Jon Bon Jovi doesn't "got the girl" anymore.

His daughter, Stefanie Rose, is no longer his little girl and she's proving that in more ways than one. She doesn't need daddy anymore, and she's certainly doesn't have that perfect daddy's girl vibe anymore either.

There are a few things that Bon Jovi probably wants fans to forget, including his little girl's drug problem. He's trying to save the world, one soup kitchen at a time, and writing lyrics that uplift people so he wasn't expecting his daughter's struggles with addiction. That doesn't mean he didn't help her. He was the first person she called when she needed help.

They've been through a lot together but she's still his little girl whether she likes it or not. Here's an inside look into what Stephanie's life as Bon Jovi's daughter is like.

Her Father Was There For Her After Her Overdose

Stefanie is Bon Jovi and his wife, Dorothea Hurley's first child, so of course, she was going to hold a special part of her parent's hearts. Growing up with three brothers, she was certainly daddy's little girl.

"I didn’t have any sisters," Bon Jovi once said. "We bring home this girl the first day. Now what? Where’s the manual? There was no manual. So you bring her up the best you can, you surround her with hugs and kisses and know that she may eventually fall down."

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In 2000 the rockstar wrote a song dedicated to Stephanie called "I Got The Girl," which was featured on his band's album Crush. Every time the band played the song live, it would be accompanied by home videos of Stephanie dancing around when she was a kid. So Bon Jovi fans have pretty much watched her grow up.

In 2017, she graduated from the New School in New York. That same year, she made a live appearance at one of her father's shows and came out to dance with him as they played her song.

"Everybody’s got a little girl in their life -- their daughter, their girlfriend, their wife, their momma," Bon Jovi said, introducing the song. "But it all goes by so fast. And they start out as little bitty babies and their future's looking bright. And I wrote this song for that little baby, who's now not such a little baby anymore."

Five years before, Stephanie's future was not looking bright, however. During her first year of college at Hamilton College, she had a near-death experience when she overdosed on heroin. She was found unconscious in her dorm room and was saved by paramedics.

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When she regained consciousness her dad was the first person she called. She and her friend, Ian S Grant, were later arrested and charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance and illegal possession of marijuana. The charges were dropped under the Good Samaritan law, which dissolves charges when someone has a potentially lethal amount of drugs inside them.

"She's good. She's getting through it," Bon Jovi told Metro. "She's healthy. The greatest gift that I have is that I have her. We'll get through this. It was a shock for everybody and hopefully, we learn from these life lessons."

"It wasn't what you see in the movies. It's a pill form that these kids have access to. It was the first and hopefully the last time."

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"It was my worst moment as a father. The first thing she said, I’m all right but then she said this is what happened. You wake up, you shake it off and put your shoes on and say OK, I am on the way home."

Bon Jovi later revealed that he was just as shocked as anyone when he learned the news of his daughters overdose. "You surround them with the best help and love and move on, and that’s where we’re at with it," he told the Associated Press. 

"I’m shocked as much as the next parent with this situation and had no idea. Steph is a great kid. Great GPA. Cool school everything about it is idyllic. She was doing great, then a sudden and steep decline."

"It was a terrible speed bump that we got over," Bon Jovi told People. "There was no need to be any closer to our kids. We couldn't get any closer."

She Works In Media

Stephanie has led a sober life since then and graduated with a liberal arts degree. A year later, she was supporting her father at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Inductions.

A year after her overdose, though, in 2012, she got work as an assistant at The Weinstein Company, and in 2015, she worked as an intern at The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, and at Vice Media. Her LinkedIn profile says she is a freelance production assistant.

She's also worked as a model. This past June, she modeled at Nikki Lund's 'White Trash Beautiful' fashion show in London. Other than that, not much is known about Stephanie. Her parents raised her in an ultra-private household and it seems to have carried on into her adulthood.

It's great to hear that she was able to recover and start a pretty successful career in media, though. Like her father, she was living on a prayer, but not anymore.

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