Ever since her mainstream debut in the early 2000s, the singer has been known as an outspoken figure and a feminist icon, often standing up for her beliefs and basically doing what she feels is right in her life without apologizing to anyone - and that includes Pink's body critics.
In the past few months, other female singers and actresses have spoken about body images in show businesses, including "Murphy Brown" star Candice Bergen, who recently wrote a memoir stating she didn't care to have gained weight, while Amanda Seyfried said she didn't get cast at the beginning of her career because directors thought she was fat - and now it's the turn for Pink's body critics.
According to The Independent, the issue surrounding Pink's body critics began last weekend, when the rebellious "So What" singer appeared last weekend at the John Wayne 30th Annual Odyssey Ball in Beverly Hills, supporting her friend Dr. Maggie DiNome, who was given the Duke Award at the ceremony.
However, it wasn't the singer's support for cancer eradication that made headlines, but rather Pink's body critics slammed the famously fit singer for having apparently gained weight after, as Metro reports, the 35 year-old singer's figure attracted a wave of negative tweets around the world with people calling her fat.
Of course, the singer's response to Pink's body critics was to be expected, and she posted a long message on her Twitter account where she very gracefully shunned critics, wasting no time on haters.
While the singer admitted the dress - a black and very revealing gown - didn't look as well on the red carpet as it did at her home, but she said it was a problem of photographing, and that ultimately she didn't care.
"Unfortunately, my weight seems much more important to some of you ... I feel very pretty. In fact, I feel beautiful ... Thanks for your concern. Love, cheesecake," the singer wrote on her Twitter account, according to Pop Sugar.
That should show Pink's body critics!