- It's the fans generating the most excitement at stadiums this summer.
- Audience members caught on camera are going viral worldwide.
- Most famously, Astronomer's CEO resigned after footage of him at a Coldplay concert.
Smile! You are almost definitely on camera.
At stadium events this summer, from concerts to baseball games to the US Open, it's the fans who are providing the most talked-about moments.
The ubiquity of cameras, the ones casting to jumbotrons and the ones in everyone's pocket, means no one is safe from scrutiny any longer — and that means fans can go viral anywhere at any time, even if they are not the main attraction.
Most recently, social media users zeroed in on a tense moment between baseball fans on Friday when the Philadelphia Phillies faced the Miami Marlins at LoanDepot Park in Florida.
Cameras captured the moment a home-run ball landed in the bleachers. Nearby fans scrambled for the ball, but one man emerged victorious and grabbed it before returning to his seat. He then gave the ball to a young boy, and the two embraced.
However, a woman who also wanted the home-run ball confronted the man. Following a heated exchange, the man gave the woman the ball. People shared footage of the interaction on social media, where one clip gained nearly 53 million views. The phrase "Phillies Karen" topped Google Trends in the United States.
In response, a stadium employee gifted the boy and his sister goody bags during the game. Additionally, Harrison Bader — the Philadelphia Phillies player who hit the home run — met the family after the game and gifted the boy a bat.
Another viral stadium fan moment happened last month at the US Open in New York City.
Following a match between Russia's Karen Khachanov and Poland's Kamil Majchrzak in August, Majchrzak stayed near the court and signed mementos for crowd members. At one point, Majchrzak removed his hat and appeared to give it to a nearby boy, but a man suddenly reached out and nabbed it. Clips of the interaction were shared online, where one received over 24 million views.
Social media users identified the man as Piotr Szczerek, a Polish chief executive. After some social media users criticized Szczerek's behavior, he apologized on Facebook in September, saying he had made a "huge mistake" and assumed the tennis player had passed him the hat. Majchrzak, for his part, later met the boy in person to gift him merch and pose for photos.
And perhaps most famously of all, there was Astronomer CEO Andy Byron, who gained international attention in July when he attended a Coldplay concert with the company's head of people, Kristin Cabot.
The pair were locked in an embrace when they appeared on the stadium's Jumbotron. They quickly separated and tried to duck from view. A fellow concertgoer recorded the moment and posted it to TikTok, where the footage garnered 130 million views, 11 million likes, 59,100 comments, and endless speculation.
Byron and Cabot resigned that month as the video became a pop culture phenomenon. However, that didn't stop the jokes, memes, and wave of reenactments.
Just days after the Coldplay "kiss cam" incident, fans attending Major League Baseball games at America First Field in Utah and Truist Park in Atlanta playfully recreated the moment for the stadiums' jumbotrons.
Although the fallout from the Coldplay concert took Astronomer by surprise, the tech company managed to leverage the sudden attention for its own gain. In late July, the company hired Gwyneth Paltrow — the ex-wife of Coldplay's front man — as a "very temporary" spokesperson. The ad, in which Paltrow promoted the company, has more than 37 million views on X.
Turns out that in stadiums these days, the real show isn't on the field or stage at all. It's in the stands.