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Season 1 Episode 07 | Below The Belt: Playboy and the Pubic Wars
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00:00The year was 1968 and America was still reeling from three major assassinations and an ongoing
00:18war in Vietnam. But Playboy was keeping up with the tumultuous times, running articles about
00:29politics, race, and social justice. Soon, the magazine was earning a reputation as the voice of the young,
00:38progressive movement that was sweeping the country.
00:45Hef did a great job of evolving the magazine from the 50s suit, dinner jacket, cocktail version of
00:55Playboy to the 60s summer of love version of Playboy. He was always ready to adapt the magazine to what was
01:05going on in culture. Most of the time, he was already very far ahead of where the culture was going.
01:11As we evolved, readership continued to boom. And by the end of the 1960s,
01:21one in four college men subscribed to Playboy.
01:28But just because the magazine had matured didn't mean we took ourselves too seriously. My new TV show,
01:35Playboy After Dark, showed that at the end of the day, we were still about having fun.
01:40In its first year, the show was popular enough to be spoofed by Johnny Carson.
01:55Each week, I'm here on the show to kind of break down ancient sex beliefs, you know, combat
02:01Puritan morality and get my hands on some good stuff.
02:10Between filming Playboy After Dark in L.A.
02:14and traveling around the world to meet with Playboy club managers and magazine editors,
02:19I was always in the air and barely spending any time in my Chicago home.
02:24So I decided it was time to bring the Playboy mansion to the skies.
02:31Every little movement, every little thing you do, is its light of hand that commands my heart to love you.
02:50Every little movement, every little movement.
02:56Every little movement.
03:09In the spring of 1968, I tasked my executive assistant, Dick Rosenzweig, with an ambitious project.
03:16Jeff came to me one day, and he said he needed a private aircraft, and he wanted a very special one.
03:27He said the plane should be painted black.
03:32Because there is no other black plane out there, and we'll put a white bunny on the tail.
03:36I love it.
03:49I've got a song that ain't got no melody.
03:56It was a status symbol just to fly private, but I wanted to take it a step further.
04:01So I took a commercial airliner, gutted it, and retrofitted it in a style that was pure Playboy.
04:10When they go round in circles
04:15When they fly high like a bird up in the sky
04:19Before long, my jet became known as the Big Bunny.
04:23If Hugh Hefner can afford a personalized airplane like this, his money must multiply like bunnies.
04:34I've got a story, ain't got no morrow
04:37That plane cost five and a half million dollars.
04:41Over 38 million dollars today.
04:43And it was worth every penny.
04:45We have a series of buttons here that control the polarized windows that can go all the way from light to gray to total blackness.
04:55It can seat 38, sleep 16, and has additional gas facilities so that it can go any place in the world.
05:04The Big Bunny had a luxury bedroom, shower, TV and movie theater, and of course, a dance floor.
05:15The Big Bunny
05:18Constantly surrounded by gorgeous girls and beautiful belongings, Hefner's world may seem enviable to some.
05:34At 44, he's unquestionably King Rabbit, and certainly he takes every opportunity to enjoy his dough.
05:40The Big Bunny, it was an experience. It was like a house with wings.
05:50I remember the first time our crew flew with Hef, he saw our luggage and he didn't like the way it looked.
05:57So he would have bought everybody luggage. If you're gonna fly with me, you're gonna have good luggage.
06:05My every need was taken care of by our Jet Bunnies.
06:10Jet Bunnies did not wear the traditional bunny outfit. They wore black mini dresses, scarves, and boots.
06:19Very much modeled after the Bond girls that were so popular at the time.
06:27The Big Bunny became a media sensation.
06:29It is the only way to fly.
06:32Really?
06:35Who cares?
06:37These are all people that work in the A&P.
06:40But I had no idea that the next time I flew to L.A., my life would change forever.
06:49You'll see in five minutes.
06:55Thanks for showing me the set.
06:57What do you think?
06:58I like it. I'm not so sure about the furniture up front, though.
07:02You've got an orange sofa down the back there. I know you love that color.
07:05Okay, great.
07:09Every week on Playboy After Dark, we pack the soundstage with great-looking models and extras.
07:15I think that's everything.
07:17All right, well, uh, you're happy. Let me take you through the makeup.
07:21One day, one of them captured my full attention.
07:26I'd bought the plane. I'd already committed to doing Playboy After Dark.
07:31I was preparing to live a new adventure and a new experience and a new timeframe or a new chapter in my life.
