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Forum nameGeneral Discussion
Topic subjectHugh Hefner gone (91)
Topic URLhttp://board.okayplayer.com/okp.php?az=show_topic&forum=4&topic_id=13198041
13198041, Hugh Hefner gone (91)
Posted by MEAT, Wed Sep-27-17 10:30 PM
A life well enjoyed.

https://twitter.com/nbcnews/status/913241098579070976
13198046, Well damn. I guess I thought he'd live forever.
Posted by KiloMcG, Wed Sep-27-17 10:58 PM
13198047, He did it to death.
Posted by 13Rose, Wed Sep-27-17 10:59 PM
Salute
13198048, Rest in peace.
Posted by Shaun Tha Don, Wed Sep-27-17 11:03 PM
13198052, Rest In Poonany
Posted by Ray_Snill, Wed Sep-27-17 11:32 PM

<=========================================
https://cdn0.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/PYzh4v9cSf4FDnq3yMQyqNqh79o=/800x0/filters:no_upscale%28%29/cdn0.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4079674/jlio.0.gif
13198404, lmao
Posted by rdhull, Thu Sep-28-17 06:42 PM
>
><=========================================
>https://cdn0.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/PYzh4v9cSf4FDnq3yMQyqNqh79o=/800x0/filters:no_upscale%28%29/cdn0.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4079674/jlio.0.gif
13198076, You can't take it with you
Posted by Atillah Moor, Thu Sep-28-17 06:15 AM
13198151, thank god he lived by this
Posted by tomjohn29, Thu Sep-28-17 09:29 AM
13198080, R.I.P.
Posted by Adwhizz, Thu Sep-28-17 06:52 AM
I can only imagine...
13198088, Hef was SO much more than an old dude surrounded by young women
Posted by bigkarma, Thu Sep-28-17 07:19 AM
That's how he is going to be remembered, and old dude in pajamas and smoking jacket with a bunch of girls around him. But, in actuality Hugh Hefner was a pioneer in publishing, a champion of civil rights and an ardent social activist.

In the 60's he provided the first platform for many of the greatest authors of the time. Alex Haley, Dick Gregory, Joseph Heller, Gabriel García Márquez, Margaret Atwood, Haruki Murakami, Norman Mailer, Gay Talese, Jack Kerouac, Ian Fleming and Kurt Vonnegut...all published in Playboy early in their careers.

When he discovered that some of his Playboy clubs and casinos were denying entry to Blacks, he personally bought back the franchise licenses. All of the proceeds from the early Playboy Jazz festivals went to the NAACP.

He was a true American hero. R.I.P.
13198105, ^^^^^
Posted by BrooklynWHAT, Thu Sep-28-17 08:06 AM
13198141, thanks for this
Posted by Hitokiri, Thu Sep-28-17 09:13 AM
because i've been a bit confused by all the rips... I wasn't aware of anything admirable about him, so thanks for putting that out there
13198277, There's a good doc about it.
Posted by denny, Thu Sep-28-17 01:04 PM
Can't remember what it's called. It's a total fluff piece but serves as a good representation of the pro-Hef side.

Don't get too excited though. He's a traditional liberal. He was pretty passionately opposed to post-modernist critical theory stuff.
13198144, if true, this is really cool
Posted by Calico, Thu Sep-28-17 09:17 AM
he seemed like a good guy
13198145, Thanks for sharing this
Posted by 13Rose, Thu Sep-28-17 09:17 AM
Appreciate it.
13198191, Cosign to all of this. He was a renaissance man and was waaay
Posted by Cornbread, Thu Sep-28-17 10:21 AM
ahead of his time in a lot of ways. The women and the nudes were the least interesting part of him. He was a film and art lover and a patron of a ton of artists and musicians over he years.

http://nerdist.com/the-playboy-mansion-a-nerd-in-hugh-hefners-court/

Being a writer in the nerd sphere of things has its advantages. Last month, a group of my colleagues got to ride in a tank with Arnold Schwarzenegger as he promoted The Last Stand, I’ve seen The Wizarding World of Harry Potter cleared out for a giant party, and watched Warwick Davis conduct a choir of frogs. Most recently, though, I was invited to screen the revenge/heist film Parker at a very special location, The Playboy Mansion.

Getting to see the Playboy Mansion was never on my to do list. Thousands of men and women dream of one day setting foot in the Mansion’s hallowed halls. The most I’d ever really wanted to see of it was fulfilled in watching Miss March, The House Bunny, and a Weezer video. But, living in L.A., the idea of one day being invited to an event or party at the mansion is always in the back of your brain. What does go on there? Is there really a zoo? What pinball machines are in the game room? These questions needed answers. So, when an invite to see the new Jason Statham flick at the mansion came in, I knew I needed to do the responsible thing and go to the Playboy Mansion and ask the hard questions, like, “Where’s the bathroom?”

