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Playgirl
June 1973 cover (issue 1, number 1)
CategoriesWomen's magazines
FrequencyMonthly (1973–2009)
Quarterly (2010–2016)
PublisherDouglas Lambert (1973–1976)
Ira Ritter (1977–1986)
Drake Publishers, Inc. (1986–1993)
Crescent Publishing Group, Inc. (1993–2001)
Blue Horizon Media, Inc. (2001–2011)
Magna Publishing Group, Inc. (2011–2016)
Founded1973
First issueJune 1973
Final issueWinter 2016
CompanyMagna Publishing Group
CountryUnited States
Based inParamus, New Jersey
Websiteplaygirl.com
ISSN0273-6918

Playgirl was an American magazine that had historically featured pictorials of nude and semi-nude men alongside general interest, lifestyle, and celebrity journalism, as well as original fiction. For most of its history, the magazine printed monthly and was marketed mainly to women, though it quickly developed a significant gay male readership.

In 2009, Playgirl transitioned from a monthly to quarterly print publication, before ceasing regular print operations in 2016. In November 2020, the magazine relaunched with nearly 10,000 copies in the U.S. and London before selling out and going back to press for a second printing and resumed monthly releases as an online-only publication in 2020.[1][2][3]

History

[edit]

The magazine was founded in 1973 by Los Angeles-based nightclub owner Douglas Lambert, who'd initially explored creating a men's lifestyle magazine featuring nude women to compete with Hugh Hefner's Playboy.[4] At the suggestion of his wife, and inspired by the success of Helen Gurley Brown's use of male nudes in Cosmopolitan magazine (including a shoot featuring film star Burt Reynolds), Lambert refashioned his idea as a feminist response to Playboy and Penthouse instead.[4][5] In partnership with William Miles Jr., an area advertising executive, Lambert founded Playgirl in Century City, California, in 1973 with a $20,000 investment.[4]

After two test issues (featuring race car driver Mike Hiss and the Hager Twins, country singers and stars of TV's Hee Haw, in seminude centerfolds), the magazine, initially styled as Playgirl: The Magazine for Women formally debuted in June 1973,[4][6] featuring television and film star Lyle Waggoner as centerfold and an interview and nude photoshoot with actor Ryan McDonald. Editorial in the issue included a travel pictorial on Hong Kong, long-form interview with actress Cloris Leachman, original fiction by Jillian Charles, and a guide to selecting artwork for the home.[7][6] The first issue sold out quickly, selling 600,000 copies in four days, and for the rest of the 1970s, the magazine would sell, on average, 1.5 million copies each month.[4]

From its inception, Playgirl has featured full frontal nude and semi-nude (rear and obscured frontal) pictorials of men, except for a 10-month period in 1986 and 1987, when following the sale and reorganization of the magazine, new ownership mandated a new approach in the hopes of appealing to a wider readership in an increasingly politically and culturally time.[4][8] Editorially, the magazine covered hot-button sociopolitical issues like abortion and equal rights for the majority of its print run. In the magazine's first decade, it typically did so via long-form journalism, commentary, and feature interviews from well-regarded staff and freelance writers.[4][6] Through the mid-1980s, in-depth interviews with A-list celebrities and newsmakers, including Maya Angelou, Larry Flynt, Barbra Streisand, and Jane Fonda, were frequently paired with commentary from cultural essayists such as Angelou, and original fiction from both emergent and established writers, including Erica Jong and Truman Capote.[5][6]

In 1977, Lambert sold Playgirl to Ira Ritter who took over as publisher, continuing the magazine's editorial style and direction (including male nude pictorials) but leaning more publicly into the magazine's feminist and journalistic bona fides.[4][5] Covers in Ritter's first years centered women, often alone, to highlight female perspectives on politics and other cultural issues, deemphasizing the nude photography and erotic themes still central to the magazine, in terms of magazine's public-facing image and newsstand presence.[6] Ironically during this period the magazine featured its first pictorial with an erection, when 21-year-old man of the month model Geoff Minger became the magazine's first centerfold to display a full erection in the historic January 1980 issue.[9] Results were mixed and in 1986, compounded by bad investments by the owners (including the launch of an unsuccessful spin-off publication, Playgirl Advisor, with a more direct focus on sex, sexuality, and couples), Playgirl filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection[10] and was subsequently acquired by Drake Publishers, Inc.[11][5] The magazine was published by Drake from 1986 until 1993, when Drake was merged into Crescent Publishing Group, Inc.[12]

