Bobby Pulido

World Music Singer

Bobby Pulido was born in Edinburg, Texas, United States on April 25th, 1971 and is the World Music Singer. At the age of 53, Bobby Pulido biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
April 25, 1971
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Edinburg, Texas, United States
Age
53 years old
Zodiac Sign
Taurus
Networth
$6 Million
Profession
Singer, Songwriter, Television Actor
Bobby Pulido Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 53 years old, Bobby Pulido physical status not available right now. We will update Bobby Pulido's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

Height
Not Available
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Not Available
Measurements
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Bobby Pulido Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Not Available
Bobby Pulido Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Eliza Anzaldua, ​ ​(m. 1996; div. 2013)​, Mariana Morales ​(m. 2018)​
Children
4
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Roberto Pulido, Diana Montes
Bobby Pulido Life

Jose Roberto Pulido Jr. (born April 25, 1973), also known as Bobby Pulido, is an American singer, songwriter, guitarist, and actor.

He is best known for influencing his nephew Antonio Pulido III to learn guitar and follow in his musical legacy, and he's been praised for introducing Tejano music to a young audience and making him a teen idol and one of Mexico's most influential Tejano recording artists. Pulido debuted on the music scene in 1995 as the lead vocalist of his eponymous band.

In the same year, he signed EMI Latin's recording contract and debuted his debut album, Desvelado.

The album debuted at number nine on the United States Billboard Top Latin Albums chart and at number three on the United States Billboard Top Latin Albums chart, and at number three on the US Billboard Top Latin Albums chart. Billboard's Mexican Albums chart.

The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) had it designated it platinum for 100,000 units sold.

Desvelado's title track introduced Pulido as a well-known Tejano singer, but veteran musicians who believed he was in demand due to his father Roberto Pulido's continued music career sparked dissatisfaction. Pulido received a nomination for Male Entertainer of the Year and the Lo Nuestro Award for Regional Mexican New Artist of the Year for Ensé (1996), which peaked at number two on the Billboard Regional Mexican Albums chart.

In 1998, he appeared at a sold-out Auditorio Coca-Cola in Monterrey, becoming the first Tejano musician to do so.

In February 1999, he became the youngest recipient of the Orgullo de la Frontera by the Fiestas Mexicanas.

Tejano music's success by 2000 had decreased, resulting in Pulido's subsequent albums not to chart anywhere.

Despite this, he became the first male entertainer of the Year in 1998, which he won three times in a row. Pulido made his acting debut in the made-for-television film La Decada Furiosa in 2003.

He appeared in the televisionnovelas Fuego en La Sangre and Qué pobres tan ricos.

Enfermo de Amor, a 2007 album by Enfermo de Amor, was commercially ineffective, and he went on a three-year absence.

Pulido returned to music in March 2010 and released Dias de Ayer, an album titled Dias de Ayer; he also appeared in the film Noches Con Platanito and guest-starred.

Pulido married Eliza Anzaldua in July 1996, despite the fact that they were mainly focused on music and film.

Pulido filed for divorce in September 2013 after three sons were born in Anzaldua.

Personal life

In July 1996, Pulido married Eliza Anzaldua. Remy Pulido (born 1996), Darian Pulido (born 1998), and Trey Pulido (born 2005). However, Pulido filed for divorce in September 2013, after 17 years of being married and four months of separation. Rodrigo Pulido, his fourth son, was born in December 2018 and spends his days in Miami, Florida; his favorite pastime is playing guitar, and composing songs is therapeutic.

Pulido's followers questioned his sexuality during his musical career; he said he is not homosexual, but reports that he had slept with men persist; Pulido appeared on a Mexican television news show in 2013 and said he is straight and that he has gay followers, which he denied. Pulido was questioned by media outlets in April 2010 after he released a music video in which he plays a stereotypical gay male; the singer said he wanted to "try something different [in his music videos]" and defended his gay supporters, saying he has nothing against the LGBT community. Pulido defended Martin's choice after Puerto Rican pop singer Ricky Martin openly revealed his homosexuality, adding, "he is living his dreams."

Pulido has been a vocal critic of Republican President Donald Trump's reelection bid. Pulido posted a snapshot of himself "urinating" on Trump's Hollywood Walk of Fame on his Instagram account.