07:38And there she was.
07:40That wholesome beauty was Barbara Klein, who would soon come to be known as Barbie Benton.
07:48I met Hef on the set of Playboy After Dark.
07:52And he asked me if I would like to go out with him that night.
07:58How about we go out for a drink after?
08:01You and me?
08:03And I said, I don't know. I've never been out with anybody over 24.
08:11And he said, neither have I.
08:14Barbie had been attending UCLA to become a veterinarian.
08:32But when she realized she couldn't stand the sight of blood, she quickly gave up the career.
08:37She began modeling part-time, acted in a few small commercials, and then took a job as an extra on Playboy After Dark.
08:49I'd been with my fair share of women.
08:52But from the moment I met Barbie, I knew she was different.
08:56I remember Sunday morning, I would meet him at the bar.
09:06Hef is the most romantic person that I've ever been with.
09:11And he put me on a pedestal and worshipped me.
09:16I hadn't been around anybody who was that affectionate and wanted me so badly.
09:28I mean, just to be with me, to sit next to me and hold my hand.
09:33He was just so excited. He was like a little boy.
09:35Hef saw her as the ultimate girl next door.
09:56And he found her refreshing, co-ed like, and a lot of fun.
10:02And Hefner really fell for her.
10:08From that point on, all my time in Los Angeles was spent with Barbie.
10:12Both off camera and on.
10:15What kind of color would you be, Barbie?
10:18Oh, I'd be sexy. I'd be...
10:20I'd have to be red.
10:22Because it's sexy and a little bit mysterious.
10:25Oh, wait a minute. Burnt orange.
10:27Because that's your favorite color.
10:28That's my favorite color.
10:32She essentially became my co-host.
10:35I noticed that Sonny and Cher are about ready to do a number for us.
10:39I can't wait. I can't wait.
10:40And maybe Barbie would like to do the introduction.
10:43And to everyone who watched the show, our chemistry was impossible to miss.
10:48Hef's girlfriend, Barbie Benton. I mean, God, Barbie Benton. I was so in love with her.
10:55She was just a regular girl. She had beauty.
10:58Simon says, girls, arms around the boys.
11:01Simon says, bring your noses two inches apart.
11:04Simon says, bring your noses an inch apart.
11:07Simon says, closer.
11:08Simon says, closer.
11:10Simon says, closer.
11:11Simon says, be creative.
11:16Simon says, stop, Hef.
11:19Hef, Simon, and Barbara, please say stop, or you'll be...
11:23Simon says, stop.
11:25I'm out of the game.
11:26I'm out of the game.
11:37With Barbie by my side, I became a new man.
11:44I think we should go somewhere.
11:47Yeah.
11:49What about Europe?
11:52Europe?
11:53Yeah.
11:54I did things with Barbie that I had never done before and have never done since.
11:58And I spent a great deal of my time where she was.
12:02It was almost as if I was planning for that relationship before I met her.
12:06It was a wonderful time of my life.
12:08Africa.
12:10Where would you like to go in Africa?
12:12Oh, gosh.
12:14I think I managed to bring him out of his shell.
12:17He was a hermit. He never got out of his house.
12:20And I love you so.
12:24I got him to do things.
12:26I'm still amazed at the things we did.
12:30One of the things that I loved to do with Hef was travel.
12:35We went to 16 different countries on one trip.
12:41It was romantic.
12:42Everything we did was fun and exciting.
12:46Hef and I had a lot of romance in our lives.
12:47Everywhere we went, it was an adventure.
12:48Hef and I had a lot of romance in our lives.
12:49Everywhere we went, it was an adventure.
12:50Hef and I had a lot of romance in our lives.
12:54Everywhere we went, it was an adventure.
12:55Hef and I had a lot of romance in our lives.
12:56Hef and I had a lot of romance in our lives.
12:57Everywhere we went, it was an adventure.
12:59Hef and I had a lot of love like I know it should.
13:09Hef and I had a lot of romance in our lives.
13:12Hef and I had a lot of love like I know it should.
13:13Hef and I said it's a good thing to love someone.
13:30Barbie was the most intensely romantic relationship that I think I had ever been in.
13:34I said publicly that it was, I thought, the first time I'd really been in love.
13:39I was having the ultimate high school courtship in my early 40s.
13:52I have some news I think a lot of you will be happy to hear.
13:57Starting with the next issue, it's time for me to take a step back.
14:03Now I'm still going to be approving every page of the magazine.
