May 20, 2024

Archives for September 2017

The Met Opera Offers Buyouts to Its Staff as Its Season Opens


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Credit Deidre Schoo for The New York Times

The Metropolitan Opera, which has continued to struggle at the box office and face what it calls “economic challenges,” has offered voluntary buyouts to 21 of its 243 administrative employees, the company said on Thursday.

“As you know, the Met continues to face economic challenges as it copes with the changing environment for presenting opera,” Peter Gelb, the Met’s general manager, said in a note he sent to the entire company on Thursday, a few days after the season opened. “As part of our ongoing efforts to reduce costs, we have offered 21 members of the administrative staff the possibility of participating in a voluntary retirement program, which includes supplemental financial benefits.”

The Met, the nation’s largest performing arts organization, has been working to cut its costs for several years. According to its most recent tax returns, the company spent $294.3 million in the fiscal year ending in July 2016 — its lowest operating budget in seven years — but still ran a small deficit of $177,000. And it has struggled to sell tickets recently: Last season the Met reported that it had taken in just 67 percent of its potential box-office revenue, which was only a slight improvement from the prior season, when it recorded its worst showing ever.

Citing its need to save money, the company took the rare step this season of canceling a previously announced new production of Verdi’s “La Forza del Destino” by the daring director Calixto Bieito. The Met is seeking to cut its budget this year to $280 million, officials said. A small portion of the necessary cuts are to come from administrative costs; officials said that the Met hopes to achieve those savings through voluntary buyouts.

The administrative employees being offered early retirement are not members of the Met’s powerful unions, which represent its orchestra, chorus, stagehands and others. In 2014 the Met won concessions from its unions after bitter negotiations that brought the company to the brink of a lockout; it also eliminated 22 nonunion positions, mostly through layoffs. But some of the pay cuts agreed to in that contract, which reached 7 percent, are to be partially restored with raises of up to 3 percent in the second half of this year, as several important contracts near their end. (The contracts with several major unions, including the ones representing the Met’s orchestra and chorus, expire at the end of July.)

In his note to the staff, Mr. Gelb wrote that “I appreciate your concerns and hope for your understanding that we are looking out for the long term fiscal health of our beloved institution.”

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Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/28/arts/music/met-opera-buyouts.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Hugh Hefner, Between the Headlines

The end of an article in 1957 noted that the magazine had a record circulation in the first quarter of the year, estimated at 880,590.

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Censors caught on soon enough. The next year, an effort by the post office to keep the magazine out of the “mails” failed.

And Mr. Hefner himself was quoted in a 1960 Associated Press piece about a ban on the magazine at newsstands in Connecticut, saying that Playboy would be distributed in the state, “if I have to go there and sell it myself.”

Celebrity on the Rise

A tiny item, fewer than 50 words long, in January 1962, heralded Mr. Hefner’s growing profile at the dawn of the sexual revolution. His life story was to be featured in a movie. Its title? “Playboy.”

His empire’s momentum was becoming difficult to stop, though many tried. New York’s state liquor authority delayed a license for The Playboy Club in December 1962. But by April 1963, the club was the “busiest in the city,” The Times reported, with 2,700 people visiting daily to “eat, drink, listen to music and gaze at scores of lightly clad young women wearing rabbit ears on their heads.”

A year later, Mr. Hefner, then the subject of his first feature-length Times profile, had not yet mastered his public persona. Though Mr. Hefner seemed to be trying to “convey the impression that he is living a ‘bachelor’s dream,’” the reporter saw the impresario as a “gaunt and rather somber young man” — a remote person whom friends described as a “loner.”

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Mr. Hefner in 1969 with a group of women at his London club. Credit Central Press, via Getty Images

At the Center of Everything

By 1968, the world had shifted, and Mr. Hefner’s libertine values were shared by much of a generation.

Charlotte Curtis, who later became the first woman on The Times’s masthead, captured the scene at a weeklong party at Mr. Hefner’s mansion in Chicago, during the Democratic National Convention:

The allegedly beautiful people of the Democratic National Convention were playing with Hugh M. Hefner’s waterfall button early this morning, sending his waiters to the kitchen for everything from steaks to scotch, tilting his pinball machine and clustering around the color television set that disappears behind a painting.

Ms. Curtis’s remarkable story — featuring cameos from a withdrawn Warren Beatty, Adlai E. Stevenson’s son, and the mayors of Boston and Cleveland — described the events of Aug. 28, which was also the day of the Chicago Police riot that became one of the defining moments of the decade. (Norman Mailer is absent, “out with the hippies.”)

The ‘Hare Apparent’

The chaos of the era did not spare Playboy. By 1970, a television review in The Times panned Mr. Hefner as an “aging anti-feminist” whose “notions of presenting sexy ecology are worn and unimaginative.” The same year, he was called a “fascist” and a “pig” as members of the women’s liberation movement protested his appearance on the Dick Cavett show.

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A series of questionable business moves by Mr. Hefner, including financing movies and taking his company public, cut into his profits, as did increasing competition from publishers willing to be more explicit than Playboy.

And in 1975, Mr. Hefner’s social secretary, who had been charged the year before with intent to distribute cocaine, died of a prescription drug overdose. For many, the party was over; the Chicago Playboy mansion closed that year. (It would later be turned over to the Art Institute of Chicago, which made it into a dorm.)

