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CariDee English
CariDee English
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CariDee English (born September 23, 1984[2][3]) is an American fashion model and TV personality who won Cycle 7 of America's Next Top Model in December 2006. Her prize was a $100,000 contract with CoverGirl Cosmetics, a modeling contract with Elite Models, and a six-page fashion editorial and cover for Seventeen magazine. She is the second ANTM winner from North Dakota, the first being Nicole Linkletter of Cycle 5.[4] English was also the host of Oxygen's biggest-premiering show to date, Pretty Wicked.

Key Information

Early life

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English was born in Fargo, North Dakota, to Pam Flesness and Tony English.

Before modeling

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Before appearing on America's Next Top Model, English worked as a photographer, and also was an actor in the sketch comedy group known as The 4th Option, which performed weekly in the old East Gate Lounge in Moorhead, Minnesota. On December 13, 2004, she sang with the Willy Waldman Project. She was a listed model with the Academie Agencie in Fargo, North Dakota, in 2001. She entered the Millie Lewis Actors Models and Talent Competition in 2002 and was placed with Mega Models in Miami, Florida, for the summer of 2003.

Winning America's Next Top Model

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English photographed in Laurel Canyon, Los Angeles in 2019.

English was the eleventh finalist selected (just before Amanda Babin and Monique Calhoun filled the final two places) for the seventh cycle of America's Next Top Model. From the start, she was noted for her similarity to Rebecca Romijn and Karolína Kurková, and in the early stages of the cycle her personality was considered fun and outgoing. Throughout the competition, English was selected to participate in challenge prizes won by Eugena Washington (alongside Jaeda Young), A.J. Stewart (alongside Megg Morales), Michelle Babin (alongside Melrose Bickerstaff and Amanda Babin) and Melrose Bickerstaff. She also had close friendships with Megan Morris and Anchal Joseph.

English received five consecutive Covergirl of the week awards, three first call-outs for her outstanding performances in photoshoots and won the acting challenge. As the acting challenge winner, English had an opportunity to guest-star in an episode of the CW series One Tree Hill (which aired immediately following Top Model at the time), appearing in multiple scenes. In the same episode, English was criticized for not being able to deliver a commercial properly, even thought it was in Spanish, however due to showing more potential, she survived her first-ever bottom two appearance over Jaeda Young who was eliminated in her fourth bottom two appearance.

Later, in Episode eleven, English was criticized for making an impulsive, crude joke to fashion photographer and ANTM judge Nigel Barker during the bullfighting photo shoot in Barcelona, asking him "Did you just remove that (referring to a large stick Barker was holding) from your ass from the last panel?" which Melrose Bickerstaff could not believe English said. English stated that Barker "actually joked back", and was never really mad, yet during panel she apologized to Barker and received the third call-out that week placing both the twins in the bottom two where Michelle Babin was eliminated. The next week, English was placed in the bottom two again for her doubtful strength to work in tough circumstances (i.e. photoshoot in cold water). Once more, she survived her second bottom two appearance over the remaining twin, Amanda, who was eliminated in her second consecutive bottom two appearance.[5]

English was shown speaking to her boyfriend on the phone in one episode, and then passionately kissing one of the male models the girls worked with in the next, when the girls were overseas in Barcelona. When interviewed about it, English said that up to that point, she and her boyfriend were seeing other people, and that they had since gotten back together.

As the competition progressed, the judges began to express concern that, due to her behavior, English might be too unpredictable to be awarded the Top Model prize. Ultimately though, she was crowned the winner over runner-up Melrose Bickerstaff. The judges said they felt she had the much sought-after "X-Factor"—an intangible quality that made her a standout.

In early 2008, English was voted as one of the most memorable contestants on Top Model by AOL Entertainment Canada, which said she was the first contestant everybody knew would win from the first episode.[6]

Other modeling

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She appeared on the weekly "My Life as a CoverGirl" segments on The CW. In 2007 she was featured in an ad for CoverGirl Eyewear alongside cycle 6 winner Danielle Evans.[7] She returned to ANTM for the finale of the eighth cycle to give advice to the final three contestants and to open the finale's runway show.

