Chris Martin has made a quip at Coldplay seemingly catching two people having an affair, saying that he “hopes we didn’t do something bad”.
Footage of the moment first started going viral yesterday (July 17) when a “kiss cam” part of the show occurred at one of Coldplay’s ‘Music Of The Spheres’ shows at the Gillette Stadium near Boston.
The segment, which finds couples in the crowd and shows them on the huge screens inside the venue, this time panned onto a man and woman who were quick to hide from it and look mortified at being shown on camera.
“Oh, look at these two,” the frontman said as they stood there in shock, with the man rushing out of the shot and the woman holding her head in her hands. “Come on, you’re OK. Oh what? Either they’re having an affair or they’re just very shy,” he added.
Now, more footage of the show has emerged showing Martin continuing to comment on the moment. In a new video shared from the night, the singer is seen on stage with an acoustic guitar, watching the two panic at being caught on the “kiss cam”.
Casually standing there as things unravelled, he said into the microphone: “Oh shit, I hope we didn’t do something bad”.
Coldplay’s Chris Martin after unknowingly exposing Astronomer CEO’s alleged affair with his HR chief:
“I hope we didn’t do something bad…” pic.twitter.com/fDJx8ZYERF
— Buzzing Pop (@BuzzingPop) July 17, 2025
Since the footage spread across social media, there have been many reports stating that the man in question was Andy Byron, the CEO of the tech platform Astronomer, and that the woman he had his arms wrapped around was Kristin Cabot, the HR chief of Astronomer.
Outlets including The Sun have claimed that Astronomer is worth more than $1.3billion (£1billion) and Byron has served as CEO of the company since 2023. Cabot allegedly joined as Chief People Officer nine months ago.
The US leg of the tour comes just before Coldplay will head over to the UK for a handful of shows, with £1 from every ticket sold being donated to support grassroots venues.
Ahead of the UK dates, the band have shared that a shuttle bus named after Coldplay’s hit ‘Yellow’ will carry fans to two ‘Music Of The Spheres’ shows in Hull next month. Shows also include multiple stops at Wembley Stadium from August 22 to September 8.
When chatting with NME last year ahead of the release of ‘Moon Music‘,Martin discussed the importance of live venues and how they helped shape the band. “Playing live is an important connection,” he said. “It doesn’t bother me that there might not be another Coldplay, but it does bother me that there might not be acts that are free to start on the bottom rung and work all the way up – so that by the time they get to stadiums, they are really good.”