There's one career move that still haunts Katie Price.
The 46-year-old propelled to fame in the late 90s for her glamour modelling, most famously appearing in the Sun's controversial Page 3 under the moniker Jordan. Since then, the star has lapped up a slew of TV appearances and side hustles - including becoming a content creator on Only Fans.
Discussion around Katie's changing appearance has often dominated headlines, with many interviewers asking whether her multiple surgeries have become a regret. It is reported that Katie has had a staggering 17 breast augmentations, a nose job, eye lifts, and other procedures - and recently admitted that there is something 'deep down' causing the desire to have work done.
"Even before I was a model, I always wanted my boobs done, always," she said in an interview with Louis Theroux. "And then when I was 18, I had them done so I've always liked that look but I've never looked in the mirror and thought: 'Oh, I'm pretty'."
But, in an interview with the Metro back in 2012, Katie was asked what the biggest regrets in her career - and plastic surgery wasn't even mentioned. "Eurovision," she replied. "I sounded awful on the night. I know I’d have qualified if it hadn't come out that I was pregnant. I don't watch it any more. It's all a big con. We'll never win it again, will we?"
Katie participated in the live TV show Eurovision: Making Your Mind Up, where the British public voted for which performer they wanted to represent the UK for the 2005 contest in Kyiv, Ukraine. Donned in a hot-pink rubber catsuit while heavily pregnant, Katie sang Not Just Anybody, written by professionals behind hits including Darius's Colourblind.
She came second in the contest, losing to Javine Hylton, and received 101 points in the contest. Despite her heavy criticism of the performance, swathes of fans argue the song would have been a big hit in the Europe-wide competition, which the UK infamously struggles to do well in.
Want the latest celeb news and gossip sent straight to your inbox? Sign up to our Showbiz Newsletter
"It sits in that nice centre-ground between contrived sincerity and pandering idiocy, a sweet spot that we've only rarely managed to hit with our acts at Eurovision," wrote Adam White of the Independent. "I even think she might have won the thing if she'd had the chance."
On social media, users are still raving about the bop to this day - with one person writing on YouTube: "This performance is burnt into my memory forever, Thought I'd imagined it. Love Katie." Another agreed, commenting: "Still to this day, I'll search for this. Still makes me smile," while a third added: "She needs to go on tour!"
Follow Mirror Celebs on TikTok , Snapchat , Instagram , Twitter , Facebook , YouTube and Threads