Word: playboyism
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Another month, another celebrity on the cover of Playboy. November's model, however, is a bit outside the usual aging-B-actress-desperately-trying-to-jump-start-a-sagging-career paradigm. "I go against the grain of everything our society says is beautiful," says CHYNA, ne Joanie Laurer, the 6-ft., 200-lb. World Wrestling Federation star. "I've always had a hard time with that. Believe me, it's tough to be called ugly--or a man." Chyna approached Playboy with the idea of a pictorial, but it took some convincing. "I give kudos to Hugh Hefner...
...CANDIDATE] 5 Buddy Lee* [PROS] Casual dress implies D.C. outsider status [CONS] Only 13 inches tall [CANDIDATE] 6 Captain Morgan [PROS] Running mate Playboy playmate Kalin Olson helps secure male vote [CONS] Frequently spotted in taverns *Buddy Lee's is a write-in campaign and is not endorsed by the Lee Jeans Company. Buddy was unavailable for comment
LORETTA SANCHEZ Pressured, Calif. Rep. nixes Playboy party. Subscriber-in-Chief avoids, um, weighing...
...Never mind that the Democrats made Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez move her benefit out of the Playboy Mansion. Hugh Hefner threw a party Saturday night that snared headlines with an appearance by newlyweds Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston. Health Secretary Donna Shalala went completely Hollywood gaga at the "West Wing" party Sunday evening on the Warner Bros. lot where the president - the TV one, Martin Sheen, that is - held court with the rest of his staff. Not to be outdone by California's Gov. Gray Davis who threw a party for 15,000 on the Paramount lot, Lt. Governor Cruz Bustamante...
...fingernails from the podium. But my hopes for truly fine TV were dashed once Loretta Sanchez took herself out of the speaker lineup, thus eliminating any chance that she'd tear into Al Gore's bad-Spanish-speaking ass for hypocritically scotching her Hispanic fund-raiser at the Playboy mansion. (Let's not forget that Hugh Hefner helped give Jimmy Carter the presidency by publishing his "lust in my heart" interview in 1976, which of course went unmentioned in Carter's Irving Thalberg Award film that night...