Producer Who Raped Lady Gaga. Lady Gaga spoke about a rape and sexual exploitation from a producer, at the beginning of her professional life, through his interview with Opera Winfrey.
The Thinis Gate team conducted an investigation that led to some important conclusions, to identify the rapist of Lady Gaga.
Superstar Lady Gaga, 35, spoke for the first time about a story of rape at the age of 19, by a producer, who threatened to erase her music at that time, and demanded that she strip.
She said: “I was 19 years old, and I was working in the business, and a producer said to me, ‘Take your clothes off.
“And I said no. And I left, and they told me they were going to burn all of my music. And they didn’t stop. They didn’t stop asking me, and I just froze and I—I don’t even remember.
“And I will not say his name. I understand this Me Too movement, and I understand people feel real comfortable with this, and I do not. I do not ever want to face that person again.”

The ‘Telephone” hitmaker then revealed she got pregnant following the attack when she explained how, years later, a doctor advised her to see a psychiatrist for her chronic pain, leading to her diagnosis of PTSD.
She said: “First I felt full-on pain, then I went numb.
She said: “Even if I have six brilliant months, all it takes is getting triggered once to feel bad. And when I say I feel bad, I mean I want to cut. Think about dying. Wondering if I’m ever going to do it. I learned all the ways to pull myself out of it.
“What’s so interesting is the line I walk, feeling like I wanna cut myself and feeling like I don’t, are actually real close together.

“Everybody thinks it’s gotta be a straight line, that it’s like every other virus, that you get sick and then you get cured. It’s not like that. It’s just not like that. And actually, I think that traps people…
“You know why it’s not good to cut? You know why it’s not good to throw yourself against the wall? You know why it’s not good to self-harm? Because it makes you feel worse. You think you’re going to feel better because you’re showing somebody, ‘Look, I’m in pain.’ It doesn’t help.”