English was featured on the front page of Seventeen, Social Life, Healthy Living, Psoriasis Advance, and Cover magazines with Top Model alumnae Naima Mora and Danielle Evans. She has modeled for Wedding Style,[7] JCPenney Bisou Bisou,[8] Stephenson Denim,[7] Johnny P. Shoes,[7] American Salon,[9] Matrix Professional Colors in Cosmopolitan[9] and the "Heart On My Sleeves" clothing campaign by Aubrey O'Day of Danity Kane[10] and Christian Siriano Fall 09.[11] She was in the Winter 2007 issue of Knit.1 Magazine,[9] the February 2007 issue of Seventeen,[12][13] the March 2007 issue of In Touch,[13] the Spring 2007 issue of Social Life,[13] the April 2007 issue of Cover,[13] on the cover of "Inked Magazine" for Fall 2007,[9] Loops&Pluto,[14] Short Hair Magazine[15] the cover of Runway Magazine, ads for Melissa Latkins t-shirts, Tasola Beauty & Beyond, and has been featured on ivillage.com.[16] She also shot a cover of Allure.[citation needed]

Her runway credits include JCPenney, Carlos Campos,[17] Renee Larc, Jordi Scott,[18][19] Snoopy in Fashion,[20] GM Style Auto Show,[21] Honduras Fashion Week,[22] L'Oréal Fashion Week in Toronto,[23] In Style's 2009's New Year's Eve lingerie show at the Estate, where she was the guest of honor[24] New York Fashion Week, Richie Rich F/W 09 "Blondes have more fun" Show in Mercedes Benz Fall Fashions 09.[25] She also opened Los Angeles Fashion Week wearing Yotam Soloman, walked in A*Muse Fall/Winter 2010, and Christian Siriano 2010 line in Mercedes Benz Fashion Week 10.[26][27]

She has also been featured on Mystyle.com[28] and Blastmagazine.com.[29]

Television work

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English had a cameo appearance on One Tree Hill as a prize for winning the acting challenge on ANTM. She also appeared in a small role on Gossip Girl.

She co-hosted MTV's Scarred[30] and the Pretty Wicked reality show on Oxygen.[31]

She has appeared several times on the Tyra Banks Show and has been featured in the advertising campaign for ANTM on Oxygen.[32]

She appears in the 2012 commercial for Stelara (Ustekinumab), a plaque psoriasis treatment.[33][34][35]

Social

[edit]

English has taken part in the Seventh Annual World Poker Invitational at the Commerce Casino in 2009.[36] She has also hosted several parties [37][38] and hosted the Capital Fashion Awards in Sacramento together with Jonathan Waud, Naima Mora and Merlin Castell.[39]

Music

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English is featured on Brad Walsh's album "Human Nature" in the song called Boy/Girl[40] and is working on music with Better than Ezra.[41] English is a drummer, and performs with Celebrity DJ Lindsay Luv. Performing a powerful girl drum and DJ duo they call LUVnENGLISH. English also drums with the New York-based DJ Zeke Thomas. They even made a short video of them working together. English sings, plays guitar, drums and said "I would have been a rockstar first but being a model paid the bills faster."[citation needed]

Philanthropy and animal rights

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She is a former spokesperson for the National Psoriasis Foundation.[42][43] In 2007, she was spreading awareness about psoriasis and encouraging others to seek treatment. English says she felt "cursed" with psoriasis when she was young because of the taunts of classmates. Today, her "curse" is her cause. "Psoriasis awareness is very important to me. I want others with the disease to know they are not alone. I want to inspire them to live their dreams," she said.[citation needed] As such she opened the walk for Awareness on January 13, 2008, in San Diego and was featured on the cover for Allure.[42] She has also held a congressional briefing on Psoriasis on June 11, 2007.[44] She has taken part in the walk for awareness multiple times since.[45] She was also featured in the Canadian Psoriasis Education website.[46] The National Psoriasis Foundation has removed English from her spokesperson position.[43]