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By the late 1970s, the magazine was plagued by financial problems, its reputation damaged as the feminist movement grew.

Enter 26-year-old Christie Hefner, Mr. Hefner’s daughter from his first marriage.

Critics called the young, conservatively-dressed Ms. Hefner a figurehead who had been elevated to deflect criticism of the magazine. Her father did not entirely disagree.

“Well, I have made the comment that if Christie hadn’t existed, our promotion department might want to invent her,” he confessed in a 1979 interview. “She’s rather ideally suited, both symbolically and actually, for the role that she’s playing in the company.

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Mr. Hefner on the Playboy jet in 1970. Credit Central Press, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Handing Over the Keys

But Ms. Hefner proved to be no figurehead. In 1982, she became president of Playboy, and two years later, the chief of operations.

Still the decline continued. In 1985, Mr. Hefner had a mild stroke, one that he credited with giving him a new outlook on life.

That became clear to the public three years later, when Mr. Hefner, 62, announced his plan to marry Kimberley Conrad, a 24-year-old model. That same year, he relinquished the chairmanship of Playboy to his daughter.

Where Mr. Hefner had been revolutionary in his marketing of the playboy lifestyle, his thoughts on the subject of marriage were less groundbreaking. (He had been married once before and would marry once again.)

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He called his coming nuptials “the logical culmination of my life” and said his relationship with Ms. Conrad was “the best I’ve ever had.” He reported that the two shared a love of animals and “simply hanging out” at home.

A Mixed Legacy

In his final few decades, Mr. Hefner was forced to reckon with the decline of his empire.

The last of the Playboy Clubs announced that they were closing in 1986.

“For the better part of a decade, I’ve been fighting smoke,” a bitter Mr. Hefner told The Times. “I’ve been fighting semantic confusions in which Playboy has been accused of exploitation by people who, in every other area, have the same social-political views that I have.”

He called those who opposed him “authoritarian true-believers,” who included evangelists and “one limited, radical but very vocal part of the feminist movement.”

He later became something of an unofficial pitchman for Viagra, which he endorsed in his 2004 manifesto, “Hef’s Little Black Book.” And he appeared on a reality show starring his much younger girlfriends.

But a 1992 profile (headline: “Father Rabbit”) revealed that he was content in hibernation. The controversy surrounding him had become old news.

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Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/28/business/media/hugh-hefner-history.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

‘It’s crazy’: Kaspersky Lab attacked in US only for being Russian, says founder

© Vladimir AstapkovichKaspersky Lab says it does not spy for any government

Last week, the US Senate passed an amendment against Kaspersky Lab that would bar its use in American civilian and military agencies.

“I’m more than sure that they know that we can’t do that. There are a thousand people working in the company. And they are not some programmers that are sitting in dirty sweaters in the dungeon each writing a piece of code. Those are teams which work openly together on large projects. We can’t do something invisibly,” Kaspersky explained, as quoted by the TASS news agency.

Kaspersky said, in his opinion, the company simply fell victim to the political climate.

“They are just hitting at everything Russian. Since we are working there, we got hit, too” he said.

The company has three offices in the United States, including a subdivision in Washington.

When asked about accusations the Russian authorities could force Kaspersky Lab to spy for Russia, Kaspersky replied that “this would be a death sentence to the entire industry of cybersecurity in Russia.”

“In the US, they say the authorities can just come and force us to do something bad. But it would be shooting yourself in the foot. It would be a death sentence to the entire software business in Russia, which is worth billions of dollars a year. It’s crazy, “ Kaspersky said.

He also recalled that it is impossible to add any “secret pin” to the products of the company. “We are releasing updates, these updates are being checked. If we put something in there, it can’t be hidden and unnoticed,” he said.

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/404899-kaspersky-lab-russia-us/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

Hugh Hefner’s Memorable Interview Moments

Hugh Hefner, the founder of Playboy magazine, died on Wednesday at 91. Known for his hedonistic parties at the Playboy Mansion, and for his many romantic involvements, he became a symbol of sexual liberation — if at times a contentious one.

The exuberant owner of the Playboy media empire did not shy from making his libertine lifestyle public. Throughout the years, he spoke candidly in interviews about his intriguing life.

David Letterman

Late Night with David Letterman – 5/15/85 Video by Bud Sneebra

Mr. Hefner was an early guest on “Late Night with David Letterman,” in May 1985. Mr. Letterman pressed him for details of his life in the mansion, asking him, “Is it just unbelievable wild sex all night long?” Mr. Hefner reassured his host, “We take time off from the wild sex to watch your show.”

William F. Buckley Jr.

William Buckley Interviews Hugh Hefner on Firing Line (1966) Part 1 Video by CEHitchens33

In an interview in 1966 with the conservative commentator William F. Buckley Jr. on “Firing Line,” Mr. Hefner was asked about his views on sexual liberation. “What it really comes down to is an attempt to establish what has been called a new morality,” he said. “I really think that’s what this thing called the ‘American sexual revolution’ is really all about.”

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Time magazine

TIME Magazine Interviews: Hugh Hefner Video by TIME

In an interview with Time magazine, for which Mr. Hefner donned his signature silk pajamas and a maroon dressing gown, he was asked about his views on feminism. “I’m not an active feminist, I’m an active humanist,” he said. “I separated ways from the American feminist movement when they became anti-sexual. I believe embracing sexuality is a part of what it means to be free.”