Until the 1986 change of ownership, Playgirl's interviews, journalism, and original fiction were central to the magazine's identity and featured and promoted as such.[13][14] Post restructuring, the magazine began featuring simplified beefcake-style covers (usually featuring a model from the issue, often in underwear or speedo-style swimwear), and implemented changes to cut costs and expand readership in an increasingly conservative and less feminist-friendly cultural environment of the late Reagan era.[13][15] This resulted in substantial reductions in the in-depth, substantive journalism, political and social feminist commentary the magazine was known for, a decrease in non-pictorial pages, and an increase in advertising space.[5][13]

Ultimately, the 1986-87 reorganization of the magazine failed to significantly increase general readership or improve the magazine's cultural palatability in the new environment, but did have the effect of eroding the magazine's credibility as a substantive mainstream publication that blended erotic content with substantive journalism, repositioning it as a niche, adult-oriented publication.[4][5] The 1993 acquisition of the title by Crescent Publishing Group, the owner of hardcore magazine like High Society and other pornographic titles, cemented this reputation and, as a result, the number of celebrities and newsmakers sitting for interviews or pictorials rapidly decreased.[5]

Crescent's experiments in the 1990s with the publication of celebrity nudes acquired from external sources—including art nudes alleged to be actor Antonio Banderas and intrusive paparazzi photos of actor Brad Pitt (both presented as cover stories), proved short-lived after a series of expensive legal losses and settlements with Banderas, Pitt, and others. Actor Leonardo DiCaprio successfully sued to stop publication of photographs taken without his knowledge, and the pressure from Crescent to publish the photos led to the resignation of Editor-in-Chief, Ceslie Armstrong, who called the photographs "an invasion of privacy [that] I can't be associated with."[16]

By the 2000s, Crescent had fully repositioned the title as an adult brand, relaunching Playgirl's website as a pay site primarily featuring co-branded hardcore straight pornography, and increasing explicit content in the print magazine.[4][5] In August 2000, Crescent was charged by the Federal Trade Commission with over $180 million of online credit card fraud, some of which was alleged by the FTC to have taken place on their new Playgirl website.[17][18] In November 2001, Crescent agreed to pay $30 million in refunds and subsequently changed its name to Blue Horizon Media, Inc.[19]

In August 2008, the magazine announced that it would cease publication of its print edition as of the January 2009 issue.[5] The last print issue of the magazine's initial print run was published as a January/February issue and sold on newsstands through March 2009.[8] Playgirl was then published online through February 2010, when print publication resumed with a March issue featuring political celebrity Levi Johnston, shot by longtime Playgirl photographer Greg Weiner.[20] In 2011, Blue Horizon sold the print rights for Playgirl and other titles to Magna Publishing Group, Inc. of Paramus, New Jersey,[21][22] and the magazine continued to publish as a print title, approximately quarterly, until 2016, when with print subscriptions dwindling to approximately 3,000 the title ceased regular print operations.[23][13]

In 2020, new owner Jack Lindley Kuhns, a gay man, revived the title, relaunching the "New Playgirl Magazine" with a special print edition, featuring a pregnant and nude actress Chloe Sevigny on the cover (a nod to both Playgirl's feminist roots and the magazine's early issues, which often featured women on the cover), edited by Skye Parrott.[1][24] The issue, described by Kuhns as "part political magazine and part art magazine" featured images of nude bodies of all ethnicities and genders, as well as writing about racial injustice, trans empowerment, and body positivity and sold out immediately.[1][25]

Since the 2020 relaunch, the magazine has moved to a regular publishing cycle as an online-only title split across two domains: Playgirl.com, a free site featuring a mix of news, features, and photo essays reside, and PlaygirlPlus.com, a subscription site where access to the publication's archives and the magazine's traditional "Man of the Month" nude photospread, modernized with additional video and multimedia content, are hosted.[26][27] Nicole Caldwell, a former editor-in-chief during the magazine's print run, oversees the online iteration in the same capacity. Under the direction Caldwell, Boardman, and production director Daniel McKernan, the brand has refocused on the traditional male physique and art nude composition the magazine is historically known for, incorporating additional video and multi-media content, moving away from the more explicit depictions of the print magazine's final years and reembracing the magazine's roots.[26] Both domains highlight the decades of substantive journalism, commentary, fiction, and pictorials from the magazine's archives, presenting them in newly digitized formats.[26][27]

Celebrities and public figures nude in Playgirl

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Many celebrities and public figures posed nude or semi-nude for Playgirl during the magazine's initial print runs (with "posed" defined as sitting as a model for the magazine specifically vs. merely appearing clothed and/or shirtless in the magazine or in photos acquired from external sources).