14:06This just means no more 60 page memos.
14:09Spec.
14:11With the magazine doing so well and Barbie taking up more of my time,
14:15I finally decided it was time to do something I had always resisted.
14:20Delegate.
14:22I gave Tajiri, Spectorsky and Kretschmer more creative control over the magazine
14:27and made Arnie executive VP of Playboy Enterprises.
14:30But I saved one of the most important assignments for Victor Lowndes.
14:38Over the last several years, we had successfully opened 15 Playboy Clubs within the U.S.
14:44and three international locations.
14:50But if we were going to become a worldwide phenomenon, there was only one place left to go.
14:55You oughta hear the monkey when he sings the moon.
14:58A monkey oh yeah, monkey oh yeah, monkey oh yeah, monkey oh yeah.
15:03London was home to the swinging 60s.
15:07An economic boom had brought average earnings almost twice as high as the cost of living.
15:11And on top of that, it had the youngest population of any city in the world.
15:20With 40% of residents under 25 years old, they were all looking to go out, spend their money and have fun.
15:28I knew Victor was the only man who could develop the London Playboy Club.
15:39So I sent him over to England.
15:42And he wasted no time setting things in motion.
15:45London was really quite a hot place.
15:47And it seemed like a good move.
15:49And they decided to send me over to organize it, which I did.
15:55He'd never been to Britain.
15:57He threw himself into London life.
16:00When he was researching everything, he was taken to clubs where there were gaming tables.
16:08Thanks to a recent ruling in London, Vic had license to take the club in a whole new direction.
16:15Gambling had just become legalized.
16:19I immediately thought we ought to get into gambling.
16:22That seemed like a very profitable avenue.
16:25He called Hefner and said,
16:27Listen, Hef, they are gambling here in Britain.
16:29It's legal.
16:31Because in America, it was only in Vegas.
16:33So Victor had this brilliant idea of opening Playboy as a casino.
16:45After months of work and a $2 million investment, we held our grand opening.
16:551,500 guests attended the Black Tie Affair, which was the most star-studded in our history.
17:03Sidney Poitier, James Garner, and even London Royalty were there.
17:09The opening night guest list is fascinating to me because it's such a great melange of people.
17:17Because he had the Duke of Bedford.
17:20Rudolf Nureyev was there.
17:23The world-famous ballet dancer.
17:25And then, of course, Roman Polanski.
17:28Roman and Victor were very, very close friends.
17:31But no Playboy Club would be complete without top-notch entertainment.
17:37Luckily, Vic knew all the best performers.
17:41And we were able to treat our guests to a performance from one of the fastest-rising comedians in America.
17:47And it was very jazzy, and I didn't know what the button was for.
17:51And they told me that if you lose a button, you take the button off the inside and you show it onto the outside and you've got a button.
17:57And, uh, I had the jacket two weeks.
18:01And just my luck, I lost, on the outside of the jacket, a buttonhole.
18:12When we opened the club here, we were bringing over acts from America to perform.
18:18Woody Allen opened the club.
18:21He's a personal friend, and he lived right next door.
18:24He lived right next door.
18:27Vic was in his element.
18:29And, just as I expected, he created the perfect venue to introduce Playboy to London society.
18:36I hate that girl, she was my queen.
18:42She didn't love me like I was.
18:46It was an incredible party, and the club stayed open 24 hours a day.
18:49So the celebration continued well after dawn.
18:53What I saw in London that summer was a whole revolution in social sexual values.
19:00The entire lifestyle from England was about to explode across the world.
19:05The world.
19:07And I came back from that trip feeling that I had seen the future.
19:12Somebody tell me what I've done wrong.
19:15In less than a year, the London Playboy Club under Victor was making more money than any casino in Europe or Las Vegas.
19:31The London Casino was the most successful casino in the world for a number of years.
19:41It was a huge celebrity hangout.
19:46When Hollywood came to London, first stop was the Playboy Club.
19:51It was a once in a lifetime club experience.
19:55The ladies they had selected in Britain to be the British bunnies were spectacular.
20:05They were not only gorgeous, they were witty, they were funny.
20:09They had various regional accents that were pleasant and fun to hear.
20:15And they were just great.
20:16Of course, being the head of the most successful club in the world, had other perks.
20:30I first met Victor when I became a bunny girl.
20:33And so we were at the Playboy Club and a man appeared on the floor.
20:39We didn't know who it was, but we knew he was somebody.