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Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/28/arts/television/hugh-hefner-interviews.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Celebrities Remember Hugh Hefner for More Than Just the Articles

Meghan Murphy, a writer in Vancouver, British Columbia, who founded the website Feminist Current, called Mr. Hefner a “billionaire who profited from women’s subordination.”

Peter York, a leading British cultural commentator and the author of “The Official Sloane Ranger Handbook,” said Mr. Hefner’s death marked the end of an era for many Britons, who viewed Playboy as a potent symbol of a swaggering and liberated America.

Mr. York said that Mr. Hefner was a promoter not only of pornography but literature too. Playboy, he noted, had influenced popular culture in Britain by promulgating the idea that men’s magazines could show skin but also publish great writing, as it had by publishing writers like Vladimir Nabokov, Saul Bellow and James Baldwin.

While Mr. Hefner launched Playboy as a magazine that would not “solve any world problems or prove any great moral truths,” some tributes recognized his contributions to the Civil Rights Movement. Mr. Hefner gave the comedian Dick Gregory one of his early breaks, signing him to perform at his flagship Playboy Club in Chicago in 1961, at a time when black artists were sometimes barred from white-owned venues.

On Twitter, the civil rights leader Jesse Jackson noted Mr. Hefner’s contributions to the movement.

Mr. Hefner’s last tweets were about the death of Mr. Gregory in August, and a request that followers donate to the One America Appeal, a hurricane relief effort promoted by several former presidents.

Despite Mr. Hefner’s support for public causes, he was most well known for his hedonist lifestyle. Commenters remarked on his reputation as a libertine and his role as a purveyor of racy photos. Many remembered Mr. Hefner by remembering the first time they encountered his magazine.

And of course, there was lots of talk about the articles.

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Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/28/us/hugh-hefner-playboy-celebrities.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Russian ruble cutting oil dependence, but headwinds still ahead

© Dominic EbenbichlerSurging oil prices keep Russian ruble world’s strongest currency

“The Russian currency demonstrates enviable stability throughout all 2017. August was very significant in this respect. In previous years, August was one of the most difficult months for the ruble. The deterioration of the balance of payments, the conversion of profits received from Russian corporations into foreign currencies with subsequent withdrawal of capital and other reasons, led to an increase in exchange rates against the ruble in the local market,” Aleksandr Egorov, Forex strategist at TeleTrade told RT.

“This year, with the help of stabilized macroeconomic indicators and, first of all, the consumer inflation (CPI index), the ruble not only avoided a fall but on the contrary became stronger in the most dangerous month of the year,” he added.

Egorov said ruble remains linked to oil prices, but the bond is much less significant than before. In the past years, the Russian currency was highly sensitive to daily fluctuations in oil prices, now it responds to the long-term events in the market. And the news is positive for oil, as OPEC and non-OPEC producers remain committed to cutting output, and a sharp plunge in prices is less likely, which is positive for the ruble.

Investors in Russia are also lured by high yields on Russian bonds, as they do carry trade, agree analysts polled by RT.

Carry trade is a strategy that involves borrowing at a low-interest rate, usually in the developed economies and re-investing in an asset that provides a higher rate of return like emerging markets.

Novorossiysk commercial sea port © Vladimir AstapkovichPutin orders end to trade in US dollars at Russian seaports

“Despite the cut of key rate to 8.5 percent, Russian bonds continue to attract foreigners. Thus, in August, on the eve of the expected easing of the monetary policy of the central bank, foreigners bought 122 billion rubles (over $2 billion) worth of Russian OFZ bonds, which is a record figure since the spring,” said Mikhail Mashchenko, an analyst at the social network for investors eToro.

However, a further rally in the ruble is questionable, warns Sergey Kostenko, Global FX investment analyst. The US Federal Reserve is still committed to increasing the key rate, and plunging dollar liquidity will force investors to reduce their presence in developing markets.

“We can expect further cuts in interest rates by the CBR [Central Bank of Russia], which in the long run will significantly reduce the interest of foreign speculators in carry trade with the OFZs,” he told RT.

Stanislav Werner, an analyst at Singapore Castle Family office, agrees. He says the CBR sees the potential to cut the key rate from the current 8.5 percent to seven percent, which will make Russian bonds less attractive to foreign investors. A probable hike of key rate in the United States will cause a dollar flow back to America, including from Russia.

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/404871-russia-ruble-oil-dependence/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

Beijing orders closure of North Korean firms in China

© Andrew KellyUN Security Council unanimously adopts tougher sanctions on North Korea

After the UN Security Council passed new sanctions two weeks ago, the Chinese Commerce Ministry said North Korean firms and joint ventures in China would be closed within 120 days.

Following North Korea’s sixth and largest nuclear test this month, the UN Security Council voted unanimously to expand sanctions on Pyongyang. It has halted the country’s textile exports and capped fuel supplies.

READ MORE: North Korea fuel prices surge after China cuts oil supplies

It is the ninth UN Security Council sanctions resolution over North Korea’s ballistic missile and nuclear programs since 2006.

Last week, China’s central bank told the country’s lenders to strictly implement UN sanctions against North Korea. They were ordered to stop providing financial services to new North Korean customers and to wind down loans with existing customers. Chinese banks have been accused of transferring funds to and from Pyongyang.

