News | Entertainment
6 Aug 2025 8:31
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > Entertainment

    Keri Hilson was "depressed" at the height of her fame

    The 42-year-old singer burst onto the music scene in the late 2000s with hits like 'Knock You Down', but her second album 'No Boys Allowed' in 2010 turned out to be her last record for 15 years as she tried to deal with the "beast" of being well-known


    She told People: "I didn't even know [it would be my last for so long].

    "I was also depressed at the new height of my career with the success of 'Pretty Girl Rock.' I was just not okay. I was not well, I needed a break. I hadn't taken a break since I was 14 years old in my first girl group. When we disbanded, I went headfirst into songwriting at 17, got my first big check by 18. I joined another group and was also writing while in college. So I never had a break from 14 to, say, mid-20s.

    "It was already a decade of just pure dedication, and I needed a break. Fame was a beast for me, and I fell into a really dark place. I needed to step away for a moment. I thought it'd be just a one-year moment, not a 14-year moment, but it turns out it was necessary. I really can't regret it. I, as a human, needed that time."

    The 'Turn My Swag On' hitmaker - who has just released her new album 'We Need To Talk' - found "new rock bottoms" in her time away from the spotlight, and actually considered quitting her career altogether before deciding to embrace her struggles to produce her latest record.

    She said: "I found new rock bottoms throughout the process. I hit many rock bottoms, honestly, of many different kinds.

    " I just wasn't sure of it anymore. The industry was changing. I love making the art, I love doing music, I love making music, I love performing music - but I didn't love everything that came with it.

    "I didn't love the heavy criticism. It's just not like the old industry now, and that, to me, felt like a threat. It felt like you have to be so careful and so cautious in how you speak, what you say, where you go, what you do, how you're perceived, things you say or [post online]. It felt like I was playing a game of, 'How many ways can I be misunderstood?'

    "You're crucified for making an honest mistake, and that just became a lot to bear. You have to let rock bottom occur to rebuild. So that's what I did."

    © 2025 Bang Showbiz, NZCity

     Other Entertainment News
     06 Aug: Lindsay Lohan thinks Dubai is the perfect place to raise her son
     06 Aug: Melanie Blatt struggles to remember the lyrics to her own songs
     06 Aug: Yungblud is set to open his own store in London
     06 Aug: Mel B has married Rory McPhee for the second time
     06 Aug: Oasis feel "shocked and saddened" after a fan died at their concert on Saturday (02.08.25)
     05 Aug: Jurnee Smollett wants her son to follow his own passions in life
     05 Aug: Tinie Tempah thinks the music industry has become "way more of a competitive space" in recent years
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    Former All Blacks and Crusaders winger George Bridge has penned a two-year deal with Super Rugby team the Western Force More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Dairy prices have risen 0.7 percent at the latest Global Dairy Trade auction overnight More...



     Today's News

    Cricket:
    The Black Caps could be poised to hand out two debuts to fast bowlers in the second and final test against Zimbabwe 8:27

    National:
    The hubris arc: how visionary politicians turn into authoritarians 8:27

    Entertainment:
    Lindsay Lohan thinks Dubai is the perfect place to raise her son 8:24

    Politics:
    Sudan’s rebel force has declared a parallel government: what this means for the war 8:17

    National:
    After years of backsliding, the ADF is growing again. What’s behind the recruitment uptick? 8:07

    Rugby League:
    Auckland will host two league test double-headers this year in the only Kiwis and Kiwi Ferns matches on home soil in 2026 7:57

    International:
    More than 240 Imran Khan supporters arrested at protests calling for his release from jail in Pakistan 7:57

    Auckland:
    A woman in her 80s has died, after being struck by a bus in Auckland on Monday morning 7:57

    Entertainment:
    Melanie Blatt struggles to remember the lyrics to her own songs 7:54

    Law and Order:
    Coroner Katharine Greig has released details of a murder-suicide involving a reclusive mother and son in Christchurch 7:47


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd