KingsOfKings
ππππππ ππ€ π₯ππ πΎπ ππ₯
He really believed he owned these women.' How Hugh Hefner demanded orgies five nights a week, drugged women with 'leg spreader' Quaaludes and hosted weekly 'Pig Nights' with 'ugly' prostitutes, new doc reveals
The series delves into the hidden truths behind Playboy with exclusive interviews with insiders, including Hugh Hefner's ex-girlfriends Holly Madison and Sondra Theodore, as well as former 'Bunny Mother' PJ Masten.
Theodore, now 65, reveals how there was group sex at the mansion five nights a week, which 'broke me like you'd break a horse.'
Hefner would also host weekly 'Pig Nights' during which he would he would bring in a dozen 'ugly' prostitutes to have sex with his friends.
VIP members of the Playboy nightclubs could do as they pleased, including revered Soul Train host Don Cornelius who allegedly held two Playboy bunnies hostage and raped one of them, according to the docuseries.
Holly Madison, a model who dated Hefner for eight years, also tells how Hefner refused to use protection during sex and how the Playboy Bunny lifestyle a even led her to consider suicide.
The series also includes interviews with Linda Lovelace, the 1970s porn star who found fame with the film Deep Throat, who says she was treated like a 'piece of meat' and forced to perform oral sex on a German Shepherd while Hefner and his friends watched.
The documentary is a critical reexamination of the legacy of iconic Playboy publisher, who died in 2017 aged 91.
Hefner was just 27 years old when he launched the first edition of Playboy magazine in 1953.
Featuring Marilyn Monroe on the cover, the first issue sold more than 50,000 copies and spawned an empire which spanned decades.
By the 1970s Playboy was selling seven million copies a month and Hefner opened up dozens of Playboy clubs where members gained entry using a key which literally opened the front door.
recent years Playboy has struggled to stay relevant - the magazine stopped printing physical copies in 2020 - and many former Playmates have spoken out against the culture in the wake of the MeToo movement.
'Secrets of Playboy' is arguably the most damning portrayal so far and has extensive interviews with many of Hefner's former close associates and Playboy Bunnies.
According to Miki Garcia, former director of Playmate promotions: 'It was cult-like. The women had been groomed and led to believe they were part of this family. He (Hefner) really did believe he owned these women.
'We had Playmates that overdosed, that committed suicide'.
One of the most disturbing accounts comes from Sondra Theodore, a former model and actress who dated Hefner in the late 1970s and 80s.
She described how his sexual demands turned nasty and admits he 'scared me at the end...you couldn't satisfy him. He wanted more and more and more.'
'The group sex was at least five nights a week. They had a protocol. He liked to direct and you didn't segue away from it because you could tell it irritated him,' she added.
Theodore said Hefner was a prolific drug user, sending her out to buy cocaine numerous times, and the sex 'broke me like you'd break a horse'.
Cocaine was a 'big deal' in the house and there was a powder room off the great hall where underneath an ornate toilet paper holder there was a 'pile of cocaine'.
The drug was so widely available that one of Hefner's poodles became addicted to it and used to lick it off the floor, Theodore claims.
Hefner thought the women were 'pigs' but ordered his VIP male friends not to call them that, the film claims.
A doctor would first examine the women for any diseases or infections before they could have sex with the guests.
Tetenbaum tells the documentary: 'Sometimes he had a special woman who would come up, she was called The Bleeder.
'She would use a very large syringe and draw blood from these different friends and a girl would come and perform fellatio or give them a hand job'.
The documentary claims that for some reason John Belushi, a regular guest at the Playboy mansion, loved this and it would 'turn him on'.
Hefner had always had multiple girlfriends but by the 2000s he was going out numerous times a week with seven blondes who he said were all dating him at the same time.
Among them was Holly Madison who became his 'special one', or main girlfriend, and moved into the Playboy mansion aged 21 in 2000.
On her first night out with Hefner and his other girlfriends he offered her a Quaalude and said they were known as 'thigh openers' in the 1970s.
More at the link
Secrets of Playboy: Shocking documentary claims Hugh Hefner demanded orgies and drugged women | Daily Mail Online
The series delves into the hidden truths behind Playboy with exclusive interviews with insiders, including Hugh Hefner's ex-girlfriends Holly Madison and Sondra Theodore, as well as former 'Bunny Mother' PJ Masten.