Sources told Reuters the banks were warned of the economic losses and risks to their reputation if they did not comply.

On Tuesday, the US announced sanctions against eight North Korean banks and 26 individuals. The new punitive measures followed President Trump’s executive order targeting North Korea’s access to the international banking system.

Washington repeatedly raised concerns that Beijing has not been tough enough over Pyongyang’s nuclear tests, warning that any threat from North Korea would trigger an “overwhelming” response.

China’s President Xi Jinping assured President Trump that Beijing remains committed to denuclearizing North Korea and remains firm in its wish to resolve the issue through talks leading to a peaceful settlement.

North Korean soldiers. © Damir Sagolj‘Effective communicator’ Trump vows ‘devastation’ of N. Korea should US pursue military option

Recently tension has been escalating between the US and North Korea. Washington and Pyongyang have exchanged a series of threats, vowing to destroy one another.

Last week, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un threatened to launch a nuclear strike against Washington after President Trump threatened to “totally destroy” North Korea if it attacks the US or its allies.

Pyongyang said the US has declared war, and “will have every right to take countermeasures, including the right to shoot down US strategic bombers even when they are not inside the airspace of our country.”

The threat came after Trump tweeted that North Korean leader Kim Jong-un “won’t be around much longer.” The White House later denied the US had declared war on North Korea.

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/404868-north-korea-china-business/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

Alibaba launches new e-commerce platform in Russia

© tradeease.netRussia China launch joint e-commerce platform to boost trade

The service has started working in test mode and should become fully operational from mid-October.

“In Russia Tmall will be launched within the AliExpress platform. In fact, this marks the brand’s debut outside China,” one of the sources said.

AliExpress is one of the most popular online shops in Russia with an estimated 15.6 million customers each month.

According to the people familiar with the matter, Tmall will operate in Russia as a separate online shop and a marketplace (or e-platform), uniting an unlimited number of sellers.

Goods will be delivered from the warehouses of Alibaba’s partners in Russia, and not from Chinese storage facilities (cross-border trade), as with AliExpress.

“We started localizing AliExpress in Russia two years ago, launching the marketplace ‘Mall’ within the platform. The upgrade to Tmall means a better quality of services due to a more careful selection of goods, a single warehouse, and logistics based on courier delivery, along with delivery to special points of issue,” said Director of Development of AliExpress in Russia and CIS Mark Zavadsky.

He added that Tmall will offer all kinds of goods, ranging from electronics and household appliances to clothing and children’s goods. Russian and international brands, as well as some favorite Chinese brands in Russia, will be available to customers.

According to statistics, Tmall’s website is the 14th most visited, with more than 14,000 international brands registered.

In 2015, Russia and China started an online e-commerce platform called TradeEase aimed at increasing cross-border trade between the two countries.

Article source: https://www.rt.com/business/404858-alibaba-russia-trade-platform/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

Hugh Hefner, Who Built Playboy Empire and Embodied It, Dies at 91

He had only recently moved out of his parents’ house and left his job at Children’s Activities magazine. But in an editorial in Playboy’s inaugural issue, the young publisher purveyed another life:

“We enjoy mixing up cocktails and an hors d’oeuvre or two, putting a little mood music on the phonograph and inviting in a female acquaintance for a quiet discussion on Picasso, Nietzsche, jazz, sex.”

Slide Show

Hugh Hefner Created an Image, and Lived It

CreditPlayboy Enterprises, Inc

This scene projected an era’s “premium boys’ style,” Todd Gitlin, a sociologist at Columbia University and the author of “The Sixties,” said in an interview. “It’s part of an ensemble with the James Bond movies, John F. Kennedy, swinging, the guy who is young, vigorous, indifferent to the bonds of social responsibility.”

Mr. Hefner was reviled, first by guardians of the 1950s social order — J. Edgar Hoover among them — and later by feminists. But Playboy’s circulation reached one million by 1960 and peaked at about seven million in the 1970s.

Long after other publishers made the nude “Playmate” centerfold look more sugary than daring, Playboy remained the most successful men’s magazine in the world. Mr. Hefner’s company branched into movie, cable and digital production, sold its own line of clothing and jewelry, and opened clubs, resorts and casinos.

The brand faded over the years, and by 2015 the magazine’s circulation had dropped to about 800,000 — although among men’s magazines it was outsold by only one, Maxim, which was founded in 1995.

Mr. Hefner remained editor in chief even after agreeing to the magazine’s startling decision in 2015 to stop publishing nude photographs. Mr. Hefner handed over creative control of Playboy last year to his son Cooper Hefner. Playboy Enterprises’ chief executive, Scott Flanders, acknowledged that the internet had overrun the magazine’s province: “You’re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it’s just passé at this juncture.” The magazine’s website, Playboy.com, had already been revamped as a “safe for work” site. Playboy was no longer illicit. (Early this year, the magazine brought back nudes.)

Mr. Hefner began excoriating American puritanism at a time when doctors refused contraceptives to single women and the Hollywood production code dictated separate beds for married couples. As the cartoonist Jules Feiffer, an early Playboy contributor, saw the 1950s, “People wore tight little gray flannel suits and went to their tight little jobs.”