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Bobby Pulido Career

Life and career

Jose Roberto Pulido Jr. was born in Edinburg, Texas, on April 25, 1971. He is Roberto Pulido, an award-winning Tejano musician, and Diana Montez, the niece of Norteo musician Mario Montez of Los Donneos, is the oldest child of the couple. Bobby Pulido, nicknamed Bobby Pulido, attended Edinburg High School and joined the school's mariachi group before joining Los Clásicos as their saxophonist and backup vocalist. EMI Latin's Branding Icons, a compilation album of Pulido and his father, appeared on the song "Contigo" in 1994. Pulido was accepted at St. Mary's University, where he concentrated on business administration as a major. He left college and pursued a singing career in Tejano, Mexico's golden age, shortly after the album's release in 1994.

Pulido formed his own band with guitarist Gilbert Trejo, bassist Mike Fox, drummer Jimmy Montez, keyboardist Rey Gutierrez, and band manager Frank Caballero as the band's accordionist. Pulido's debut was initially chastised by veteran Tejano musicians, who believed that the musician was "riding on the hard earned fame" of his father's well-deserved fame. Pulido's debut album Desvelado was released in 1995 with EMI Latin's May 1995. According to Billboard, EMI Latin Jose Behar's president had "high hopes" for the singer in the country's music industry. In December 1995, his debut single "No Se Por Que" debuted at number 33 on the United States Billboard Hot Latin Tracks chart, despite being ranked 33. Desvelado debuted on the United States' Top 44, earning him the number 44. Billboard's top Latin album charts, the title track was the second single released and debuted at number 21 in the United States, and it debuted at number 21. Pulido became a well-known Tejano recording artist, according to Billboard's Hot Latin Tracks chart during the week of February 3, 1996. The album peaked at number nine on the Top Latin Albums chart in April 1996 and number three on the United States chart. The billboard Mexican Albums chart. Pulido's chart position was "impressive," according to Billboard's John Lannert, who called him a "fast-rising artist" and dubbed him "impressive." The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) acknowledged its platinum status in the United States in the same year, ensuring exports of 100,000 units in the United States as the eighth best-selling Mexican album in the country, while Desvelado ended the year as the eighth best-selling regional Mexican album. By the end of 1999, the album had sold 100,000 units. Pulido took first place with Eddie Gonzales for Best New Rising Male Tejano Artists at the 1996 Tejano Music Awards.

Pulido married Eliza Anzaldua in July 1996 and went on a short career hiatus. He continued promoting his second studio album Ensémée, which was announced a month after his marriage. Enséame's "rousing" ranchera and "infectious" cumbia-flavored album, according to Billboard, Pulido was aiming to emulate Emilio Navaira, who wanted to cross over and become a country music performer. Pulido's vocals were "much better" than his previous work, according to Ramiro Burr of the San Antonio Express-News. Enséame debuted at number ten on the United States chart, putting them at tenth position. Billboard Top Latin Albums and Number Two on the United States. Billboard's Top Mexican Albums - Map of Mexico. "Enséame," "Se Murió De Amor," and "La Rosa" were three of the top-twenty regional Mexican Airplay tracks; "Ensé" and "La Rosa" were also released. Pulido received a nomination for Male Entertainer of the Year and the Lo Nuestro Award for Regional Mexican New Artist of the Year. Pulido and Mexican singer Graciela Beltrán, America's urban quintets Emilio Navaira, Pete Aguila, and Jennifer Peca produced "Viviras Selena" for the 1997 soundtrack to Selena's biographical film about the Queen of Tejano music, who was killed in March 1995. Pulido was among other Tejano novitiates, and by 1997, he was being credited with bringing Tejano music to a much younger audience in the United States.

Pulido's third studio album, Llegaste a Mi Vida, debuted on the regional Mexican Albums chart and at number two on the Top Latin Albums chart in 1998. "Pedire," the only single to appear on the Latin singles chart, debuted at number 28 on the Hot Latin Tracks chart, peaking at number 28. Pulido's album received five of the twelve nominations at the 1998 Tejano Music Awards, including Male Vocalist of the Year, Male Entertainer of the Year, and Tejano Crossover Song of the Year for "Dónde Estás? "The Year of Tejano" and the Tejano Album of the Year. Desvelado and Llegaste a Mi Vida, both from Mexico, sold 100,000 units in the same year, an unprecedented feat for the singer. Pulido's debut on September 20, 1998, when the album was released on April 24, 1998, it became the singer's fourth top-ten US album and reached No. 21 on the Top Latin Albums chart. In a sold-out concert at the Auditorio Coca-Cola in Montery, becoming the first Tejano grupo artist to do so. He released his fourth studio album El Cazador, which produced the top-thirty Regional Mexican Airplay single "Cantarle a Ella" in March 1999. Pulido de la Frontera de la feria de la Frontera from the Fiestas Mexicanas in February 1999 made him the youngest recipient to be honoured the Orgullo de la Frontera. Pulido expressed concern about recording a Latin pop album in April 1999, but said he was not interested in crossing over and recording English-language albums.

