Katy Perry annoyed by long drive to visit boyfriend Orlando Bloom
Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom's romance could be in the fast lane to trouble because the singer hates the long drive to visit her boyfriend.
The California Gurls star, who has been dating the British actor since February (16), has one major gripe about the relationship - the time it takes her to get to his beachside home in Malibu.
Katy, who lives nearly an hour away in the Hollywood Hills, tells
Women's Wear Daily it took her a while to handle the traffic chaos
en route to her man, saying, "My boyfriend lives in Malibu and
getting used to that drive was like, 'Are you kidding me? What kind
of life is this?'"
She continues, "There's no pop-over and I never really got used to
Malibu because it's halfway to (her hometown) Santa Barbara, so I’m
always just going to Santa Barbara. I get the whole coming to L.A.
and living by the beach thing... but it’s so far, nobody who lives
in town is going to come see you."
The mention of the oceanside city where she grew up took Katy back
to her childhood, and she reveals she didn't get to enjoy the best
parts of Santa Barbara as a kid because her family was so poor -
and she lived in an area no tourist would want to visit.
"I grew up in the poorest part of Santa Barbara," Katy says.
"People associate it (Santa Barbara) with the French Riviera,
almost Monte Carlo, like beautiful American rich people, and we
were like super-poor. Actually my boyfriend didn't even believe me
and I was like, 'I'm going to drive you by my house'."
Katy, whose parents are pastors, continues, "I basically had a
crazy church-filled, God squad upbringing. I lived on food stamps
and a food bank in Santa Barbara, which is like a crazy
juxtaposition to live in beauty and still have a bit of a struggle,
but that’s just because of the nature of the church."
But she insists she still has love for her hometown, adding, "I
make a lot of music there because it’s only an hour and 15 minutes
away from L.A. at the right times and the energy level is so
dramatically different - people, priorities, community, connection.
I also have a local thing where they’re, like, 'Oh, you’re one of
us. You just went out and hustled, but you’re still one of
us'."