Anonymous wrote:Both of them will find new jobs they pay more within a few months if it takes that long. C suite people always land on their feet. It's like NFL coaches a buddy buddy system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish this would broadly change corporate culture. Cold Play concerts should be for families and friends and legite couples, not coworkers. I’d like to see an end to people using work as an excuse to go out with coworkers. A firm line between work and pleasure.
Unless you are there wirh your AP, going to a Coldplay concert is absolutely not pleasurable.
Some folks in my network know the CEO and in their words this is all karma - he's supposedly awful.
Anonymous wrote:The hr woman is so ugly and old, it's totally embarrassing to the CEO, career-ending based on how ugly and old it means he has no game or ability to manage anything or get someone worthy of cheating on, low class and sad for him, he deserves to be fired, divorced, and put in prison.
Anonymous wrote:While they certainly engaged in inappropriate behavior at the concert, we have no PROOF they were sleeping with each other. Let’s not jump to conclusions
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have gotten to a point in the US that there are literally zero consequences for any unethical, immoral behavior.
Sure there are consequences: private ones not for your enjoyment. Divorce, etc.
This appeared to be the tipping point….the pot was simmering ..and then this video at this point and time blew the lid off.
Uh, no. Nothing has blown its lid.
The key word here is "private." These two cheaters thought they could do what they wanted in a public arena with cameras and 60,000 or so spectators with cellphones. If they wanted privacy, they made a very poor choice; and the world is mocking them.
Bogus premise. Your odds of being on some sort of kiss cam jumbotron in a stadium full of 60k people is really slim.
I met somebody from my US grad program randomly on the 5th floor of a tourist craft store in Delhi. He was a Delhi native (although living in the US) and I was on a business trip.
I also once ran into a former coworker while sightseeing in China. Both of us tourists.
If you're at a giant concert near home, odds are people you know are in the crowd.
And highly unlikely you will run into them.
And even more unlikely you will be on some kiss cam.
The kiss cam is the rarer thing but my point is, there's a non-zero chance of getting busted. On DCUM, seems like taking an AP to a restaurant not far enough away is a common means of getting busted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have gotten to a point in the US that there are literally zero consequences for any unethical, immoral behavior.
Sure there are consequences: private ones not for your enjoyment. Divorce, etc.
This appeared to be the tipping point….the pot was simmering ..and then this video at this point and time blew the lid off.
Uh, no. Nothing has blown its lid.
The key word here is "private." These two cheaters thought they could do what they wanted in a public arena with cameras and 60,000 or so spectators with cellphones. If they wanted privacy, they made a very poor choice; and the world is mocking them.
Bogus premise. Your odds of being on some sort of kiss cam jumbotron in a stadium full of 60k people is really slim.
I met somebody from my US grad program randomly on the 5th floor of a tourist craft store in Delhi. He was a Delhi native (although living in the US) and I was on a business trip.
I also once ran into a former coworker while sightseeing in China. Both of us tourists.
If you're at a giant concert near home, odds are people you know are in the crowd.
And highly unlikely you will run into them.
And even more unlikely you will be on some kiss cam.
Anonymous wrote:The hr woman is so ugly and old, it's totally embarrassing to the CEO, career-ending based on how ugly and old it means he has no game or ability to manage anything or get someone worthy of cheating on, low class and sad for him, he deserves to be fired, divorced, and put in prison.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish this would broadly change corporate culture. Cold Play concerts should be for families and friends and legite couples, not coworkers. I’d like to see an end to people using work as an excuse to go out with coworkers. A firm line between work and pleasure.
Unless you are there wirh your AP, going to a Coldplay concert is absolutely not pleasurable.
Some folks in my network know the CEO and in their words this is all karma - he's supposedly awful.
Guaranteed this is not the first time this guy has cheated. His wife probably knew and put up with it but this incident might be the last straw.
I wonder where he said he was that night? And how did he pay to get into the concert suite? Company card to hide the concert from his wife? "Babe just going to a concert with some investors. I'll probably be late, you know how they are."And no doubt they had a nearby hotel romp before and were planning to after.
NY Post is reporting that the wife left the family home and is hiding out in Maine, while the Cabot husband was in Japan on a business trip when he found out.
If they were banging at her house while her husband was gone that is truly diabolical.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish this would broadly change corporate culture. Cold Play concerts should be for families and friends and legite couples, not coworkers. I’d like to see an end to people using work as an excuse to go out with coworkers. A firm line between work and pleasure.
Unless you are there wirh your AP, going to a Coldplay concert is absolutely not pleasurable.
Some folks in my network know the CEO and in their words this is all karma - he's supposedly awful.
Guaranteed this is not the first time this guy has cheated. His wife probably knew and put up with it but this incident might be the last straw.
I wonder where he said he was that night? And how did he pay to get into the concert suite? Company card to hide the concert from his wife? "Babe just going to a concert with some investors. I'll probably be late, you know how they are."And no doubt they had a nearby hotel romp before and were planning to after.
People like these two think nothing of it. No morals, no conscience, don't care about their kids and even less about their spouses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have gotten to a point in the US that there are literally zero consequences for any unethical, immoral behavior.
Sure there are consequences: private ones not for your enjoyment. Divorce, etc.
This appeared to be the tipping point….the pot was simmering ..and then this video at this point and time blew the lid off.
Uh, no. Nothing has blown its lid.
The key word here is "private." These two cheaters thought they could do what they wanted in a public arena with cameras and 60,000 or so spectators with cellphones. If they wanted privacy, they made a very poor choice; and the world is mocking them.
Bogus premise. Your odds of being on some sort of kiss cam jumbotron in a stadium full of 60k people is really slim.
I met somebody from my US grad program randomly on the 5th floor of a tourist craft store in Delhi. He was a Delhi native (although living in the US) and I was on a business trip.
I also once ran into a former coworker while sightseeing in China. Both of us tourists.
If you're at a giant concert near home, odds are people you know are in the crowd.
And highly unlikely you will run into them.
And even more unlikely you will be on some kiss cam.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have gotten to a point in the US that there are literally zero consequences for any unethical, immoral behavior.
Sure there are consequences: private ones not for your enjoyment. Divorce, etc.
This appeared to be the tipping point….the pot was simmering ..and then this video at this point and time blew the lid off.
Uh, no. Nothing has blown its lid.
The key word here is "private." These two cheaters thought they could do what they wanted in a public arena with cameras and 60,000 or so spectators with cellphones. If they wanted privacy, they made a very poor choice; and the world is mocking them.
Bogus premise. Your odds of being on some sort of kiss cam jumbotron in a stadium full of 60k people is really slim.
I met somebody from my US grad program randomly on the 5th floor of a tourist craft store in Delhi. He was a Delhi native (although living in the US) and I was on a business trip.
I also once ran into a former coworker while sightseeing in China. Both of us tourists.
If you're at a giant concert near home, odds are people you know are in the crowd.