At 57 years old, Mexican singer Gloria Trevi dares to share in her documentary series ‘La Trevi: sin filtro’ the “feelings of pain and frustration” that continue to generate her having accusations of sexual abuse, a feeling that she celebrates being able to “share and heal” with an audience that is not so “different” from her.
“Here I share how they want to break you, make you tired, because they know that you are going to sleep and rest less, that you are going to be exhausted because you have to work to pay lawyers. It’s very exhausting,” he confesses in an interview with EFE.
Despite still facing several charges in California (United States) for alleged crimes committed in 2022 and other cases in Mexico, the artist says she takes it in a normal way, as one of the “many annoyances” that her fans have, such as “paying the electricity bill”.
“I think many can identify, and still connect with me still,” she defends hopefully more than two decades after being acquitted of her rape, corruption and child abduction charges for which she spent more than four years in prison.
In ‘La Trevi: sin filtro’, the singer not only shows her latest concerts and tours, but also takes the cameras into her vacations, her life and relationship with her children, and even the arguments that arise between her and her husband on a daily basis.

Somehow, the also actress felt she had to let her hair down again and let the public “come into her life as a family”, since after more than 35 years of career her fans are the ones who still encourage the 90’s pop star to shine on stage.
“It’s a lot of work, discipline, love, passion and connection. I don’t really live so much from my past, because I always have my eye on today and the future. I love the avant-garde and making new music,” he expresses about his music.
That desire to reward his fans was what led him to make the biggest tour of his career, ‘My soundtrack’, which began in 2021 and has taken him to various cities in the United States, Mexico, Chile, Peru and Italy.
“I have that hunger to reach countries where they don’t even speak my language and make that connection, because I think the union with music is such an important thing and can do such wonderful things. I don’t really feel like I’m even halfway through my career,” he reveals.
Wanting to continue innovating and making her music is not, however, to everyone’s taste, and although the artist says she is used to the “hate”, she prefers to focus on the positive views and comments about her work.
“Many times the ‘hate’ speaks from ignorance. So, I stay or I like to answer people who speak nicely. I either ignore the ‘hate’ or it stabs me in the heart, but I don’t let them know,” jokes the author of songs like ‘Todos me miran’.
La Trevi: sin filtro’ premieres this weekend on the streaming platform ViX and will feature ten episodes in which the most intimate moments of the life of the singer, who continues to dazzle more than 8.3 million monthly listeners on Spotify, reported Agencia EFE.
Find out more at ‘QueOnnda.com’.