Playgirl featured the highest number of A-list celebrities in nude photoshoots in the 1970s, in the wake of the American sexual revolution and early feminist positioning of the magazine, and 1980s.[14] While many celebrities, such as football legend and actor Jim Brown, World Series MVP Steve Yeager, and actors Lyle Waggoner and Christopher Atkins, posed nude at the height (or near height) of their fame, some, including actors Sam J. Jones and Steve Bond, and country singer Keith Urban, posed earlier in their careers, going on to greater professional success in the years immediately following. Others, like teen idol singer and actor Fabian, Skid Row musician Phil Varone, and supermodel Tim Boyce posed nude for the magazine after the height of their fame, introducing themselves to new generational audiences. In rare occasions, as with fallen 9/11 firefighter Vincent Princiotta, Playgirl models came to national prominence posthumously.

With dozens of celebrities and public figures posting for the magazine over the five-decade print runs, circumstances and experiences varied. Many of the early celebrity centerfolds elected to pose in support of the feminist and gender equality aims of the magazine, particularly in response to male-oriented titles like Playboy, which already featured nude female celebrities. NFL player Dan Pastorini first posed for the magazine to help pay off a legal settlement, but positive reception to his shoot led to a second appearance shortly after.[4][26] While film star Atkins told UPI columnist Vernon Scott he'd posed to "stir up some controversy" in his young career,[28] Olympian Greg Louganis disclosed in his autobiography that he hadn't wanted to do his shoot, but felt pressured to do as a marketing vehicle (to bolster the heterosexual "heartthrob" appeal of the then-closeted diver).[29] Singer Johnny Mathis, unhappy with the results of his shoot, requested his feature not run (the magazine agreed),[30] while NFL player Bob Chandler, who posed shortly after his team won the Super Bowl, was pleased with his layout, and displayed a framed shot in his home.[31]

Actor Marcus Patrick claimed then-editors' use of photos more explicit than agreed cost him his role on the daytime soap opera Days of Our Lives,[32] and singer Urban jokingly called posing pre-superstardom a "career regret," finding the photos, which featured him posing nude and in underwear with his guitar, embarrassing.[33] Conversely, musician Peter Steele expressed strong regret for his unusually explicit shoot, reportedly repulsed by the attention he garnered from gay fans.[34] Others, like straight soap opera actor John Gibson, found the attention from male and female fans equally flattering, with Gibson specifically crediting the positive attention from his Playgirl appearance for his career shift and subsequent success as an actor, model, and dancer.[35][36]

While celebrities and public figures from many walks of life—including the military, circus arts, and politics—have posed nude for Playgirl, the majority of the magazine's high-profile nude models have come from the worlds of film and television acting, professional and world-class athletics (mostly professional baseball, football, and Olympic athletes), and music, including well-known pop, rock, metal, and rap artists.[4][6][16] Historically, famous athletes and musicians have posed fully, frontally nude at the highest rates, while actors, generally required to more carefully manage public image and perception, have been more likely to pose for obscured or rear-only nude pictorials (with some notable exceptions).[6][16]

The number of mainstream celebrities appearing nude in the magazine slowed steadily following a 1986 restructuring (which saw significant cuts to the budget for original features and an end to the high fees previously paid out to celebrity models), and as a result of increasing cultural conservatism at the end of the Reagan Administration and concurrent rise of cultural movements like the Moral Majority, which called for the censorship and restriction of nudity as non-"family friendly" content in American media.[15] With top publicists and representatives for A-list actors and professional athletes more wary of associating with the magazine, celebrity appearances (including A-list interviews) grew rarer. This trend hastened in the final years of the magazine's print run, when the magazine's owners moved the publication in a more explicit direction.[37][5] (As a general rule, explicit celebrity photoshoots, featuring erections or sexually suggestive poses with a female model, were exceptionally rare; most exceptions—including Steele, Varone and reality stars Nick Hawk and Joey Kovar—came during this later period in the title's history.) In the final years of the print run, celebrity appearances were limited exclusively to personalities from the world of reality television.