English has also taken part in a video against seal hunting.[47] She also attended the Power of Paws opening, an association which promotes animals as part of health programs[48] and promoted Project Cuddle.[49]

She has also taken part in the NOH8 Campaign.[50]

Television

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
2006 America's Next Top Model Herself Winner
One Tree Hill Tia (Brooke's Model in Red dress) Season 4 Episode 7 "All These Things That I've Done"
2007 The Tyra Banks Show Herself Guest
Gossip Girl Bart's date / Carissa 1 episode
Scarred Herself Co-host
2009 Pretty Wicked Herself Host
2019 Betrayed Priscilla Strole

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
CariDee English (born September 23, 1984) is an American fashion model and television personality recognized for winning the seventh cycle of the reality competition series America's Next Top Model in December 2006. Raised in Fargo, North Dakota, English entered the modeling industry prior to her reality television appearance, having worked as a photographer and performer in a sketch comedy group. Her victory on America's Next Top Model provided a $100,000 contract with CoverGirl cosmetics, a modeling contract with Elite Model Management, and a feature in Seventeen magazine, launching her professional modeling career. English has modeled for various brands and appeared in television series including Gossip Girl and One Tree Hill, while also serving as a spokesperson for the National Psoriasis Foundation due to her lifelong experience with the autoimmune skin condition, which she has publicly addressed to raise awareness.

Early life

Childhood and family background

CariDee English was born on September 23, 1984, in Fargo, North Dakota. She was raised in Fargo by her parents, Pam Flesness and Tony English. English has at least one older brother, who at age four invented her name by merging "Cari" from the Little House on the Prairie character Carrie Ingalls with "Dee" from their grandmother. The family maintained Midwestern roots in Fargo, an industrial and agricultural hub in the northern Great Plains region, though specific parental occupations are not publicly detailed in verified accounts.

Initial health challenges

English first noticed symptoms of psoriasis at age five, observing spots on her leg while riding in the back seat of her family's car during a drive. Diagnosed shortly thereafter with plaque psoriasis, an autoimmune condition causing inflamed, scaly red patches on the skin, she experienced initial mild manifestations that did not immediately disrupt her daily life. By her early teens, around age 12 during middle school, the condition flared severely for the first time, leading to widespread lesions that prompted her to recognize its chronic nature and attempt concealment through clothing and avoidance of exposure. Initial management focused on topical treatments and hiding the visible signs, as her mother had identified the rash early but limited options existed for comprehensive control at the time. Raised in Fargo, North Dakota—a small city with a population under 100,000 at the time—English encountered pronounced social repercussions from her psoriasis in a tight-knit community where visible differences drew scrutiny. Classmates' taunts exacerbated her self-perception, fostering feelings of being "cursed" and prompting isolation to evade judgment during pre-teen and adolescent years. These interactions, rooted in limited local awareness of the condition, heightened emotional strain but also cultivated adaptive strategies, such as channeling energy into creative outlets like drawing, which helped mitigate the psychological burden of peer rejection. The small-town environment, with its emphasis on conformity, intensified the causal link between visible symptoms and social exclusion, yet English later described how enduring such challenges honed her determination to pursue ambitions despite physical setbacks.

Pre-modeling career

Early jobs and interests

Prior to her modeling pursuits, English worked as a photographer, a role she held before transitioning to in front of the camera. She also performed as an actor with the sketch comedy group The 4th Option, based in Moorhead, Minnesota, engaging in local improv and performance arts. English's pre-modeling interests centered on music, where she identified as a struggling musician in a band while living in Cleveland, Ohio. In this group, she served as the drummer and vocalist, though she later described the band as ineffective. These activities reflected her creative inclinations toward performance and instrumentation, predating her fame and involving relocation to urban centers for band opportunities amid financial challenges.