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“You couldn’t talk politically,” Mr. Feiffer said in the 1992 documentary “Hugh Hefner: Once Upon a Time.” “You couldn’t use obscenities. What Playboy represented was the beginning of a break from all that.”

Playboy was born more in fun than in anger. Mr. Hefner’s first publisher’s message, written at his kitchen table in Chicago, announced, “We don’t expect to solve any world problems or prove any great moral truths.”

Still, Mr. Hefner wielded fierce resentment against his era’s sexual strictures, which he said had choked off his own youth. A virgin until he was 22, he married his longtime girlfriend. Her confession to an earlier affair, Mr. Hefner told an interviewer almost 50 years later, was “the single most devastating experience of my life.”

In “The Playboy Philosophy,” a mix of libertarian and libertine arguments that Mr. Hefner wrote in 25 installments starting in 1962, his message was simple: Society was to blame. His causes — abortion rights, decriminalization of marijuana and, most important, the repeal of 19th-century sex laws — were daring at the time. Ten years later, they would be unexceptional.

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Mr. Hefner with a cadre of Playboy Club waitresses, called bunnies, in 1963. The club, which opened in Chicago in 1960, was an extension of the lifestyle brand created in the pages of his magazine. Credit Playboy Enterprises Inc.

“Hefner won,” Mr. Gitlin said in a 2015 interview. “The prevailing values in the country now, for all the conservative backlash, are essentially libertarian, and that basically was what the Playboy Philosophy was.

“It’s laissez-faire. It’s anti-censorship. It’s consumerist: Let the buyer rule. It’s hedonistic. In the longer run, Hugh Hefner’s significance is as a salesman of the libertarian ideal.”

The Playboy Philosophy advocated freedom of speech in all its aspects, for which Mr. Hefner won civil liberties awards. He supported progressive social causes and lost some sponsors by inviting black guests to his televised parties at a time when much of the nation still had Jim Crow laws.

The magazine was a forum for serious interviews, the subjects including Jimmy Carter (who famously confessed, “I’ve committed adultery in my heart many times”), Bertrand Russell, Jean-Paul Sartre and Malcolm X. In the early days Mr. Hefner published Ray Bradbury (Playboy bought his “Fahrenheit 451” for $400), Herbert Gold and Budd Schulberg. It later drew, among many others, Vladimir Nabokov, Kurt Vonnegut, Saul Bellow, Bernard Malamud, James Baldwin, John Updike and Joyce Carol Oates.

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Hugh Marston Hefner was born on April 9, 1926, the son of Glenn and Grace Hefner, Nebraska-born Methodists who had moved to Chicago. Decades later, he still told interviewers that he grew up “with a lot of repression,” and he often noted that his father was a descendant of William Bradford, the Puritan governor of the Plymouth Colony.

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In 2005, the reality show “The Girls Next Door” offered viewers a look at the lives of three of Mr. Hefner’s young companions in the Playboy Mansion: from left, Holly Madison, Bridget Marquardt and Kendra Wilkinson. Credit European Pressphoto Agency

Though father and son reached an accommodation — the elder Mr. Hefner became Playboy’s accountant and treasurer — neither changed moral compass points. Glenn Hefner, who died in 1976, said he had never looked at the pictures in the magazine.

As a child, Mr. Hefner spent hours writing horror stories and drawing cartoons. At Steinmetz High School, he said, “I reinvented myself” as the suave, breezy “Hef,” newspaper cartoonist and party-loving leader of what he called “our gang.” At the University of Illinois, after serving in the Army, he edited the humor magazine and started a photo feature called “Co-ed of the Month.”

He married a high school classmate, Millie Williams, and began what he described as a deadening slog into 1950s adulthood: He took a job in the personnel department of a cardboard-box manufacturer. (He said he quit when asked to discriminate against black applicants.) He wrote advertising copy for a department store, and then for Esquire magazine. He became circulation promotion manager of another magazine, Children’s Activities.

Meanwhile he was plotting his own magazine, which was to be, among other things, a vehicle for his slightly randy cartoons. The first issue of Playboy was financed with $600 of his own money and several thousand more in borrowed funds, including $1,000 from his mother. But his biggest asset was a nude calendar photograph of Marilyn Monroe. He had bought the rights for $500.

Plenty of other men’s magazines showed nude women, but most were unabashedly crude and forever dodging postal censors. Mr. Hefner aimed to be the first to claim a mainstream readership and mainstream distribution.

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Besides remaining the public face of Playboy magazine throughout his life, Mr. Hefner held on to his duties as editor in chief, as well, even through a decision in 2015 — since reversed — to stop publishing nude photographs. Credit Vincent Laforet/The New York Times

When Playboy reached newsstands in December 1953, its press run of 51,000 sold out. The publisher, instantly famous, would soon become a millionaire; after five years, the magazine’s annual profit was $4 million and its rabbit logo was recognized around the world.

Mr. Hefner ran the magazine and then the business empire largely from his bedroom, working on a round bed that revolved and vibrated. At first he was reclusive and frenetic, powered past dawn by amphetamines and Pepsi-Cola. In later years, even after giving up Dexedrine, he was still frenetic, and still fiercely attentive to his magazine.

