💔 Wonder Woman Unleashed: At 74, Lynda Carter NAMES The 5 Men She HATED the Most — #2 Will Shock You 😱

For decades, Lynda Carter kept her pain behind a dazzling smile.

At 74, Lynda Carter Names The 5 Man She HATED The Most #UntoldStories

While the world saw the Amazon warrior, the truth was more complicated.

Her rise to fame came during a time when Hollywood was still a boys’ club—ruthless, unforgiving, and dominated by powerful men who saw strong women as threats.

But Carter played the game with elegance, never publicly naming names… until now.

In a candid sit-down for an upcoming memoir and a shocking televised interview teaser, Lynda finally unveiled five men who she says “made life a living hell” during her climb to the top.

The first name she dropped? Producer #1, heavily rumored to be Douglas S.Cramer, a TV executive connected to the Wonder Woman series.

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Though she didn’t explicitly name him, Carter spoke about a man on set who consistently belittled her ideas, dismissed her concerns, and treated her like “just another pretty face.

” According to Carter, he once told her, “You’re not here to think, you’re here to smile.

” That moment stuck with her for decades.

“I never forgot the tone.

It was like being slapped in the soul.

Then came Man #2, someone she does name directly: Bob Guccione, the founder of Penthouse magazine.

In the early 1980s, Guccione published unauthorized nude images of Carter taken from an old modeling shoot—images she never approved for release.

The Twilight of Bob Guccione

Carter described it as “a violation beyond words.

” She said she felt “humiliated, powerless, and betrayed by a man who saw my body as a product to be sold.

” She fought back legally and emotionally but admitted, “I hated him for what he took from me.

And I still do.

Man #3 is described as a “well-known director” Carter worked with on a TV film after Wonder Woman ended.

While she hasn’t revealed his name (yet), insiders suggest it’s a now-retired figure famous for working with CBS during the 1980s.

According to Carter, he subjected her to constant criticism, called her “difficult” for demanding basic respect on set, and allegedly blacklisted her from future projects.

“He wanted me quiet, grateful, and obedient,” she said.

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“When I stood up for myself, he made sure I paid the price.

Perhaps the most heartbreaking betrayal came from Man #4, who wasn’t a stranger—but her former manager.

Carter said he manipulated her finances and tried to take over control of her image rights during her peak fame years.

She claims he forged her signature on licensing deals and siphoned money without her knowledge.

“I trusted him with everything,” she said.

“He was supposed to protect me.

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Instead, he saw me as a bank account.

” Legal battles ensued, and though she won back some control, the emotional damage was permanent.

And then there’s Man #5—a name she hesitated before saying out loud, but ultimately included: Bill Cosby.

Carter revealed that she was approached to appear on his show in the early 1980s but declined after a deeply uncomfortable meeting.

While she says Cosby never assaulted her, she described the meeting as “creepy and filled with subtle threats.

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” She claims he tried to pressure her into “private rehearsals” and insisted she wear revealing outfits for a “comedy skit” that never made it to air.

“It was manipulative.

He had this smirk like he knew I wouldn’t say no—until I did.

” After that, she says, she was unofficially blacklisted from any collaboration with his team or related networks.

Carter’s revelations have already sparked massive waves across social media.

Fans, stunned by her boldness, have rallied behind her with hashtags like #JusticeForLynda and #WonderWomanSpeaks.

Younger audiences who only knew her as a glamorous superhero are now seeing the harsh truths behind her smile.

Meanwhile, insiders in the entertainment world are bracing for more names to drop as Carter’s memoir nears release.

So why is she speaking now? “Because I’m finally free,” Carter said.

“For years I stayed silent out of fear.

Fear of losing work, fear of not being believed, fear of being labeled ‘difficult.

’ But I’m 74 now.

What are they going to do—cancel Wonder Woman? I’ve already survived them.

In a Hollywood era still reeling from #MeToo and waves of long-buried truths coming to light, Carter’s story is both a bombshell and a battle cry.

It’s a reminder that behind the glam, behind the power poses, behind the lasso of truth—there was a woman constantly fighting off the shadows of men determined to dim her light.

And yet, she stood tall.

She always did.

Now, with raw honesty and the armor of time, Lynda Carter is finally saying what so many feared to: Not all villains wear capes.

Some wore suits, ran studios, and smiled as they cut her down.

But she survived every one of them.

And with every name she reveals, the real Wonder Woman becomes even more unstoppable.