Entry into the modeling world

English signed with the local Academie Agencie in Fargo, North Dakota, in 2001, initiating her early efforts in professional modeling within the Midwest market. This affiliation provided limited local exposure but underscored the challenges of breaking into a field dominated by major urban centers, where regional agencies often yielded few bookings. In 2002, she entered the Millie Lewis Actors Models and Talent Competition, a regional event blending modeling, acting, and talent scouting, which represented one of her initial competitive attempts but did not lead to significant breakthroughs. Subsequent submissions to agencies resulted in numerous rejections, reflecting the industry's rigorous standards for appearance, including clear skin, which her psoriasis complicated despite treatments. These setbacks highlighted the high barriers for entrants from non-traditional modeling hubs, where physical imperfections like visible skin conditions often disqualified candidates outright. By 2006, after stabilizing her psoriasis through dermatological intervention to align with modeling's aesthetic demands, English pursued the America's Next Top Model audition for Cycle 7, drawn by the $100,000 prize and contract potential amid financial practicality. She competed against roughly 6,000 applicants, a process that tested resilience against mass elimination and subjective evaluations. This step marked her shift from sporadic local pursuits to national competition, prioritizing viable economic incentives over gradual agency climbs.

America's Next Top Model

Cycle 7 participation

CariDee English advanced to the finals of America's Next Top Model Cycle 7 after competing in the open casting call held in Los Angeles in summer 2006, where producers narrowed thousands of applicants to 33 semi-finalists through initial evaluations by host Tyra Banks, creative director Jay Manuel, and runway coach J. Alexander. The process continued with the top 21 semi-finalists participating in a nude photo shoot challenge, after which 13 contestants, including English from Fargo, North Dakota, were selected as finalists to relocate to a shared house for the main competition. Filming occurred prior to the cycle's premiere on September 20, 2006, on The CW network, spanning 12 episodes until the December 6, 2006, finale. English's performances featured in key photo shoots, such as the CoverGirl Outlast Double Lip Shine ads near the finale, where she competed to deliver commercial appeal under photographer direction. In runway challenges, she faced difficulties maintaining poise, particularly on the "wobbly runway," which required walking in four-inch heels across an unstable surface resembling a balance beam—a task she later identified as the season's most demanding due to the physical strain and risk of falls. Judges, including Nigel Barker and Twiggy, provided feedback highlighting her edgy intensity as a strength for high-fashion shots but noted inconsistencies in composure during walks and group dynamics. Tensions emerged in house interactions, notably with contestant Melrose Bickerstaff, as English expressed frustration over perceived attitudes, stating in filmed discussions, "I don't respect Melrose" and that she would "puke" if Bickerstaff won. These exchanges, captured in episodes, underscored competitive rivalries without direct impact on judging panels, which focused on empirical metrics like photo quality and challenge execution. English progressed to the finale through consistent advancement in call-outs, demonstrating resilience amid critiques of her unpolished demeanor.

Key challenges and performances

CariDee faced notable health-related hurdles during Cycle 7 photo shoots and challenges, including managing visible psoriasis flare-ups that risked undermining her professional viability under scrutiny. She concealed the condition for the first four weeks, relying on makeup and wardrobe choices to mask plaques, before revealing it to host Tyra Banks, who responded with acceptance rather than dismissal, allowing her to proceed without on-show elimination tied to the disclosure. This vulnerability, while not causing immediate flare-ups documented in episodes, amplified stress and required unedited accommodations in lighting and posing, with judges occasionally noting skin texture impacts on final images without overt sanitization of the fallout. Her ADHD contributed to emotional volatility, manifesting in outbursts during high-stakes sessions that judges assessed as double-edged—potential liabilities for instability but assets for raw, intense expressions in emotive concepts. In a cold-water pool photoshoot, CariDee endured prolonged submersion leading to visible shivering and hypothermia-like distress, with Tyra Banks verbally pushing her to channel the discomfort into performance, citing her Fargo origins for resilience; the resulting images captured fierce determination but drew panel critique for compromised poise compared to rivals like Melrose Bickerstaff. Performance-wise, CariDee landed in the bottom two multiple times based on panel deliberations, including instances against Amanda Babin where her edgier looks clashed with commercial polish expectations, and during Barcelona shoots where consistency faltered relative to frontrunners. Standout moments included emotive challenges where her unfiltered energy outshone competitors, such as conveying stress-induced intensity that secured safe calls despite prior threats, though judges grounded decisions in tangible photo quality over narrative sympathy.

