BEIJING, Aug. 28 -- Madonna has always reveled in
controversy and with the recent launch of her concert tour, "Sticky &
Sweet," the 50-year-old pop star has kicked up a new fuss by comparing John
McCain to Adolf Hitler in a video.
The dust-up is the latest in a career of risky moves
that have paid off handsomely for Madonna, whose tours and albums have long
mixed music with politics, sex and religion. While other stars rose to fame in
the 1980s then faded away, "Material Girl" Madonna has become a global star and
even courted controversy to stay relevant to younger audiences.
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U.S. singer Madonna performs on the
opening night of her "Sticky & Sweet" tour at the Millennium Stadium
in Cardiff Aug. 23, 2008. Madonna kicks off her "Sticky & Sweet" world
tour at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium on Saturday, the latest test of her
enduring appeal just a week after her 50th birthday. (Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
"Madonna seems to be an extraordinarily brilliant
business woman in the business of culture," said Robert Thompson, a professor of
media at and pop culture at Syracuse University.
"She's controlled her controversy, so every time
she's been in controversy it does her good not bad," he told Reuters.
As her world tour opened in Cardiff, Wales, over the
weekend, Madonna showed a video montage juxtaposing images of Hitler with
McCain, the Republican senator from Arizona running for president against
Democratic Sen. Barack Obama. The Democrats on Monday launched their nominating
convention.
McCain's campaign blasted Madonna with a campaign
spokesman telling media organizations that the video was "outrageous,
unacceptable and crudely divisive."
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U.S. singer Madonna performs during the
opening night of her "Sticky & Sweet" tour at the Millennium Stadium
in Cardiff Aug. 23, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
Abraham Foxman, national director for Jewish group
The Anti-Defamation League also issued a statement calling it "outrageous to
invoke Nazi imagery in the context of John McCain's candidacy."
In 2005, Rabbis criticized Madonna over a song,
"Isaac," that they said used an inappropriate reference to a 16th century
mystic. Madonna also has drawn the ire of the Vatican over sexual themes such as
simulating masturbation on stage.
Her 1989 song "Like A Prayer," with links between
religion and eroticism, caused Pepsi-Cola to cancel a sponsorship deal.
In 1992, she released a book called "Sex" with nude pictures of the star that caused a media sensation, and in 2003 her same-sex kiss with Britney Spears at MTV's Video Music Awards proved to be yet another celebrity news firestorm.
While Thompson noted that Madonna has successfully
boosted her career in the past with controversy, he added that celebrities
should speak their minds if they want.
"The whole notion of a democratic republic is that
this wasn't just about politicians, that anyone could shoot their mouth off
about whatever they wanted to," Thompson said.
But David Horowitz, a conservative writer and
activist, took a more dim view of Madonna's latest controversy.
"We're in a sad situation if we're turning to
entertainers for political wisdom," he told Reuters.
(Source: China Daily/Agencies)