“It’s not about fame. It’s about falling, standing, and finding the strength to sing again.”
Netflix has officially announced “Till the End: The P!nk Story,” a six-part limited documentary event that promises to peel back the glitter and reveal the soul of one of the most dynamic performers of the 21st century.
Directed by Joe Berlinger — the acclaimed filmmaker behind Conversations with a Killer and Metallica: Some Kind of Monster — the series has a production budget of $65 million and an emotional scale to match.
The Story Behind the Icon
For over two decades, P!nk has defied labels and expectations.
From her early days as a fierce rebel in the early 2000s pop scene to becoming a Grammy-winning global powerhouse, she’s built a career on defiance, heart, and authenticity.
But “Till the End” promises something different — not a victory lap, but a deep reflection.
“It’s not just about what I’ve done,” P!nk says in the trailer’s opening moments.
“It’s about what I’ve survived — and what I’m still learning to love about myself.”
Behind the Music — and Beyond It
Each of the six episodes will focus on a defining era of P!nk’s life and art:
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Episode 1: “The Firestarter” — her tumultuous rise from small-town Pennsylvania to global pop domination.
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Episode 2: “Try” — the creative rebirth after personal loss and industry pressure.
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Episode 3: “Family Portrait” — balancing fame and motherhood in the spotlight.
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Episode 4: “Trustfall” — vulnerability and reinvention in her later albums.
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Episode 5: “The Noise and the Stillness” — her fight for authenticity in an age of social media chaos.
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Episode 6: “Till the End” — the message of resilience that defines her legacy.
Raw, Rare, and Real
What sets this project apart is its tone.
Berlinger and P!nk agreed early on that there would be no filters.
Every scar, every tear, and every triumph is on display — including the behind-the-scenes conflicts that shaped her most defining performances.
“You think you know her,” Berlinger said in a press statement.
“But what she lets you see here — it’s beyond fame. It’s human.”
The series combines unseen rehearsal footage, home videos, and confessional-style interviews with those closest to her — including husband Carey Hart, longtime bandmates, choreographers, and even her children.

A Woman, Not a Brand
For P!nk, the documentary isn’t about myth-making. It’s about myth-breaking.
“People see the lights and the noise,” she reflects, “but I hope they see the bruises too — the times I almost gave up, the nights I thought I’d lost my voice for good.”
She credits her family and fans for keeping her grounded through chaos:
“They didn’t just watch me sing — they carried me when I couldn’t.”
From the Stage to the Soul
Filmed across Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and London, Till the End captures P!nk at her most personal — revisiting the places where her biggest songs were born.
The camera follows her through recording sessions, backstage breakdowns, and moments of stillness — painting a portrait of a woman who built a career on refusing to be defined by anyone else’s terms.
“You can’t fake what she does,” one producer says in the series.
“She bleeds honesty — even when it hurts.”

A Global Premiere with Heart
Netflix plans to release Till the End in spring 2026, with a global rollout in over 120 countries.
Advance screenings are already generating buzz among critics calling it “the most emotionally honest music documentary since Beyoncé’s Homecoming.”
“It’s brave,” wrote Variety’s early review.
“It’s not about the legend of P!nk — it’s about the woman who became one.”
The Final Word
In one of the final scenes, P!nk looks straight into the camera and says quietly:
“Every song I’ve ever written was a piece of me learning how to keep breathing.
This series isn’t the end. It’s a thank you — for staying with me through it all.”
It’s a statement that echoes what has always made her different — the vulnerability behind the voltage.
Because at the heart of every sold-out tour, every anthem, and every tear, P!nk’s story has always been about one thing:
💗 Falling, rising, and singing anyway — till the end.