Advertisement

Amber Rose Reveals She Once Tried to Sell Crack — But Says She Was 'Too Pretty' to Be a Drug Dealer

Amber Rose Reveals She Once Tried to Sell Crack — But Says She Was 'Too Pretty' to Be a Drug Dealer

Amber Rose is opening up about her past.

The actress — who has previously spoken out about working as a stripper — revealed that she once tried selling crack to make ends meet for her family, but was stopped before she could get involved in the drug scene.

“I usually don’t tell people this but I tried selling crack in my neighborhood,” Rose, 35, admitted to Van Lathan on his The Red Pill podcast.

“They said I was gonna get robbed, I was a girl and I was too pretty, and it wasn’t going to happen,” she added of why she didn’t end up being a drug dealer.

Amber Rose
Amber Rose

But Rose says she did not stay away from the drug business entirely, instead, she made money by weighing and bagging the drugs to make a cut of the dealers’ profits. Her decision to dabble in the drug scene for money was primarily due to the fact that she was “the queen of the house” and needed to do what “I had to do to feed my family.”

But Rose explained that it took her awhile to publicly address her drug experiences because of the double standards in society pertaining to men and the pass they get for doing similar controversial activities in order to survive.

“When it comes to me, do I have to give you this story to understand? It’s been nine years since I been famous, I never told that to nobody,” she said of her past. “It was a hard time in the beginning, and I became a stripper very young. I made that decision, nobody in my family put that on me.”

“I don’t really think people understand how ‘hood I grew up… the s— that I had to overcome, and even overcome after I became famous,” she added. “My life has never been easy… [But] it did push me to that limit to go fend for my family.”

Amber Rose
Amber Rose

RELATED: Amber Rose Wears ‘Intergalactic Space Slut’ Cone-Bra Corset to the 2018 MTV VMAs

Now that Rose has established herself as a successful model and actress, she has used her platform — and past — for good.

Three years ago, she founded the Amber Rose Slut Walk. Rose and hundreds of supporters gathered in L.A. for her rally — its mantra is “strippers have feelings, too” — as a reminder to the world, as one sign put it, that “My Clothes Are Not My Consent.” It has since become an annual event.

The idea behind the walk is to convey the message that double standards and blaming victims of sexual assault and rape perpetuates a culture of sexual violence.

RELATED VIDEO: Lady in Lilac! Amber Rose Debuts Purple Hair – See Her New Look

Participants dress “how they want” as a way to show awareness that people should not be judged for their outfits — something Rose has been especially supportive of, both vocally and on Instagram.

“Regardless of how you dress, that doesn’t make you a slut, it doesn’t make you a whore,” Rose previously told PEOPLE. “Those are all just derogatory labels they men and women use against other women to put us down for being confident in our sexuality without even knowing our past sexual history.”