The person who made videos and YouTube channels died suddenly at the age of 30.
A post on Alexandra’s Instagram page said she had died. She was known as Pretty Pastel Please.
The Australian influencer’s death was said to be sudden and out of the blue.
The statement said, “This comes as a shock to all of us, and her family and friends have asked for privacy while they deal with their grief.”
“We would ask that you respect their wishes – they appreciate all of your support but need time to heal in private.”
Along with the statement was a picture of the influential person beaming.
Fans have been very sad and have sent thousands of messages of sympathy and condolences.
“This news really breaks my heart,” one person on social media said.
“I watched Alex for so many years, she began to feel like a friend.”
“My heart is in my stomach, I’m so saddened by this news praying for her family,” someone said.
“Seeing how much she’s grown and changed over the years feels so unreal,” a third fan said.
She told her fans weeks before she died that she would be streaming on Twitch three days a week.
It made my heart melt when she shared pictures of herself holding her beloved parrot Archie.
Alexandra was proud that more than 120,000 people followed her on Instagram.
She also had over 690,000 people who followed her on YouTube.
Some of the things she posted were product reviews and vlogs.
More than 4 million people watched a vlog in which Alexandra only ate food from Japanese 7-Eleven stores for a week.
She told everyone last year that she had reached the big goal of 1,000 Instagram posts.
Fans are sad.
She was also thrilled that she now had 3,000 Twitch Fans.
“I’m a world away from who I was six months ago and God it feels so good,” she stated.
After being told she had ADHD and obsessive-compulsive disorder in 2022, the influencer opened up.
In a long post on social media, she talked about how she came up with the name Pretty Pastel Please.
“Pretty Pastel Please is a persona born of trauma, deflection, and mental illness,” she stated.
“A bright colorful character that can look past their pain and put on a smile.”