Non-Nudie PLAYBOY Reinvented
It could happen now, a Playboy India, because the nudity as
flag-bearer of sexual revolution is gone with its March 2016 issue.
Incidentally, the non-nudie Playboy is targeting the 18 to
30 age group, not unlike The Quint, with its multi-media digital platform and
content aimed at over a billion smartphones in use here.
Playboy has put Sarah McDaniel, a 20 year old Snapchat and
Instagram model, on the March cover. She has caught-in-the-head-lights eyes, in
two different colours. They are natural to her, a phenomenon called heterochromia
iridium.
As Playboy, over the years, alongside its many advertisers, took on the mantle of the pied-piper for the luxe set, the reader profile grew older, at an average of 45 years.
Now, like the James Bond franchise under the Broccoli
family, there is a change back to young people, the equivalent of the college
freshmen of its early years. The revamped website has 16 million unique users,
a recent four-fold increase, with an average age of 30; and 20% of these are
women.
The January/February issue of 2016 featured Pamela Anderson
of Baywatch as the last nude in the Playboy saga; just as Marilyn Monroe was
the first, back in December 1953, 62 years ago.
Times have changed, the March cover picture seems to say.
McDaniel appears with an arm outstretched outside the frame, suggesting the photograph
is an impromptu selfie, even though it isn’t.
The coming of the new non-nudie Playboy was announced last
October by the 89 year old Hugh Hefner himself.
Is there still a place for reinvention of this iconic hold-
it-in-your-hands style statement? Present circulation is 800,000, respectable
enough for a print magazine when most
people just access their content on the Internet - either for free, or a small
subscription. But, back in 1972, Playboy
did sell 7.2 million copies a month. Now, such numbers can only hope to be
found on a digital format, hence the shift in the Playboy strategy, that just
includes the iconic ‘print’ version as a member of its multi-media bouquet.
The erstwhile nudes, in all their plastic-surgeried, enhanced,
airbrushed, glow-lit glory, are gone, for good. Today’s people get much
raunchier fare plentifully on the Internet.
But, much of the essential Playboy DNA still resonates and has been
retained. The March issue has the sex column being written by a woman for the
first time. The overall vibe is that of a new erotic that is still committed to
the Playboy rubric of progress, freedom and exploration.
It features an interview with MSNBC anchor Rachel Maddow, who
comments on the presidential elections, going through the primaries at present.
Maddow apparently agreed to the interview only after being told the nudes were
gone.
Other Playboy hallmarks, a piece on politics, an essay by the American
Psycho author Bret Easton Ellis, an excerpt from another book, are all there.
This Playboy can be carried without embarrassment into the
workplace or sit on drawing room coffee tables. The young target audience will
see in a new generation of advertisers too.
The photography has always been a Playboy standard,
projected not as art, but in a cross between advertising photography and
photo-journalism. Now, it seeks to be more accessible and natural.
The old roster of nudes is
impressive though. Starting with Marilyn Monroe in 1953, there was Anita Ekberg
in 1956, Sophia Loren in 1957, Raquel Welch in December 1979, Nastassia
Kinski in May 1983, Madonna in September 1985, Farrah Fawcett in December 1995,
Naomi Campbell in December 1999- to remember just a few of the beautiful women
who graced the magazine.
Playboy has been an institution, shaping lifestyles, defining
sophistication, selling the sports car over the family sedan. It always maintained
its edge, promoting art and artists such as Salvador Dali, Frederico Fellini,
Helmut Newton, Andy Warhol, all of whom presented erotic works to be published
and brought before a huge audience.
There were legendary photographers who worked with the centrefold
models, and created highly imaginative
and technically proficient photographs-Richard Fegley, Pompeo Posar, David Chan.
There were fabulous artwork cartoons by great graphic artists such
as Shel Silverstein, John Dempsey, Jules Feiffer, Phil Interlandi, Gahan Wilson;
each with their distinctive style. The Playboy pages had many landmark and
in-depth celebrity interviews, articles, book excerpts. And the whole package
was presented to the highest printing and quality standards.
These are wonderful legacies- to carry forward into the covered up
and digital era. Playboy will still feature lovely women, beautifully presented,
possibly all the more alluring for the artful concealment.
For: The Quint
(755 words)
February 12th, 2016
Gautam Mukherjee
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