Perry's Parents Ashamed of Hit Single "I Kissed a Girl"
According to PopEater, Katy Perry's parents were not fond of her hit song, "I Kissed a Girl."
Perry's parents, long time evangelists, have condemned the song and blame the "big city lights of Los Angeles" for corrupting their daughter and taking her far from her gospel roots.
In an interview by the Daily Record, Perry's mother Mary Hudson says, "I hate the song. It clearly promotes homosexuality and its message is shameful and disgusting. Katy knows how I feel. We are a very outspoken family."
According to Hudson, it was a "total shock" when she heard her daughter's song. She said, "When it comes on the radio I bow my head and pray."
Katy Perry began her musical career in 2001 as a Christian pop singer under her former name, Katy Hudson. Her mother believes she began to transform when she traveled from Santa Barbara to Los Angeles to meet with a producer.
Hudson was worried about her daughter becoming involved with illegal substances and narcotics, however; Perry told her mother not to worry, "I'm not going to turn into Amy Winehouse."
Both Perry's mother and father are pastors and disagree with what she is doing. According to her parents, Perry "knows we disagree strongly with what she is doing and the message she is promoting regarding homosexuality which the Bible clearly states is a sin."
