Rich middle aged CEO going viral busted at Coldplay concert cheating of his wife with his HR director

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why is this such a huge news item? Why do so many people care?

Honestly by this point I kind of feel sorry for them, yet I am sick of seeing this all over the news when there are much more important things to care and opine about!


Trying to distract from Trump and Eppy


Nah. Cheating is something Americans universally hate and it’s very personal. Pretty much everyone has been affected by cheating in some manner—-as a betrayed spouse, as a kid whose family was broken up by it, as a sister or brother whose sibling was betrayed, a grandparent, etc. it’s a base human triggering event.

Then- add in he’s a billionaire and she’s a HR director, with news they are awful at work and you get even more schadenfreude. They were so BOLD and arrogant.

This is a both sides thing—it has nothing to do with Trump. Everyone is reporting it and talking about it. People are so fed up with the charlatans and the rich and the double standards.


If Americans hate cheating so much, how come “pretty much everyone has been affected?”


6 degrees of separation. You can be the mother or grandmother watching a son or daughter go through it. You can be a best friend. You can be a child of a cheater parent. You can be a co-worker. You can be an aunt or a niece or a sister or a brother. Christ, you can be a dog that loses its home and a parent.

Americans place cheating on a spouse dead last on a list of acceptable behaviors, behind abortion, cohabitation, pornography, out-of-wedlock births and divorce, among others. A puny 6 percent say adultery is acceptable, according to a Gallup poll conducted last May.
American social taboos on many issues — especially issues of personal sexual choice — have been changing over time, but views on infidelity have not budged. It has been consistently frowned upon by the masses across decades and demographics. Adultery is less popular than cloning humans, polygamy, suicide and teenagers having sex — all of which were also close to the bottom of Gallup's list. That disapproval has not ended infidelity, which may in fact be on the rise today among women, though men are still more likely to be unfaithful.


And even cheaters find the behavior unacceptable when it’s anyone, but themselves doing the cheating !!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Byron’s duck and cover response- beyond the poor personal choice to engage in an affair.

I wonder how this duck and cover reaction plays out in his work and what it might say about his leadership style?


I felt bad for how he left her standing there.


Haaaaa! Not at all. She appeared to be loving the attention. Giggling laughing whispering to her friend. She’s a seasoned serial cheater. She’s cheating on the guy she cheated with prior, only a couple years in new marriage.

I do not feel sorry for either of them one bit, they are at a massively public concert openly displaying three infidelity—they weren’t hiding in a Motel 6. They brought this on themselves. Their fatal flaw was their absolute arrogance.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Byron’s duck and cover response- beyond the poor personal choice to engage in an affair.

I wonder how this duck and cover reaction plays out in his work and what it might say about his leadership style?


I felt bad for how he left her standing there.


Haaaaa! Not at all. She appeared to be loving the attention. Giggling laughing whispering to her friend. She’s a seasoned serial cheater. She’s cheating on the guy she cheated with prior, only a couple years in new marriage.

I do not feel sorry for either of them one bit, they are at a massively public concert openly displaying three infidelity—they weren’t hiding in a Motel 6. They brought this on themselves. Their fatal flaw was their absolute arrogance.


She wanted to get caught. She wanted his wife to find out. Her behavior shows that. Many OW will leave clues for the wife to force the guy’s hand, get him caught in hopes he’ll leave the wife.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Byron’s duck and cover response- beyond the poor personal choice to engage in an affair.

I wonder how this duck and cover reaction plays out in his work and what it might say about his leadership style?


I felt bad for how he left her standing there.


Haaaaa! Not at all. She appeared to be loving the attention. Giggling laughing whispering to her friend. She’s a seasoned serial cheater. She’s cheating on the guy she cheated with prior, only a couple years in new marriage.

I do not feel sorry for either of them one bit, they are at a massively public concert openly displaying their infidelity—they weren’t hiding in a Motel 6. They brought this on themselves. Their fatal flaw was their absolute arrogance.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It triggered me because DH travels for work and sometimes gets to do fun things with colleagues like going to a concert, while I'm at home chasing and cleaning up after our young kids. I think that's why it's stirring up so much hatred. Many of us with traveling spouses fear this is what the trips are really about.
It often is. Mine was banging the client's support staff and there was a Foo Fighters concert involved. Silly me! I thought when he texted me a photo of them at FF that it was, just, a group outing.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why is this such a huge news item? Why do so many people care?

Honestly by this point I kind of feel sorry for them, yet I am sick of seeing this all over the news when there are much more important things to care and opine about!


Trying to distract from Trump and Eppy


Nah. Cheating is something Americans universally hate and it’s very personal. Pretty much everyone has been affected by cheating in some manner—-as a betrayed spouse, as a kid whose family was broken up by it, as a sister or brother whose sibling was betrayed, a grandparent, etc. it’s a base human triggering event.

Then- add in he’s a billionaire and she’s a HR director, with news they are awful at work and you get even more schadenfreude. They were so BOLD and arrogant.

This is a both sides thing—it has nothing to do with Trump. Everyone is reporting it and talking about it. People are so fed up with the charlatans and the rich and the double standards.


If Americans hate cheating so much, how come “pretty much everyone has been affected?”


6 degrees of separation. You can be the mother or grandmother watching a son or daughter go through it. You can be a best friend. You can be a child of a cheater parent. You can be a co-worker. You can be an aunt or a niece or a sister or a brother. Christ, you can be a dog that loses its home and a parent.

