WATCH: Madonna's graphic 'God Control' video a 'wake up' call on gun violence

Singer Madonna performs at the 2019 Billboard Music Awards show in Las Vegas. File picture: Mario Anzuoni/Reuters

Singer Madonna performs at the 2019 Billboard Music Awards show in Las Vegas. File picture: Mario Anzuoni/Reuters

Published Jun 27, 2019

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Los Angeles - Madonna stepped into the

gun violence debate on Wednesday with a music video containing

graphic dramatizations of a mass shooting.

Called "God Control," the disco beat song and video depicts

a gunman opening fire in a crowded nightclub or bar and images

of actors playing dancers who fall to the ground, bleeding, or

try to flee.

A message before the video reads, "The story you’re about to

see is very disturbing. It shows graphic scenes of gun violence.

But it’s happening everyday. And it has to stop."

"We need to wake up," Madonna sings. The video also uses TV

footage of demonstrators calling for stricter gun control,

including the 2018 "March For Our Lives," in Washington and

other US cities.

While the music video does not refer to any one incident, it

recalls the June 2016 shooting inside the Pulse gay nightclub in

Florida, in which 49 people were killed and 53 injured.

Madonna, 60, said the video was designed to shock.

"Seeing the reality, and the brutality of things makes you

wake up,” the singer told People magazine on Wednesday.

"This is really happening. This is what it looks like. Does

it make you feel bad? Good, 'cause then maybe you will do

something about it,” she said.

The United States has seen hundreds of mass shootings in

schools, workplaces, places of worship and leisure in recent

years but stricter gun control legislation has proven difficult

to pass in the U.S. Congress.

In a message on her social media accounts, Madonna urged

people to "insist on common-sense gun safety legislation" and

directed fans to gun control organizations they could support.

The "God Control" video had been viewed more than 360 000

times on YouTube some two hours after its release on Wednesday. 

Reuters

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