Upgrade to platinum & get 
up to 4 months FREE!

Results 1 to 10 of 391

Thread: Every Playboy Centerfold 1954 - Today

Threaded View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #2
    Expert ryanstreet's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Ohio, USA
    Posts
    1,473

    Default 1955

    1955. Miss January is Bettie Page.
    This pinup starlet was known throughout the 50s and 60s for her risqué and often fetishistic pictorials. Long after posing in Playboy in January 1955, she was featured in pictorials. Since then Betty Paige has gained a cult following as people adore her stunningly coy smile and the brunette’s ample figure. Her photos have been reproduced numerous times, while she has been idolized in film and other mediums such as comics. No matter where she’s been seen, she’s always a page-turner!

    Also, it is the year of the infamous 'Issue That Never Existed'.

    Here is some info on it...

    The issue that never was...

    If anybody tries to sell you a March 1955 issue, tell him you'll be glad to trade it for a
    left-handed monkey wrench. In Playboy lore, the story of the missing March 1955 issue is the
    ultimate good news/bad news report. The good news: After an initial year in which Playboy's
    press run had increased from 70,000 to 175,000 copies per issue, the first three months of 1955
    saw circulation nearly double again. The bad news: Subscription and newsstand orders were
    flooding the magazine's Chicago offices at such a rate that its tiny staff (a mere five names
    appeared on the masthead) was overwhelmed. "Though we've had everyone from receptionist to
    editors working nights, we haven't been able to keep up with the demand," read the apologetic
    Playbill that led off the next issue--dated April. Reasoning that this was a good time to bring
    Playboy into line with other magazines, which traditionally appeared in the month previous to
    the date printed on the cover, editors simply skipped the March issue. Citing the lack of a
    March issue, the U.S. Post Office tried to deny Playboy its second-class postal permit. When
    Hefner reapplied, postal officials again turned him down--this time basing their refusal on the
    magazine's editorial content. In November, Hef secured an injunction against the Post Office in
    Chicago, restraining it from further interference with the mailing of Playboy.
    Attached Images Attached Images
    Last edited by ryanstreet; 02-02-2011 at 06:45 PM.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND!



Sign up for a Platinum account with Pay PAL



JOIN NOW



Please note: Once payment is made you need to send a private message to wicked at the forum, stating your username and the email address you used to pay.
If you do not do this your upgrade will be delayed, the upgrade will be done within 12 hrs.


Payments are made via websoftff.com

Close