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IPC profile. They came to 'swinging London' and brought the concept with them. Although not strictly a men's magazine, it is included here as the training ground for Maxim founder Felix Dennis.
The magazine broke all the publishing and design rules and was highly creative and influential. The cover ran around the front and back of the School Kids Issue, for example, and issue 37 September could be read from either end as A World of Young Love portraying sex and drugs and rock 'n' roll or Angry Oz. In , Oz was the subject of an infamous obscenity trail that held Briton in thrall. Sentences of up to 15 months sparked protests from John Lennon and many others.
The convictions were quashed on appeal. Oz sales rose to 80, but the magazine closed in issue Official papers released in showed that the authorities held an inquiry into the accusation that police were prosecuting hippie publications such as Oz and the Little Red Schoolbook while Soho pornographers paid bribes to avoid jail.
The resulting anti-corruption drive saw the jailing of the senior officer responsible for the Oz prosecution; other officers were imprisoned or left the force. See Tony Palmer's book Trials of Oz for details. Weed's Oz links and covers. Larger format, colour cover and centre-spread colour pin-up used both men and women.
Marketed itself as featuring pin-ups, cartoons and stories. Published on Mondays. Parade and Blighty 14 November — 26 December New name, same publisher and format. Parade 3 December Marketed itself as 'The man's magazine women love to read. Still printed by Eric Bemrose. It became a monthly. It used full-frontal shots and nipples were shown on the covers. The numbering started from volume 1.
The line 'Not for sale to persons under 18 years of age' was printed under the masthead. It was later published by Gold Group International owners of the Ann Summers chain under the subdivision GoldStar Publication as a hardcore publication.
Jayne Mansfield was on the cover. The colour centre-spread pin-up was of Carol Stevens. There was also a comic strip series, 'Claws of Death'. It cost 6d and ran to 40 pages. Paris Magazine [closed] Paris Magazine was a popular French title with excellent production values — the issue shown here dates from Such titles influenced the British market; others were distributed in the UK; and the content was sometimes republished in English by British publishers.
Penthouse was the first of the UK titles to adopt a Playboy format, carrying lifestyle and mainstream articles among the pin-ups. Seen as more aggressive than Playboy , in its April issue, Penthouse showed a woman's pubic hair. Almost all the other upmarket top-shelf magazines quickly followed suit. Very successful internationally. An issue in was reported as selling 5. The group also launched a CD-Rom version and website.
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