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His own public playboy persona emerged after he left his wife and children, Christie and David, in 1959. That year his new syndicated television series, “Playboy’s Penthouse,” put the wiry, intense Mr. Hefner, pipe in hand, in the nation’s living rooms. The set recreated his mansion on North State Parkway, rich in sybaritic amusements, where he greeted entertainers like Tony Bennett, Ella Fitzgerald and Nat King Cole, and intellectuals and writers like Max Lerner, Norman Mailer and Alex Haley, while bunches of glamorous young women milled around. (A later TV show, “Playboy After Dark,” was syndicated in 1969 and 1970.)

In the Playboy offices, life imitated image. Mr. Hefner told a film interviewer that in the early days, yes, “everybody was coupling with everybody,” including him. He later estimated that he slept with more than 1,000 women. Over and over, he would say, “I’m the boy who dreamed the dream.”

Friends described him as both charming and shy, even unassuming, and intensely loyal. “Hef was always big for the girls who got depressed or got in a jam of some sort,” the artist LeRoy Neiman, one of the magazine’s main illustrators for more than 50 years, said in an interview in 1999. “He’s a friend. He’s a good person. I couldn’t cite anything he ever did that was malicious to anybody.”

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Christie Hefner, then the chairwoman and chief executive of Playboy Enterprises, with her father, Hugh, at the New York Stock Exchange in 2003. Credit Richard Drew/Associated Press

At the same time, Mr. Hefner adored celebrity, his and others’. Mr. Neiman, who sometimes lived at the Playboy Mansion, said: “It was nothing to breakfast there with comedians like Mort Sahl, professors, any kind of person who had something on his mind that was controversial or new. At the parties in the early days, Alex Haley used to hang around. Tony Curtis and Hugh O’Brian were always there. Mick Jagger stayed there.”

The glamour rubbed off on Mr. Hefner’s new enterprise, the Playboy Club, which was crushingly popular when it opened in Chicago in 1960. Dozens more followed. The waitresses, called bunnies, were trussed in brief satin suits with cotton fluffs fastened to their derrières.

One bunny briefly employed in the New York club would earn Mr. Hefner’s lasting enmity. She was an impostor, a 28-year-old named Gloria Steinem who was working undercover for Show magazine. Her article, published in 1963, described exhausting hours, painfully tight uniforms (in which half-exposed breasts floated on wadded-up dry cleaner bags) and vulgar customers.

Another feminist critic, Susan Brownmiller, debating Mr. Hefner on a television talk show, asserted, “The role that you have selected for women is degrading to women because you choose to see women as sex objects, not as full human beings.” She continued: “The day you’re willing to come out here with a cottontail attached to your rear end. …”

Mr. Hefner responded in 1970 by ordering an article on the activists then called “women’s libbers.” In an internal memo, he wrote: “These chicks are our natural enemy. What I want is a devastating piece that takes the militant feminists apart. They are unalterably opposed to the romantic boy-girl society that Playboy promotes.”

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From left, the actor Darren McGavin, the actresses Jean Stapleton and Ruth Buzzi, Mr. Hefner, and Barbara Fisher at a casino fund-raiser in Los Angeles in 1979. Credit Lennox Mclendon/Associated Press

The commissioned article, by Morton Hunt, ran with the headline “Up Against the Wall, Male Chauvinist Pig.” (The same issue contained an interview with William F. Buckley Jr., fiction by Isaac Bashevis Singer and an article by a prominent critic of the Vietnam War, Senator Vance Hartke of Indiana.)

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Mr. Hefner said later that he was perplexed by feminists’ apparent rejection of the message he had set forth in the Playboy Philosophy. “We are in the process of acquiring a new moral maturity and honesty,” he wrote in one installment, “in which man’s body, mind and soul are in harmony rather than in conflict.” Of Americans’ fright of anything “unsuitable for children,” he said, “Instead of raising children in an adult world, with adult tastes, interests and opinions prevailing, we prefer to live much of our lives in a make-believe children’s world.”

Many, of course, questioned whether Playboy’s outlook could be described as adult. Harvey G. Cox Jr., the Harvard theologian, called it “basically antisexual.” In 1961, in the journal Christianity and Crisis, Dr. Cox wrote: “Playboy and its less successful imitators are not ‘sex magazines’ at all. They dilute and dissipate authentic sexuality by reducing it to an accessory, by keeping it at a safe distance.”

In a 1955 television interview, a frowning Mike Wallace asked Mr. Hefner: “Isn’t that really what you’re selling? A high-class dirty book?”

Such scolding sounded quaint by the time crasser competitors like Penthouse and Hustler appeared in the 1960s and ’70s. Playboy began showing pubic hair on its models, while the others doubled the dare with features on kinkier sexual tastes and close-up photos that bordered on the gynecological. Mr. Hefner would decide, after furious debate among the staff, not to compete further.

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Clockwise from top left, Jerry Lewis, Anthony Newley, Mr. Hefner and Sammy Davis Jr. on the set of “Playboy After Dark,” the brand’s second TV show, in 1968. Credit Bruce McBroom

Playboy Enterprises still prospered, and in 1971 went public to finance resorts in Jamaica; Lake Geneva, Wis.; and Great Gorge, N.J.; and gambling casinos in London and the Bahamas.

The heady mood broke in 1974, when Mr. Hefner’s longtime personal assistant, Bobbie Arnstein, committed suicide. Ms. Arnstein had just been convicted of conspiracy to distribute cocaine, and Mr. Hefner said bitterly that investigators had hounded her to set him up.

