Aside from having more Grammys than fingers and producing heartfelt bops without missing a beat, Adele has maintained her knack for keeping it real. You can take the girl out of Tottenham, but that doesn’t mean she won’t chant the Hotspurs anthem when interviewed for Vogue.
When the singer isn’t educating us on the correct way to eat a bag of Walkers crisps (doused in Worcester sauce, fyi—“those soggy ones at the bottom are the best”), or signing off an acceptance speech with a middle-fingered salute (because: never cut Adele off halfway through), she’s word-vomming whatever pops into her head to her fans, in the best way.
Often, Adele’s performances are littered with the sort of intimate interactions that you’d cackle over with your best mates at dinner. Only, you know, she just does it in front of an audience of several thousand people, all capturing and uploading the moments to share with millions more.
Case in point: on Sunday the singer interrupted her set to tell fans gathered at Caesars Palace Colosseum for her Weekends With Adele residency in Las Vegas that being a performer isn’t always all it’s cracked up to be. She admitted that the stage outfits and bright lights can be a sticky combination, after developing “jock itch” from wearing her Spanx.
“Do you know what my doctor gave me? It is a bit crude but I never knew it existed,” she asked fans after declaring “I need a towel, Jesus!”
“Me and my team were talking about it earlier. Obviously, when I do my shows I wear Spanx to keep it all in and make it all fit me,” Adele shared, per one fan-filmed video. “And I sweat a lot and it doesn’t go anywhere,” she added. “So basically I just sit in my own sweat,” she explained, revealing, “My doctor gave me Jock Itch [cream].”
For the uninitiated, jock itch is a form of fungal infection affecting the groin, according to the NHS. It “causes an itchy rash in warm, moist areas of the body [that] often affects the groin and inner thighs and may be shaped like a ring,” the Mayo Clinic says. As for the name, “jock itch gets its name because it’s common in athletes. It’s also common in people who sweat a lot,” they say, which is why they advise drying off quickly with a clean towel after exercising and wearing loose-fitting clothing. “Tight-fitting clothes can chafe your skin and up the risk of jock itch,” they say, (so Spanx is out).