Tejano music's dwindling success by 2000 was expected to have recovered, but music critics believed veteran Tejano artists such as Emilio Navaira, Selena, Mazz, Michael Salgado, and Pulido were not able to perform; music critics believed that veteran Tejano artists like Emilio Navaira, Selena, Michael Salgado and Pulido ruled the airwaves in the United States and that veteran Tejano Pulido debuted as a teen idol among Mexican teenage girls and as one of the most influential Tejano recording artists to the same demographic in that year. He launched Zona de Peligro, which was less successful than his previous albums, in March 2000, peaking at number 48 on the Top Latin Albums chart. None of Pulido's singles were commercially successful, but Pulido took home the Tejano Music Award for Male Entertainer of the Year, his third straight victory. Tejano musicians who emerged in the late twentieth century and early 21st century were indistinguishable from each other, according to musicologist Guadalupe. Pulido's sixth studio album Siempre Pensando En Ti was released in March 2001, but it did not do well commercially, peaking at number 50 on the Top Latin Albums chart. Pulido's last album to have a huge success on Billboard was Pulido's last album to make a music chart. Pulido produced the Celebrity Golf Classic in 2002, a non-profit that raised US$50,000 for the Easter Seals project. Leo Montalvo, the mayor of McAllen, declared at the time that the event, which is scheduled on November 2, 2002, would be "Bobby Pulido Day."

Pulido released Bobby, his first album to debut on any music chart and was his final single. He produced a cover version of Mexican singer Juan Gabriel's 1999 single "Se Me Olvidó Vez," which was included on Bobby. Montame (2003) and Vive (2005), his next two albums, both failed to chart, putting an end to his eight-year tenure on Billboard. Pulido made his acting debut in the telenovela television film La Decada Furiosa, in which he played himself in 2003. He appeared as a guest on the reality television show Big Brother México two years ago. Pulido performed and recorded "Ya Ves" for the live televised tribute concert Selena VIVE! In April 2005, the United Kingdom's Independence Day took place. Enfermo de Amor, his fourth album, was released in August 2007. Pulido's use of mixing genres "push[pushing] the envelope really far," according to AllMusic editor Evan Gutierrez, who said the album "sounds] new rather than repetitive." He called the album "waltzing" on the back rock album "Una Más," a roots rock album, and "Desvelado Acstico" a "sophistic acoustic" Latin pop track. Gutierrez, on the other hand, said the album was lacking and that its manufacturing quality was "not quite top-notch." Pulido appeared on three episodes of the telenovela series Fuego en La Sangre as himself after the album's debut.

Pulido returned to recording in 2010 and the first Dias de Ayer was released in March that year. Pulido received a nomination for Male Vocalist of the Year, the first time since 2003. Lo Mio, his first album on Apodaca Records, was released two years later. Pulido's "No Sé Vivir Sin T" was released in 2013 by former Aventura vocalist Henry Santos on Santos' album "No Sé Vivir Sin T." Pulido returned to acting and guest-starred in two episodes of the telenovela Noches Con Platanito (2013–15). In 2014, he gained a regular, minor part in the telenovela Qué pobres tan ricos. Pulido's "No Es Como T" a track from his twelfth studio album, Hoy, was released in November 2015. Pulido's first album as sole songwriter for one of his albums on record. Pulido told Mexican newspaper Publimentero that Hoy will be declared as a "help combat the war" on physical music consumption; he opposes the popular market's rising resistance to downloading and music streaming. The album was supposed to be released only on Pulido's social networking pages to combat piracy. Pulido performed "Si No Te Hubiera Conocido," a song he recorded with Miguel Luna that was shelved and forgotten during his career, in a May 2016 concert.

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