He left Chicago for his second home in Los Angeles, an enormous mock-Tudor house in Holmby Hills with a grotto and a zoo (Mr. Hefner loved animals), where he could orchestrate the company’s move into films.

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The 1980s brought a huge retrenchment for Playboy. The company lost its London casinos in 1981 for gambling violations and was denied a gambling license in Atlantic City, partly because of reports that Mr. Hefner had been involved in bribing New York officials for a club license 20 years earlier.

The company shed its resorts and record division and sold Oui magazine, a more explicit but less successful version of Playboy, while the flagship’s circulation plunged. The Playboy Building in Chicago, its rabbit-head beacon illuminating Michigan Avenue, was also sold, as was the corporate jet with built-in discothèque. Bunnies were going the way of go-go dancers, and the Playboy Clubs closed.

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Playboy bunnies celebrating the inaugural flight of Mr. Hefner’s new DC-9 jetliner, the Big Bunny, in 1970. Credit George Brich/Associated Press

Mr. Hefner relied more and more on his daughter, Christie, named company president in 1982 and then chief executive, a position she held until 2009. Mr. Hefner suffered a stroke in 1985, but he recovered and remained editor in chief of Playboy, choosing the centerfold models, writing captions and tending to detail with an intensity that led his staff to call him “the world’s wealthiest copy editor.”

In 1989 Mr. Hefner married again, saying he had rethought Woody Allen’s line that “marriage is the death of hope.” His second wife was Kimberley Conrad, the 1989 Playmate of the Year, 38 years his junior. They had two sons: Marston Glenn, born in 1990, and Cooper Bradford, born in 1991.

The couple divorced in 2010, and Mr. Hefner plowed into his work, including the editing of “The Century of Sex,” a Playboy book. When a New York Times interviewer later prodded him about the rewards of marriage, he replied, “Unfortunately, they come from other women.” Meanwhile, to widespread snickering, he became a cheerleader for Viagra, telling a British journalist, “It is as close as anyone can imagine to the fountain of youth.”

The re-emerged Hef reveled in the new century. In 2005 he began appearing on television on the E! channel reality show “The Girls Next Door,” although his onscreen role consisted mostly of peering in while his three young, blond girlfriends planned adventures at the mansion. When the three original “Girls Next Door” went their separate ways after five seasons, he replaced them with three others, also young and blond — and shortly afterward asked one of them, Crystal Harris, to marry him.

Five days before the 85-year old Mr. Hefner was to marry the 25-year-old Ms. Harris in June 2011 — the wedding was to have been filmed by the Lifetime cable channel as a reality special — the bride called it off. Mr. Hefner, by this time a man of the 21st-century media, announced on Twitter, “Crystal has had a change of heart.”

But Ms. Harris had another change of heart, and the two married on New Year’s Eve 2012. On their first anniversary, Mr. Hefner tweeted to his 1.4 million followers, “It’s good to be in love.”

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In addition to his wife, Mr. Hefner’s survivors include his daughter, Christie; and his sons, David, Marston and Cooper.

Another of the “Girls Next Door,” Holly Madison, offered a much more depressing version of life in the mansion in a 2015 tell-all book. In the years when Mr. Hefner was calling her his “No. 1 girlfriend,” she wrote in “Down the Rabbit Hole,” she endured a dysfunctional household of petty rules, allowances, quarrels and backstabbing, all directed by an emotionally manipulative old man.

Through those years, however, the Playboy brand marched forward. In 2011 Mr. Hefner took Playboy Enterprises private again. Mr. Flanders, after taking over as chief executive in 2009, focused on the licensing business, shrinking the company and raising its profits. The website, cleansed of any whiff of pornography, enjoyed huge growth, while Mr. Hefner, who retained his title and about 30 percent of the company’s stock, cheerfully tweeted news and pictures of the many festivities at the mansion, along with hundreds of photographs from his past, in the glory decades of the ’60s and ’70s.

Mr. Hefner will be buried in Westwood Memorial Park in Los Angeles, where he bought the mausoleum drawer next to Marilyn Monroe.

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Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/27/obituaries/hugh-hefner-dead.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Trump Proposes the Most Sweeping Tax Overhaul in Decades

On the individual side, the plan would collapse the tax brackets from seven to three, with tax rates of 12 percent, 25 percent and 35 percent, the president said. The current top rate is 39.6 percent and the lowest rate is 10 percent. The framework also gives Congress the option of creating a higher, fourth, rate above 35 percent in the tax plan to ensure that the wealthy are paying their fair share.

The plan aims to simplify and cut taxes for the middle class by doubling the standard deduction to $12,000 for individuals and to $24,000 for married couples filing jointly. That would allow people to avoid a complicated process of itemizing their taxes to claim various credits and deductions. It would increase the child tax credit from $1,000 to an unspecified amount, and create a new $500 tax credit for non-child dependents, such as the elderly.

Provisions such as the alternative minimum tax and the estate tax, a levy on inherited wealth that Mr. Trump has derided for years, would be gone under the Republican proposal.

The proposal calls for reducing the corporate tax rate to 20 percent from 35 percent, a shift that supporters say is needed to make American companies more competitive with their counterparts around the world.

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Six Charts That Help Explain the Republican Tax Plan

The proposal lowers rates for individuals and corporations but leaves key elements up to Congress.

