Astronomer Hires Gwyneth Paltrow to Move On From the Coldplay Debacle

When your data ops startup gets roasted by Chris Martin, you bring in Gwyneth Paltrow and roll the cameras.

Nkeiru Ezekwere
4 Min Read

After a week of being that company from the Coldplay concert, data operations startup Astronomer is attempting a rebrand-by-fire, or, more accurately, a rebrand-by-Gwyneth.

In a surprise PR pivot, Gwyneth Paltrow, actress, entrepreneur, and Goop overlord, is now the face of a new tongue-in-cheek Astronomer video meant to distract us all from the social media storm that sent two of its top execs packing.

Let’s rewind. Astronomer CEO Andy Byron and Chief People Officer Kristin Cabot were spotted getting very cozy on the kiss cam at a Coldplay concert in Massachusetts. The moment was made extra awkward by the fact that they were both married, just not to each other, and Chris Martin, Coldplay’s frontman and Paltrow’s ex-husband, casually roasted them from the stage:

“Either they’re having an affair or they’re just very shy.

Social media did what social media does, and the clip went viral faster than you can say “data pipeline.” The fallout? Both execs resigned from Astronomer. The company released a very we-take-this-seriously kind of statement, emphasizing that their leadership is supposed to “set the standard in both conduct and accountability”, a standard that was, let us say, momentarily mislaid.

They also tried to steer the spotlight back to their actual work:

“While awareness of our company may have changed overnight, our product and our work for our customers have not.”

Astronomer’s latest attempt to shift the conversation comes in the form of a cheeky marketing video, starring Paltrow doing her best “I’m here to clean up this mess” impersonation.

Related: Astronomer CEO Resigns After Viral Coldplay Concert Clip

Opening with a knowing smile, she introduces herself as someone “hired on a very temporary basis to speak on behalf of the 300+ employees at Astronomer.” The bit is dry, and funny, very “I know what you’re here for, and I am not giving it to you.”

Then come the “frequently asked questions,” flashed briefly on screen, half-written, gossip-fueled queries referencing the scandal. Gwyneth, unfazed, ignores them entirely and sticks to the script:

“We’ve been thrilled so many people have a newfound interest in data workflow automation.”

It is part deflection, part damage control, and part smart PR. She even manages to plug Astronomer’s upcoming conference before signing off with a wink:

“We will now be returning to what we do best — delivering game-changing results for our customers.

That depends on who you ask. Is it a genius brand moment, or a desperate attempt to meme their way past a PR disaster? Either way, it’s entertaining, and in an industry that usually sells itself with whitepapers and buzzwords, that’s saying something.

At the very least, Astronomer managed to replace “Coldplay kiss cam scandal” with “Gwyneth Paltrow in a tech ad” in the headlines. That’s a win in today’s attention economy.

But will customers buy more data pipeline tools because of it? The jury’s still out. Sometimes tech companies spend millions on awareness. Astronomer got it in one awkward moment and is now trying to code their way out. The question is: Can a scandal-turned-joke become a launchpad, or will it stick like glitter on a Gwyneth Paltrow candle?

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