Slate Magazine | - |
Starting
next March, Playboy will stop publishing photographs of naked women.
The cheesecake will be dialed back to a “PG-13” rating, the New York
Times' Ravi Somaiya reported Monday night.
How the Internet Killed Playboy
The nudie magazine is going PG-13 to save itself in the digital age.
Starting next March, Playboy will stop publishing photographs of naked women. The cheesecake will be dialed back to a “PG-13” rating, the New York Times’ Ravi Somaiya reported Monday night.
Playmate photos will look “more like the racier sections of Instagram”
than the adult section of the bookstore. In place of nude women, the
magazine will highlight its “tradition of investigative journalism,
in-depth interviews and fiction.” It will target “young men who live in
cities.” According to Playboy CEO Scott Flanders, the Internet
is to blame. “You’re now one click away from every sex act imaginable
for free,” Flanders told the Times. “And so it’s just passé at this juncture.”
The precise mechanism by which the Internet killed Playboy is a little more complicated than that. It’s true that Internet porn delivers more bang for the buck than Playboy
ever did—particularly because Internet porn is free. But the digital
dominance has also made smut markedly less cool, especially for members
of Playboy’s target audience.
When Playboy debuted in 1953, it was revolutionary to page through a nudie mag. Reading Playboy was practically a political protest
against government censorship. Two decades later, catching an erotic
flick in a movie theater was a bawdy date for naughty couples. But now,
the sexual counterculture is trading erotic GIFs on Tumblr, and the
scene is glittering with contributions from gay, pansexual, feminist,
and BDSM viewers. Today’s straight guys are unlikely to buy a magazine
just to see a naked girl. And today’s literally-everybody-else is
unlikely to be thrilled by a brand that sells such an activity as the
height of cool—partly because Playboy’s hetero framework is terribly old school, too.
Porn’s digital dominance also made porn consumption more private.
It’s now normalized to scroll through porn videos on your phone in bed,
but gross and weird to pay to watch it in a public theater. Ditto picking up Playboy on the newsstand (or rocking bunny-eared insignia—as print sales dwindle, retail is central to Playboy’s 21st-century business model). The retro chic image of the Playboy playboy rocking a smoking jacket in a conversation pit has been replaced with that of a geriatric Hugh Hefner bumbling around his mansion while reality show producers pipe in derpy sound effects.
Meanwhile, social media sites, which now determine which magazine
content lives and dies, are less amenable to nudity than sidewalk
newsstands are (or were). Though Tumblr and Twitter allow nakedness on
their networks, Facebook and Instagram—the latter is owned by the
former—ban most exposed nipples,
with photos of breastfeeding mothers as the exception. In that media
landscape, a sex column written by a “sex-positive female” (one feature Playboy editors have teased for the reboot) is a clickier prospect than a nude photograph of said female. Online, Playboy has
been PG-13 for more than a year. The magazine found that when it made
its website totally “safe for work,” and safe for social media sharing,
by dropping nudity, the average reader’s age also dropped—from a
late-40s guy to an early-30s dude.
By clothing the models in print, Playboy can help the magazine reach another demographic. In recent years, Playboy
has been smart enough to market itself to international audiences that
can still be scandalized by a photograph of a naked woman. The Times notes that the Playboy brand is wildly popular in China, a country in which the magazine itself is not actually available. Pornography is illegal in China; the government routinely shutters
websites and social media profiles found to disseminate pornographic
images. So in place of actual porn, Chinese consumers stock up on
bunny-emblazoned T-shirts and trinkets. Over the past decade, Playboy has sold $5 billion worth of the stuff in that country alone. When Playboy tells the Times
that the target audience for its buttoned-up reboot is “young men who
live in cities,” it might just mean Beijing—perhaps a nudity-free
version of Playboy would pass through China’s censors, as the nudity-free lad mag Maxim did in 2004. The retooled Playboy will also likely follow Maxim’s path and shore up on military bases where nudie mags are often off-limits (Playboy isn’t sold at military base exchanges in the Middle East, and mail shipments of the mag are confiscated) and personal Internet time is scarce. In the 1950s, Playboy positioned itself as an enemy of censorship. Now, self-censorship may be the only thing keeping it afloat.end quote from:
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