A new tax rate of 25 percent would also be created for so-called pass-through businesses, such as partnerships and sole proprietorships, which are currently taxed at the rate of their owners. About 95 percent of businesses in the United States are structured as pass-throughs and they generate a majority of the government’s corporate tax revenue.

“This will be the lowest top marginal income tax rate for small and midsize businesses in this country in more than 80 years,” Mr. Trump said.

While Republican leaders claim to be united on the tax plan, they must now sell it to lawmakers who have been deeply divided this year. The push began at a House Republican retreat on Wednesday at Fort McNair in Washington, where Representative Kevin Brady of Texas, the Republican chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, walked members through the blueprint and talked about the importance of coming together to fix the tax code.

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Later, in a hopeful sign for Republican leaders fretting privately about keeping their rank and file together, the conservative Freedom Caucus, whose members have derailed the party’s initiatives with hard-line demands, issued a statement of support calling the plan “forward looking” and pledging to back the party’s budget designed to ensure its passage.

The political stakes are high for a president who is desperate to score a legislative win before his first year in office draws to a close. Mr. Trump, who has eschewed the advocacy tours that his predecessors have used to build support for their top domestic priorities, made a rare direct appeal to voters during his speech, imploring them to call their representatives and senators and demand action on the tax proposal. “Let them know you’re watching,” Mr. Trump said. “Let them know you’re waiting.”

In an apparent nod to the harsh political realities the tax plan faces, Mr. Trump made an explicit overture to Democrats to support the plan.

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“Democrats and Republicans in Congress should come together, finally, to deliver this giant win for the American people,” Mr. Trump said.

But behind the scenes, Republican congressional leaders and senior White House officials have discussed bypassing Democrats and using special budget rules that would allow them to get the bill through Congress on a simple majority vote. And Mr. Trump paired his scripted talk of bipartisanship with an impromptu threat to Senator Joe Donnelly, Democrat of Indiana, saying he would personally work to defeat the senator’s re-election bid next year if he does not fall into line on the tax plan.

“If Senator Donnelly doesn’t approve it — because, you know, he’s on the other side — we will come here, we will campaign against him like you wouldn’t believe,” Mr. Trump said as Mr. Donnelly looked on from the audience.

Conservatives cheered the plan as a bold and long-awaited step to spur economic growth, while Democratic leaders condemned it as an irresponsible boon to the rich. And some budget watchdogs expressed worry about the long-term impact of a plan they said could cost more than $2 trillion over a decade.

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Read President Trump’s Tax Proposal

The New York Times on Wednesday obtained the Trump administration’s proposed tax framework that includes what would be the most sweeping changes to the tax code in decades.

Mr. Trump, who has broken with precedent for modern American presidents by refusing to release his tax returns, insisted that wealthy people like him would not benefit — an assertion that seemed improbable for a man who runs a family-owned real estate empire and whose children stand to inherit vast sums.

“Tax reform will protect low-income and middle-income households, not the wealthy and well-connected,” Mr. Trump said, framing a proposal that would affect hundreds of millions of Americans in terms of his own self-interest. “I’m doing the right thing, and it’s not good for me, believe me.”

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Democrats scoffed. “If this framework is all about the middle class, then Trump Tower is middle-class housing,” said Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon, the ranking Democrat on the Finance Committee. “It violates Trump’s tax pledge that the rich would not gain at all under his plan by offering sweetheart deals for powerful C.E.O.s, giveaways for campaign coffers and a new way to cheat taxes for Mar-a-Lago’s loyal members.”

As with the individual side, some of the thornier business tax issues remain unaddressed. It will be left to Congress to create safeguards that prevent wealthy individuals from incorporating as pass-through businesses, which would tax their income at a lower rate.

Most itemized deductions, including those widely used for state and local tax expenses, would also be eliminated, along with most of the tax credits that businesses use. However, the plan would preserve the deductions for mortgage interest expenses and charitable giving and keep incentives for education and retirement savings plans, as well as preserve the tax credits for research and development and low-income-housing on the business side.

Another big change for companies would be a limitation of the deductibility for corporate interest expenses, in exchange for the opportunity to immediately expense business investments. The ability to immediately write off these expenses would last only five years, and the limitations for deducting interest have yet to be determined.

Perhaps the most significant, yet murky, shift is the move from a worldwide tax system to a territorial tax system for multinational corporations. In theory, this means that companies would not be taxed on their overseas earnings. But to prevent erosion of the tax base, Republicans plan to impose some form of tax on foreign profits. The transition to the new system would also include a one-time repatriation tax at yet-to-be-determined rates to encourage companies to bring offshore profits back home.

Administration officials did not provide a cost estimate for the plan. Members of the Senate Budget Committee have agreed on a budget resolution that would allow for a $1.5 trillion tax cut over 10 years. Studies of similar plans produced by Mr. Trump and House Republicans have been projected to cost $3 trillion to $7 trillion over a decade.

Republicans say economic growth will compensate for lost revenue. Senator Patrick J. Toomey, a Pennsylvania Republican who sits on the Finance Committee, said he was confident that a growing economy would pay for the tax cuts.

“This tax plan will be deficit reducing,” Mr. Toomey said.

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Article source: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/27/us/politics/trump-tax-cut-plan-middle-class-deficit.html?partner=rss&emc=rss