![]() ![]() But not only was Playboy one of the first to publish colored photographs of nude women, its Playmate concept set it apart from the rest. Circulation grew quickly, partly because of the magazine's lack of competition. Hefner immediately invested his profits back into Playboy, expanding his staff. A huge success, the magazine sold out of all 70,000 copies at $0.50 apiece. Regardless, the first issue was released in December 1953. The star was never paid for her Playboy debut. Hefner bought old photos a struggling Monroe had posed for under a pseudonym, having no idea they would eventually end up as a magazine feature. The cover and centerfold featured Marilyn Monroe. He thought a tuxedoed rabbit would be "cute, frisky, and sexy." With no office to work out of, Hef put the first issue of Playboy together in his apartment on the kitchen table. But Hefner himself came up with Playboy's now iconic logo. Originally, Hefner wanted to call it Stag Party, but was challenged by Stag Magazine, so a friend suggested the name Playboy, and it stuck. Recruiting 45 investors who cobbled together $8,000, a young Hef was ready to launch what would become Playboy. In 1953, former copywriter Hugh Hefner saw a demand for a gentleman's magazine. But Hugh Hefner's gone, the original Playboy Clubs have closed, and magazine sales have shrunk to less than 4% of what they used to be. In the early 2000s, Playboy's logo could be found on everything from jewelry to tattoos, and Bunnies were all over movie screens and reality TV. Its best-selling issue sold over 7 million copies. Irene Kim: Playboy used to be everywhere. ET on A&E.Account icon An icon in the shape of a person's head and shoulders. “Secrets of Penthouse” airs September 4 and 5 at 9 p.m. There’s a sense of karma, perhaps, in watching his almost Shakespearean descent from the Penthouse to the poor house, provided one doesn’t spend too much time dwelling on the voyeurism that’s central to making “Secrets of” such a viable concept. Guccione died of cancer in 2010, living long enough to see the empire he had meticulously built essentially collapse around him. Other sordid chapters include the lawsuit brought by former Pet Anneka DiLorenzo, who accused Guccione of treating her as a “sex slave,” forcing her to sleep with men to advance his business interests. “The hatred was visceral,” recalls Peter Bloch, Penthouse’s longtime editor, one of several former employees who detail Guccione’s bullheadedness and misguided decisions. There’s also a cultural aspect to the Penthouse saga, as Guccione managed to simultaneously draw the wrath of feminists as well as evangelicals, punctuated by the episode in which he published explicit photos of Vanessa Williams, the first Black Miss America, prompting her to relinquish her crown. ![]() Not surprisingly, “Secrets of Penthouse” is most interesting in the “fall” part of Guccione’s business, as he foolishly expanded into areas separate from the magazine – sinking money into the star-studded “Caligula,” basically just a glorified porn film amid a more explicit cinematic wave in the 1970s and losing millions fruitlessly trying to open an Atlantic City casino. Nick Guccione, interviewed for the docuseries "Secrets of Penthouse." A&E Not that they listened to him, according to his son Nick, who says he “didn’t have a father” growing up, and, along with his sister Nina, speaks freely about personal struggles related to his upbringing. Indeed, while Guccione carried on relationships with a number of his employees, and the discussion includes his unorthodox sexual appetites, he expressly forbade his sons from fraternizing with the magazine’s models. Guccione launched Penthouse in Europe, offering more explicit photography than the better-established Playboy before jumping the Atlantic in 1969, targeting its rival with cheeky “We’re going rabbit hunting” ads.įor a time, there was ample room for both, allowing Guccione to earn millions – investing much of it in priceless artwork – and occupy a lavish New York mansion with Penthouse “Pets” (that is, its featured models) among the occasional residents, while proceeding to alienate himself from his four children. As trashy as one might expect, it’s also a rise-and-fall story, told heavily through Guccione’s children, about an empire built and lost. Having carved out a niche in vaguely sleazy “Secrets of” docuseries beginning with Hugh Hefner and Playboy, A&E finds an ideal and perhaps inevitable playground for the franchise with “Secrets of Penthouse,” which basically serves as a four-part biography of the magazine’s founder, Bob Guccione.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |