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View Full Version : Hugh Hefner is dead...maybe


Aktungbby
09-28-17, 01:07 AM
There have been rumors since Tuesday On Wednesday (September 27) the business man's reps officially confirmed that Hugh Hefner is not dead. “He joins the long list of celebrities who have been victimized by this hoax. He's still alive and well, stop believing what you see on the Internet,” they said.
Some fans have expressed anger at the fake report saying it was reckless, distressing and hurtful to fans of the much loved business man. Others say this shows his extreme popularity across the globe. but now it's just announced on TV: http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2015/05/01/00/2821867F00000578-0-image-a-35_1430436657669.jpg Chauvinistic: Showing the times that were 1953, the magazine's introduction says: 'If you're somebody's sister, wife or mother-in-law and picked us up by mistake, please pass us along to the man in your life and get back to your Ladies Home Companion'

HW3
09-28-17, 03:16 AM
It is true. https://www.nbcnews.com/pop-culture/celebrity/hugh-hefner-playboy-magazine-mogul-dies-91-n657521

Sailor Steve
09-28-17, 05:33 AM
The Playboy Interview, a several thousand-word-long Q&A that began in 1962 with Alex Haley interviewing Miles Davis...
Cool! I knew about Haley's (in)famous interview with George Lincoln Rockwell, but their very first was Haley and Miles Davis?

Cool!

Aktungbby
09-28-17, 09:57 AM
What I forgot to post^: In 1953, he raised $8,000 from friends and family — including his mother — to launch Playboy, featuring photos of Marilyn Monroe from a 1949 nude calendar shoot. (Hefner once said he owed his career to the screen siren and reserved a crypt adjacent to Monroe's at the Westwood Village Memorial Park mausoleum, according to Vanity Fair (http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2010/08/playboy-hugh-hefer-201008).) Talk about: 'let the circle be unbroken' here!:Kaleun_Applaud:

Dowly
09-28-17, 10:22 AM
Did he have a stroke?


:88)

aanker
09-28-17, 11:19 AM
Did he have a stroke?


:88)
He sure influenced our culture. According to fox news he died peacefully in his sleep, at age 91.

Buddahaid
09-28-17, 01:24 PM
Somebody missed the joke.....:up:

August
09-28-17, 01:36 PM
He sure influenced our culture. According to fox news he died peacefully in his sleep, at age 91.

He sure did. Hefner did an lot to advance freedom of speech in this country. He fought a lot of the legal and social battles that paved the way for further advances over the 60's and 70's, and while his magazine did objectify women getting him into trouble with the womens lib movement (some say giving rise to it) it also broke through the last vestiges of sexual repression putting to rest the notion once and for all that good decent girls couldn't ever like or want sex.

Dowly
09-28-17, 01:54 PM
I wonder how sex would be looked at in the US these days without men like Hefner? I mean, sex and nudity still seems to be quite a "taboo" there. :hmmm:

Platapus
09-28-17, 02:03 PM
He was an innovator in marketing. We studied his company and magazine (not the photographs) in business school.

Every detail about how a playboy magazine was designed was well thought out and planned.

August
09-28-17, 04:43 PM
He was an innovator in marketing. We studied his company and magazine (not the photographs) in business school.

Every detail about how a playboy magazine was designed was well thought out and planned.

http://s2.quickmeme.com/img/bd/bd3a5d38cbbb5ef5c39c15c63810fb8970bedddf2122976517 b75fb9725a7a2f.jpg :):03:

vienna
09-28-17, 04:45 PM
He was an innovator in marketing. We studied his company and magazine (not the photographs) in business school.

Every detail about how a playboy magazine was designed was well thought out and planned.


Yeah, yeah, we know you were "only getting it for the articles" (nudge, nudge, wink, wink, say no more...)...


http://i0.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/newsfeed/001/052/199/94e.gif


Playboy actually was one of the leading publications to give voice to issues and persons who were blocked out of mainstream exposure. Back in high school, I was part of the tournament debate team and, one year, the assigned tournament topic was the Warren Commission report. Mark Lane, the noted JFK assassination researcher and Warren Commission critic, had given an interview to Playboy. There was much agonizing over whether to cite some of Lane's discussion as reference in the debates since Playboy was still considered a bit of a social pariah in the late 60s. We finally did go ahead and use the interview as part of our sources. We would have never been able to find such good, first hand, info if not for Playboy's active pursuit of giving voice to persons and issues who would have been silenced otherwise. The impact of Playboy on the culture of the US, particularly in the 60s and 70s, was significant and Hugh Hefner was able to elevate the magazine above being just another 'girlie mag'. Although, it was a surprise to find out actual women didn't have staples in the navels...

RIP, Hugh Hefner...





<O>

Sailor Steve
09-28-17, 05:33 PM
He also gave voice to a lot of great writers of the era. I became a huge Larry Niven fan in 1971 after reading one of his stories in a Playboy. I still have most of his books.

Gargamel
09-28-17, 05:59 PM
He sure did. Hefner did an lot to advance freedom of speech in this country. He fought a lot of the legal and social battles that paved the way for further advances over the 60's and 70's, and while his magazine did objectify women getting him into trouble with the womens lib movement (some say giving rise to it) it also broke through the last vestiges of sexual repression putting to rest the notion once and for all that good decent girls couldn't ever like or want sex.

Well said.

Agree with his content or not, he (and others of his ilk) did great things in the fight for free speech. He pushed the boundaries, allowing others to not have to worry of they didn't push as hard.

And those that didn't like his content, it gave them a rally cry to fight behind, which also led to improvements in society.

So like him or hate him, I guess his 'extremism' has led to many good things.

u crank
09-28-17, 06:30 PM
When I was in high school in 1967 there was this guy who we all thought was a little strange. His name was Murray and he was very smart but somewhat eccentric. Also a very proud teenage Scotsman who would wear a kilt to school on Robbie Burns day. One day in history class the teacher asked us what magazines we were reading to keep up with current events. A few people said Time, Life etc. Murray spoke up and said.."Playboy has excellent articles in every issue." The silence was deafening and finally the embarrassed teacher said.."anyone else?". It goes without saying that Murray's street cred went up a 100% with us guys after that. :D:yep:

Jimbuna
09-29-17, 05:59 AM
There is an article below claiming to expose Hefners 'dark side'.

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2017/sep/28/hugh-hefner-playboy-founder-91-dark-side

Platapus
09-29-17, 01:00 PM
Unfortunately, only the magazine design was part of the class, not the magazines themselves.