Arts & Entertainment
Would You Pay To See Madonna Even If She Shows Up Late?
Star Patcher Robert J. Nebel writes about pop singer/actor/dancer/diva Madonna's latest top on her 'Rebel Heart' tour.

I confess that I was one of the many who missed Madonna on this last tour stop which came to Atlanta on Wednesday night (January 20). Shocking indeed. Even though I rarely attend big arena concerts these days, I doubt that I would set aside the dollars to see someone like Madonna again. Yes, βagain.β I saw Madonna over 30 years ago.
Nowadays the cost to attend the spectacle is outrageous. I read in the local paper that one attendee spent $400 for his seats, not including transportation and food for the evening. Look, anyone can spend their hard-earned money any which way they see fit, but wow, hundreds (maybe even a thousand or more?) for one evening?
Thereβs no doubt that Madonna is a gifted performer and from what I read in the local paperβs review, it sounds like the evening was amazing. There was one glitch: Madonnaβs show didnβt start until 11 p.m. Thatβs flat-out insane. Why the long delay? We have known for years that Madonna is a diva and quite proud of it, but 11 p.m.? Some folks have work and/or school the next day. Heck, thatβs crazy even for a weekend evening when folks are either too darn old to stay up βtil the show ends a little before 1 a.m. the next day. Oh yes, then there are a few who pay babysitters. On the one hand itβs quite rude to show up that late. Does this talented diva deserve a pass because she needs more time to βget in the zone?β Most likely many would say that Madonna gets a pass for being tardy, but there has to be a few out there who are peeved at these late start times.
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I was a senior in high school when I last saw Madonna. Thankfully she didnβt start over two hours late back in those days. I would have had one worried mother to deal with back then. Some might be asking why a guy in high school would see Madonna even during her so-called βhey-deyβ years. I was just fascinated with Madonna. No one looked or acted like Madonna. In the early 1980s, we got another one-name performer following Cher and Sting. The name stuck in my mind. Months before I attended that 1985 Madonna concert, a high school friend predicted her uber-success and history proves that he was right. By the way, he drove me to that concert. I was mesmerized by the videos with Madonna prancing about on a gondola or re-creating Marilyn Monroe. From βBurning Upβ to βMaterial Girl,β I was sold. I even bought a Virgin Tour concert shirt and dared to wear it to school the next day. Trust me, it was far from cool to wear such a shirt when males in that school were heavily into Black Sabbath and AC/DC.
Throughout college, I was impressed with the follow-up releases to the incredibly successful Like a Virgin album. From blasting βPapa Donβt Preachβ to the hit single βLike a Prayer,β I was beyond appreciative of Madonnaβs work. Even in the 90s, I went to see Truth or Dare β which now feels like a reality television project rather than a film documentary. The film honestly displays Madonnaβs diva side seemed to amuse certain theater-goers and turn off others in the audience. I was somewhere in the middle when viewing the film. Speaking of film, I enjoy Madonna as an actress. I think sheβs been a natural fit in many of her film roles.
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My interest in Madonna waned a bit from the 90s to today, but Iβm still impressed with her ambition and success. Even though concerts typically start 45 minutes to even one hour late, Iβm jarred by Madonnaβs extreme tardiness. With such a late start and expensive seat prices, itβs hard for me to justify going to such a concert. For those who have no problem with the late start and price admission, there is one good thing about going to the concert: Youβre helping to employ Madonnaβs crew and the venue workers.