Victory and immediate aftermath

On December 6, 2006, during the live finale broadcast of America's Next Top Model Cycle 7, host Tyra Banks announced CariDee English as the winner, selecting her over runner-up Melrose Bickerstaff after their final runway presentations in Bangkok, Thailand. English's victory was highlighted by Banks for her photogenic versatility and personality, marking her as the first winner from North Dakota in the competition's history. The standard prizes for the Cycle 7 winner included a $100,000 modeling contract with CoverGirl Cosmetics, international representation by Elite Model Management, and a six-page editorial feature with a cover appearance in Seventeen magazine. These awards provided immediate professional validation and financial support, with the CoverGirl contract enabling prompt endorsement deals valued at the full $100,000 payout, while Elite's management facilitated early bookings in print and advertising. In the weeks following the finale, English activated her prizes through initial media exposure, including the Seventeen cover shoot and appearances promoting her win on Banks' syndicated talk show, capitalizing on the heightened visibility from the CW broadcast. Industry reception was positive in the short term, with Banks publicly endorsing her as a marketable talent during post-finale discussions, setting the stage for debut commercial work under the new contracts.

Debates over the win

CariDee's selection as winner of America's Next Top Model Cycle 7 on December 6, 2006, sparked immediate and ongoing debates among viewers and analysts, centered on whether her photogenic versatility and on-camera charisma outweighed traditional modeling attributes like height, symmetry, and runway precision exhibited by runner-up Melrose Bowe. Supporters argued that CariDee's portfolio demonstrated superior adaptability across diverse shoots, including strong performances in the romance novel cover and Secret deodorant commercial, where her expressive features and emotional range translated effectively to print. Judges, including Tyra Banks and Nigel Barker, emphasized her "commanding" personality and natural instinct as key differentiators, contrasting it with Melrose's perceived overthinking and perfectionism, which they viewed as limiting her spontaneity despite her technical strengths. Critics contended that the decision favored entertainment value and narrative arcs over core modeling metrics, with CariDee's ADHD disclosure and bold, teasing interactions—such as ribbing Barker during panels—positioning her as a compelling "underdog" story that boosted viewership dynamics. Fan discussions on platforms like Reddit highlighted perceptions of her as "least modelesque" in physique and walk, arguing Melrose's consistent runway wins and edgier high-fashion look better aligned with industry standards like 5'9" minimum height and proportional symmetry, which CariDee approximated but did not exemplify. Retrospective fan rankings and forum polls, such as those on Digital Spy and BigSoccer from 2006 onward, often split evenly, with roughly half favoring Melrose for her work ethic and portfolio consistency in challenges like the water runway. This divide reflects broader causal patterns in ANTM's judging, where production incentives prioritized personality-driven drama and relatability—evident in CariDee's humorous, non-arrogant demeanor—to sustain audience engagement, sometimes at the expense of conventional metrics like biomechanical runway efficiency or facial proportionality favored in elite agencies. While no formal polls quantified exact splits, aggregated online sentiments from 2006–2021 threads indicate persistent contention, with some analyses crediting CariDee's win to her "whole package" of likability amid the cycle's competitive field, though others decry it as symptomatic of the show's bias toward televisual appeal over runway viability. These debates underscore ANTM's format evolution, where empirical modeling data yielded to subjective narrative elements, as corroborated by judge deliberations prioritizing "natural" expressiveness.