Theodore, now 65, reveals how there was group sex at the mansion five nights a week, which 'broke me like you'd break a horse.'
Hefner would also host weekly 'Pig Nights' during which he would he would bring in a dozen 'ugly' prostitutes to have sex with his friends.
- New A&E docuseries, Secrets of Playboy, will lift the lid on the 'dark underbelly' of Hugh Hefner's Playboy Mansion
- The documentary, premiering January 24, reveals how the Playboy mansion and clubs became seedy playgrounds for drug use, sexual abuse, and even bestiality
- According to ex-girlfriend Sondra Theodore, Hef demanded group sex five nights a week: 'You couldn't satisfy him. He wanted more and more and more'
- 'It was cult-like. The women had been groomed and led to believe they were part of this family,' Miki Garcia, former director of Playmate promotions said
- Hefner, who died in 2017 at age 91, also hosted weekly 'Pig Nights', during which he would bring in 'ugly' prostitutes to have sex with his friends
- He also kept a stockpile of Quaaludes, known at the mansion as 'leg spreaders' and were regarded as a 'necessary evil' because they made women do anything
VIP members of the Playboy nightclubs could do as they pleased, including revered Soul Train host Don Cornelius who allegedly held two Playboy bunnies hostage and raped one of them, according to the docuseries.
Holly Madison, a model who dated Hefner for eight years, also tells how Hefner refused to use protection during sex and how the Playboy Bunny lifestyle a even led her to consider suicide.
The series also includes interviews with Linda Lovelace, the 1970s porn star who found fame with the film Deep Throat, who says she was treated like a 'piece of meat' and forced to perform oral sex on a German Shepherd while Hefner and his friends watched.
The documentary is a critical reexamination of the legacy of iconic Playboy publisher, who died in 2017 aged 91.
Hefner was just 27 years old when he launched the first edition of Playboy magazine in 1953.
Featuring Marilyn Monroe on the cover, the first issue sold more than 50,000 copies and spawned an empire which spanned decades.
By the 1970s Playboy was selling seven million copies a month and Hefner opened up dozens of Playboy clubs where members gained entry using a key which literally opened the front door.
recent years Playboy has struggled to stay relevant - the magazine stopped printing physical copies in 2020 - and many former Playmates have spoken out against the culture in the wake of the MeToo movement.
'Secrets of Playboy' is arguably the most damning portrayal so far and has extensive interviews with many of Hefner's former close associates and Playboy Bunnies.
According to Miki Garcia, former director of Playmate promotions: 'It was cult-like. The women had been groomed and led to believe they were part of this family. He (Hefner) really did believe he owned these women.
'We had Playmates that overdosed, that committed suicide'.
One of the most disturbing accounts comes from Sondra Theodore, a former model and actress who dated Hefner in the late 1970s and 80s.
She described how his sexual demands turned nasty and admits he 'scared me at the end...you couldn't satisfy him. He wanted more and more and more.'
'The group sex was at least five nights a week. They had a protocol. He liked to direct and you didn't segue away from it because you could tell it irritated him,' she added.
Theodore said Hefner was a prolific drug user, sending her out to buy cocaine numerous times, and the sex 'broke me like you'd break a horse'.
Cocaine was a 'big deal' in the house and there was a powder room off the great hall where underneath an ornate toilet paper holder there was a 'pile of cocaine'.
The drug was so widely available that one of Hefner's poodles became addicted to it and used to lick it off the floor, Theodore claims.
Hefner thought the women were 'pigs' but ordered his VIP male friends not to call them that, the film claims.
A doctor would first examine the women for any diseases or infections before they could have sex with the guests.
Tetenbaum tells the documentary: 'Sometimes he had a special woman who would come up, she was called The Bleeder.
'She would use a very large syringe and draw blood from these different friends and a girl would come and perform fellatio or give them a hand job'.
The documentary claims that for some reason John Belushi, a regular guest at the Playboy mansion, loved this and it would 'turn him on'.
Hefner had always had multiple girlfriends but by the 2000s he was going out numerous times a week with seven blondes who he said were all dating him at the same time.
Among them was Holly Madison who became his 'special one', or main girlfriend, and moved into the Playboy mansion aged 21 in 2000.
On her first night out with Hefner and his other girlfriends he offered her a Quaalude and said they were known as 'thigh openers' in the 1970s.
More at the link
Secrets of Playboy: Shocking documentary claims Hugh Hefner demanded orgies and drugged women | Daily Mail Online