13th December | | | Researchers claim that lads' mags use the same language as convicted sex
offenders
| Here's a quote: We are not killjoys or prudes who think that there should be no sexual information and media for young people. But...
Can you identify the source? A. Daily Mail B. Mediawatch-UK C. Object D. Church of England E. New Labour F. Academics from Middlesex University and the University of Surrey
See press release from surrey.ac.uk
|
Psychologists from Middlesex University and the University of Surrey claim that, far from being harmless or ironic fun, lads' mags could be legitimising hostile sexist attitudes. The researchers claim that when presented with [out of context,
carefully selected, and nebulous] descriptions of women taken from lads' mags, and comments about women made by convicted rapists, most people who took part in the study could not distinguish the source of the quotes. The research due to be
published in the British Journal of Psychology also revealed that most men who took part in the study identified themselves more with the language expressed by the convicted rapists. Psychologists presented men between the ages of 18 and 46 with a
range of statements taken from magazines and from convicted rapists in the study, and gave the men different information about the source of the quotes. Men identified more with the comments made by rapists more than the quotes made in lads' mags, but
men identified more with quotes said to have been drawn from lads' mags more than those said to have been comments by convicted rapists. The researchers also asked a separate group of women and men aged between 19 and 30 to rank the quotes on how
derogatory they were, and to try to identify the source of the quotes. Men and women rated the quotes from lads' mags as somewhat more derogatory, and could categorize the quotes by source little better than chance. Dr Miranda Horvath and Dr Peter
Hegarty argue that the findings are consistent with the possibility that lads' mags normalise hostile sexism, by making it seem more acceptable when its source is a popular magazine. Horvath, lead researcher from Middlesex University, said: We
were surprised that participants identified more with the rapists' quotes, and we are concerned that the legitimisation strategies that rapists deploy when they talk about women are more familiar to these young men than we had anticipated. Horvath, is concerned that lads' magazine editors are not working hard enough to moderate the content of their magazines:
A lot of debate around the regulation of lads' mags has been to do with how they affect children but less has been said about the influence they have on their intended audience of young men and the women with whom those men socialise. These magazines support the legitimisation of sexist attitudes and behaviours and need to be more responsible about their portrayal of women, both in words and images. They give the appearance that sexism is acceptable and normal - when really it should be rejected and challenged. Rapists try to justify their actions, suggesting that women lead men on, or want sex even when they say no, and there is clearly something wrong when people feel the sort of language used in a lads' mag could have come from a convicted rapist.
Hegarty, of the University of Surrey's Psychology Department, added: There is a fundamental concern that the content of such magazines normalises the treatment of women as sexual objects. We are not killjoys or prudes who think that there
should be no sexual information and media for young people. But are teenage boys and young men best prepared for fulfilling love and sex when they normalise views about women that are disturbingly close to those mirrored in the language of sexual
offenders? He added that young men should be given credible sex education and not have to rely on lads' mags as a source of information as they grow up.
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12th December | | |
Irish book censors formally unban men's glamour mags
| See
article from independent.ie
|
As of last week the following publications are freely and legally available in Ireland: Razzle, Mayfair, Men Only, Escort and Club International. You may have assumed that such publications are already available in Ireland, since the
general lifting of the ban on high-street pornography in the mid-Nineties. However, these have all been hit with specific bans going right back to 1935 when Razzle first started publishing. Anyway, as of last week, these publications will be
available here. They may have been sold anyway, but the publishers decided to regularise the whole thing and appealed to the Censorship of Publications Appeals Board (CPAB). This is a five-person State body, chaired by solicitor Paula Mullooly, and whose
members (four women and one man) go unpaid for their curious task. This is the first time the CPAB has met since 2005. Irish Book Censorship See
article from justice.ie Censorship of publications is
governed by legislation and administered by two voluntary boards appointed by the Minister for Justice and Equality:
the Censorship of Publications Board, which was established under the Censorship of Publications Act 1929 the Censorship of Publications Appeal Board, which was established under the Censorship of
Publications Act 1946
Any person may make a complaint to the Censorship of Publications Board. A prohibition order may be appealed to the Censorship of Publications Appeal Board by
the author, editor or publisher of the publication or any five members of the Oireachtas acting jointly
The appeal board may affirm, revoke or vary a prohibition. A
Register of Prohibited Publications [pdf] is maintained by
the Censorship of Publications Board.
