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  • Portrait of American pornographic magazine publisher Al Goldstein as he holds open his jacket to reveal a t-shirt that bares the name of his publication, 'Screw,' New York, New York, June 26, 1969. (Fred W. McDarrah/Getty Images)
    Portrait of American pornographic magazine publisher Al Goldstein as he holds open his jacket to reveal a t-shirt that bares the name of his publication, 'Screw,' New York, New York, June 26, 1969. (Fred W. McDarrah/Getty Images)
    News section icon
    Al Goldstein’s Brash, Brazen Legacy

    Remembering the outlandish ‘Screw’ publisher one year after his death

    byJeremy Elias
  • News section icon
    Remembering ‘Screw’ Publisher Al Goldstein

    The original ‘bad Jewish boy’ has died at 77

    byJosh Lambert
  • Hugh Hefner on a visit to London, 1969.(Central Press/Getty Images)
    Hugh Hefner on a visit to London, 1969.(Central Press/Getty Images)
    Arts & Letters section icon
    My Son, the Pornographer

    By the 1960s, Playboy and its founder had become household names. But while Hugh Hefner was out making his brand synonymous with the good life, a team of Jewish editors made his magazine one of the liveliest, sexiest, and most progressive reads around.

    byJosh Lambert
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