The mansion was built in 1927 by Arthur Letts Jr. and purchased by Playboy in 1971, the home became famous once Hugh moved in and began throwing the same lavish yet elegant parties that made his Playboy Clubs successful. The home was purchased for $1.1 million and is currently valued at over $54 million, not counting the identical home next door and second home across the street that Hef keeps for playmates to stay in. Built in a “Gothic-Tudor” style, the house is imposing yet inviting to walk up to. I found myself getting those same contradictory feelings through most of my night at the mansion.

As I entered the home, the entry hall was decorated with winning entries from an art design contest for Parker called “The Art of the Heist“. The pieces from Mark Dean Vaca, Dabs Myla, and Six Point Harness stood out against the rich wooden walls filled with character. The luminaries and taste makers that had entered these halls for a night of decadence began running through my mind. Before I could get very far through names like Jack Nicholson, James Caan, and Warren Beatty I saw Parker trucker caps and remembered that Pauly Shore was a staple of the parties thrown here too.

The Mansion was pretty open to us. There were a few security guards making sure we didn’t make our way into the private area of the home. Making my way outside and looking east, I saw the infamous Grotto. Strutting around the cavernous pool’s synthetic grass (think Astroturf) lawns were two elegant birds (African Cranes to the best of my knowledge) that have clearly become comfortable with strangers. At the rear of the lawn is the mansion’s aviary and zoo, home to a wide array of parrots and the tiniest monkeys I’ve ever seen huddled under a heat lamp. Sadly there was no pig for the squirrel monkeys to ride, but they were still completely adorable.

Before heading in to the screening room some Playmates rejoined the party after giving a few of the writers tours of the grounds and game room. Nikki Leigh, Raquel Pomplun, and Alana Camposs kept the room’s attention as dozens of entertainment writers waited patiently for a photo and a chance to chat up the stunning ladies. I’m not immune, and couldn’t help but be a little proud of myself when Nikki complemented my choice of shoes with my suit. Thank you, David Tennant, for proving to the world that Chuck T’s are a perfectly acceptable shoe choice with a nice suit.

While my colleagues continued to mingle in the hall, I headed into the screening room for a look-see. Normally filled with comfortable couches for first run movie screenings on Sunday nights, this evening the room was set up with rows of chairs. Looking to the back of the room, I saw something that brought great joy to my heart. As a former 35mm projectionist and film enthusiast, I get really excited to see private projection booths. The Playboy Mansion did not disappoint. In the confines of the tiny space were two Simplex 35mm projectors from what looked like the early ’80s, maybe even late seventies. Film buffs, the Mansion is reel to reel. Most modern projection booths are on platter systems if they haven’t fully converted to digital. This is one of the leading causes of wear-and-tear on prints and the main reason movie prints look so bad when they reach the end of their theatrical runs and on second run screens. Having a reel-to-reel projection system also allows Hef to borrow rare film prints from archives and studios that normally wouldn’t see a public screening.

The house manager told me that we won’t be watching Parker on these beauties tonight. The booth is equipped with a digital projector as well as being linked to a media server that serves the entire house. According to staff, “Hef can access anything he wants anywhere in the house.” As for a private collection of film for that 35mm booth, several of Hugh’s famous friends have left him their private collections over the years. According to an employee, he has “less than a dozen” he keeps on the property; the rest has been donated to UCLA’s film archive. The sound system in the screening room is on par with most theatrical set-ups, with surround sound so good I actually thought background noise from the film was people talking in the theater.

Across the hall from the screening room is the dining room. Featuring a 6-foot-something tall bronze statue of Frankenstein’s monster and a Jackson Pollock, the dining room may have the best analogy for the Playboy brand as a whole. Where else could a creature feature character and a controversial painting be in the same room stylistically and work and it not be a museum? Speaking of museums, art enthusiasts can live with painting envy for Hugh Hefner, since 4 feet away from the Pollock is a painting by Salvador Dali, which is directly across the door frame from a simple and elegant Matisse. In the screening room hangs a Miro and a Picasso next to a beautiful chess set and baby grand piano.

At that point in the evening I just stopped and soaked in art from two of my favorite artists. I had never seen Hugh’s Dali, an intimate painting from the surrealist. Of course it’s titled “Young Virgin Sodomized By Her Own Chastity,” so there is some implied intimacy there. Just like many before me, I will say that pictures of Pollock’s work do not do the depth of the paintings any justice. Thanks to the Playboy Mansion, I got to experience that very closely. Like, super-closely. I’m surprised I wasn’t asked to give the painting some breathing room; I may have been emotionally smothering it.

