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Pink’s special achievements were reaching Number two on the billboards and selling ten million copies all around the world. She has received A Grammy for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance. “Stupid Girls” hit Number One on the billboards and the song was about Paris Hilton and Brittney Spears. At 16, Pink gets her first record deal. Antonio "L.A." Reid (right) of LaFace Records, signs her as part of Choice, a female R& B/pop trio. Two years later, without much success in the studio, Choice disbands and Reid encourages Pink to go solo. It is around this time that she dyes her hair sometimes-green pink Hair and chooses the name to match. Pop Debut With her first solo album, Can't Take Me Home, 20-year old Pink sells 3 million records, largely on the strength of three Top Ten singles, "There U Go," "Most Girls" and "You Make Me Sick." Her R&B sound is largely manufactured, and she knows it. "There was no blood, sweat or tears on my first album – and no emotional exchange between me and the musicians," she tells London's Daily Mail in 2006. "R& B is a conveyor belt." Into Her Own Striving for a more representational sound, Pink brings in producer Linda Perry for her sophomore album,Missundaztood. Fueled by "Get the Party Started" and "Don't Let Me Get Me," the album sells 10 million copies worldwide and establishes Pink as a pop-rock staple. "Missundaztood gave me a sense of freedom and purpose," she tells Billboard. "It allowed me to exorcise a lot of my demons. The world has become my therapist. And it helped me to feel better about being an outcast, knowing that there are so many other people that share my pain." A Stumble of Sorts Pink captures her second Grammy with the lead single "Trouble" from her third album, Try This. The album, harder-edged than Missundaztood, fails to scale the charts, and fans find it lacking. Sales reach only 700,000 in the U.S.
Broken Hearted