|
22nd September | | |
Lilac claims to have the first bikini modelled on the cover of an Arab magazine
| See
article from
dailymail.co.uk
|
Yara Mashour has made it her business to break taboos. As editor in chief of Lilac, an Arab magazine based in Israel, she has set out to challenge customs and tradition - and her latest milestone is perhaps her biggest triumph to date. This
month's Lilac, for the first time ever, sees an Arab magazine featuring a model in a bikini on its front cover. The model in question is an Arab Israeli, Huda Naccache, from Haifa. In an exclusive interview with MailOnline, Yara said:
Since I established [Lilac] in Nazareth, Israel 10 years ago, I set out to break taboos regarding women in society... I worked on empowering and liberating [women]. Huda is the first Arab model to
appear on the cover of an Arabic magazine in a bikini. Lilac is the first Arabic magazine to show a cover with a bikini! I don't recall this being done elsewhere in the Arab world.
Yara admits, [authorities]
might censor it and refuse to allow it to be distributed. Some Arab countries like Lebanon shouldn't ban it, they are very liberal. The only barrier there is the political one... Written in Arabic, with some English inserts because the new and
young generation prefer reading English, the magazine targets Arabs in Israel, as well as Palestinians in the West Bank. The title is also on sale in neighbouring Jordan.
|
6th September | | |
China rips out Ai Weiwei article from Newsweek
| See article
from voanews.com
|
Censors in China have attempted to purge an essay written by prominent artist and dissident Ai Weiwei by manually tearing the pages of the article from a weekly news magazine. The essay, which appears in the September 5 issue of Newsweek, urges
Chinese citizens to speak out against what he says is the government's denial of basic rights. He also blasts the Chinese judicial system as being untrustworthy. However, the article was still accessible online to English speakers. Ai was understood to be barred from speaking to media or leaving Beijing after being released from jail in June. The internationally renowned artist was detained for almost three months after being charged with tax evasion.
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30th August | | |
WHSmith ban Garage magazine with Damien Hurst tattoo on the cover
| See
article from
artinfo.com
|
Dasha Zhukova's new art and fashion magazine, Garage, has received some good publicity from WHSmith. The newsagent and distributer has banned the publication before it hit the newsstands. The offending cover features a closeup shot of a Damien
Hirst-designed butterfly tattoo as displayed by a 23-year-old model.
|
30th August | | |
Venezuelan court bans magazine with government officials portrayed as cabaret dancers
| See article from
indexoncensorship.org
|
A court in the Venezuelan capital Caracas has issued a temporary injunction to prohibit the publication and circulation of satirical magazine 6to Poder after it published a cover with six Venezuelan government officials portrayed as cabaret
dancers. The Intelligence Service arrested the magazine's editor, Dinorah Giron, and put out a warrant for the arrest of the president of the publishing company, Leocenis Garcia. Update: Resumed 1st September
2011. See article from
indexoncensorship.org A judge has this week lifted a week-old court ruling banning the distribution of 6to Poder . However, the weekly was still prohibited from
referring to the case in print or from publishing similar content.
|
11th August | | |
New UK magazine exploring kink, fetish, swinging and dogging
| From xdpublications.co.uk
|
There's a new edition to the range of magazines from XD Publications. The Little Back Book is described by the publishers as: an adult magazine that walks a dangerous tightrope between high-class sophistication and downright
filth. First published in June 2011, The Little Back Book is a 100-page, A5, glossy publication that explores kinks, fetishes, swinging, dogging, spanking, cross-dressing, role-play and sex toys, as well as treating its readers to lots
of very sexy (and very naughty) pictures of British girls.
|
29th June | | |
Sport magazines find a new publisher
| See article from
erotictradeonly.com
|
Two titles previously published by Sport Media Group have found new homes. Adult Sport and Sport Readers' Wives have now been acquired by Euroticus Media. Adult Sport features candid photographs of celebrities, gossip and nude photography, while
Sport Readers' Wives does at is says on the can. Advertising services are being handled by Tri Active Media which owns and publishers Paul Raymond and Fantasy magazines.
