Madonna fires back at fans who sued her for starting concert three hours late ... trends now

Madonna fires back at fans who sued her for starting concert three hours late ... trends now
Madonna fires back at fans who sued her for starting concert three hours late ... trends now

Madonna fires back at fans who sued her for starting concert three hours late ... trends now

Madonna shot back at fans who sued her for starting her concert late saying they got exactly 'what they paid for' and no true fan could expect the Queen of Pop to perform on time, court documents revealed.

Concertgoers Michael Fellows and Jonathan Hadden accused the pop icon and concert organizer Live Nation of false advertising after the 65-year-old singer was three hours late for her set at Brooklyn's Barclays Center on December 13. 

The lawsuit filed in January claim the late starts constitute a 'wanton exercise in false advertising, negligent misrepresentation and unfair and deceptive trade practices.' 

Court documents obtained by DailyMail.com show attorneys for the Material Girl filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit on Wednesday arguing it was illogical for them to expect her to start the show on time

'No reasonable concertgoer - and certainly no Madonna fan - would expect the headline act at a major arena concert to take the stage at the ticketed event time,' the filing said.

'Fans got just what they paid for: a full-length, high quality show by the Queen of Pop.' 

Madonna shot back at fans who sued her for starting her concert late saying they got exactly 'what they paid for'

Madonna shot back at fans who sued her for starting her concert late saying they got exactly 'what they paid for'

Concertgoers Michael Fellows and Jonathan Hadden (pictured) accused the pop icon and concert organizer Live Nation of false advertising

Concertgoers Michael Fellows and Jonathan Hadden (pictured) accused the pop icon and concert organizer Live Nation of false advertising

Her attorney's also referenced a Facebook post by Hadden from the day after the concert which he share a photo of the tour poster and said, 'Caught her North American tour opener last night! An homage to NYC! Incredible, as always! I've never missed a Madonna Tour!'

'In other words, the concert met or exceeded his expectations,' said the filing.

In their lawsuit, the plaintiffs argued it was false advertising that they experienced damages because the concert did not start at the time listed on the ticket. 

They said because the show started much later than expected, it put ticketholders at risk due to 'limited public transportation, limited ride-sharing, and/or increased public and private transportation costs at that late hour.'

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