Texarkana Gazette

Playboy told to remove sign from Texas road

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MARFA, Texas—A Texas agency says Playboy has 45 days to remove a neon-lit 40-foot high sculpture of the magazine’s iconic bunny logo from a West Texas road.

The Texas Department of Transporta­tion ordered the removal of the sign, called “Playboy Marfa,” because Playboy does not have a license for outdoor advertisem­ent in Texas.

The El Paso Times reports officials representi­ng Playboy said the company has not violated any laws and will try to resolve the agency’s concerns.

Officials were alerted about the sign after Marfa resident Lineaus Lorette filed a complaint. “I thought it was a sign—a corporate logo. And in Texas you can’t put up signs without permits,” Lorette said. “I checked and it didn’t have a permit so I filed a complaint.”

Lorette says some Marfa residents are upset the company has used their town, known as a hub for artists, for marketing purposes.

“I was really ambivalent. It’s a beautifull­y made sign,” Lorette said. “The problem is that it’s a sign. The rules have to apply to everybody.”

Veronica Beyer, TxDOT’s director of media relations in Austin said that the agency is treating the case like any other instance in which someone puts up a road side advertisem­ent without a license in an area that does not qualify.

The sign is part of a roadside art display designed by New York contempora­ry artist Richard Phillips and Playboy’s creative director of special projects Neville Wakefield. The installati­on features the offending sign perched atop a post and a concrete platform displaying a stylized version of 1972 Dodge Charger, a classic American “muscle car.”

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