|
20th June | | |
Foreskin Man and his comic book arch enemy Dr Mutilator wind up the pro-circumcision camp
| See
article from
dailymail.co.uk
|
Foreskin Man is not a typical comic-book superhero, and neither is his choice of adversaries - doctors who practice circumcision and Orthodox Jews who support the religious ritual. The comic books are produced to support activist
Matthew Hess, of San Diego, who has managed to put a measure on San Francisco's ballot in November that would make it illegal to perform a circumcision on a boy under 18 without medical need. Hess is the founder of MGMbill, a national organisation
pushing to outlaw circumcision on boys under the age of 18. MGM stands for Male Genital Mutilation. Hess said he launched his campaign in 2003 but had been getting a lot of glazed eyes until he created Foreskin Man. The first issue, in
which Foreskin Man confronts Dr. Mutilator, was viewed as kind of weird, he said, but the second issue has sent Internet traffic soaring. This is generating a lot of attention that is pushing people to look into this a little bit more, Hess
told The Associated Press: The more you look into it, the worse it gets. It is a serious human rights violation. Now a lot of people are going to learn about circumcision and be thinking about it before the November ballot. In the comic's
second issue, the mohel (a specialist in Jewish ritual circumcision) barges into a San Diego home, snatches a baby boy from his mother, and proceeds to circumcise the infant on a pool table before being stopped by Foreskin Man. Now Hess is being
accused of anti-semitism over his use of imagery. The (Monster) mohel has a dark complexion, hook nose and is practically drooling at the thought of apparently doing harm to a child, said Nancy Appel, associate director of the
Anti-Defamation League: He even has claws on his fingertips. He is blood thirsty just like the grotesque Jewish stereotypes that appeared in Nazi propaganda. It's absolutely a direct parallel.
|
13th June | | |
South African Playboy editor resigns over sale of the magazine in sex shops
| See
article from timeslive.co.za
|
Playboy magazine re-launched in South Africa after a 16-year absence at the end of March. But already the editor of Playboy South Africa has resigned because he believes it should not be sold in sex shops. Peter Piegl quit on May 23
after being in charge for only three issues. he said: My vision is that it is a lifestyle magazine . He posted on Facebook that his editorial vision was being compromised by negotiations about having the magazine distributed in sex shops.
The magazine's general manager, Karen von Wielligh, confirmed that the publishers had signed a three-month deal with the Adultworld sex shop chain, but said this would not detract from the magazine's classiness .
|
8th June | | |
Retail trade body OKs modesty covers as long as they don't have to bear the costs
| See article from
pressgazette.co.uk
|
Among the recommendations contained in the Bailey review, looking at the sexualisation of children, was that publishers and distributors provide modesty sleeves for lads' mags or make modesty boards available to all outlets they supply. John
Lennon, the managing director of the Association of News Retailing, agreed with the report's recommendations but said the cost should not be met by the retailer: It's a good idea for retailers that are too small to put these magazines out of the
eye-level of children, but I hope these [modesty sleeves] would be supplied by the publishers and not by the retailers, he said. The Bailey report also criticised newspapers for the use of sexualised front covers , but Lennon said this
was not a major issues for retailers. Newspapers are not included in the industry-wide voluntary code of conduct and Lennon said he did not expect this to change, adding: It's never really been an issue. We've had or two complaints from church
groups but that's really about it. |
21st May | | |
US bookstores censor cover picture of topless man
| 17th May 2011. See
article from
dailymail.co.uk |
Two major U.S. book retailers have censored an image of andogynous male model Andre Pejic in case customers confuse him for a woman. The Serbian-born catwalk star, 19, appears topless on the cover of glossy magazine Dossier. But both Barnes
& Noble and Borders have demanded that issues of the magazine come wrapped in opaque plastic. Barnes & Noble said that though it understood that Mr Pejic was male and not female, the model is young and it could be deemed as a naked
female. Dossier co-founder and creative director Skye Parrott told Jezebel.com that the directive came as a shock: We knew that this cover presented a very strong, androgynous image, and that could make
some people uncomfortable. That's partly why we chose it. I guess it has made someone pretty uncomfortable. Nobody I know has ever heard of anything like this happening, she said. Especially with a guy. Guys are
shirtless on magazine covers all the time. [It poses] a very interesting question of gender.