20:42Just by his vitality and his looks and his voices just sounded different.
20:48And it turned out it was Victor Lowndes, the boss, so to speak.
20:53Victor was constantly surrounded by beautiful women.
20:57But soon enough, one particular bunny stood out among the rest.
21:01And you are?
21:21Marilyn Cole.
21:23It's my first day here.
21:24I picked up on that.
21:25I'm so sad.
21:26But don't worry.
21:27You'll do just fine.
21:28You're a real beauty.
21:30Some people say I'm too tall.
21:32Well, those people don't know what they're talking about.
21:34Me, on the other hand, I am an expert.
21:37And trust me, you're perfect.
21:40Absolutely perfect.
21:42Thank you, Mr. Pounce.
21:46Please call me Victor.
21:47I dated Marilyn because she was drop-dead gorgeous when I saw her.
21:58And she was intelligent and interesting.
22:01While Victor was falling in love in London, my relationship with Barbie was becoming more serious.
22:22And we were practically inseparable.
22:25Mom, what are you doing up?
22:27I thought you might like some breakfast.
22:29Oh, sweetheart.
22:33Come here.
22:38Oh, and a flower.
22:40Yes, I picked that myself.
22:42No, you didn't.
22:43I did.
22:44I don't believe you for a second, but you're still sweet.
22:49That's great.
22:53What's that?
22:59I don't know.
23:13Since Playboy's inception, the magazine had never faced any real competition.
23:17But that all changed in 1969, when a publication called Penthouse burst onto the scene and made it its mission to take Playboy down.
23:27When Penthouse came onto the scene in the late 1960s, it really presented a challenge to Playboy.
23:38It sought to be a lifestyle magazine.
23:41It talked about things like fashion and politics.
23:45And so Penthouse was taking the formula that Playboy had established.
23:51The man who runs it is 44-year-old Robert Guccione, Brooklyn-born but a long-time European resident.
23:58Penthouse jumped the Atlantic from England in 1969 with a promotion aimed directly at Playboy.
24:04The Penthouse Pet of the Year is Guccione's version of Hefner's Playmate of the Year.
24:10Guccione has dreams of an empire to surpass Hefner's, and he's working at getting it.
24:14Get out of the way, I ain't got much time.
24:20But there was one thing Penthouse offered that Playboy never had.
24:25Penthouse was showing pubic hair.
24:30That had always been the line of demarcation that Hef and most men's magazines would not cross
24:38in order to avoid the risk of obscenity charges by the government.
24:42But then here came Penthouse.
24:53Only six months earlier, the U.S. Supreme Court made a major ruling on obscenity,
24:59stating that people could view whatever they wished in the privacy of their home,
25:03effectively loosening obscenity standards in America.
25:06By the early 70s, you had porn chic magazines that were a lot more explicit than Playboy ever was.
25:16And, of course, you had hardcore pornography films running in the neighborhood theaters.
25:22We've come a long ways, baby.
25:24The new laws gave readers access to a whole new world of explicit photos.
25:33And Penthouse took full advantage.
25:34The government came after me with guns blazing for Mansfield,
25:44and Penthouse shows Bush, and what? Nothing.
25:47Times have changed, Hef.
25:48I wouldn't exactly call it showing Bush, it's just a glimpse of her pubic hair.
25:51You know what I mean, Crutch.
25:52You can't find a copy anywhere.
25:57Is that true?
25:59It's completely sold out.
26:01The entire print run is gone within a week.
26:03Half a reporter from Time just called.
26:07And?
26:09They want to get your reaction.
26:11To what?
26:12To this.
26:19You know, it's completely natural for the established brand to be threatened by outsiders that are willing to be much more extreme.
26:30Just like Esquire was threatened by Playboy, I'm sure Playboy had to look at Penthouse and decide whether or not it was going to go as far as Penthouse.
26:39Or whether it was good enough to sort of stay the course.
26:44Even with the recent court rulings, I still believe that our Playmates didn't need to show everything to be sexy.
26:54But Penthouse, riding the wave of relaxed standards, quickly began gaining ground on Playboy.
27:00They doubled their circulation from 235,000 to over half a million in just one year.
27:08This was really difficult for Hefner because he had spent his life, his crusade was mainstreaming middle class sexuality.
27:26And so to remove Playboy from that status would have challenged everything he had worked so hard for.
27:40Sometimes it seems so heavy.
27:44Penthouse had become too big to ignore.
