Rihanna is featured on the cover and in the pages of the new issue of GQ magazine and in her coverstory interview, Ri Ri talks about how far she’s come since she was assaulted by ex-boyfriend Chris Brown back in February of this year. She explains how she managed to get over the trauma of being physically attacked and expresses her hope that people who sympathize with her situation will be able to move past the incident like she has. Here is Rihanna‘s racy GQ coverphoto and some excerpts from her coverstory interview:

She’s done “Good Morning America” and “20/20,” but Rihanna gives one of her most revealing interviews about Chris Brown yet in the upcoming January issue of GQ magazine. The Barbados-born beauty fields some difficult questions about her abusive ex, but admits talking about that ugly incident helps the healing process. “It’s relieving,” she told the mag, “because it was built up for so long, and all these thoughts and emotions have been running through my mind for the past eight months. And now it’s like I finally get to let go and move on.” Putting the Feb. 8 assault behind her is crucial in shifting the “Wait Your Turn” singer’s image from punching bag to reigning pop princess. “I wanted people to move on with me,” she continues, “’cause the last big thing they know about me is That Night. And I don’t want that to be what people define me as.” After the violent attack last spring when Brown brutally hit and bit the singer following a pre-Grammy party in Hollywood, Rihanna withdrew from the spotlight to nurse her wounds. She soon returned to the studio and poured her heart and hurt into her latest album “Rated R,” which takes on a distinctly darker, edgier tone than her previous Top 20-friendly song “Umbrella.” “Nobody [helped me]. Really just music. And working,” she explains, “‘Cause I didn’t really want to be around anybody, for them to stare at me and stuff, and feel sorry for me. “The physical pain comes and it goes,” she adds. “The bruises fade away. But the thing that stays with you is the emotional scars.” The 21-year-old singer hopes her new album will inspire other women suffering from domestic abuse to stand up for themselves and get out of harmful relationships – especially those victims who might be blaming themselves. “That’s part of the insight that I wanna give,” Rihanna says. “Stop blaming yourself for that outcome. There’s nothing you can do, ever, to excuse a man’s behavior like that.”
It is very clear that she is becoming more comfortable with talking about her ordeal, which is a very good thing. I hope she continues to talk about her incident for as long as she likes in order to spread her message far and wide. As you can see, Rihanna stripped down for this GQ interview … but she also stripped down, literally, for the accompanying photoshoot. After the jump, check out a few photos from Ri Ri‘s GQ photospread and read a lot more from her GQ coverstory interview …

Now that you’re talking about everything, is it hard, or is it liberating?
Very liberating. It’s relieving. Because it was built up for so long, and all these thoughts and emotions have been running through my mind for the past eight months. And now it’s like I finally get to let go and move on.
Is it therapeutic to talk about it?
Um, I don’t like talking about it a lot. But every time I do, it’s better; it’s easier each time.
Because you said something about wanting to give some insight to young women.
Mm-hmm.
And that’s a brave thing. You could have said nothing.
Mm-hmm.
What made you decide that this was the right thing to do?
Because I wanted to move on. And I knew that was the only way I could have done it. And I wanted people to move on with me. ‘Cause the last big thing they know about me is That Night. And I don’t want that to be what people define me as.
Before I came here—I live across the street from a pretty tough public school in New York City. And I went to talk to the girls there.
Oh, wow.
Just to say, “Hey, I’m going to meet Rihanna. What would you like to know?” And it was interesting, because a lot of them had been in your situation, and they wanted to know how you handled it. Are those the insights you’re talking about?
I guess definitely. I just knew I’d be good one day. I just knew it. So I just kept waiting for that day. Like, you know, even though it was tough the entire time, there were ups and downs, I just kept knowing: I’m gonna get over it one day. I’m gonna get over it.
Who helped you through it?
Nobody.
… [N]obody helped you through it. Really?
Nobody. Really just music. And working. ‘Cause I didn’t really want to be around anybody, for them to stare at me and stuff, and feel sorry for me. So I just—I stayed in the house a lot. Then I started to get cabin fever. I was like, I’m going crazy in here.
But what about all the friends you’ve met…you have a great relationship with Jay-Z. With Justin Timberlake. Were all these people supportive of you through the past eight months?
Absolutely.
But you still felt alone?
