Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Voluptuous features busty women who have had no breast augmentations. 18eighteen: A magazine dedicated to women who are presented as 18 or 19 years old. Naughty Neighbors: Nude photos of models present as ordinary "girl next door" types. Leg Sex is a magazine dedicated to leg fetishism, and features photos of women's legs.
Gay pornography includes magazines, sometimes known as adult magazines or gay sex magazines, that contain content of a sexual nature, typically regarded as pornography, that relates to men having sex with men. These magazines are targeted at gay and bisexual men, although they may also have some female readers, and may include male-male and ...
Young Money magazine, Jan 2007. Cover story features Jenna Lee of Fox Business Network. This is a list of women's magazines from around the world. These are magazines that have been published primarily for a readership of women.
The magazine grew from an uncertain start to a peak circulation of around 3 million in the early 1980s; it has since dropped to approximately 500,000. Hustler was among the first major US-based magazines to feature graphic photos of female genitalia and simulated sex acts, in contrast with relatively modest publications such as Playboy. [1]
Playgirl is an American magazine that has historically featured pictorials of nude and semi-nude men alongside general interest, lifestyle, celebrity journalism, and original fiction. For most of its history, the magazine printed monthly and was marketed mainly to women, though it developed a significant gay male readership.
The Pubic Wars, a pun on the Punic Wars, [1] was a rivalry between the American men's magazines Playboy and Penthouse during the 1960s and 1970s. [1] [2] Each magazine strove to show just a little bit more nudity on their female models than the other, without getting too crude. [2] The term was coined by Playboy owner Hugh Hefner. [1]
Filament was a British erotic magazine aimed at women, [2] published in the United Kingdom. It ran for 9 issues, from June 2009 to December 2011. [3]The magazine featured both explicit and non-explicit pornographic imagery of men, designed specifically for heterosexual women (as distinct from that designed for gay men). [4]
Lad mag was a term principally used in the UK in the 1990s and early 2000s to describe a then-popular type of lifestyle magazine for younger, heterosexual men, focusing on "sex, sport, gadgets and grooming tips". [1] The lad mag was notable as a new type of magazine; previously, lifestyle magazines had been almost entirely bought by women.