Modeling and media career

Post-ANTM modeling achievements

Following her victory in America's Next Top Model Cycle 7 in December 2006, English signed a modeling contract with Elite Model Management, which represented her for subsequent bookings. She fulfilled her prize package by appearing on the cover and in a six-page spread in Seventeen magazine in 2007, alongside executing a $100,000 contract with CoverGirl cosmetics for promotional campaigns. English secured additional magazine covers, including Social Life (April 2007), Healthy Living (September 2007), Cover (March 2007), and Runway (February 2009). Her print work extended to features in Inked, Vogue Knitting (Winter 2007 as Knit.1), and American Salon. In commercial campaigns, English modeled for brands such as JC Penney, Bisou Bisou, Stephenson Denim, Johnny P. Shoes, and Matrix Professional Colors, with the latter advertised in Cosmopolitan. She also served as the face of Ray-Ban sunglasses in 2013. These opportunities primarily involved commercial and editorial print rather than extensive high-fashion runway presentations, consistent with the post-reality competition landscape where initial visibility often shifts toward accessible advertising over couture circuits.

Television and entertainment roles

English appeared in a cameo role on the CW series One Tree Hill in 2007, awarded as a prize for winning the acting challenge during America's Next Top Model Cycle 7. She portrayed Bart Bass's date in the Gossip Girl episode "The Handmaiden's Tale," which aired on October 24, 2007. In hosting capacities, English co-hosted MTV's Scarred, a reality series documenting extreme sports injuries and mishaps. She served as host and executive producer for Oxygen's Pretty Wicked, which premiered in March 2009 and followed ten women undergoing personal transformation challenges to cultivate inner beauty, positioned as a counterpoint to more confrontational reality formats. Additional guest roles included an appearance on General Hospital. English also featured as a principal in the Hulu pilot In the Bag.

Transition to music and songwriting

Following the peak of her modeling career in the late 2000s, CariDee English pivoted toward music, drawing on her prior experience as a drummer and vocalist in a band based in Cleveland, Ohio, where she described the group as struggling and "terrible." This early involvement, paused during her rise in fashion and television, informed her return to performing arts, including drumming collaborations and self-described professional touring as a musician for over 15 years. In 2023, English released her original song "9Lives," promoted via Instagram as an independent track available on iTunes shortly after its October announcement, marking a milestone in her songwriting endeavors. She has shared previews and performances on social media, positioning herself as a multifaceted artist blending drumming, singing, and composition, distinct from the image-driven demands of modeling. To formalize her creative pursuits, English enrolled as an undergraduate student at Berklee College of Music in songwriting, publicly announcing the achievement on October 1, 2024, after what she characterized as a challenging journey back to music education. This step reflects a deliberate shift toward skill-building in an industry emphasizing auditory and performative merit over visual appeal, contrasting the metrics that propelled her modeling success.

Personal health and struggles

ADHD diagnosis and management

English has publicly identified herself as having ADHD, referring to it as one of several ongoing personal challenges in an Instagram post dated June 1, 2025. Specific details regarding the timing or process of her diagnosis remain undisclosed in available public statements. Impulsivity, a core diagnostic criterion for ADHD involving hasty actions without forethought, manifested during her appearance on America's Next Top Model Cycle 7 in 2006; in episode 10, set in Barcelona, she directed a crude remark at judge Nigel Barker during a bullfighting photo shoot, quipping that he should "pull a stick out of where the sun don't shine," which prompted immediate criticism for unprofessionalism from Barker, photo director Jay Manuel, host Tyra Banks, and peers. This incident highlighted challenges in impulse control under pressure, a trait English later reflected on in connection to the episode's notoriety. Public information on her management approaches, such as pharmacological interventions or therapeutic modalities, is limited, with no verified accounts of medication trials, therapy regimens, or sustained focus relapses tied explicitly to ADHD in her career trajectory.

