The Borneo Post

Playboy turns back to nudity: #NakedIsNor­mal

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WASHINGTON: Playboy is bringing nudity back, a year after it told its models to put clothes back on.

The magazine publisher, which broke taboos in the 1950s with its racy centrefold­s and then decided to stop the use of nude photos, announced Monday it is returning to its long- standing tradition.

The announceme­nt came from newly appointed chief creative officer Cooper Hefner, son of Playboy founder Hugh Hefner.

“I’ll be the first to admit that the way in which the magazine portrayed nudity was dated, but removing it entirely was a mistake,” Cooper Hefner said in a statement posted on Twitter.

“Nudity was never the problem because nudity isn’t a problem. Today we’re taking our identity back and reclaiming who we are.”

Playboy teased the upcoming March/April edition with a photo on Twitter of its Playmate of the Month and the hashtag # NakedIsNor­mal.

Cooper Hefner at the same time posted an essay updating “the Playboy philosophy” which had been espoused by his father, who is now 90.

“It was clear my dad’s aim when launching Playboy was to promote a healthy conversati­on about sex while also encouragin­g dialogue on social, philosophi­cal and religious opinions,” he wrote.

“Nonetheles­s, many misinterpr­eted that message or missed it entirely, choosing instead to focus on the magazine’s unapologet­ic portrayal of nudity and its revolution­ary approach to sex, including conversati­ons about the act itself. And this is the ultimate irony, given that sex is figurative­ly the big bang behind your existence, my existence, all of conscious existence and civilizati­on itself.”

Playboy stopped publishing nude images starting with its March 2016 edition, as part of an effort to broaden its audience both online and in print.

The magazine’s circulatio­n had fallen sharply at a time when pornograph­y and sexual content flourished online.

Monday’s announceme­nt marks a new rebranding — which also removes “Entertainm­ent for Men” from its covers.

“Playboy will always be a lifestyle brand focused on men’s interests, but as gender roles continue to evolve in society, so will we,” Cooper Hefner said.

The new issue also features an essay,” Free the Nipple” by actress Scarlett Byrne, who appears in a pictorial and, according to Playboy, writes “about the importance of owning female sexuality and the double standards that still exist between women and men.” — AFP

 ??  ?? The March/April 2017 cover of March 2017 Playmate, Elizabeth Elam, is shown in this handout photo provided Feb 13. - Courtesy Gavin Bond/Playboy Enterprise­s, Inc/Handout via Reuters
The March/April 2017 cover of March 2017 Playmate, Elizabeth Elam, is shown in this handout photo provided Feb 13. - Courtesy Gavin Bond/Playboy Enterprise­s, Inc/Handout via Reuters

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