In February 2024, the newly relaunched, and no longer explicit, Playgirl announced the first celebrity pictorial of its new era—featuring actors Bryan Dattilo, Paul Telfer, Robert Scott Wilson, and Emmy Award-winner Eric Martsolf, stars of the long-running soap opera Days of Our Lives, and their former co-star, Hawai'i 5-0 and Star Wars: Resistance actor Christopher Sean would be released in April.[38]

Celebrities and notable public figures who posed for Playgirl pictorials

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Year Issue Type Style Name Field/Notability
1973 June centerfold obscured nude Lyle Waggoner actor (The Carol Burnett Show, Wonder Woman)
celebrity nude obscured nude Ryan McDonald actor (The Odd Couple, Days of Our Lives)
July centerfold frontal nude George Maharis Emmy Award-nominated actor (Route 66, The Most Deadly Game), singer
August centerfold obscured nude Gary Conway actor (Burke's Law, Land of the Giants) and screenwriter
feature rear, obscured full nude Alan Landers actor, model (The Winston Man)
September centerfold obscured nude Fabian Forte singer, actor (The Longest Day), Emmy Award-nominated producer
October centerfold obscured nude Fred Williamson professional football player, actor (Black Caesar, Julia)
November centerfold frontal nude Don Stroud actor (The Amityville Horror, Mrs. Colombo), stuntman
December centerfold frontal nude Jean-Paul Vignon French singer, TV host, actor (The French Atlantic Affair, The Rockford Files)
1974 January celebrity nude rear, obscured full nude John Ericson actor (Honey West, Stalag 17 original Broadway cast)
feature frontal nude Sonny Landham actor (48 Hours, Predator), politician
April centerfold frontal nude Peter Lupus actor (Mission: Impossible), champion bodybuilder
June group feature frontal nude San Diego State Rugby Team athletic team
July feature frontal nude Lou Zivkovich professional football player
August centerfold frontal nude Greg Rogers, Neil Rogers Australian swimmers, Olympians, Olympic medalist (Gregg)
September centerfold frontal nude Jim Brown professional football player (Pro Football Hall of Fame), actor (The Dirty Dozen, 100 Rifles), Emmy Award-nominated broadcaster
November centerfold frontal nude Phil Avalon Australian actor and producer
1975 April centerfold frontal nude John Gibson actor (The Young and the Restless, The Warriors) and dancer
June centerfold frontal nude Sam J. Jones actor (Flash Gordon, The Highwayman) and professional football player
September frontal nude Jaime Moreno Mexican telenovela actor, singer
October feature frontal nude Steve Bond actor (General Hospital, Picasso Trigger)
1976 January centerfold frontal nude Jimmy Cavaretta celebrity trapeze artist, television personality
1977 February centerfold frontal nude Dick Baney professional baseball player
1980 November group feature frontal nude Eric Martin and Kid Courage musician, rock band
December centerfold rear, obscured full nude Dan Pastorini #1 professional football player
1981 July feature obscured nude Dan Ford professional baseball player
December feature rear, obscured full nude Bob Chandler professional football player (Rose Bowl MVP, Super Bowl XV winner)
1982 January return feature rear, obscured full nude Dan Pastorini #2 professional football player (Super Bowl XV winner)
July feature rear, obscured full nude Leon Isaac Kennedy actor (Body and Soul, Lone Wolf McQuade), disc jockey, playwright
September feature frontal nude Christopher Atkins actor (The Blue Lagoon, Dallas)
October feature rear, obscured full nude Steve Yeager professional baseball player (World Series MVP)
December feature rear, obscured full nude John Matuszak professional football player and actor (The Goonies)
1983 January feature rear, obscured full nude Tommy Chong actor (Cheech & Chong, That 70s Show), Grammy Award-winning comedian
frontal nude Don Williams professional football player
June feature rear, obscured nude Warren Cuccurullo #1 musician (Duran Duran, Missing Persons)
July feature rear, obscured full nude Steve Stone professional baseball player (Cy Young Award), Emmy Award-winning broadcaster