Update: Not True 21st May 2011. See
article from advocate.com Representatives from Barnes & Noble and Borders say reports they censored an issue of
Dossier Journal featuring a shirtless, androgynous male model on the cover are false. At no time did Borders request opaque polybags for this issue of Dossier magazine, Stephanie Laco, Vice President of Marketing and Business
Development, told The Advocate in a statement. A spokeswoman for Barnes & Noble says she doesn't understand how the rumor was started, saying, There was absolutely no conflict.
|
3rd May | | |
The DarkSide Magazine returns
| Thanks to Sergio Based on
article from cyberschizoid.com
|
Popular yet controversial British horror magazine The Darkside was started in 1990 by writer and editor Allan Bryce but by 2009 it went dark. But Allan Bryce has seen the light, and The Darkside has returned with issue 144. Editor Allan Bryce said on his
DVD & Blu-Ray World website: I'm pleased to be able to announce that Dark Side will be continuing with a new publisher, the same one
as DVD and Blu-ray World. The new magazine will pretty much be the same as the old one, though maybe a little spiffier on the design front since yours truly won't be doing it himself this time.
The first of the new issues should be out by the time you read these words and it has some great features on everything from the new Burke & Hare movie and cult giallo flick Amer to interviews with such genre legends as Gary
Sherman (Deathline, Dead And Buried) and Troma king Lloyd Kaufmann.
|
30th April | |
| Turkish internet censors list 138 words that trigger URL blocking
| See
article
from cyberlaw.org.uk
|
A request made by the Turkish Telecommunications Directorate, or TIB, to ban a total of 138 words from Turkish Internet domain names has no legal basis and has left companies unsure of what action to take, according to experts. Providing a list
and urging companies to take action to ban sites that contain the words and threatening to punish them if they don't has no legal grounds, Yaman Akdeniz, a cyber-rights activist and a law professor at Istanbul Bilgi University, told the Hu rriyet
Daily News. Akdeniz said no authority could decide that an action was illegal just by association. The TIB cited the Internet ban law number 5651 and related legislation as the legal ground for its request. The law, however, does not authorize
firms to take action related to banning websites. The hosting company is not responsible for controlling the content of the websites it provides domains to or researching/exploring on whether there is any illegal activity or not. They are
responsible for removing illegal content when they are informed and there is the technical possibility of doing so, according to Article 5 of the law. The list of banned words has caused many scratching of heads The effect of the TIB's
request could see the closure of many websites that include a number of words. For example, the website donanimalemi.com (hardwareworld.com) could be banned because the domain name has the word animal in it; likewise, sanaldestekunitesi.com,
(virtualsupportunit.com) could be closed down because of the word anal. Websites will also be forbidden from using the number 31 in their domain names because it is slang for male masturbation. Some banned English words include beat,
escort, homemade, hot, nubile, free and teen. Some other English words would also be banned because of their meanings in Turkish: pic, short for picture, is banned because it means bastard in
Turkish. The past tense of the verb get is also banned because got means butt in Turkish. Haydar, a very common Alevi name for men, is also banned because it means penis in slang. Gay , naked, confession, high school
student, breath and forbidden are some of the other banned words.
|
27th April | | |
Safermedia whinge at a Mariah Carey picture on the cover of OK!
| 21st April 2011. From au.christiantoday.com
|
Safermedia has voiced supposed concerns over a shot of Mariah Carey on the front of OK! magazine. The pregnant singer is on the front cover of the latest edition of the celebrity gossip magazine with her belly exposed and her husband, Nick
Cannon, covering her cleavage with his hands. The group is asking people to write letters of complaint to the magazine's publishers and the Press Complaints Commission. Safermedia claim that the advert demeans women and sexualises
pregnancy and motherhood unnecessarily . This is an unusually explicit cover for OK! Magazine ... and is another example of pornography becoming increasingly mainstream in all forms of the media.