Of course while I was reenacting the museum scene from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, party-goers and colleagues were calling it a night. A few of the guests took “open bar at the Playboy Mansion” further than necessary, but the staff laughed it off as one of the most tame events they’ve thrown. The staff filled me in that, generally, the inside of the mansion is a no-go zone and this is a rarity. As a member of the crew exited the restroom with dismay that the bathroom has been “destroyed”, I thought that it was time to head back to the real world with the thought, “50 people wrecked a bathroom 15 feet from a Matisse.” The Playboy Mansion, inviting yet imposing
13198310, Mafia 3 exposed me to how dope Playboy was in the 60s/70s
Posted by Nodima, Thu Sep-28-17 01:58 PM
In a GTA-style video game I definitely spent a half hour reading an interview with a conservative oligarch about the political process of the late-60s on my TV screen.


~~~~~~~~~
"This is the streets, and I am the trap." � Jay Bilas
http://www.popmatters.com/pm/archive/contributor/517
Hip Hop Handbook: http://tinyurl.com/ll4kzz
13198090, Damn. Never thought I would hear those words.
Posted by legsdiamond, Thu Sep-28-17 07:23 AM
13198104, RIP to a true legend. few have ever enjoyed this earth so much
Posted by BrooklynWHAT, Thu Sep-28-17 08:06 AM
13198108, respect due.
Posted by CyrenYoung, Thu Sep-28-17 08:14 AM

*skatin' the rings of saturn*


..and miles to go before i sleep...
13198138, We all agree he was a pimp , right?
Posted by AFRICAN, Thu Sep-28-17 09:10 AM
A pimp with good taste in Jazz, a contributor to the legacy of gonzo journalism and no hostility towards Black people.
Let’s not go crazy.
13198152, California v.Freeman says no
Posted by tomjohn29, Thu Sep-28-17 09:32 AM
13198170, Correct me if I’m wrong but I thought that ruling was on pornography ?
Posted by AFRICAN, Thu Sep-28-17 09:56 AM
I was talking more about his rotating stable of girls with weekly ‘allowances ‘ and ‘club appearances ‘ .
13198210, exactly. he gets props for the great things he did
Posted by Damali, Thu Sep-28-17 10:52 AM
but let's not leave out how he treated women at that mansion.

human beings are complicated and Hef was no different.

d
13198230, So it seems.
Posted by SoWhat, Thu Sep-28-17 11:20 AM
He did some good shit. And some pimping.
13198273, definitely not a saint. an interesting and complicated dude
Posted by GOMEZ, Thu Sep-28-17 12:49 PM
but you know how people do when someone dies. sins are immediately washed away.

13198304, Hmm... ionno about all that.
Posted by legsdiamond, Thu Sep-28-17 01:50 PM
13198473, I stand in this line. I find dude fdisgusting.
Posted by Buddy_Gilapagos, Fri Sep-29-17 06:33 AM
>A pimp with good taste in Jazz, a contributor to the legacy
>of gonzo journalism and no hostility towards Black people.
>Let’s not go crazy.
>


**********
"Everyone has a plan until you punch them in the face. Then they don't have a plan anymore." (c) Mike Tyson

"what's a leader if he isn't reluctant"
13198393, any of y'all watch American Playboy? I just started ep. 1.
Posted by Somnus, Thu Sep-28-17 05:41 PM
is it worth the time investmemt?
13198526, Hugh Hef helped Dick Gregory find the bodies of slain civil rights leaders
Posted by BrooklynWHAT, Fri Sep-29-17 09:40 AM
i keep stumbling on all this shit i didn't know about the guy. great article but here's the bit about Hef's help

https://stillcrew.com/how-dick-gregory-forced-the-fbi-to-find-the-bodies-of-goodman-chaney-and-schwerner-fa9790c49ad4


Gregory knew that there wouldn’t be an investigation in earnest, so he had a plan.

I told Farmer, “Jim I’ve got the wildest idea.” He said, “ What?” I said, “You know, the only way we’re gonna get it out is with large sums of money. If you’ll put up $100,000, we’ll break this case in one week.”

The comedian wasn’t able to get the full $100,000 but he was able to get $25,000 thanks to a phone call to Hugh Hefner. “Hefner understood what those rednecks didn’t: that things had changed,” he told British GQ in 2011. That you could no longer argue that you’d ‘killed three Jews’. Or ‘killed three blacks’. What you’d done was, you’d killed three fellow human beings.”

Gregory drove to Meridian and announced a $25,000 reward for any information on the location of Goodman, Chaney and Schwerner. The next day, the FBI put out their own $30,000 reward. However it was Gregory who would receive a tip. “I received a letter quite some time ago that practically pinpointed the spot where the bodies were found,” he continued to tell Mississippi Eyewitness shortly after the bodies were found. “I gave this letter to the FBI and the FBI denied that the letter was any good. But they never denied the location stated in the letter.”

As far as many civil rights activists are concerned, it was the pressure Dick Gregory put on the FBI that led to the discovery of the three workers’ bodies. Anyone in Mississippi, my father included, believe the FBI always knew where the bodies were and only revealed where the bodies were after finding out Gregory also had that information. The importance of the discovery of those three bodies can’t be overstated as it revealed, once again, the hellish hatred resting in the heart of Mississippi for black people simply trying to get access to vote. The discovery of the bodies killed conspiracy theories and propaganda that wanted to convince the public that the three men had fled or weren’t victims of racial violence. And the revelation that the men were murdered provided the final straw, creating enough fervor for the 1964 Civil Rights Act to pass Congress.
13198533, wow, I have to read up on Hugh..
Posted by legsdiamond, Fri Sep-29-17 09:59 AM
never knew shit about him besides bunnies and actually having good articles in his magazines.