The magazine featured articles about men's interests includingclothing,sports, consumer goods, men's health, politics, and public figures. The magazine always showed large pictures ofnude women, except for one year in 2016–2017.[2]
In each issue, a provocatively posed "Playmate of the Month" was featured in a pictorial several pages in length at the center of the magazine with an accompanying "centerfold" photograph. Unlike traditional pin up art,Playboy humanized their models by describing their real world jobs, accomplishments, and goals.[3]
In 1963 Hefner was arrested for obscenity in Chicago after publishing nude photos of actressJayne Mansfield that were taken on the set ofPromises! Promises! He was acquitted at trial by ahung jury.
Starting with the March 2016 issue, the magazine no longer had pictures of nude women. According to the company, "times change."[4] Times changed again in February 2017 when nudity returned. In March 2020 the company announced that it would stop publishing the magazine on paper and only use digital copies instead.[5] Between 1970 and 1985Playboy was also printed inbraille.[6][7] It is also one of the few magazines whosemicrofilm format was in color, not black and white.[8]