1984 January feature obscured nude Glenn Morrissey actor (Emerald Point N.A.S., Force: Five)
1985 October feature rear, obscured full nude Héctor Camacho #1 boxing champion
1986 March feature rear, obscured full nude Brian Pockar Canadian Olympic figure skater, national champion
August cover story rear nude David Lee Roth singer (Van Halen)
feature frontal nude Steven Pearcy singer and musician (Ratt)
1987 August feature rear, obscured full nude Greg Louganis diver, Olympic medalist
April feature rear nudity Jeff O'Haco actor (Return to Lonesome Dove, Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman), stuntman
1989 April cover story underwear Frank Dicopoulous actor (Guiding Light, Forever and a Day)
1991 May cover story underwear, obscured nude Kip Winger Grammy Award-nominated musician (Winger)
June feature rear, obscured full nude Big Daddy Kane Grammy Award-winning rapper, producer
1994 January feature frontal nude Frank Sepe #1 fitness celebrity, author, model
November group feature frontal nude Vincent Princiotta NYC firefighter (fallen 9/11 first responder)
1995 October feature frontal nude Hermann Eastmond Pan-American Games medalist, national team athlete
August cover story frontal nude (explicit) Peter Steele musician (Type O Negative)
1996 August feature frontal nude Father MC rapper, Grammy Award-nominated producer
October cover story obscured nude Shawn Michaels professional wrestler (world champion)
1998 January feature frontal nude Frank Sepe #2 professional bodybuilder, author, model
May feature frontal nude Robert John Burk celebrity street performer (The Naked Cowboy), model
Digital PG Extras frontal nude (explicit) Warren Cuccurullo #2 musician (Duran Duran, Missing Persons)
2000 October cover story obscured nude Christian Boeving actor (Kingdom of Heaven, When Eagles Strike), extreme athlete (Battle Dome)
January cover story rear, obscured full nude Victor Webster actor (Days of Our Lives, The Matchmaker Mysteries)
May cover story rear, obscured full nude Winsor Harmon actor (All My Children, The Bold and the Beautiful)
2002 September cover story underwear James Hyde actor (Passions, Monarca)
2001 April cover story obscured nude Keith Urban Grammy Award-winning singer
2003 May feature rear, obscured full nude Darryl Worley CMA-nominated singer
2006 April feature obscured full nude Brendon Small actor, comedian, musician (Metalocalypse)
June feature frontal nude Danny Lopes actor (Desecration, Satan's Playground)
2007 April feature rear, obscured full nude Vito LoGrasso professional wrestler
September cover story frontal nude Marcus Patrick actor (Days of Our Lives, All My Children)
2010 Winter #1 feature rear, obscured full nude Levi Johnston political celebrity
Summer cover story frontal nude Ronnie Kroell actor, politician, reality TV star (Make Me a Super Model)
return feature frontal nude Héctor Camacho #2 boxing champion
Winter #2 cover story frontal nude (explicit) Phil Varone musician (Skid Row)
2011 Spring cover story frontal nude Tim Boyce supermodel
Fall cover story frontal nude Joey Kovar reality TV star (The Real World), bodybuilder
2013 Spring cover story rear, obscured full nude Filippo Giove reality TV star (Jerseylicious)
Summer cover story frontal nude (explicit) Nick Hawk model, reality TV star (Gigolos)
Digital feature rear, obscured full nude Mike Shouhed reality TV star (Shahs of Sunset)
2024 Digital feature, video underwear (all), obscured nude (Telfer, video only) Bryan Dattilo, Eric Martsolf, Paul Telfer, Robert Scott Wilson, Christopher Sean actors (Days of Our Lives - all, Hawaii Five-0, Star Wars: Resistance - Sean, Emmy Award-winner - Marsolf)

Readership and Gay Following

[edit]

Though the magazine was mainly marketed to heterosexual women, it developed a substantial gay male following. In 2003, then-editor-in-chief Michele Zipp acknowledged the magazine's gay readership, noting "it's 'Entertainment for Women' because there's no other magazine out there that caters to women in the way we do [but]...we love our gay readers as well, and the gay readership [of the magazine] is about 30%."[39]