Psoriasis advocacy and experiences

English was diagnosed with plaque psoriasis, a chronic autoimmune skin condition characterized by rapid skin cell growth leading to thick, red, scaly patches, at the age of five. The disease first manifested as spots on her leg while in a car, prompting medical evaluation, and has since involved recurrent flares influenced by genetic factors, as psoriasis often clusters in families. Flares significantly impacted her early modeling career, with visible plaques causing rejections from agencies before her 2006 appearance on America's Next Top Model, where skin visibility during shoots exacerbated challenges. Despite these barriers, reflecting industry preferences for flawless skin, she secured the Cycle 7 win and subsequent bookings, demonstrating professional viability amid uncontrolled symptoms at the time. For management, English began ustekinumab (Stelara), a biologic inhibiting interleukins IL-12 and IL-23 to reduce inflammation, in October 2009, reporting subsequent skin clearance that enabled year-round modeling without major interruptions. She has described pre-treatment flares covering much of her body in plaques, contrasting with post-treatment improvements documented in her personal accounts and promotional materials for the drug. While effective for her moderate-to-severe cases, such therapies carry risks like infections, underscoring psoriasis's lifelong management demands rather than cure.

Addiction relapses and recovery efforts

In early 2022, English suffered a relapse into substance use, resulting in intoxication that led to a serious head injury and subsequent hospitalization. She experienced multiple seizures and mobility impairments during this episode, which she described as a "heartbreaking" consequence of addiction's persistent nature. On June 21, 2024, English was rushed to a hospital after a gas leak at her West Hollywood apartment complex, where she appeared visibly shaken and injured in photographs taken at the scene. In March 2025, she posted images from a hospital bed displaying extensive bruising on her arms, linking the visible injuries to her addiction struggles and expressing personal shame while committing to recovery through "rigorous honesty & relentless bravery." These public disclosures highlighted her efforts to confront relapses head-on, contrasting past glamorous modeling images with current realities of physical toll.

Advocacy and philanthropy

Mental health and psoriasis campaigns


English served as a spokesperson for the National Psoriasis Foundation starting in 2007, using her platform to advocate for greater awareness of the condition through public service announcements and educational videos. In these efforts, she promoted the catchphrase "You have psoriasis. Don't let psoriasis have you" to encourage individuals to manage the disease proactively rather than allowing it to dominate their lives. She appeared in PSAs, such as a 2007 video calling for research funding toward a cure, and a 2008 promotional segment positioning her as the "face" of the foundation's initiatives. Additionally, in 2014, she featured in a television commercial for Stelara, a biologic treatment, highlighting year-round skin clearance amid seasonal challenges.
Her psoriasis advocacy contributed to increased visibility, with post-disclosure outreach from others affected by the condition, fostering community support without achieving measurable policy shifts like expanded research funding. For mental health, English collaborated with Well Being Trust in 2020 on the #work2bewell campaign, producing videos that emphasized humor and positivity as coping strategies. These included a November segment demonstrating laughter's role in mental well-being and an earlier May challenge promoting daily resilience practices, reaching audiences via social media platforms with focuses on practical, individual-level interventions rather than systemic reforms. Her participation aligned with broader efforts to destigmatize mental health discussions, leveraging her personal experiences to promote accessible self-care tools.

Animal rights activities

English participated in a video campaign opposing seal hunting, highlighting concerns over the practice's cruelty to marine mammals. On July 15, 2008, she attended the launch party for Power of Paws in New York City, an initiative focused on integrating animals into health and therapy programs to support human well-being through animal companionship. These activities represent her documented engagements in animal welfare prior to 2020, with no evidence of sustained leadership, founding roles, or broader campaigns such as anti-fur advocacy in the modeling industry or affiliations with major organizations like PETA.

