According
to New York Times, last month, Cory Jones, a top editor at Playboy, went to see
its founder Hugh Hefner at the Playboy Mansion and suggested that
they should stop publishing images of naked women. Mr. Hefner, now 89, but
still listed as editor in chief, agreed.
As
part of a redesign that will be unveiled next March, the print edition of
Playboy will still feature women in provocative poses. But they will no longer
be fully nude.
Its
executives admit that Playboy has been overtaken by the changes it pioneered.
“That
battle has been fought and won,” said Scott Flanders, the company’s chief
executive. “You’re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free.
And so it’s just passé at this juncture.”
For
a generation of American men, reading Playboy was a cultural rite, an illicit
thrill consumed by flashlight. Now every teenage boy has an Internet-connected
phone instead. Pornographic magazines, even those as storied as Playboy, have
lost their shock value, their commercial value and their cultural relevance.
Due
to internet porn, Playboy’s circulation has dropped from 5.6 million in 1975 to
about 800,000 now, according to the Alliance for Audited Media. Many of the
magazines that followed it have disappeared.
'You're
now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it's just
passé at this juncture,' Playboy Enterprises CEO Scott Flanders told the Times.
Playboy's
website got rid of nudity last August, and the company says that traffic
quadrupled to 16million as a result.
Future
versions of Playboy will still feature pictures of women in 'provocative
poses', but not full nudity and it is not yet known whether it will keep
publishing a centerfold.
Hefner,
who still personally selects all the nude spreads for the magazine, was not
quoted in the Times piece and has not commented publicly on his Twitter
account.
The
company insists that its strategy is best for business.
'Don't
get me wrong,' editor Cory Jones said of the decision to dispense with nudity,
'12-year-old me is very disappointed in current me. But it's the right thing to
do




No comments:
Post a Comment