LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Aerosmith rocker Steven Tyler has been to rehab incalculable number of times, but don't expect him to appear on "Celebrity Rehab," reality TV show on the battles of addiction of vaguely rich and famous.
In his new book, "is the noise in My Head Bother you?, Tyler rips the VH1 show and its host, a specialist addiction-Medicine Dr. Drew Pinsky, who worked previously in one of the hospitals where he sought treatment."
Tyler told that he was at the hospital in the region of Los Angeles, Las Encinas in 2008, along with Steven Adler, the former drummer for Guns ' n Roses. Adler, who was expelled from the band in 1990 because his antics were too wild even by the standards of his hedonic colleagues, said alleged fake its stupor of drugs for "celebrity rehab", Tyler cameras.
"They wanted him to act on its own State up stole when he entered rehab." He was macabre and unreal. They gave him 30 grand for the episode, it's all, reniflée crashed his car, and he finished in detoxification in prison, "Tyler wrote."
"He did not seem ethical everything that use actual f - ed - up people like Steven Adler in a reality show, but who am I to say?". "Not to mention getting trashed celebrities to mimic their own nosedives self-destructive which they sensational then on an of melo-f ing-drama reality show, which therefore traumatizes them they end by worse than ever - the drug, they bought with the money of the show".
A spokesman for Pinsky declined comment, suggesting that motions aim at Tyler himself. Spokesperson for VH1 and Adler emails were not immediately answered.
Tyler went on to describe the theories of the dependence of Pinsky, a certified doctor as "dogma of the psychopharmalogical".
"It is interesting that Dr. Pinsky never came for me, never advances," writes Tyler. "It certainly not asking me to be on his (sic) celebrity rehab" because - at best - I would have had, Are you f - ing kidding me? "".
Pinsky, a best-selling author who rose to fame as co-host of the appeal of syndication radio show "loveline," is more associated with Las Encinas, the subject of a series of complaints about care at the facility.
Pinsky comes relatively lightly compared to others in the book of Tyler, particularly his own group. Tyler described as "pricks" - hypocrites, henpecked husbands, some of them have persistent drug problems.
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