Living in Santa Barbara, California, her daily life was markedly different from the courtly existence in Bangkok. She resided in a comfortable but not ostentatious home, focusing on research and child development—a subject she was passionate about due to her own experiences as a mother. In 2011, she and her husband, Mr. Dhi “Leo” Bhakdibutr (whom she married in 2009), were raising their son, Max (born 2009). Her lifestyle revolved around university libraries, family meals, and the quiet rhythms of academic life.
Formed with her brother, Bhumi Jensen (known as “Khun Khun”), The Bottom Blues was a classic rock cover band. In 2011, the band performed primarily for charity and private family gatherings. Their setlists included songs by Eric Clapton, B.B. King, and The Beatles. Ploypailin was the band’s lead vocalist, a role she undertook not for fame but to honor her late brother’s memory. Tragically, Bhumi had died in the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, and the band became a therapeutic outlet for the family. In 2011, their performances were rare, intimate affairs—often at fundraisers for the “Khun Khun” foundation, which built schools and provided aid in Phuket. ploypailin jensen scandal 2011
By 2011, Ploypailin Jensen, then 29 years old, had largely stepped away from the sporadic public appearances of her youth. Her lifestyle was dominated by her role as a student and a mother. She was pursuing a doctoral degree (PhD) in Educational Psychology at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), a path that reflected her family’s emphasis on substance over spectacle. Her father, Peter Ladd Jensen, an American businessman, and her mother, HRH Princess Ubolratana Rajakanya, had raised their children to value international education. Living in Santa Barbara, California, her daily life