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Lady Gaga’s Meat Dress Designer Shares ‘Gruesome Process’ Making It

by Julia Evans – Entertainment Editor

Lady Gaga‘s‍ Meat Dress Designer Reveals Gruesome ⁢Preservation Process, Ongoing Harassment

LOS ANGELES, CA ​ – The designer of Lady Gaga’s infamous 2010 meat dress, Franc Fernandez, detailed the unsettling process ‍of creating adn preserving the controversial garment in⁤ a⁢ recent⁤ interview, revealing a months-long effort involving freezing, re-stitching ⁣rotting flesh, and⁣ even ⁢managing ⁢online ​harassment ‌campaigns. The dress, worn by​ Gaga at the⁤ MTV ⁣Video Music Awards, remains a cultural touchstone, sparking debate about art, celebrity, and animal rights.

Fernandez recounted a frantic ⁢hope that Gaga would actually​ wear the⁤ dress after its creation. “I just remember⁤ it happening so fast. More than anything, it was⁣ like,‌ ‘I hope she likes it, I hope ⁣she wears it,'” he said. Following the event,the dress was placed in a ⁤trash bag⁢ and stored in his‌ parents’ freezer for approximately‌ two ⁢months,alongside the matching shoes,while ⁢a plan ‍for its preservation was devised.

The eventual solution involved taxidermy. Fernandez explained, “After she wore the dress, I went to ⁢pick it up the next ‌day ‍and put it in a trash bag and carried it out…we decided what to do with it. And this idea came up about ‍taxidermying ⁢it. I took it ⁤back to ‍my‍ friend’s house and ⁣at that point ‌it had rotted ​a bit. It ⁤was kind ‍of gross, but⁣ we put masks on and we sewed it back ​in place.”

The dress’s impact extends beyond‍ a single awards show ‍moment. Fernandez monitors its⁤ cultural legacy through Google Alerts. “Ther will always⁣ be ⁢an article about ​the 20 most shocking dresses of all time – björk in her ‌swan dress or J.Lo in the Versace dress – fashion moments that are shocking that ultimately are not that shocking. They’re just a moment in time.”

However, the creation of the dress also drew intense ‌backlash.Fernandez received aggressive ⁣emails from animal rights activists, some of which he⁢ reported to detectives. He proactively created both pro- and anti-meat-dress⁤ Facebook groups, ⁤secretly‍ moderating⁢ both to observe the discourse. He also⁤ described encountering bizarre conspiracy⁢ theories online, including‍ claims the dress ⁤was made from⁣ “dead babies,” and noted the early appearance of ⁤the letter ​”Q” associated ‌with the QAnon movement.

The refrigerator ⁢used to store the dress during the preservation⁤ process, located ⁤in a downtown Los Angeles loft, remains a ‍perhaps historic artifact. “Well, he moved out,” Fernandez said with a laugh. “Landlords probably still have ⁢that fridge. I should’ve asked.That would be a fun ⁣piece to have. I guess.”

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