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Playboy Magazine And Its Biggest Scandals In The History

Playboy possibly the most dubious magazine ever published, piling on many scandals since Hugh Hefner established it in 1953.

Be that as it may, not long ago the magazine settled on maybe its most questionable choice so far - jettisoning nude images from its pages and rehashing itself as a lifestyle magazine for men.

Playboy Magazine Scandal

On February 12th, social media star Sarah McDaniel turned into the main model to make the Playboy cover without stripping naked.

The Controversial Covers

While Sarah was just excessively upbeat, making it impossible to be the principal non-nude star in Playboy - notwithstanding conceding she would consider going naked if required - one of the greatest cover debates is around a star who would not like to be on the front of the magazine.

Jessica Alba was picked as the publication's Sex Star of the Year for their March 2006 issue, yet didn't favor being on the cover, so Playboy utilized a two-piece clad pic of her from one of her Into the Blue motion picture promotional posters.

Be that as it may, the actress was not impressed.She was so irate she filed a lawsuit against Playboy guaranteeing the publication had done "limitless harm" to her reputation. Hefner figured out how to calm things down when he gave some money to two charities of her choice, Keep A Child Alive and Until There's A Cure.

Another first came in 2012, when news that Bollywood star Sherlyn Chopra would have been the principal Indian woman to appear on the magazine's cover, and nude inside. It didn't go down well in India.

A more unusual grievance returned off the of the February 2008 cover when feminist comic book fans were ready to fight at the sight of Tiffany Fallon appearing body painted as Wonder Woman. Some thought the sight of the champion in such frame would ruin her picture for young girls.

Rita Jenrette, the then-estranged wife of John Jenrette, a Democrat and standard in the US House of Representatives, appeared nude in the magazine and wrote in a going with piece that the pair once engaged in sexual relations on the progressions of the US Capital following a throughout the night House session.

Unfortunately, Playboy's history has seen the death of several former Playmates in tragic circumstances.

A standout amongst the most shocking was Dorothy Stratten, a former Playmate of the Month, who was killed by her estranged spouse Paul Snider at 20 years old in 1980 after she started seeing film executive Peter Bogdanovich. He later dedicated suicide with the same gun he used to kill his one-time significant other.

All the more as of late, Playboy model Katie May passed away on February 1 subsequent to affliction a "cataclysmic" stroke aged only 34.

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