Me and Jay-Z, we have a very close relationship, so he was there helping me through it and giving me advice and guidance, and just words of support. Like, strength.
Were you in shock?
Initially. I would say the first…the first seventy-two hours after I realized, it hit. The entire thing was kind of a daze. I was confused. It was a little weird, but…but then, after, I was getting bored of being in the house and sittin’ around. I called Jay Brown—he’s my A&R—and I was like, “I want to get back to the studio. I want to get back.”
In one of the tracks on the album, you sing about thinking you might die…did you think you would die that night?
No…no. [long silence]
It must take a lot of strength to deal with all this. I mean, just the basic things. Like, how did you have the presence of mind to call 911?
I didn’t call 911. No. I know everybody thinks I did, but it was someone else…It was…
Rihanna looks at the Hovering Manager and then mutters something about having just spoken to Diane Sawyer about all this. But here’s the weird thing: You get the feeling that Rihanna still has a lot to say. Her eyes are wet when anything Chris Brown-related comes up. She has a tendency to stare off into the distance when she talks about It—but then she meets the glare of the manager. Maybe she does want to go there—and can’t. Or perhaps it is dawning on Rihanna that to really step out and be the kind of advocate she says she wants to be is another burden altogether.
When you say you want to give insight to young women—what was the biggest insight you got? What did you learn?
Um…really really really that love is blind. It took a lot of strength to pull out of that relationship. To finally just officially cut it off. It was like night and day. It was two different worlds. It was the world I lived for two years, and then having the strength to say, “I’m gonna step into my own world. Start over.”
What was harder, the physical pain or the emotional pain?
Definitely not the physical pain. The physical pain comes and it goes. The bruises fade away. But the thing that stays with you is the emotional scars.
You were in love.
Yeah.
And you were a kid.
Yeah.
Do you think you two will ever be friends?
Mmm. Maybe in like ten years, you know? But it’s not something that I’m depending on. I’m not depending on his friendship.
Right. How do you ever trust again?
I can trust. I mean, I don’t like to stereotype; I believe everybody’s an individual. You can’t judge someone based on someone else’s actions. There are people in the world who will love you and people in the world who will hurt you, and there are people in the world who will do both.
Do you think a man who does something like that can change?
Absolutely. Yeah. Some of them won’t change and some of them will—but you know, very few of them change.
You know, when I talked to those high school girls…and this illustrates how difficult a problem it is: Their first question was “What did she do to get hit?”
Mm-hmm.
And I thought, Oh God, how awful is it that they’d ask that question.
Mm-hmm. After everything happened, it was a wake-up call to me…I didn’t realize how much of an effect it had on young girls’ lives, and that’s part of the insight that I wanna give. Stop blaming yourself for that outcome. There’s nothing you can do, ever, to excuse a man’s behavior like that.
Did you blame yourself?
Initially? I mean…actually, no, I never blamed myself, but I wondered what, what did I do to provoke it?…
This is the breaking point. Hovering Manager chimes in with “You’ve exhausted it now.”
Okay. Well then. How did the cover shoot go? I heard the pictures are really hot.
[giggles] It’s very sexy, yeah. At one point [chairman, Island Def Jam Music Group] L.A. Reid came into the shoot, and he was like, “Rihanna, put some fucking clothes on!”
These are pretty. [She is wearing a couple of dozen bangle bracelets.]
Thank you.
They’re very Michelle Obama.
Yeah? I love her. She’s so fly.
Rihanna‘s interview can be read in full HERE at GQ‘s website. She goes on to talk about her tattoos, her music and more. I can understand why her manager would be wary of her talking about her assault at such length for a magazine interview but I find it wholly irritating and counterproductive for anyone to curtail her need to share. I understand she was talking to a reporter but if she feels the need to let it out, she needs know that she can do so without getting shunned by someone else (ie. her manager). But, Rihanna did share in this GQ interview, she has been sharing in other interviews and I fully commend and support her in every way. The photos, wow … yeah, they are really hot. It seems to me that Rihanna is really trying to exert her strength and control by baring as much of herself as she can … I’m not sure if that’s really the way to go, nor am I sure that this is the way to empower oneself but, again, I support her need to bare as much as she needs to in order to move on. Great interview, crazy hot pics … this is an issue of GQ that needs to be purchased when it hits newsstands this week.





























