Life as a young pop star looked glamorous from the outside, but Jessica Simpson says the reality was far more complicated.
During a recent concert appearance, the singer reflected on the expectations placed on her as a teenager entering the music industry.
Decades later, she is opening up about the pressure to fit a specific image, the self-doubt that followed, and how she eventually found her own voice.
While performing in Pennsylvania, Jessica Simpson shared memories from the beginning of her music career and the expectations she faced after signing with Columbia Records.
The singer explained that record executives saw her as the next big pop star and expected her to follow a path already established by two of the biggest names in music.
“When I first started singing, I was, to everyone at the record label, supposed to be this pop star. There was Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera… and I had to follow in their footsteps,” Simpson told the audience per Us Weekly.
What began as excitement about a recording contract soon came with demands that had little to do with her voice.
“I really thought I was signed just because of my voice, then it was like, ‘OK, you need to lose 15 lbs,’” she recalled.
Simpson was only 17 years old at the time and said she weighed 115 pounds when she received that instruction.
The Pressure To Become Someone Else

Looking back, Jessica Simpson described how the expectations continued to grow as her career developed.
“The second record, I [was told I] needed to have a six-pack, which was definitely not going to happen. I’m just not built that way, you know?” she said.
The constant pressure to meet an image created by others left a lasting impact on her confidence.
“There were just all these things that I had to be to be ‘Jessica Simpson,’ or the version of ‘Jessica Simpson’ they believed I should be to be successful. I always felt like a failure, like, I was never good enough.”
Her comments offered a glimpse into the challenges many young artists faced during the height of the late-1990s and early-2000s pop boom, when appearance often became just as important as talent.
For Simpson, those years were marked by a struggle to balance her own identity with the version of herself others wanted to sell.
Jessica Simpson Reflects On Competing With Pop Giants

The singer has spoken about these challenges before. In a March 2025 interview with Rolling Stone, she revisited the difficult reality of trying to break through while Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera dominated the charts.
“I was never gonna win because I had someone like Britney [Spears] and Christina [Aguilera] ahead of me, who were selling so many more records,” she admitted.
Simpson also revealed that many aspects of the traditional pop-star image never felt natural to her.
She confessed, “I didn’t want to dance, I didn’t want to wear a head mic.”
Despite her reservations, she felt obligated to meet the expectations of the people backing her career.
“But I agreed to do it, because I worked for Sony, and I didn’t want to let them down, and I felt like I was constantly letting people down. Even myself probably, because I wasn’t singing words I wrote.”
Those feelings eventually pushed her toward creating music that reflected her own experiences rather than trying to fit into an existing formula.
Finding Success On Her Own Terms

A major turning point came when Jessica Simpson began taking greater control of her music.
Instead of chasing trends or attempting to mirror other performers, she focused on material that felt more personal. That shift helped lead to one of the biggest moments of her recording career.
Her 2004 hit “With You” became her first chart-topping single and remains one of the songs most closely associated with her career.
The success reinforced something Simpson had been searching for since her teenage years: proof that she could succeed while staying true to herself.
Today, she continues to perform and release music while embracing a more authentic approach to her artistry.
Jessica Simpson Embraces A New Chapter

The singer also used her recent concert to celebrate where she is now in life.
She shared, “It feels good to be back on stage in my 40s. I missed all of my 30s, so this really to me, feels like I’m me again. I feel like walking on stage is almost more comfortable than my living room at home, and it’s such a beautiful feeling.”
Her latest music has been shaped by major personal changes, including her split from former NFL player Eric Johnson.
The pair share three children: Maxwell, Birdie, and Ace. Simpson announced their separation in January 2025 after months of speculation.
At the time, she said, “Eric and I have been living separately, navigating a painful situation in our marriage.”
Before confirming the breakup, she had already hinted at a new phase in her life through social media posts promoting fresh music.
She said at the time, “Interviews in my Nashville music room where I unearthed my singular magic.”
She later added, “This comeback is personal. It’s an apology to myself for putting up with everything I did not deserve.”
For Simpson, the journey from insecure teenager to confident performer has not been easy. But years after being told who she should be, she appears more comfortable than ever embracing exactly who she is.
