion through a senior notes offering, bolstering its balance sheet to support continued growth. The stock surged 4.5% following the announcement as investors responded to the company's move to lean into long-term demand for AI compute capacity. The new 2031-dated bond comes as CoreWeave continues to navigate a stretched balance sheet, with $8 billion in total debt reported as of December 2024. The offering will be made to qualified institutional buyers under Rule 144A and to non-U.S. persons under Regulation S, and will be guaranteed on a senior unsecured basis by certain wholly owned subsidiaries. Analysts have generally remained constructive on CoreWeave's near-term outlook despite the capital structure concerns. 'From a numbers perspective, we are expecting another double-digit beat, with current consensus assuming 10% q/q growth, which feels conservative given the ongoing Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) B200 ramp management spoke to last quarter,' noted Barclays analyst Raimo Lenschow. Still, the company's aggressive expansion strategy, centered on massive investment in GPU infrastructure, has come at a cost, with elevated interest burdens raising flags about cash flow resiliency in a cyclical market. CoreWeave issued $2 billion in new notes in May and follows that just two months later with this $1.5 billion issuance, moves that could signal a need to refinance rather than organic deleveraging. Since debuting in public markets in late March, CoreWeave's has proven an AI darling, initially spiking from $40 to $187 before stabilizing in the $125 to $140 range. Lenschow's updated price target of $140 reflects both expectations for sustained customer demand in AI cloud services and the limitations posed by valuation, which he described as 'full (~50x CY26E EV/EBIT).' CoreWeave's differentiated infrastructure, reportedly offering up to 35 times faster and 80% cheaper computing compared to AWS or Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Cloud, has positioned it as a leader in the AI acceleration space. However, the company's reliance on debt to fund its buildout raises long-term questions, particularly if hyperscaler spending slows or AI workload monetization falls short. Moody's assigned a B1 rating to CoreWeave's newly announced $1.5 billion senior unsecured notes due 2031, while maintaining its Ba3 corporate family rating and a stable outlook. Fitch similarly rated the notes at BB- with a Recovery Rating of 'RR4', noting CoreWeave's strong revenue visibility, capital discipline, and projected deleveraging, supported by a $25.9 billion backlog and robust EBITDA growth through 2026. Both agencies cited CoreWeave's relatively high leverage and customer concentration as key concerns. Nonetheless, Moody's and Fitch highlighted the stability of CoreWeave's contracted revenues, its unique competitive positioning in AI infrastructure, and the potential for leverage to decline to 3.5x or below by the end of 2026, provided the company continues its execution pace and maintains liquidity. Revenue for the second quarter is forecast at around $1.2 billion, potentially exceeding consensus estimates and supporting EBITDA momentum. 'In all, we think Q2 should provide proof points of ongoing healthy end-demand, though we still view valuation as full... and think the end of the lock-up two days after earnings limits any potential positive price action,' said Lenschow. Related articles CoreWeave shares climb on $1.5 billion debt offering amid AI expansion Victoria's Secret Exposed: The Warning Sign Behind the Stock's 52% Collapse Clients buying into summer rally, bracing for later pullback, says BofA's Hartnett Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Woodstock '99 riots: Photos show how festival devolved into violent chaos, destruction
