Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Hugh Hefner’s company lives on

But Playboy magazine just a shadow of itself

- By Tali Arbel Associated Press

NEW YORK — Playboy Enterprise­s has outlived the founder of its iconic magazine, though largely as a shadow of its former self.

Hugh Hefner’s Playboy, a magazine founded to celebrate his “Playboy Philosophy” of sexual freedom, influenced sexual mores and popular culture for decades.

A business empire grew out of that, but it’s shrunk considerab­ly over the years. It now lives on primarily as a set of bunny ears slapped on products around the world.

Hefner 91.

The magazine itself, whose circulatio­n peaked in the 1970s at 7 million, is died last week at seen as more of a marketing tool that supports the licensing operations at the heart of the modern company. “The magazine is sort of the tiny part of the equation now,” said Samir Husni, director of the Magazine Innovation Center at the University of Mississipp­i.

Playboy the magazine: Playboy, born in 1953, is still putting out print issues. But today its circulatio­n has fallen below 500,000, according to industry tracker the Alliance for Audited Media.

The free-for-all of internet publishing that has squeezed the newspaper and magazine industries has done likewise for Hefner’s brainchild. Pornograph­y for just about any taste or flavor is now available for free online.

For those who read Playboy for the articles, there’s no shortage of compelling journalism spread across the internet and available in your Facebook newsfeed.

The private equity era: In 2011, as Hefner and private equity firm Rizvi Traverse Management arranged to take Playboy private, thenCEO Scott Flanders highlighte­d its transition to a “brand management company.”

Playboy aimed more upscale, dropping licensing deals that were more lowmarket in the U.S. It sold its adult TV and digital operations to an internet porn company.

Then in October 2015 it declared that the magazine would no longer publish the nude photos it was famous for.

Media reports from spring 2016 said that Playboy was looking to sell itself for $500 million, more than double the price paid in 2011. Private equity firms typically acquire troubled companies, then try to slash costs, improve profitabil­ity and resell them for a higher price.

Playboy didn’t end up selling itself, but made a string of changes anyway. Flanders left, and the CEO now is Ben Kohn, a managing partner at Rizvi Traverse, Playboy’s majority owner.

Hefner’s son Cooper, then 24, was brought in as chief creative officer in July 2016. Then the company sold the Playboy Mansion for $100 million to Daren Metropoulo­s of Hostess, maker of Twinkies.

The magazine reversed itself on its no-nudes policy earlier this year, saying nudity was part of its identity.

Licensing empire: Playboy Enterprise­s today pulls in most of its revenue from licensing its brand — its name and those instantly recognizab­le bunny ears in a bow tie — for everything from perfume bottles to men’s shoes.

It wants to once again conjure up a hip and sexy image, leaving behind the cheese factor that’s become associated with it in the U.S. The biggest market is Asia, and Playboy says it has been particular­ly successful in China.

“Playboy isn’t just the magazine — the brand has evolved to become a ‘lifestyle’ brand with a luxurious, smart, and cultured image,” Karina Masolova, executive editor of the trade publicatio­n The Licensing Letter, said in an email. “The branded merchandis­e is always going to sell (at least decently well) in the mature American and European markets.”

Masolova added that while the Playboy brand’s growth may be tapped out in the U.S. and western Europe, Asia is a bright spot where Playboy is cultivatin­g a premium image in men’s fashion.

The magazine also has an internatio­nal presence with 25 foreign editions, with Germany the largest, and owns a subscripti­on adultenter­tainment channel, Playboy TV, available in more than 60 countries.

A string of Playboy Clubs still dot the world; one is even opening in New York later this year, complete with Bunnies, more than three decades after the original New York club closed.

Still, as a private company, Playboy’s finances are opaque. In its last year as a publicly traded company, revenue fell 10.5 percent to $215 million in 2010, and it had posted three years of annual losses.

Its finances then point toward Playboy’s direction today: licensing fees weren’t the biggest revenue source, but they accounted for nearly all the profit.

Some think it is too late for a Playboy resurgence and say the Playboy brand will never approach the prominence and influence it once had.

“The times have passed Playboy,” Husni said. “Without a customer base, without consumers, there is no magazine. With no magazine, there’s no brand.”

 ?? KIN CHEUNG/AP 2010 ?? Waitresses pose inside the Playboy Club at the Sands Casino in Macau. Playboy magazine had millions of readers at its peak in the 1970s.
KIN CHEUNG/AP 2010 Waitresses pose inside the Playboy Club at the Sands Casino in Macau. Playboy magazine had millions of readers at its peak in the 1970s.

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