Arts & Entertainment
Mayor of Spurned City Fires Back After Madonna Says It's Full of 'Idiots'
Madonna says Rochester Hills residents are "basic, provincial-thinking people." The mayor sharpened his pen and fired back.

Madonnaβs comments about her hometown on βThe Howard Stern Showβ didnβt win her many friends back home in Rochester Hills. (Photo by Pascal Mannaerts via Creative Commons ShareAlike Licence)
Rochester Hills Mayor Bryan K. Barnett has penned an open letter to Madonna, who had some harsh words for her hometown last week on The Howard Stern Show, explaining she kept to herself because she βjust thought everyone was an idiot.β
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The pop icon was responding to Sternβs question about whether she ever thought about returning to Michigan, where she was known as Madonna Louise Ciccone while growing up in Rochester Hills.
βHave you ever been to Rochester Hills, Michigan?β she replied. βI just didnβt want to go back. I canβt be around basic, provincial-thinking people.β
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βI Just thought everyone was an idiot,β she said, explaining why she didnβt socialize much and felt like an outsider in Rochester Hills.
The mayor sharpened his pen and didnβt hold back, pointing out in his letter that Rochester Hills is βhome to quite a few amazing people who are known more for innovative thinking than provincial β Olympic gold medalists, NASCAR Champions, visionaries in the fields of medicine and education, andβ β wait for it β βeven a top selling global singer/songwriter.β
βThatβs right,β the mayor told the Material Girl. βDespite your distaste for us, we actually have enshrined you on our Community Wall of Fame at the Van Hoosen Museum.β
He said Madonnaβs portrait is hung alongside that of Bertha Van Hoosen, one of the first women to graduate from the University of Michigan in 1888 and one of the worldβs leading surgeons for nearly 60 years.
βShe was a female trailblazer in the field of medicine at the university your daughter (Lourdes) now attends,β Barnett wrote.
Just a few feet away from Madonnaβs portrait is that of Helen Southgate Williams, a renowned author of childrenβs literature who was ultimately appointed to the International Board of Books, an agency of the United Nations and one of the highest recognitions possible in the field.
βI assume that would be of some interest to a fellow childrenβs author like yourself,β Barnett wrote. βTwo strong women, ahead of their time, and in all of my research, I could not find the terms, βbasic or provincial mindedβ to describe them or their accomplishments.
βMadonna, you have achieved unbelievable success, and while we appreciate your talent and achievement, we expect you to appreciate ours,β he wrote.
The mayor concluded his letter with an invitation to Madonna to visit Rochester Hills and see all that has changed in the 40 years since she cheered at Adams High School. βWhile we certainly donβt need your stamp of approval, I am quite confident we would earn it,β he wrote.
Brad Keselowski , the NASCAR champion Barnett referenced in his list of local celebrities, also called Madonna out on Twitter for dissing their mutual hometown.
βEven if Madonna isnβt, I am and always will be proud to be from Rochester Hills, MI,β he tweeted.
Barnett told the Detroit Free Press he learned one thing from his rebuttal.
βWhen you pick a fight with someone like Madonna, it takes most of your afternoon,β he said, noting that social media went wild after his letter became public.
Below are some of the tweets responding to the mayorβs open letter and the dust-up.
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