The Sunday Telegraph

Playboy bares its soul to attract millennial­s

- By David Millward US CORRESPOND­ENT

FOR decades, Playboy tried to set itself apart from other “men’s publicatio­ns”.

At its peak, the magazine had seven million readers. But circulatio­n has plummeted and is now somewhere below 400,000.

Changing fashions made Playboy an anachronis­m and after a series of relaunches, it is now trying to appeal to the millennial, MeToo generation.

Founded by Hugh Hefner in 1953, it offered not only titillatio­n but also serious writing, publishing short stories by writers as diverse as Margaret Atwood and Roald Dahl.

Hefner died in 2017 and for the first time, no members of the Hefner family are involved in the magazine, which is run by financier Ben Kohn.

Nudes are back, having been banished from its pages by Hugh’s son Cooper in late 2015.

On recanting, Cooper, tweeted: “I’ll be the first to admit the way in which the magazine portrayed nudity was dated, but removing it entirely was a mistake.”

Its approach today has changed. The latest magazine does feature an underwater nude shot, but the participan­ts are not profession­al models. One is an underwater dancer who uses the medium to promote ocean conservati­on.

Another, a Belgian artist, has filmed herself walking naked through Brooklyn.

Many of the pictures in the magazine are taken by female photograph­ers, as it sought to convince readers of the new approach: “Today, we strive to be more inclusive, stretching and redefining tired and frankly sexist definition­s of beauty, arousal and eroticism.”

Not everybody is convinced, though – including Joanna Coles, a former editor-in-chief of Cosmopolit­an.

“Through today’s lens, Hugh Hefner is grotesque and his women victims,” she told the New York Times. “They should lay it to rest with Hugh’s smoking jacket.”

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