HOLLYWOOD SHOCK! Kristin Cabot files for divorce from Andrew Cabot after the “kiss cam” scandal with Astronomer CEO at Coldplay concert! 😲 Shocking secret: She requested full custody of the children and division of million-dollar assets! 👉

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Kristin Cabot—the woman caught snuggling with Astronomer CEO Andy Byron at a Coldplay concert in July—is getting divorced, according to court documents.

The fallout from the Coldplay concert scandal continues.

Kristin Cabot, the woman seen cuddling with former Astronomer CEO Andy Byron on the jumbotron at the band's Boston concert in July, has filed for divorce from her husband, according to court documents obtained by NBC News.

The 52-year-old filed a petition for divorce in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, Aug. 13, according to the filing. The next hearing is a Nov. 26 scheduling conference in the family division of New Hampshire's 10th Circuit Court.

NBC News reached out to Cabot, her husband and their lawyers for comment and didn't hear back.

Cabot's divorce filing came one month after she stepped down from her post as Astronomer's head of human resources.

“I can confirm that Kristin Cabot is no longer with Astronomer,” a company rep told NBC News in July. “She has resigned.”

Her resignation came just days after Byron himself handed in his resignation as CEO.

Andy Byron has tendered his resignation, and the Board of Directors has accepted,” the company wrote in a statement to E! News, adding at the time that the former CEO has failed to meet the company's standards of conduct. “The Board will begin a search for our next Chief Executive as Cofounder and Chief Product Officer Pete DeJoy continues to serve as interim CEO.”

The controversy went viral after their appearance at a Coldplay concert at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass., on July 15, during which fans from the crowd were being spotlighted on the jumbotron.

Andy Byron, Coldplay concert, kisscaminstaagraace/TikTok

After Byron and Cabot were shown in one another's arms on the screen, he quickly ran out of frame while she covered her face and turned her back to the camera, which prompted a now-infamous quip from Coldplay's frontman Chris Martin.

“Either they’re having an affair or they’re just really shy,” he joked. “I’m not quite sure what to do.”

Martin added, “Oh s–t! I hope we didn't do something bad.”

A month later, the 48-year-old defended his band's use of the jumbotron during its shows.

“This is not, never will be and never was a kiss-cam,” he said at Coldplay's Aug. 19 concert. “We put one couple and it's branded as a kiss-cam for the rest of your life.”

“This is called a Jumbotron,” he went on. “We've done this for a long, long time. We pick people out to say hello. Sometimes they turn out to be an internationally, massive scandal, sure. But most of the time, we're just trying to say hello to some f–king people, that's all. Now, all of this bulls–t.”

Chris Martin, ColdplayMatt Stone/MediaNews Group/Boston Herald via Getty Images

The “Fix You” singer then doubled down on the bit even further.

“Life throws you lemons and you've got to make lemonade,” he told the audience. “So, we are going to keep doing it because we are going to meet some of you.”

And Martin even threw in a little shade at Byron and Cabot, saying, “If you're not prepared to be on international news, please duck.”

Keep reading for a deeper look into the scandal…

(E! and NBC News are both part of the NBCUniversal family.)

What did Coldplay’s Chris Martin say that caused a viral scandal for former Astronomer CEO Andy Byron?

Performing at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass., on July 15, Coldplay frontman Chris Martin zeroed in on two people who seemingly sprang out of each other’s arms once they saw that they were on the jumbotron.

“The way we’re going to do that is using our cameras,” Martin told the crowd beforehand. “So, if you look at the screens, we’re going to come looking and see who’s out there to say hello to.” First stop, a young man who was thrilled by an impromptu happy birthday tribute from Martin.

“Oh, look at these two,” the singer said as the camera stopped next on the cozy-looking pair. But then the man ducked and the woman, her hands in front of her face, turned her back to the camera.

“Either they’re having an affair or they’re just really shy,” Martin quipped. “I’m not quite sure what to do.”

As the woman then left her seat, disappearing past the people behind her, the singer added, “Oh s–t! I hope we didn't do something bad.”

The moment was captured for posterity on video by concertgoer Grace Springer and, by the end of the night, internet sleuths had identified the squirrelly pair as Astronomer CEO Andy Byron and Astronomer Chief People Officer Kristin Cabot. Furthermore, as quickly deduced by TikTokers, X users, et al., Byron and Cabot are both married to other people.

Just moments afterward, Martin asked another pair who showed up on the screen, “OK, listen, are you two a couple? Are you two a legitimate couple?”

Who are Andy Byron and Kristin Cabot?

Byron and Cabot are now-former coworkers who were spotted together at a Coldplay concert and became the talk of the internet. Neither has made any public comment about the incident so far and an apology purportedly from Byron that circulated online the next day was fake, according to Astronomer.

In their respective lives, Byron was chief executive of data operations company Astronomer—which, contrary to what many assumed at first glance, has nothing to do with space—and Cabot was the firm’s head of human resources.

Astronomer confirmed July 24 to NBC News that Cabot had resigned.

Both have since deleted their LinkedIn pages and multiple outlets have reported that Byron’s wife deleted her Instagram and Facebook accounts. They reportedly share two sons.

Cabot is married to Privateer Rum CEO Andrew Cabot, the sixth-generation descendant of a rum distiller of the same name dating back to the American Revolution, per multiple reports. According to the Boston Globe, Andrew traded in a career in tech to found the spirits company in 2011. They also have two children.

What is Astronomer?

Astronomer is the tech company behind Astro, an operations platform that, per the company’s website, “empowers your team to build, run, and observe data pipelines that just work, all from one place.”

The company was founded in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 2018 and also has offices in San Francisco and San Jose, Calif.

Byron joined the company as CEO in 2023 and Cabot came onboard in 2024.

They raised $93 million in a Series D funding round led by Bain Capital Ventures in May 2025, Astronomer announced at the time, per the New York Post, calling it “just one step in Astronomer’s journey to build a durable, lasting software company.”

The funding raised the firm’s valuation to $740 million, according to the Economic Times.

ompany’s board of directors had “initiated a formal investigation into this matter” and clarified that the alleged statement making the rounds from Byron was not genuine.

“Astronomer is committed to the values and culture that have guided us since our founding,” the firm said. “Our leaders are expected to set the standard in both conduct and accountability.”

The statement also noted that none of the other people seen in the fateful jumbotron video—aside from the pair in question—were Astronomer employees. (The company confirmed separately to the Associated Press that Cabot was the woman with Byron in the video.)

Is Andy Byron still CEO of Astronomer after the Coldplay jumbotron scandal?

Byron was on leave from Astronomer as of July 18, according to co-founder and Chief Product Officer Pete DeJoy, who was named interim CEO, and then the company announced his resignation the next day.

“Andy Byron has tendered his resignation, and the Board of Directors has accepted,” Astronomer said in a statement to E! News. “The Board will begin a search for our next Chief Executive,” the statement added, noting DeJoy would continue in his new compounded role.

“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 July 21 LinkedIn post. “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.”

What has Coldplay’s Chris Martin said about the jumbotron “affair” scandal?

Martin couldn’t even begin to try to fix what happened, but he’s had some fun with it since.

During the first Coldplay show since the scandal July 19, the English singer once again advised the crowd at Camp Randall Stadium in Madison, Wisc., that some of them might end up on the big screen.

“So please,” Martin said, “if you haven’t done your makeup, do your makeup now.”