The Playboy Mansion isn’t the non-stop orgy Hef would have us believe.
For every aspiring model/actress who lands in Los Angeles seeking fame and fortune, there’s a very real threat: an octogenarian whose primary wardrobe consists of a bathrobe and a cravat.
Hugh Hefner’s robe was to be an indication of his flannelette-heavy nocturnal activities with his tribe of “girlfriends”, according to former number-one girlfriend Holly Madison in her new book, Down the Rabbit Hole: Curious Adventures and Cautionary Tales of a Former Playboy Bunny.
Madison, now 35, met the ageing lothario in 2000 when she was apparently facing homelessness, and turned to the only safe haven she could think of: her mum’s house the Playboy Mansion.
When she met Hefner, he offered her a Quaalude and was approving when she declined, telling her that he only offered because they’re “thigh openers”.
The first night Madison spent at the Mansion, she writes, she got to see the super-sexy bedtime routine each of the girls have to undertake.
Watch a report on the book from ET (Post continues after gallery):
Top Comments
I am happy that Holly got out and lived to tell the tale and finally make money out of him (sorry whats his name again, old pervert man??) , i hope all bunnies survive, grow into great women and punish him with dollar making literature!!
OOOOH... What a surprise! NOT!!!.. And the girls knew what they were getting into... each to their own.. whatever floats your boat.. for the old man.. young hot women... and the girls, Fame, money and nice shiney baubles... no blame
A lot of the girls probably didn't know what they were getting into, actually. They're going from no money in tiny towns with no career opportunities to living with a reverred celebrity - people in their home towns probably acted like they'd "made it". People act like Hef is a god, and he gets very little negative coverage.
And for those who are less niave - are we really saying that extreme misogyny is harmless, acceptable and should attract "no blame" just because we expect it?
If someone we expect might be racist or homophobic says or does extremely racist or homophobic things, do we say "ah well, that's their choice, no blame"? Or do we say "that attitude is not okay in today's society, improve yourself". The fact we treat sexism differently from other forms of discrimination only demonstrates how ingrained it is.