Private is a pornographic magazine published by the Swedish publisher and distributor Private Media Group. The magazine is known for its combination of high-quality photography and depiction of sex acts typical of hardcore pornography such as anal sex, an innovation at the time of its creation. The American pornographer Al Goldstein described it as "[the] best porno magazine in the world".[1]

Private
Cover of issue 134, published April 1996
CategoriesPornographic magazine
FrequencyEvery two months
First issue1965; 59 years ago (1965)
CompanyPrivate Media Group (since 1991)

The magazine was created in 1965 by the Swedish photographer Berth Milton Sr., who initially included his pornographic photographs in erotic magazines, which he distributed in his bookshop in Stockholm. He sold the first issues of his magazine himself to newspaper kiosks, since there was no distribution for such magazines.[2]

After the 1966 United States Supreme Court decision Memoirs v. Massachusetts, the prohibition of pornography in the United States was questioned for the first time. The magazine, previously distributed under the counter in the United States, has since been sold openly there and, from its ninth issue, is considered the United States' first legally distributed pornographic magazine.[3]

Since the mid-1980s, Private has been published in Barcelona, Spain, which was the second largest market for pornographic products after Germany.[2] The magazine became the best-selling pornographic magazine in the world,[4] before losing importance in the course of the digitalization of pornography in the 1990s.

Private Media Group was founded in 1991 by Berth Milton Jr. who extended the Private brand by adding web offerings to the portfolio, expanded video production and successfully took the company public.[5] The magazine Private, which forms the cornerstone of the company, continues to this day.

The erotic art book publisher Taschen has published two collections, each in five volumes, featuring photographic works published in Private in the 1970s and 1980s.[6]

References

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  1. ^ Heidenry, John (2002-03-22). What Wild Ecstasy. Simon and Schuster. p. 215. ISBN 978-0-7432-4184-7.
  2. ^ a b Voss, Georgina (2015). Stigma and the shaping of the pornography industry. London [England]: Routledge. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-203-56851-4. OCLC 912319847.
  3. ^ Lane, Frederick S. (2001). Obscene profits : the entrepreneurs of pornography in the cyber age (1st pbk. ed.). New York: Routledge. p. 28. ISBN 0-415-93103-7. OCLC 48116646.
  4. ^ Sally-Anne Gerull, Boronia Halstead: Sex industry and public policy (= Conference proceedings, number 14). Australian Institute of Criminology, Canberra 1992, p. 95
  5. ^ "Porn goes public". Forbes. June 14, 1999. Retrieved 2022-06-05.
  6. ^ Dian Hanson: Private 1970-1979. Taschen, Köln 2009, ISBN 3822845086 & Private 1980-1989. Taschen, Köln 2009, ISBN 3822845094.