Woodstock '99 veered sharply from the "peace and love" vibes of 1969 to chaos and destruction. (Andrew Lichtenstein/Sygma via Getty Images) In an effort to recreate the 'peace and love' vibes of the iconic 1969 Woodstock music festival, concert organizers chose to celebrate the event's 30th anniversary with Woodstock '99. The four-day festival, which ran from July 22 to 25, 1999 at the former Griffiss Air Force Base in Rome, N.Y., featured a lineup of artists including Limp Bizkit, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, George Clinton, Kid Rock, Sheryl Crow and more. The event, however, devolved over the course of four days into overcrowding, fires, sexual assaults, violent mayhem and destruction. More than 200,000 people reportedly had bought tickets to the event, which was set mostly on asphalt and concrete during peak summer heat with two stages set a two-mile walk from each other. Add to that overpriced water and food, and whatever decorum and goodwill existed in the beginning took a nosedive into the festival's proverbial mosh pit. The festival's final day, called 'the day the music died' by the San Francisco Examiner and 'Apocalypse Woodstock' by MTV News, appeared to suffer from similar issues as its chaotic 1994 iteration, reportedly due to multiple factors, including the bands that turned up the spectacle several notches: Kid Rock asked the audience to throw plastic water bottles onstage, Insane Clown Posse threw $100 bills into the crowd and the Red Hot Chili Peppers covered Jimi Hendrix's song 'Fire,' apparently inspiring the crowd to commit arson and light up the venue. Advertisement Two documentaries released in recent years — Woodstock '99: Peace, Love, and Rage and Trainwreck: Woodstock '99 — spotlighted the chaos and violence of the festival. Limp Bizkit's Fred Durst brings his performance to the crowd at Woodstock '99 in Rome, N.Y. (Frank Micelotta/ImageDirect) Chad Smith, the Chili Peppers' drummer, told Yahoo Entertainment in 2019 that his band's role in the chaos was unintentional. '[Hendrix's] sister came to us, and we'd met her before; we'd done some other stuff with the Hendrix Experience,' Smith said. 'And she said, 'Hey, I know you guys do Jimi Hendrix songs. What do you think if I could get a Hendrix song before, like as your last song before the tribute thing, you know? It'd be kind of a nice segue.' And we're like, 'OK, that sounds cool.'' During the band's performance on the festival's final night, anti-violence group PAX had distributed 100,000 candles to fans. Instead of a peaceful lighting ceremony, the moment sparked bonfires and blazes, eventually leading to rioting and looting. Advertisement Law enforcement was called in to deal with the chaos. However, the band kept playing, with Smith telling Yahoo Entertainment that they misjudged the scope of the arson. And instead of leaving the stage, the Red Hot Chili Peppers proceeded with their Hendrix cover, inadvertently adding musical fuel to the literal fire. 'The next morning, I get up, I'm in the airport, and I'm looking up at CNN or whatever the news that's on the airport television,' Smith said. 'They're like, 'Yesterday's Woodstock festival, they had the Dave Matthews Band and Jewel, and it was all really nice. And then… the Red Hot Chili Peppers played, and all hell broke loose!' And I'm like, 'What?' And they show the fires, and I am like, 'Oh my God. Oh s***.' We really looked like we were instigating — that we were the bad guys.' The promoters reportedly faced multiple lawsuits after the festival. And while the concerts' organizer, the late Michael Lang, entertained the notion of recreating the spectacle once again in 2019, according to Esquire, the festival was ultimately canceled altogether. Here are more photos from Woodstock '99 as the event devolved into chaos and destruction. Fans of Limp Bizkit commandeer the stage at Woodstock '99. (Frank Micelotta/ImageDirect via Getty Images) A concert fan is shown rising above the crowd at Woodstock '99 on July 24, 1999. () Kid Rock asked the crowd to throw plastic water bottles onstage during his performance at Woodstock '99. (Kevin Mazur/WireImage via Getty Images) Festivalgoers made their way among the trash at Woodstock '99. (Andrew Lichtenstein/Sygma via Getty Images) Advertisement Attendees pitched tents at Woodstock '99. (Andrew Lichtenstein/Sygma via Getty Images) The crowd was sprayed with water during Woodstock '99. (Kevin Mazur/WireImage via Getty Images) Some festivalgoers covered themselves in mud at Woodstock '99. (Henry Diltz/Corbis via Getty Images) Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist Flea (Michael Balzary) opted to perform without clothes on the final day of Woodstock '99. (Frank Micelotta/ImageDirect via Getty Images) Advertisement Festival attendees lit huge fires during Woodstock '99. (Andrew Lichtenstein/Sygma via Getty Images) Festivalgoers flung anything they could find into the fires. (Andrew Lichtenstein/Sygma via Getty Images)