Americans place cheating on a spouse dead last on a list of acceptable behaviors, behind abortion, cohabitation, pornography, out-of-wedlock births and divorce, among others. A puny 6 percent say adultery is acceptable, according to a Gallup poll conducted last May.
American social taboos on many issues — especially issues of personal sexual choice — have been changing over time, but views on infidelity have not budged. It has been consistently frowned upon by the masses across decades and demographics. Adultery is less popular than cloning humans, polygamy, suicide and teenagers having sex — all of which were also close to the bottom of Gallup's list. That disapproval has not ended infidelity, which may in fact be on the rise today among women, though men are still more likely to be unfaithful.


I don't think Americans care about cheating as much as you think. I mean, the so called party of Christian values literally nominated a serial cheater who had sex with an adult actress while his wife was pregnant. If they don't care at all, I am not sure Democrats care either.

I am not condoning cheating, but the story is not famous because of the cheating scandal. CEO/Wealthy and Powerful man cheats on wife is a dog bites man story. It's a viral buzz because it's on camera and their reaction to getting busted is entertaining.

He will be fine over time just as Tiger Woods was even more popular after cheating hundreds of times. He is not more popular because his cheating but because it's not really a factor over time.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Byron’s duck and cover response- beyond the poor personal choice to engage in an affair.

I wonder how this duck and cover reaction plays out in his work and what it might say about his leadership style?


I felt bad for how he left her standing there.


Haaaaa! Not at all. She appeared to be loving the attention. Giggling laughing whispering to her friend. She’s a seasoned serial cheater. She’s cheating on the guy she cheated with prior, only a couple years in new marriage.

I do not feel sorry for either of them one bit, they are at a massively public concert openly displaying three infidelity—they weren’t hiding in a Motel 6. They brought this on themselves. Their fatal flaw was their absolute arrogance.


She cheated on Thornton and he filed for divorce on her. A year or two in new marriage she’s already cheating on the new husband (former affair) when they just bought a $2.2 million house 5 months ago. Her daughter still looks fairly young—what a prime role model this mother is for her, and Byron for his sons.

Total lack of character or respect or care for their respective families.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Imagine the hostile work environment these two created!? The lawsuits are about to fly.


So true. What a goldmine if you applied for the position she gave to her tag-along crony.
Anonymous
I think these two are POS but there are families involved and the way commercial brands are jumping on this to market Their own products is disgusting me in a way. Sports teams, restaurants, etc. making their own memes from this just seems tacky.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I think the hate is partly because people hate CEOs in general. They are completely overvalued and rake in huge amounts of cash even when they do sucky job and the company they’re running ends up going under. They also as a group tend to be arrogant and unethical


CEOs also tend to be gross alpha males who enjoy having women swooning over them and feel like the rules don’t apply to them


Yes, that’s it. Everything about both of them suggests that they don’t think the rules of business, love, and life apply to them. That’s why I kind of love this story.


What makes CEOs successful is also what make them the worst partners to commit too.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It triggered me because DH travels for work and sometimes gets to do fun things with colleagues like going to a concert, while I'm at home chasing and cleaning up after our young kids. I think that's why it's stirring up so much hatred. Many of us with traveling spouses fear this is what the trips are really about.
It often is. Mine was banging the client's support staff and there was a Foo Fighters concert involved. Silly me! I thought when he texted me a photo of them at FF that it was, just, a group outing.


Are you still married to him?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I think the hate is partly because people hate CEOs in general. They are completely overvalued and rake in huge amounts of cash even when they do sucky job and the company they’re running ends up going under. They also as a group tend to be arrogant and unethical


CEOs also tend to be gross alpha males who enjoy having women swooning over them and feel like the rules don’t apply to them


Yes, that’s it. Everything about both of them suggests that they don’t think the rules of business, love, and life apply to them. That’s why I kind of love this story.


What makes CEOs successful is also what make them the worst partners to commit too.


She’s not a CEO. She’s a banger of CEOs a groupie, gold digger. Like Sanchez
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Byron’s duck and cover response- beyond the poor personal choice to engage in an affair.

I wonder how this duck and cover reaction plays out in his work and what it might say about his leadership style?


I felt bad for how he left her standing there.


Haaaaa! Not at all. She appeared to be loving the attention. Giggling laughing whispering to her friend. She’s a seasoned serial cheater. She’s cheating on the guy she cheated with prior, only a couple years in new marriage.

I do not feel sorry for either of them one bit, they are at a massively public concert openly displaying three infidelity—they weren’t hiding in a Motel 6. They brought this on themselves. Their fatal flaw was their absolute arrogance.


She wanted to get caught. She wanted his wife to find out. Her behavior shows that. Many OW will leave clues for the wife to force the guy’s hand, get him caught in hopes he’ll leave the wife.


Yup. See also serial cheater Lauren Sanchez.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It triggered me because DH travels for work and sometimes gets to do fun things with colleagues like going to a concert, while I'm at home chasing and cleaning up after our young kids. I think that's why it's stirring up so much hatred. Many of us with traveling spouses fear this is what the trips are really about.


You should’ve married a better man
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Will there be something on SNL tonight, lol


Until Trump gets it cancelled
post reply Forum Index » Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
Message Quick Reply
Go to: