20 Attention-Grabbing Information About Purple
It’s been 20 years since we first met Pink.
When her debut album Can’t Take Me Home arrived on the scene on April 4, 2000, it heralded the arrival of pop music’s biggest rebel. Executive produced by L.A. Reid and featuring writing and production from, among others, Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds and Kandi “Future Real Housewife” Burruss, the RB-influenced album included hits like “There You Go,” “Most Girls” and “You Make Me Sick” and peaked at No.
26 on the U.S. Billboard 200, with the lead single giving her a Top 10 hit on the Hot 100 on her very first at-bat.
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20 Fascinating Facts About Pink
While her sound would morph over the years, with Pink bristling at both the look and sound Reid insisted upon at the start as she took control and developed the spunky dance-pop sound that would become her calling card over the years, it was clear from the jump that she was a star. And since her debut, she’s only proven that by selling over 90 million albums worldwide, winning three Grammys, and even taking home the People’s Champion Award at the 2019 E! People’s Choice Awards.
In celebration of two decades of pop music’s most outspoken, inclusive, and almost supernaturally athletic stars, take a look at 20 of the most fascinating facts from a career and life like no other.
20 Fascinating Facts About Pink
1. Born Alecia Moore, the pseudonym Pink was first born out of an embarrassing moment at camp, but later came to life as a reference to a Reservoir Dogs character. It’s just a nickname that’s been following me my whole life,” she told CNN in 2001. “It was a mean thing at first; some kids at camp pulled my pants down and I blushed so much, and they were like, ‘Ha ha! Look at her! She’s pink!’ And then the movie Reservoir Dogs came out and Mr. Pink was the one with the smart mouth, so it just happened all over again.”
2. As a precursor to her days as one of pop music’s most acrobatic performers, she trained as a competitive gymnast for eight years, from the ages of 4 to 12.
3. By the time she was 14, she’d already begun writing her songs and had a regular singing gig every Friday night at a club in Philadelphia.
4. She also began heavy experimentation with drugs after dropping out of school, surviving an overdose at just 15. “I was a hard-core partyer from 12 to 15. I was like a candy raver and I was on all the club drugs, selling Ecstasy and crystal meth and Special K,” she told Entertainment Weekly in 2012. Close friend Sekou Harris, who died of a heroin overdose when they were only 14, ultimately inspired the 2006 song “Who Knew.”
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