Dirk Shafer, one of the gay men featured later produced a comic mockumentary titled Man of the Year in which he discussed balancing his own homosexuality with his role as Playgirl's "Man of the Year," a seemingly heterosexual sex symbol. While the magazine always presented its models as heterosexual, openly gay models have appeared in the magazine, including Scott Merritt, Playgirl's 30th-anniversary centerfold, who came out publicly in an interview with The Advocate. Some models featured over the magazine's print run also posed for gay-focused publications or worked in the gay adult entertainment industry.[39]

[edit]
  • Mike Honcho, a fictional race car driver played by John C. Reilly in the 2006 film Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, reveals he'd previously posed for Playgirl[40]
  • A 2010 "April Fools" episode on Smosh, an American comedy YouTube channel, entitled "Anthony Poses for Playgirl?!" pranked viewers with a fake announcement that one of the channel's co-hosts had posed for the magazine[41]
  • During the 2011 season of reality series A List: New York, cast member Austin Armacost shoots test photos and considers posing for Playgirl[42]
  • The 2022-2023 television dramedy Minx, followed the creation and running of a Playgirl-like magazine in the mid-1970s (the same time period the real-life magazine was founded)[43]

Other versions

[edit]

Playgirl is available in English and has been published in a number of other languages and international English-language editions during its history:

  • Germany (1978–1980 and 1989–2003)
  • France (1978)
  • Australia (1985–88) and as Interlude in 1991
  • Netherlands (1987–88)
  • United Kingdom (1992–93, 2011)
  • Spain (1992–93)
  • South Africa (1995)
  • Brazil (1985)
  • Russia (2004–09)
  • Japan (1986–2015)

When the Russian version of Playgirl was launched in June 2004, it contained photographs of nude, circumcised American men despite circumcision's being less common outside the U.S., being practiced mainly by Muslims and Jews in Russia.[44]

Playgirl UK's brief 2011 relaunch was accompanied by an announcement that it would feature no below-the-waist nudity, and would focus on attractive male celebrities rather than models and pornography actors. It was a failure, and ceased circulation soon after it began.[citation needed]

