Top 1200 Playboy Magazine Quotes & Sayings - Page 3

Explore popular Playboy Magazine quotes.
Last updated on October 8, 2024.
Yes, of course, I've been dreaming about it since I was a kid. Even now, I'm 31 years-old now and I've never been on a cover of a magazine. It makes you feel in such a way to do it with my signature guitar and to have it be Guitar Player magazine, it was really just an amazing experience.
I'd guess that 80 percent of the people who work for Playboy are feminists.
Playboy's all about why it's worth working so hard. — © Christie Hefner
Playboy's all about why it's worth working so hard.
If a guy is going to get paid and will be covered on a magazine cover for revealing his relationship status, then girls toh definitely should get featured in two magazine covers and many more things to reveal the relationship status!
Don't let the good looks and the playboy image fool you. I'm very serious.
Twitter is the new rock magazine of the modern age. When I was a kid, we had magazines and journalists and interviews and articles and pinups and posters to follow our favourite artists. Nowadays? Twitter is actually the new rock magazine.
When I graduated high school, nearly a half-million people subscribed to 'Popular Electronics' magazine. Soldering up some radio or hi-fi amplifier on the basement workbench was not just a personal passion - a lot of young people were doing the same. The magazine expired in 1999 for lack of interest.
Posing for 'Playboy' for me was a classy and tasteful thing to do.
I don't think the Playboy brand has changed much at all - it's always been sophisticated and aspirational.
I didn't want to be the girl who posed in 'Playboy' and then - by the way - made some music.
I almost got kicked out of eighth grade for selling 'Playboy.'
I moved into the Playboy Mansion at 18 years old.
I don't think 'Playboy' would have been successfully started on either coast. — © Christie Hefner
I don't think 'Playboy' would have been successfully started on either coast.
I never read Playboy before I started working there and stopped reading it the day I quit.
I would read Playboy more often, but my glasses keep steaming up.
You look at, like, a 'People' magazine, which used to be a really good, you know, nice magazine you could go to for real stories. It wasn't like a 'Star' or an 'US Weekly' and they have somebody with plastic surgery on the cover, Heidi Montag. And it's obviously what consumers want, because why else would they be doing it?
My mum always told me if I wanted to do Playboy' she'd support it.
To get over my divorce, I got a prescription to live at the Playboy Mansion for a while.
It's over. The franchise is dead. The press killed it. Your magazine f**king killed it. New York Magazine. It's like all the critics got together and said, 'This franchise must die.' Because they all had the exact same review. It's like they didn't see the movie. Got any more gum?
When I was younger, I was like, 'I want to be on Playboy.' My mum was a Playmate.
I guess I showed certain signs of being a workaholic in early years; I had a magazine route very early on - I must have been about seven or eight years old or something like that - when I was carrying Liberty magazine, trying to win green and brown coupons; I eventually [won] a pony.
I want to get past the Playboy image and really develop myself as an actress, a dancer and a singer.
Barry Hearn has said there's no time for playboys, but I'm not a playboy.
I've always liked Playboy; I think it's very tasteful.
In my heart, I will always love Hef and Playboy.
I always believe that if you're looking at a magazine and I'm one of 40 ads, I - in effect - get one-fortieth of your attention. But if, when you close that magazine, you're still thinking about my ad, I've got a lot more than one-fortieth of your attention.
Sven Schumann did an interview with photographer Wolfgang Tillmans in Berlin addressing the question: What is photography today when everyone is a photographer? These kinds of questions and answers you find in a magazine, on paper and not on Instagram. For me this is the essence of a magazine - it's questioning what's going on today and celebrating true creativity without compromise.
When I was at 'Newsweek' magazine - which, you know, this really sounds like I walked four miles in the snow to school - but I started at 'Newsweek' magazine in 1963, which was before the Civil Rights Act of 1964. So it was actually legal to discriminate against women, and 'Newsweek' did.
If a magazine proudly labels itself 'The Economist,' you would expect that publication to understand the economic burdens of today's youth. But when a tone-deaf writer at the magazine tweets an article asking 'Why aren't millennials buying diamonds,' it pretty much sums up how oblivious some can be in matters they're supposed to be experts in.
