She’s had a lot to say recently.
A couple of weeks ago, Chrissie Hynde, 63, most famous for being the lead singer of the Pretenders, made some fairly disturbing comments to the Sunday Times about being responsible for her own rape when she was 21 years old.
“If I’m walking around in my underwear and I’m drunk? Who else’s fault can it be?” was one of the fairly inflammatory things she said at the time.
Now she’s attacking contemporary pop stars for their hyper-sexualised images, branding them “sex workers” during an interview on BBC Women’s Hour yesterday.
“I don’t think sexual assault is a gender issue as such, I think it’s very much… it’s all around us now. It’s provoked by this pornography culture, it’s provoked by pop stars who call themselves feminists.
“Maybe they’re feminists on behalf of prostitutes — but they are not feminists on behalf of music, if they are selling their music by bumping and grinding and wearing their underwear in videos,” Hynde said.
“That’s a kind of feminism but, you know, you’re a sex worker, is what you are.”
Contemporary pop stars aren’t taking control of their own bodies in the name of feminism, she suggested, but rather reducing themselves to sexual objects for the male gaze.
“I would say those women are responsible for a great deal of damage,” she said.
The remarks she’s been making recently mostly pertain to stories she’s related in her memoir Reckless, published in Australia at the beginning of the month.