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Hugh Hefner

From Encyclopedia Dramatica
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Hugh Hefner was a prince among men who sought to liberate Women from the evil Victorian values of old that teach that Sex is a sin outside of marriage and women should embrace the idea of being sexually agressive, initiate sex more and sought to elevate women and help men to see them as something more than just a fuck toy and a sammich maker despite Feminazi, penis-hating women calling him a chauvinistic exploiter of women. Hugh is well as a defender of the First Ammendment despite being a supporter of the Democratic Party and their desire to censor everything from music lyrics, video games, literature and pornographic magazines.
It is a black spot on the history of man that on 27 September 2017 Hugh Hefner passed on to that great Playboy Mansion in the sky. He is best known for helping young boys discover themselves, making Marilyn Monroe a converation piece and is getting an article because we needed an excuse to post a huge gallery of titties from the 50s to today to ensure that his legacy goes on.

Playboy Magazine

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You can have this issue for the small price of $4,400
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Hugh Hefner began Playboy Magazine in January 1952 when he quit his job at Esquire Magazine because the Jews in charge refused him a $5 raise. With $1,000 from his mother, a $600 bank loan and $8,000 from 45 investors to launch the first issue of Playboy, that went to market December 1953 and included the still popular nude of Marilyn Monroe as the centerfold. The issue was a complete success and sold over 50,000 issues at 50 cents and is considered a collectors item by book dealers and fans of the magazine with a near-mint issue going for as much as $5,000.
The Iconic rabbit logo was designed by Playboy Art Director Art Paul for the second issue as an endnote and by the third issue became tge official logo. Heffner has said he chose the idea of the rabbit for the logo because it's a feminine animal that is well known for being playful and outright sexual in nature. A running gag with the magazine is to hide the rabbit somehow on the cover of the magazine
One of Playboy's more notable themes is that Hugh Hefner would only allow nudity that was in tge classic traditions of Art and could be found in most museums. The nudes are shot more as artistic pieces to show off the beauty and form of the woman rather than serve as vehicles for arrousal. So there is to be no seeing of a vagina or sex acts. His goal was to make the images of the woman look like something that could have been painted by a clasical artist like Johannes Vermeer and could be viewed at The Metroploitan Museum Of Art. This could also have a lot to do with the fact that he was publishing in the 50s where anti-obsenity laws had writers being thrown in jail for admitting to fapping at poetry readings.