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For decades, Playboy’s famous “rabbits” have been synonymous with sex, fun and glamor. However, behind that business founded by Hugh Hefner, he was hiding a dark web of abuse, drugs and flu trafficking in the highest spheres of power. This is how the docu-series reveals it Playboy secrets, the naked truthwhich will debut on Sunday 19 June on A&E.
Through twelve episodes, in a tone of denunciation, the series that has documentary material from different eras, explore and uncover the truths hidden behind the empire Playboy. Two chapters will be broadcast every Sunday.
real testimonials
Playboy Secrets. Real testimonies of what was happening behind Hugh Hefner’s empire in A&E’s “Playboy Secrets” docu series. Photo: Press.
With the direct testimonies of many of its true protagonists, who tell their experiences in the first person, the docu-series brings to light the most complex and dark plot of the a millionaire business that has sold out for decades.
Among those who provide details on how the “behind the scenes” world worked Playboy, This is Mikki Garcia, a former bunny and former head of promotions for the company and the producer and director of the series, Alexandra Dean.
The protagonists of the docu-series talk about everything: from drug use and excessive sex that has developed and was promoted by Hefner in the villa itself, until the tragic story of Dorothy Stratten, the playmate killed by her ex-husband, in 1980.
tragic story of a murder
Stratten was just 20 years old, a rising star, and the case was a real scandal. The details of the crime also involved Hefner himselfpassed away in 2017.
For her part, the producer Alexandra Dean tells how the testimonies of many of the women who have lived her experience Playboy. On the other hand, he also delved into it the pyramid structure created by Hugh Hefner to use the “rabbits” and thus gain influence among important businessmen and in the higher strata of politics, to do their own business.
“Playboy Secrets”, a new series of docu from A&E, which tells the dark secrets of the mansion.
“I was Miss January 1973. My photos became beautiful and I soon became the Playboy Advertising Director,” says Mikki García. “I wasn’t interested in getting married at the time, but I was interested in doing business,” she says. “We women were taking power and deciding what to do with ourselves and I thought it was good for me.”
The former playmate assures that she felt she had a lot of power and freedom. “It was all thanks to the sexual revolution. But many times I have received criticism from the most radical feminists and I have explained to them that I had control over my life.”
Recalling that phase of his life, García adds: “I I was convinced that I could control what happened in my life, it was my choice. But that choice obviously had a cost, and I didn’t realize it at the time. “
Mikki García, a former bunny and former Advertising Director of the brand, is one of the testimonials of “Playboy Secrets”. Photo: print.
In another testimony, Jaki Nett, also a former “bunny”, recounts her experience as part of the Playboy mansion in the late 1960s. “They paid us very well, I bought a car and I had the freedom. Much more than if I were a secretary or a teacher”.
For his part, PJ Mastten provides her voice as a “bunny mother” in the 1980s. “I had 70 girls under my leadership in Chicago. And we did a lot to help them thrive,” she says, revealing the details of the mighty business.
However, everything that alleged economic progress had its price: drugs, abuse and manipulation suffered by women by Hefner and his entire structure, something that has remained in the shadows for years and which is now coming to light.
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Source: Clarin