'My trauma will exist forever': Jennifer Lawrence opens up about lasting impact of 2014 nude photo leak

    Jennifer Lawrence gets candid about the "trauma" she's been living with since her nude photos were leaked in 2014. In an interview with Vanity Fair, the 'Silver Linings Playbook' star reveals the ongoing emotional toll of the scandal.

    <p>Jennifer Lawrence (Source: Los Angeles Times)</p>

    Jennifer Lawrence (Source: Los Angeles Times)

    Just when you thought the glitz and glam of Hollywood had no dark underbelly, Jennifer Lawrence comes forward with an emotional gut punch. "My trauma will exist forever," Lawrence told Vanity Fair, shedding light on the harrowing nude photo leak that rocked her world back in 2014.

    As reported by The Independent, Lawrence was among over 100 high-profile individuals who were targeted in the infamous 4chan scandal. Nude photographs of Lawrence and other A-list celebrities like Rihanna, Selena Gomez, and Kim Kardashian were dispersed across the bowels of the internet, all linked back to an Apple iCloud breach. "I feel like I got gang-banged by the f*ing planet,"** Lawrence said in retrospect during a 2017 interview, emphasizing the global exposure of her intimate images.

    Jennifer Lawrence (Source: Koimoi)

    In her sit-down with Vanity Fair, Lawrence laid it all out, describing the nightmare that's been haunting her since 2014. "Anybody can go look at my naked body without my consent, any time of the day," she stated, pinpointing the perpetual invasion of her privacy. In a world where anything can be pulled up on a phone during a casual barbecue, the star finds it nearly "impossible to process."

    Jennifer Lawrence (Source: Koimoi)

    • With all eyes on her, Lawrence isn't letting her past define her. While she continues to bear the emotional scars of the leak, she's channeled her energies into her craft. Her new Netflix film, 'Don't Look Up,' slated for a December 10 release, promises to be another feather in her already decorated cap. It's a reminder that even in the face of unbearable hardship, she's still making us look up—this time, to the screen.

    (Several parts of the text in this article, including the title, were generated with the help of an AI tool.)