|
21st April | | |
Daily Sport relocates to the moon
| 2nd April 2011. See article from
bbc.co.uk
|
The Daily Sport and Sunday Sport have suspended publication and will go into administration, their owner has said. The announcement came after the group warned it had experienced an insufficient recovery since December. Sport Media
Group (SMG) said on its website that it had ceased trading because of its inability to meet certain creditors as they fall due and was in the process of appointing administrators. The Daily Sport was launched by David Sullivan in 1991,
following on from the Sunday Sport, first published in 1986. The papers made the biggest impact when edited by Tony Livesey. Under his tutelage, the Sunday edition in particular became known for its outlandish stories - such as World War Two Bomber
Found on the Moon . Update: Daily Sport rescued from the Sea of Tranquility 21st April 2011. The Sunday Sport will return to news-stands next month after one of its former owners saved the publication from
the brink of collapse. David Sullivan has revealed that he and former staff had set up a private joint venture to save the Sunday publication and it will relaunch on May 8. The Daily Sport is still in the hands of administrators.
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11th April | | |
Dubai censors negative article in Vanity Fair
| See
article from
google.com
|
The up market magazine, Vanity Fair has wound up locals with an article panning the Gulf city state of Dubai. The magazine's April edition is on sale in bookshops but with the three pages of the column headlined Dubai on Empty removed.
The UAE newspaper censors of the National Media Council denied censoring the magazine. Local sources suggested the action against the Dubai-bashing article may have been at the initiative of magazine distributors rather than a case of formal
censorship. The missing piece was written by A.A. Gill who commented: There is no greater compliment for a journalist than to be hand-censored. If anyone has any doubt about what I wrote about Dubai, the
fact that you can't read it in Dubai makes the case.
The article slams Dubai and its expat and Emirati residents, as well as its giant shopping malls, its treatment of workers and legal system. Gill even belittles the Burj
Khalifa, the world's tallest building that is the pride and joy of Dubai.
|
23rd February | | |
Supermarkets set to implement display restrictions on lads mags
| See article
from dailymail.co.uk
|
Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury's, Morrisons, the Co-op group and BP petrol stations have agreed to put the magazines behind plain covers or on the top shelf following nutter pressure. But WHSmith said the measures went too far. The National Federation of
Retail Newsagents has also refused, saying it is not in a position to tell independent corner shops how to operate. The moves come after on going campaigning, most recently by Mumsnet, which found 'enormous' unease in a survey of mothers about the
publications and their images of scantily-clad women. But WHSmith said its existing restrictions were sufficient to protect children. We have a strict display policy in place that requires men's lifestyle magazine titles be displayed at minimum
height of 1.2 metres, equivalent to the average adult chest/shoulder height, a spokesman said. The policy requires men's lifestyle magazines to be displayed away from children's or women's magazines, and away from other product ranges which
children may be shopping for, e.g. toys and stationery. Justine Roberts, founder of Mumsnet, which is running the Let Girls Be Girls campaign against the sexualisation of children through advertising, clothing and music, said the store's
stance was frustrating . It's great that so many retailers are supporting Mumsnet's campaign. But it's frustrating that WHSmith are arguing that shelf height of 1.2m, that of an eight-year-old child, is a sufficient barrier. Asda has
ordered compulsory modesty boards for the magazines and changed its policy so publishers can no longer pay to have magazines displayed at the front of stores. Tesco is rolling out nationwide a trial in which the titles are put at the back of the
top shelf.
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22nd January | | |
Gay magazines find a successful niche in India
| See
article from
google.com
|
When the first editions of gay magazine Fun arrived at his stand in New Delhi, Ram Naresh displayed it discreetly to avoid giving offence -- but customers have ensured every month is a sell-out. The glossy publication, launched in July,
combines pictures of young models posing in underwear with articles on what to wear on a swingers' date, explicit sexual problems, and the latest cars and gadgets. We consistently run out of copies, said Naresh. I will have to order more
as there's enough of an audience for magazines like these. Gay sex was legalised in 2009 and there are now at least eight print and online magazines aimed at lesbians and gays in India. These include Jiah (Heart), an Internet
publication started last year. Jiah , which is staffed by volunteers, steers clear of nude photograph spreads and bedroom fantasies in favour of poetry and gay-friendly travel guides.
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