Critiques of her public persona

Some observers have questioned the consistency of English's public recovery narratives, citing multiple relapses that contrast with her advocacy for mental health and sobriety. In February 2022, she was hospitalized after a fall resulting in a serious head injury sustained while intoxicated, which she attributed to her addiction struggles, leading to public discourse on the authenticity of prior sobriety claims. This incident followed earlier periods of professed recovery, prompting skepticism in media coverage about the durability of her personal testimonies. Further scrutiny arose in March 2025 when English posted graphic hospital photos showing bruises and injuries from an addiction-related episode, framing it as a moment of "shame" while emphasizing hope for others; although some outlets praised the transparency, it reignited debates over whether such disclosures serve genuine awareness or risk exploiting vulnerability for attention amid repeated setbacks. English's portrayal during America's Next Top Model Cycle 7 as bubbly yet erratic has also drawn retrospective criticism for appearing contrived or unprofessional, with judges highlighting incidents like an impulsive crude remark to photographer Nigel Barker as evidence of immaturity unfit for high fashion. This persona, amplified by the show's editing, has contributed to broader doubts about the sincerity of reality TV contestants' on-screen vulnerabilities, including English's openness about psoriasis and ADHD, which some view as strategically leveraged for narrative sympathy rather than unfiltered authenticity. Such skepticism aligns with general critiques of the genre, where constructed drama often blurs into post-show advocacy, potentially undermining credibility.

Recent developments (post-2020)

Health incidents and hospitalizations

In February 2022, English was hospitalized following a serious head injury sustained from a fall while intoxicated during an addiction relapse; she reported experiencing multiple seizures for the first time and subsequent mobility issues. On June 17, 2024, English was rushed to a Los Angeles hospital after a gas leak at her home, where she appeared shaken in subsequent social media photos but provided no further details on her condition or treatment. In March 2025, English shared hospital photographs on social media depicting visible bruises and injuries amid ongoing addiction struggles, marking another inpatient stay though specific admission dates and medical diagnoses were not disclosed.

Educational pursuits and current projects

In October 2024, English enrolled as an undergraduate student at Berklee College of Music, pursuing a degree in songwriting. She has described the path to admission as challenging, reflecting her transition into formal music education after years of informal performance experience as a drummer and multi-instrumentalist. Her LinkedIn profile lists her as a current Berklee student alongside her modeling background, emphasizing 15 years of professional touring as a musician. English documents her ongoing music projects on Instagram, where her bio positions her as a "Model x Drums x Songwriter x @berkleecollege student," highlighting compositions and drumming practice integrated with her studies. As of 2025, she maintains a multi-hyphenate career blending modeling and music, with educational pursuits centered on songwriting development rather than commercial releases.

Ongoing career reflections

English has critiqued the fashion industry's treatment of America's Next Top Model winners, observing that the show propels contestants into fame without equipping them for the business realities, leading to limited career longevity as agents and brands struggle to market reality TV alumni beyond initial hype. She noted in 2012 that the industry often dismissed ANTM participants as unserious, placing them at the "bottom rung" despite their titles, with no substantive support from figures like Tyra Banks. This dynamic, she argued, fosters unrealistic expectations, as critics fault winners for not achieving supermodel status while ignoring structural barriers like lack of portfolio depth and guidance. Reflecting on personal impediments, English has identified the psychological toll of abrupt exposure to industry pressures as a catalyst for addiction relapses, describing the mental strain as "horrific" and fame as an amplifier of underlying vulnerabilities that hinder consistent professional output. In a 2023 interview, she extended this to broader self-doubt, equating her ANTM victory to "a bandaid on a bullet wound" for enduring low self-esteem, underscoring how such unaddressed internal factors compound external industry indifference to impede sustained success. Balancing these challenges, English maintains a pragmatic outlook, affirming no regrets over her path and crediting the with diverse pursuits in modeling, , and , even as she highlights —where women's viability wanes faster than men's—as a persistent causal on . She emphasized in recent reflections that true fulfillment lies in experiential growth over mastery, weighing platforms for awareness against personal costs like mental health erosion.

References

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