Before she took over the music world, Cardi B walked off a photoshoot set after the photographer sexually harassed her. 

Cardi recounted the shocking story to Untold Stories of Hip Hop host Angie Martinez, reports Entertainment Tonight.

"I will never forget how I went to shoot for this magazine and the photographer, he was trying to get close to me, like, 'Yeah, you want to get in this magazine?'" Cardi recalled. "Then he pulled his d**k out. "I was so f**king mad, and I was just, like, 'This is crazy.'"

Bardi left after the man exposed himself. 

"I was like, '[You're] f**king bugging. You know what? I'm out,'" the rapper continues. "You know what's so crazy? I told the magazine owner and he just looked at me like, 'So? And?'"

She didn't identify the assailant or the magazine owner who brushed her off. The Bronx beauty remembered the incident when the #MeToo movement picked up steam because she knew several women who experienced "the same type of treatment." It's common for women trying to break into the rap game to be pressured to give sexual favors in exchange for clout and other benefits. 

"Like, they make you feel like you got to do a certain type of thing for the most bullsh*t s**t," Cardi stated. "It happens, really, every day."

Thankfully, she doesn't have to worry about it anymore. When Martinez asked if it happens now, Cardi replied, "Oh, hell no. I'll put you on blast on my Instagram. I'll f**king violate."

This is the second time Cardi addressed the incident. In the March 2018 issue of Cosmopolitan, she admitted she didn't think the #MeToo movement would reach hip-hop. 

"A lot of video vixens have spoke about this and nobody gives a fuck," she told the magazine. "When I was trying to be a vixen, people were like, 'You want to be on the cover of this magazine?' Then they pull their dicks out. I bet if one of these women stands up and talks about it, people are going to say, 'So what? You're a ho. It don't matter.'"

The "Bartier Cardi" rapper was also skeptical of men who seemed to support the movement. 

"These producers and directors," she says, "they're not woke, they're scared."