27:47For us to understand.
27:49Playboy had started a sexual revolution.
27:52But now we were being left behind.
27:56Although it is hard to conceive now, the idea of the Playmate showing pubic hair was a hard hurdle to overcome.
28:04But the world recognized that Penthouse was pushing Playboy, so he went there.
28:13Nine months after Penthouse changed the game, a new, more revealing Playboy hit the shelves.
28:31In the first issue of 1971, Miss January, Liv Linda Lind, showed more than any Playmate had before.
28:42And our readers approved.
28:47Pushing circulation to over six million issues per month.
28:50But competition from Penthouse wasn't the only opposition I had faced that year.
29:04The battle cry of the Women's Liberation Movement rings out down New York's Fifth Avenue as more than 10,000 militant feminists stage a one-day strike for equal rights.
29:14When the women's movement really comes onto the scene in the late 60s and early 1970s, Playboy was a primary target.
29:27Because feminists argued that the centerfold images were degrading to women and objectifying.
29:34And so they really criticized Hugh Hefner as a purveyor of patriarchy and sexism and the degradation of women.
29:47Now, there had always been groups of women who disliked Playboy.
29:52But back in the early days of the magazine, they were mostly conservative, religious types.
29:59I knew this was different.
30:01Join us now!
30:02Sister is powerful! Join us now!
30:05Sister is powerful! Join us now!
30:08The 1960s had given rise to a second wave of feminism.
30:12While their predecessors had fought for things like the right to vote,
30:20these women were fighting for access to birth control, abortion, and equal rights.
30:27Equal rights. Equal rights to have a job, to have respect, to not be viewed as a piece of meat.
30:32We just want what men have had all these years.
30:34Who knows where the time comes from?
30:39Led by women, including Betty Ferdinand.
30:42This will continue as a political coalition to achieve the unfinished revolution, to win the unfinished revolution of women's equality.
30:50Bella Abzug.
30:52We proclaim that when we talk about free abortion on demand, we need to have it now!
30:58And Gloria Steinem.
30:59Now, thanks to the spirit of equality in the air, and to the work of many of my more four-sided sisters,
31:06I no longer accept society's judgment, that my group is second class.
31:11Steinem had been a harsh critic of Playboy for many years.
31:18In 1963, she even went undercover as a bunny in our New York club,
31:22giving herself a fake name, and ultimately writing an article about her experience for Show magazine.
31:34I exposed the working conditions at the Playboy club, which were so horrendous.
31:39If you can only get a job, you know, in three-inch heels falling out of your costume, serving food, you know, it's not...
31:47I mean, men don't have to fall out of their costumes to serve food.
31:52Her article came out in the May of 1963.
31:56Needless to say, I didn't agree with her evaluation.
31:59She characterized the experience as extremely degrading, as extremely objectifying.
32:07That instead of being an exciting, adventurous, well-paying job for young women in cities like New York,
32:15she said that this was actually intense labor, exploitation, and a really sexist place
32:22that was just using women further for the benefit of men.
32:37I hadn't paid much attention to the article at the time,
32:41but now the feminist movement had made Playboy one of its main targets,
32:45and I knew I had to respond.
32:47I truly believed Playboy and the feminists were on the same side,
32:54and I felt the best way to explain myself was to speak with Steinem face-to-face.
33:00So what men do you admire, and why?
33:03Well, I've always admired Jack and Robert Kennedy.
33:06How about women? What women do you admire?
33:09Margaret Mead, very much.
33:10I can't remember her name off the top of my head, but the head of Sikis.
33:21Mary Calderon.
33:23Mary Calderon, yes, very much so.
33:27The interview got off to a rough start, and it only went downhill from there.
33:32What I don't understand is why feminists don't appreciate us, appreciate the Playboy philosophy.
33:38I never picked them out as special enemies. They chose me first.
33:44But don't you understand that you have made women objects?
33:48It's as if we were put on a meat hook.
33:51And according to Playboy philosophy, women are useless with age.
33:57Wait a second. Now, I am all for women's right to vote, to own property, all of that.
34:02What I'm saying is that I think women can be attractive to men.
34:09And I think men should be attractive to women.
34:12But I wouldn't rest their entire identity on it.
34:19Let's take a different tact.
34:22If you had one thing to say to the women readers of McCall's, what would it be?
34:26By Playboy.
34:30That's your whole message.
34:32That's it.
34:33All right.
34:35Thank you very much, Gloria.
