Although Adele is one of the most prevalent hit makers of the decade, the 27-year-old singer isn't even allowed to run her own personal Twitter account. After being responsible for multiple counts of drunk tweeting, her management team has given the power vocalist restricted access to her page.
The "Someone Like You" singer admitted the Twitter news while recording Adele at the BBC, an upcoming BBC special that was filmed this week in front of a live crowd and set for impending broadcast, NME notes. When the British singer was questioned about being banned from the social media platform, she responded:
"I'm not a drinker any more, but when Twitter first came out I was drunk tweeting and nearly put my foot in it quite a few times. So my management decided that you have to go through two people and then it has to be signed off by someone. But they're all my tweets. No one writes my tweets. They just post them for me. So yeah, that's very, very true," according to Entertainment Weekly.
After taking time of from the music industry and giving birth to her son Angelo, the "Chasing Pavements" singer has made an instant return with her single "Hello," the first song ever to be downloaded one million times in the U.S. over a time span of one week. Her highly anticipated studio album, 25, trails behind the fellow, numerically titled 2008 LP 19 and 2011's 21.
Recently speaking of the late, fellow Brit singer Amy Winehouse, Adele detailed her qualms with fame and fortune. "I'm just frightened of it, you know? Frightened of it destroying me and it ruining me, and some of the people that I love with my whole musical heart. I get frightened. And I get frightened for the people that I love, feeling like they've lost me... It's a bit toxic, fame. I've got enough toxins in the body, I don't need any of that."
Adele At The BBC will air on Nov. 20 in the U.K., the same day her third studio album, 25, hits the public.
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