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Kelly, Keith (November 18, 2020). "Playgirl relaunched — and its first edition sold out". Retrieved March 1, 2024.
  2. ^ Staff (May 26, 2022). "Playgirl launches new site". Rochester First. Retrieved March 1, 2024.
  3. ^ "Meet the Gay Publisher Behind 'Playgirl Magazine's Bold Relaunch".
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Fraser, Kristopher (June 12, 2023). "What Happened to Playgirl? 50 Years of Scandals, Centerfolds and Revolutionizing What Women Read". WWD. Retrieved March 2, 2024.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Rettenmund, Matthew (June 24, 2017). "The Rise and Fall of Playgirl". Esquire.com. Esquire Magazine. Retrieved June 25, 2017.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Various (ed.). "Archives - Playgirl Magazine". Playgirl. Retrieved March 2, 2024.
  7. ^ Milliam, Marin Scott (June 1, 1973). "Playgirl: The Magazine for Women". Playgirl. Retrieved February 29, 2024.
  8. ^ a b Cara Buckley They couldn't get past the 'Mimbos' Archived September 30, 2017, at the Wayback Machine The New York Times, November 14, 2008.
  9. ^ Awl, The (May 13, 2016). "Playgirl's First Hardon". The Awl. Retrieved March 12, 2024.
  10. ^ "Playgirl Magazine Files for Bankruptcy Protection". Associated Press.
  11. ^ Fox, Stephen (August 11, 1976). "Couples Grace Centerfolds". Fresno Bee/Associated Press. p. 18. Retrieved March 11, 2024.
  12. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on August 22, 2016. Retrieved August 4, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  13. ^ a b c d "How did 'Playgirl' magazine go from feminist force to flaccid failure?". fusion.net. May 19, 2016. Archived from the original on July 26, 2016.
  14. ^ a b "Playgirl Archives". www.playgirlplus.com. Retrieved March 2, 2024.
  15. ^ a b "29. The Triumph of the Right". The American YAWP. June 7, 2013. Retrieved March 2, 2024.
  16. ^ a b c Baird, Kirk (June 2, 2003). "The Man Show: At age 30, Playgirl remains the answer to Playboy". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved March 2, 2024.
  17. ^ Lori, Enos (August 24, 2000). "U.S. Cracks Down on Net Porn Fraud". E-commerce Times. Archived from the original on September 16, 2016.
  18. ^ Playgirl Web Site Faces FTC Charges Archived October 8, 2008, at the Wayback Machine Federal Trade Commission, August 23, 2000.
  19. ^ "Blue Horizon Media, Inc". Companiesny.com. Archived from the original on February 7, 2017. Retrieved March 15, 2017.
  20. ^ David Caplan Finally! Levi Johnston's Playgirl cover revealed Archived January 8, 2011, at the Wayback Machine People magazine, February 8, 2010.
  21. ^ "Playgirl (Sold to Magna Publishing on April 25, 2011)". Investing Answers. June 6, 2013. Archived from the original on August 16, 2016.
  22. ^ Johnson, Bob (April 25, 2011). "Magna Publishing Acquires Blue Horizon Titles, Internet Rights". XBIZ Newswire. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016.
  23. ^ "Levi Johnston Bares All for Playgirl". CBS News. February 9, 2010. Archived from the original on August 19, 2016.
  24. ^ Tucker, Emma (October 30, 2020). "Playgirl is back". Creative Review. Retrieved March 2, 2024.
  25. ^ Hopkins, Kathryn (October 26, 2020). "Playgirl Is Back and Very Different From Its Last Issue". WWD. Retrieved March 2, 2024.
  26. ^ a b c d "Playgirl Plus". Playgirl Magazine. Retrieved March 1, 2024.
  27. ^ a b Playgirl. "Playgirl | Iconic. Bold. Timeless. Est 1973". Playgirl. Retrieved March 9, 2024.
  28. ^ Scott, Vernon (July 21, 1982). "Christopher Atkins in the Raw". Tampa Bay Times. p. 63.
  29. ^ Louganis, Greg; Marcus, Eric (1995). Breaking the Surface. Random House.
  30. ^ Adams Sloan, Robin. "The Gossip Column: Cuddly Dudley is Cozy with, but not Wedded to, Tuesday". Daily News. p. 81.
  31. ^ Staff, S. I. "The Bare Facts Are He's A Star". Sports Illustrated Vault | SI.com. Retrieved March 2, 2024.
  32. ^ "A Candid Interview with Hollywood Actor, Marcus Patrick". the-artifice.com. July 1, 2014. Retrieved March 2, 2024.
  33. ^ Ok (January 12, 2013). "Keith Urban regrets posing nude for Playgirl". OK! Magazine. Retrieved March 2, 2024.
  34. ^ Futernick, Brandon (December 17, 2021). "Xero Tolerance: A Critical Look at the Complicated Legacy of Type Xero Tolerance: A Critical Look at the Complicated Legacy of Type O Negative O Negative". CUNY Academic Works.
  35. ^ Gerien, Mischelle (April 1975). "Pride of Palm Beach: John Gibson". Playgirl. pp. 56–60.
  36. ^ Durell Stone, Maria (March 19, 1975). "'Pride of Palm Beach' Speaks Out". The Palm Beach Post. p. 12.
  37. ^ "A Penis on Every Page: The Rise and Fall of Playgirl". June 24, 2017.
  38. ^ Harding, Curtis (February 24, 2024). "'Here Goes Nothing': Days of Our Lives Leading Men Take the Dare to Go Bare for Playgirl". Soaps.com. Retrieved March 2, 2024.
  39. ^ a b Michael Rowe, "Great Scott: After years of struggling with his sexuality, Playgirl centerfold Scott Merritt is coming all the way out. To his surprise, so is Playgirl", Archived June 2, 2006, at the Wayback Machine The Advocate, issue 895, August 19, 2003.
  40. ^ Davis, Ryan (March 25, 2022). "From 'Talladega Nights' to 'Step Brothers': The Best Comedic John C. Reilly Performances". Collider. Retrieved September 6, 2024.
  41. ^ "Anthony Poses for Playgirl". Yahoo News. April 20, 2012. Retrieved September 6, 2024.
  42. ^ Peters, Jeremy (July 29, 2011). "The A-List? They Must Be Grading on a Curve". The New York Times. pp. ST-1.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  43. ^ Ryan, Patrick. "'Minx': How HBO Max's feminist porn comedy exposes the surprising history of adult magazines". USA TODAY. Retrieved September 6, 2024.
  44. ^ Carl Schreck, "Playgirl's men are a cut above," Archived May 13, 2016, at the Wayback Machine St. Petersburg Times, Issue 978 (46), June 18, 2004.
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