I was afraid of staying at the Playboy Mansion; I wanted to get a footing before I ventured into a world of hedonism.
I believed deeply that digital was an empowering opportunity for Playboy, not a threat.
They're cheering a young lad, the champion playboy of the Western World.
You start out with Mad magazine, and you go right through the sort of black humor of Lenny Bruce, Lord Buckley, Mort Sahl, Paul Krassner... If you put Lenny together with Mad magazine and run it through the brain of a college student, you get National Lampoon.
I've actually been turned down for jobs because I was in Playboy.
I have the whole costume from Playboy's sixtieth-anniversary cover shoot.
After eating, an epicure gives a thin smile of satisfaction; a gastronome, burping into his napkin, praises the food in a magazine; a gourmet, repressing his burp, criticizes the food in the same magazine; a gourmand belches happily and tells everybody where he ate; a glutton empraces the white porcelain alter, or more plainly, he barfs.
I'd do a really tasteful Playboy shoot, but I'd want at least 700,000 for it.
The 'Playboy' affiliation will probably stick for the rest of my life to some extent. — © Barbi Benton
The 'Playboy' affiliation will probably stick for the rest of my life to some extent.
It pleased the public to think I lived the easy, carefree life - the playboy of golf.
Playboy was founded on the notion that nice girls like sex too.
The Playboy Calendar this year has some tiptop models. Any more top and they'd tip.
Anybody that was famous found their way to the Playboy Mansion. It was exciting for me. But I didn't know half of them!
Playboy offered me a lot to do their mag but I'm not even the sort to go topless on the beach.
I used to think of the cartoons as a magazine within a magazine. First you go through and read all the cartoons, and then you go back and read the articles.
I saw the end of the general magazine business at the end of the '70s, and I knew I had to move into another profession when the advertising dollar moved from magazines to television. The magazine business as we knew it was over. We were no longer the educators of the world.
In real life, I am nothing like a playboy.
People ask me 'Why you want to do another magazine - 10 years at 'Vogue,' a great magazine? Why do you want to make a new one? It's so difficult and there's already so many.' I wanted to do something new, bring a new vision.
I came out of school one day, and there was this pulp magazine. It was a rainy day, and it was floating toward the sewer in the gutter. So I pick up this pulp magazine, and it's Wonder Stories, and it's got a rocket-ship on the cover, and I'd never seen a rocket-ship.
My 'Playboy' cover shoot experience was nothing short of a paid luxury vacation. — © Sherlyn Chopra
My 'Playboy' cover shoot experience was nothing short of a paid luxury vacation.
As late as the summer of 1941, the Atlantic Monthly, then a still respected magazine for literates and edited by White men, published a long article by Albert Jay Nock, in which he proved that the Jews are an Oriental race that is incompatible with ours. He was not punished and the magazine was not destroyed, strange and almost incredible as that seems today.
I'm jackin' off reading Playboy on a hot afternoon, I'm a three time loser.
I wouldn't mind doing Playboy again. But only if I had creative control.
In order for a person of color to get on a cover of a magazine, they have to do something prolific - winning an Oscar, being the first billionaire, you know, or whatever. I think it's becoming more natural that somebody can get on the cover of a magazine just because they're an amazing person. That's what it should be.
I didn't want to be known as Madonna's playboy, her boy toy.
First, at a certain point, I wanted to have my own magazine, but I never could. Why? Because I am not commercial enough. The people who would have been able to give me my own magazine, they were not insulting me, but they would simply say, "It wouldn't work for you." And that was a big disappointment to me.
I was a very young mod. The older mods at school used to like me because I brought in a copy of Mad magazine every week and let them read it. I think Mad magazine is the biggest influence in my life. At the age of ten, I decided I was going to have a band, one of the best in the country.
Admitted to Playboy in 1993 that he smoked marijuana twice.
People always say theres no such thing as bad publicity, and you always think theyre right, because it seems self-evident: nobodys going to buy a magazine that nobody ever talks about, so people should want to buy a magazine that everybodys talking about.
Some, but much of my money is tied up in Playboy stock.
Michael Jackson asked me to sign a Playboy. I was more than happy to.
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