Bret Michaels, born Bret Michael Sychak on March 15, 1963, is an American rock musician best known as the lead singer, songwriter, and frontman of the glam metal band Poison.[1][2] Formed in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania, in 1983 with drummer Rikki Rockett and bassist Bobby Dall, the band relocated to Los Angeles, added guitarist C.C. DeVille, and rose to fame on the Sunset Strip scene.[1][3][5] Poison's 1986 debut album *Look What the Cat Dragged In* launched hits like "Talk Dirty to Me," followed by multi-platinum successes *Open Up and Say... Ahh!* and *Flesh & Blood*, featuring Top 10 singles including the No. 1 ballad "Every Rose Has Its Thorn."[1][2][4] The band sold over 65 million albums worldwide, with 10 Top 40 Billboard Hot 100 singles, cementing their status in the 1980s hair metal era despite internal tensions over drug use and lineup changes.[1][5]
Michaels survived a near-fatal 1990s Ferrari crash that caused broken ribs, a disfigured nose, and lost teeth, and managed Type 1 diabetes throughout his career.[1][7] After Poison's label dropped them in 1998, he pursued solo ventures, co-founding a production company with Charlie Sheen and starring in, writing, and directing the film *Letter from Death Row*.[2][4] The band reunited in 1999 for successful tours.[1]
In the 2000s, Michaels gained reality TV prominence with VH1's *Rock of Love* (2007), *Bret Michaels: Life As I Know It* (2010), and winning *The Celebrity Apprentice*.[2][4] He balanced Poison tours with solo albums like *Songs of Life* and *Freedom of Sound*, while engaging in philanthropy.[5][7] A 2024 A&E documentary *Biography: Bret Michaels* chronicled his grit, near-death experiences, and business endeavors, highlighting his enduring pop culture status as a performer and entrepreneur.[6][7] Poison remains a live draw, with Michaels actively touring and performing into the 2020s.[1][5]