As a victim on abuse – I find it SICKENING that someone could say someone should shut up about it. So if you don’t like seeing her speak about it, STOP reading it. All there is to it.
She’s SO beautiful in that 1st pic!!!
I’m kind of shocked at the note in the interview under the “glare” of her manager. Wtf?
Peeeeeeople, if her hands *weren’t* there, you’d be complaining that she shouldn’t have her hoohoo showing! I think it looks like she’s shielding it, not grabbing it.
Also, CHASE and Sam are totally right.
I agree with Lana. She should stop talking about it, you grow from it you, you move on, you don’t harp on the fact that is has happened, you help people. She keeps repeating herself in interviews, she isn’t providing anything helpful. If she needs to talk about it maybe she should find a therapist, maybe more than one. She is only talking about it for publicity and maybe sympathy.I personally don’t buy for a second its to help girls, please..she waits til her album is out to talk. And I understand interviewers ask her about it, but if you don’t want to be defined talk about your music, your fashion sense, something else!
I love Rihanna, but she is just a little bit too nekkid for me lately.
She is trying soooo hard to be sexy. Which she is naturally. But not like this, she looks desperate. Over it.
A have to agree with most poster that I’m a bit tired of seeing her half naked ALL the time… is it really necessary????
Sorry but this skanky image of so many young ‘celeb’s these days is getting a bit out of hand…. not to mention just plain boring. I totally agree with what JADED so eloquently stated:”
As someone who has worked with battered women, I can tell you that talking about your ordeal while half naked makes it quite difficult to hear the message.
People who haven’t been in the situation can’t take you seriously while you’re spread eagle grabbing your crotch.
I like Rihanna but this promo tour is starting to feel exploitative. She stayed silent about her horrible abuse for nearly a year, then can’t stop talking about it when she has an album coming out. Just seems really cynical to me… like she’s using something terrible as a selling point.
@Mark — When does domestic abuse sell albums? Your comment alone proves that it is NOT a selling point, so your argument seems invalid.
@Mark
Your presumptions about her are what’s *cynical*. As for the people who automatically think of her situation that way, that point of view says more about YOU than it does her. I’m not sure why anybody has such a difficult time understanding that the way things are unfolding is the most likely and natural way- did you really expect her to start talking about it IMMEDIATELY? That’s almost never what anybody does when they go through something traumatic- things take time to process, and she didn’t and doesn’t owe anybody anything, anyway. She started recording an album, and now that’s she’s releasing it, she’s doing a lot of interviews- that’s how things go! Artists start doing a lot of interviews when they’re releasing an album- not when they’re in the middle of recording it. Anybody who’s whining about how they’re tired of hearing her talk about this now and she “needs” to stop is being selfish, narrow-minded and ridiculous- other human beings aren’t your puppets, so grow up and try to learn to have more respect for people, k?
Ok, that was a massive overreaction. I don’t care if you see my point or not, or that you think I’m being disrespectful. I don’t know her, I’m seeing what she’s putting out there, and I have opinion. I have no obligation to do what you think I should or align my views to match your views. I never once said anything validating abuse or the situation.
Trent, I didn’t say domestic abuse sells albums, you’re jumping to a conclusion… but appearing on 20/20, GMA, in magazines and using domestic abuse as a platform to segue into album promotion can come off as calculated and cyncial from a marketing persective. Simple. (I am a marketing major, and worked in the music business).
Why did she feel the need to go “porn”to sell albums, she looks like a skank
goodluck riri…but pls stop talking about the sh!t its gttng really old! thanks
@Laura Jayne Sorry but there really isn’t any need to drag Britney Spears into this. She used to be in quite a bit of a mess but she’s obviously proven the whole world (minus your ignorant self) that she’s better than ever now. What with her MASSIVE AND SUCCESSFUL Circus Tour of 09 etc. You need to get over the fact that Britney’s always going to be an icon and she’ll never let obstacles fail her. You might have something against Rihanna but this girl is also talented. If you’re no where near successful as them, you should keep such harsh comments to yourself. Or go elsewhere. Not here! ps. The whole ‘shaved head’ thing is getting old. You obviously have nothing else to pick on. If you can’t be mature and respectful, don’t go to forums.
Get over the fact that Britney’s never going to be put down for long and she’s always going to be an icon and she’ll never let obstacles fail her.*