I went with over a thousand women, but I never found love”

“Playboy” founder Hugh Hefner has passed away at 91. In a statement conveyed by the magazine he started publishing in 1953 from his home kitchen, Hefner reportedly fell quietly to his bed by natural causes, reports Top Channel. What began as an effort of one [...]
“Playboy” founder Hugh Hefner has passed away at 91.
In a statement conveyed by the magazine he started publishing in 1953 from his home kitchen, Hefner reportedly fell quietly to his bed by natural causes, reports Top Channel.
What started as a single human effort would soon be turned into “mark” that represented the sexual culture of the XX century.
The “Playboy” patterns became a fantasy object for millions of men, while Hefner thus openly challenged American Puritanism.
The role of <x0) The first was Marilyn Monroe. The magazine's success was soon translated into a real business empire involving casinos and nightclubs.
The silk coated tycoon almost always made himself famous for his hedonic lifestyle and for dating the lollipops of the “Playboy” and, in some cases, marrying them.
Hefner claimed to have had intimate relations with over 1,000 women.
My third wife, Crystal Harris, was crowned in 2012, when she was 86 years old, and she was 60 years younger.
Despite this life, however, Hefner claims he never found true love.
I never found the soul mate,” has declared.
Hughes Hefner practically lived the life that he himself had portrayed in his magazine.
His villa “Playboy Mansion” in Los Angeles, where he died surrounded by friends, was the incarnation of a teenager's dream.
The feminists strongly attacked him with the argument that he turned girls into objects, but Hefner liked to be remembered as someone who changed the world in a positive way, even in an intimate social context.















