Playboy offered me a lot to do their mag but I'm not even the sort to go topless on the beach.
Loneliness doesn't have much to do with where you are.
Apart from if Playboy come calling.
But 'Playboy' was liberating. I was drawn to it and went for it full throttle.
I didn't want to be the girl who posed in 'Playboy' and then - by the way - made some music.
I think that from the very beginning it wasn't simply, what made Playboy so popular was not simply the naked ladies, what made the magazine so popular was, there was a point of view in the magazine, that you couldn't run nude pictures without some kind of rational that they were art.
I knew when I got into this business I couldn't have it both ways: I could live the playboy lifestyle, which is not a bad thing to do, or have a traditional family life, which is how I grew up. And that was more important to me.
I didn't want to be known as Madonna's playboy, her boy toy.
To get over my divorce, I got a prescription to live at the Playboy Mansion for a while.
Playboy, very clearly, from the outset, has fought against the historical repression of women. The notion that we were anywhere else simply defies the reality.
I think the Playboy philosophy is very, very connected to the American dream.
Playboy magazine announced that they are going to support the troops by sending them emails from Playboy playmates. After hearing this the U. S. troops said 'Just our luck, we get emails from playmates, but we're embedded with Geraldo. '
I was raised in a typical Puritan Midwestern Methodist home and there was a lot of hurt and hypocrisy in those times. And I think that whatever part Playboy played and that I managed to play in terms of the sexual revolution came out of what I saw in the negative part of that life and tried to change things in some positive way so that people could choose alternate personal ways of living their lives.
I did Playboy. There was an ad in the paper for playmates. Playboy called me and flew me to Los Angeles, and I was on the March cover of 1992.
What I really love about the Playboy bunny outfit, is it's all about a woman's silhouette.
Once Playboy came to me, all the preachers ran. I needed to pose in Playboy to make money.
Playboy and I have had some talks about doing it and in what manner it would be done. Aaron Spelling did not pay me money not to do it - that's completely false.
I've actually been turned down for jobs because I was in Playboy.
I never read Playboy before I started working there and stopped reading it the day I quit.
I had never seen so many cute men in one place in my life. But I could tell they were not for me. Russell was like the gay vampire Hugh Hefner, and this was the Playboy Mansion, with an emphasis on the "boy.