Playboy (1-year)
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| List Price: | $62.90 |
| Price: | $15.96 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
| Issues: | 12 issues / 12 months |
Availability: Your first issue should arrive in 6-10 weeks.
Average customer review:Product Description
Playboy is America's best-selling men's magazine. Every month, this provocative and informative magazine provides stimulating articles, probing interviews, and eye-pleasing centerfolds.
No other magazine entertains you with the quality, style and naked truth of Playboy. Every issue brings you the world's most beautiful women, uncensored advice about sex, revealing celebrity interviews, award-winning fiction and humor, the famous cartoons and jokes, stimulating articles and, of course, those sumptuous eye-pleasing centerfolds. Provocative and informative, Playboy is America's best-selling men's magazine.
Playboy publishes double issues, each counts as two of 12 issues in an annual subscription.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #29 in Magazine Subscriptions
- Formats: Magazine Subscription, Print
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Who Reads Playboy?
Provocative and informative, Playboy is America’s best-selling men’s magazine. Playboy is read by more than 10.3 million people in the U.S. – of which two million are women. The magazine is primarily aimed at men in their twenties and thirties, but is read by men and women of all ages.
What You Can Expect in Each Issue:
Whatever goes on between a man’s ears is a convenient way to sum up the content of Playboy. Prominent among its features are the pictorials, which showcase women ranging from the girl next door to world-famous celebrities, but also includes sports, entertainment, politics, social trends, developments in the areas of sex and romance, short fiction and compelling articles on behalf of a wide variety of subjects.
- Pictorials: Featuring the world’s most beautiful women, as captured by some of the world’s most talented photographers.
- ManTrack: New cars, sporting equipment, technology, furniture, travel destinations and other consumer goods.
- After Hours: A bemused tour d’horizon of current culture.
- Forum: Opinion and argument about political and social developments, often focusing on issues of personal freedom and expression.
- The Playboy Advisor: A column in which readers’ questions about modern living, including love, sex, fashion, technology, etiquette and other topics are answered.
Each month, Playboy magazine offers the most engaging and eclectic mix of material in the general interest and men’s categories. The Playboy Interview, a monthly in-depth conversation with an important figure—recent subjects include Richard Branson, Alec Baldwin, Chuck Palahniuk, Tina Fey, Kanye West, Seth Rogen, Jay Z, Gov. Bill Richardson, Arianna Huffington, Kenny Chesney, Bill O’Reilly, Farheed Zakaria and Thomas L. Friedman—is the most authoritative body of interview-format work in the history of American journalism. A shorter, lighter interview called 20Q (recent subjects include Danica Patrick, Judd Apatow, Charles Barkley, Jack Black, Fergie, Scott Boras and Amy Smart) allows readers another chance to hear about a celebrity in the person’s own words.
Playboy delivers news-making and substantive journalism like "Death and Dishonor," the story of the brutal home-front murder of an Iraq War veteran that was the basis for the movie "In the Valley of Elah," “Our Battles Joined,” a search for the true circumstances behind the execution of an Afghani translator, which was turned into the HBO documentary “Fixer: The Taking of Ajmal Naqshbandi,” and “The Strange Redemption of James Keene,” about a convicted drug dealer turned federal informant who infiltrates a prison for the criminally insane to befriend a serial killer—and which is also being made into a feature film. Reporting for Playboy also served as the basis for the fictionalized account of an U.S. bomb unit in Iraq for the film, “The Hurt Locker.” Other recent articles include a joint profile of comedians Jimmy Kimmel and Sarah Silverman, an series of provocative letters written by Norman Mailer during the course of his illustrious career, a multi-part memoir of the romantic escapades of brilliant noir novelist James Ellroy, photo-driven profiles of actors such as Justin Long, Ray Stevenson and the cast of “Mad Men,” a feature about Howard Stern sidekick Artie Lange, a profile of LAPD chief Bill Bratton, an expose of sexual repression in fundamentalist Iran, several essays about maintaining privacy in an era of dizzying technological and legal change, and a series of definitive articles on male sexual health.
Each issue also includes a piece of fiction, spotlighting the best of established and emerging talents. In 2008, for instance, Denis Johnson wrote a novel exclusively for serialization in the magazine called “Nobody Move,” the follow-up to his National Book Award winning “Tree of Smoke”; it was published in 2009 by Farrar, Straus & Giroux. Playboy has also secured rights to an excerpt of a unpublished novel by Vladimir Nabokov which will appear in its December 2009 issue.
Past Issues:
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Contributors:
Playboy’s roster of contributors over the course of its history is second to none. It includes Norman Mailer, Kurt Vonnegut Jr., Hunter S. Thompson, William F. Buckley Jr., Arthur Schlesinger Jr., John Cheever, Arthur C. Clarke, George Plimpton, Ray Bradbury and Shel Silverstein. Active contributors include Gore Vidal, Stephen King, John Updike, T.C. Boyle, Jonathan Safran Foer, Chuck Palahniuk, Richard Dawkins, Jeff Greenfield, Denis Johnson, Jimmy Breslin, Christopher Buckley, Jane Smiley, Margaret Atwood, Robert Coover, Jim Harrison and Nadine Gordimer.
Magazine Layout
The magazine offers a pleasing balance of attractive photography, lively illustration, and well-designed text.
Comparisons to Similar Magazines:
Playboy informs its entire editorial product (articles, photographs, and illustrations) with intelligence, wit, and sophistication. They provide readers with a unique editorial mix, including lifestyle service information, entertainment, interviews, politics, advice, women, sports, news features, and short fiction.
Playboy is an American icon. Smart, edgy and a bit provocative, Playboy has been the leading men’s magazine for nearly the entirety of its 55 year existence, surpassing and outlasting all competitors and imitators.
Awards
Playboy has long been recognized for its design, art and writing, receiving more than 1,600 awards. Most recently, Playboy won eight design awards from Creativity, encompassing illustration, design and editorial photography. In 2007, Playboy was also nominated for a National Magazine Award for Fiction.
Customer Reviews
Female Fan
I've been a fan of playboy ever since i found a stack in my dad's closet. Why? because the articles are great! that was years ago and i still fight my boyfriend for the chance to read it first. It's one the few magazines left that you can really read. I'm so sick of the female magazines that tell you how to please your man and all that junk. you only hve to buy one mag and you know all the information for the next 11 issues.
EVERRYONE should have a subscription to playboy, not just the boys!!!
A great magazine, but abysmal print quality.
I like the magazine, but the past 2 years the print quality has been the absolute worst. I can't find a single magazine on the entire news stand with more shoddy printing than Playboy. It is not damage, it comes from the printers that way. Every single issue will be like that. I can get one in the mail with a warped spine and other defects. Then get one at a book store with identical problems. Then order one from Amazon with the same problems. Then get one from another city, or another seller, with the exact same problems.
I have brought this to their attention. They just don't care. Before early 2007, the quality was great, straight flat spine, no defects of any kind. If you did find a bad one, a good copy was easy to find. Now it's all crap.
It's really a shame too, it has great articles and pictures. I still like to read it. But I don't understand how they are not completely embarrassed to have by far the worst print quality of any magazine currently in circulation.
Another thing that puzzles me. How is it possible for the news stand specials (lingerie, nudes, etc.) to be perfect, yet the main magazine to be all bent up?
everything covered; except the women
What can I say? I have subscribed to Playboy for over 40 years. Every subject imagineable is likely to be in the magazine eventually. The women are more beautiful than ever, and the interviews are always interesting. No magazine covers more topics than Playboy with insight and intelligence. I particularly enjoy the Playboy advisor and 20 questions.