34:37If you'll excuse me.
34:38Steinem had recorded our discussion for the October issue of McCall's Magazine.
34:52And when the issue hit newsstands, it was clear that I hadn't made my point as effectively as I thought.
34:59The women's movement attacking the magazine certainly caught him up short.
35:05He thought he was doing a great job for women.
35:08Saying that good girls like sex.
35:10Saying that women should have charge of their own sex lives.
35:14Being in favor of abortion.
35:17Placing women in jobs.
35:19My dad was carving out a road for men and women to say we like sex.
35:28And he was doing it from the male point of view.
35:31Gloria Steinem was saying there really aren't a whole lot of opportunities out there that allow women to pursue a career that doesn't involve objectifying oneself.
35:41And that point was fair to make.
35:44Because it's true.
35:45While I had tried to smooth over Playboy's relationship with the movement.
35:51It seemed I had just made the situation worse.
35:56But I was determined to prove that Playboy was not sexist.
36:00So I decided to try again.
36:03And this time, I wanted to do it in prime time.
36:06The Dick Cavett Show.
36:07With Hugh Hefner.
36:08Jefferson Airplane.
36:09At that time, the Dick Cavett Show had been on the air for about two years.
36:22They had a huge audience.
36:24And Cavett regularly brought on guests who had something to say.
36:27My next guest has created an empire.
36:29In fact, the London Times said they always refer to Hefner as one of the great empire builders.
36:33And they said that he is as well known a symbol of American life as Coca Cola.
36:38Will you welcome Mr. Hugh Hefner.
36:39Hugh Hefner.
36:44So when he asked me to come on his show with two prominent feminists, I didn't hesitate for a second.
36:58It looks like a show that was probably contrived before controversy.
37:04Will you welcome Susan Brownmiller and Sally Kempton.
37:07And the show went on from there.
37:11They oppress us as women.
37:12They benefit from oppressing women.
37:15They really do.
37:16Hefner has built an empire based on oppressing women.
37:24Have you had this reaction before tonight?
37:27Yes.
37:28Can I respond just a little bit?
37:29All right.
37:30I think that women over generations and centuries have indeed been oppressed.
37:34I think there's no question about it.
37:35I think there are still many areas in society in which they do not have equal job opportunity.
37:40But I take issue and separate in this one rather fundamental area.
37:45I think whether you are male or female is the beginning of who you are as a human being.
37:51I think it's important and I think that it is important emotionally as well as physically.
37:56I think there are differences and I think there should continue to be differences.
37:59Would you like to respond Susan?
38:00I certainly would.
38:01The role that you have selected for women is degrading to women because you choose to see women as sex objects, not as full human beings.
38:08Well, obviously it's been raining.
38:09Hold on now.
38:10The day that...
38:11But obviously it's been raining so a lot of them.
38:12I want to say...
38:13I haven't finished.
38:14The day that you are willing to come out here with a cotton tail attached to your rear end...
38:17You make them look like animals.
38:27Yes.
38:28Women are bunnies.
38:29They're not rabbits.
38:30They're human beings.
38:32Give the applause.
38:33We'll be back in a moment.
38:34I don't know if Hefner expected quite as much assault as he was in for when he came on.
38:44But it made for lively television.
38:46I loved it.
38:53I was starting to realize this was a conflict I wasn't going to win.
38:57Hugh Hefner is my enemy.
38:59I do think Hef was surprised at the harsh critique of the feminist movement of Playboy.
39:09He felt quite justifiably that he'd been an ally in a lot of political battles.
39:16But I think he didn't understand that there was an element of the feminist movement grappling with sexual imagery.
39:24And that part of the women's movement was not going to be happy with Playboy.
39:33As frustrated as I was with these attacks, I'd soon have to turn my attention to a battle I could fight.
39:42As Penthouse was about to push the envelope again, forcing us to question how far Playboy was willing to go.
39:51It was sweet. I thought that it would always last.
39:57Every little movement.
40:01Every motion of your hips.
40:05I feel the compulsion to pull you to my sweet lips.
40:12To sit up like a magic spell you put me under.
40:22This miracle moment.
40:25Never let it end.
40:29Every little movement.
40:33Is beyond improvement.
40:36Every little movement.
40:37You are the magician.
40:38I've been wishing for forever.
40:39Every little movement.
40:40Every little movement.
40:41Every little movement.
40:43Every little movement.
40:46Every little movement.
40:51Every little movement.
40:57.
41:04You
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