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Oui Year 1973 Magazine Back Issues

1972 | 1973 | 1974 | 1975 | 1976 | 1977 | 1978 | 1979 | 1980 | 1981 | 1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985 | 1986 | 1987 | 1988 | 1989 | 1990 | 1991 | 1992 | 1993 | 1994 | 1995 | 1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008

Oui Jan 1973
Oui January 1973 magazine back issue cover image
Supersonic Holiday

Buying Choices
Oui January 1973

Features
King Hussein Forgives Us All

 


Oui Feb 1973
Oui February 1973 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Oui February 1973

Features
Blues For Red China
Getting To The Bottom Of "Deep Throat"
Goa: Gateway To Somewhere
The Truth About Older Women

 


Oui Mar 1973
Oui March 1973 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Oui March 1973

Features
The Philippines Are Falling Apart!
Juan Peron Gets It Together!
Fellini On Fellini!
New Youth Menace: Egg Abuse!

 


Oui Apr 1973
Oui April 1973 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Oui April 1973

Features
Hanky Panky On The S.S. France
The Nudest Bardot Yet
Lord Porn Finds You Disgusting
The Secret Rhythms Of The Human Male

 


Oui May 1973
Oui May 1973 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Oui May 1973

Features
How To Zou-Zou In Paris
Let's Make Friends With The Dolphins
Plus: Hitler's Fave Rave
David Hamilton's Ladies

 


Oui Jun 1973
Oui June 1973 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Oui June 1973

Features
Why God Made The World

 


Oui Jul 1973
Oui July 1973 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Oui July 1973

Features
69 Facts About French Sex
John Wayne Meets Bob Dylan
Music To Make Out To
Sex Star Of The Casino De Paree

 


Oui Aug 1973
Oui August 1973 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Oui August 1973

Features
Diana Rigg: American Men Make Lousy Lovers
Feelthy French Postcards
William Burroughs Meets The Goat God
Making It On The Riviera

 


Oui Sep 1973
Oui September 1973 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Oui September 1973

Features
Covergirl Goldie Pelt Photographed by Richard Noble
Mysterious Haiti (Lowlife In High Places!)
Marcel Marceau Moves His Lips (Sound Emerges!)
Our Fabulous Cover Girl Golden
The Sex Book That Rocked Italy

 


Oui Oct 1973
Oui October 1973 magazine back issue cover image
Gala First Anniversary

Buying Choices
Oui October 1973

Features
Bette Midler Rising
Passion In The Sand
The Nudest Hitler Yet
Gay Talese Examines Sex

 


Oui Nov 1973
Oui November 1973 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Oui November 1973

Features
The Greatest Stripshow On Earth
James Jones' Vietnam Diary
Bobby Seale's Big Problem

 


Oui Dec 1973
Oui December 1973 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Oui December 1973

Features
Germaine Greer On Sexy Men
Papillon On Gambling
Aunt Nancy On The Love Seat
Plus: Ravenous Cannibals, Tiny Basketball Players and More

 

1972 | 1973 | 1974 | 1975 | 1976 | 1977 | 1978 | 1979 | 1980 | 1981 | 1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985 | 1986 | 1987 | 1988 | 1989 | 1990 | 1991 | 1992 | 1993 | 1994 | 1995 | 1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008
Oui was a men's adult pornographic magazine published in the United States and featuring explicit nude photographs of models, with full page pin-ups, centerfolds, interviews and other articles, and cartoons. Oui ceased publication in 2007. ("Oui" is French for "yes".)

Oui was originally published in France under the name Lui by Daniel Filipacchi (first French issue November 1963), as a French equivalent of Playboy. In 1972, Playboy Enterprises purchased the rights for a U.S. edition, changing the name to Oui, and the first issue was published in October of that year. Jon Carroll, formerly assistant editor at Rolling Stone magazine and editor of Rags and later editor of The Village Voice, was selected as the first editor. Arthur Kretchmer, the editor of Playboy, however, had a role in ensuring that editorial choices would be in line with Hugh Hefner's vision.

The intention was to differentiate the audience in mass-market men's magazines, in an attempt to answer the challenge brought by Penthouse and Hustler, with its more explicit photography, and therefore compete on multiple fronts. At first Playboy considered a direct response by following Penthouse in a nudity escalation, but Playboy management was hesitant to alter the magazine's philosophy, based on a more 'mature' and 'sophisticated' audience (one-third of Playboy's readership at that time was estimated to be over 35). Instead, a separate publication, Oui, was introduced in order to pursue a younger readership, offering a combination of a "rambunctious editorial slant with uninhibited nudes pictured in the Penthouse mood."

In the late seventies, Oui published some interesting articles, including "Is this the man who ate Michael Rockefeller?" (April 1977) by Lorne Blair (lately famous for the Ring of Fire documentaries), beginning with a photograph of a grinning New Guinea native, told by the intrepid anthropologist/reporter who journeyed to New Guinea, interviewed people who had known Michael Rockefeller, then ventured into the jungle and talked to members of the tribe from whom Rockefeller had bought native art artifacts, including totem poles. In the end, he found a man who claimed he had eaten the unfortunate collector.

Oui also hosted several reportages about Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) activity, like the article "CIA vs. USA – The Agency's Plot to Take Over America" by Philip Agee, about an alleged Operation PBPrime, whose leaders were the top four men in the CIA and whose target was the control of the U.S. government.

In a more humorous vein, Oui also published the essay "The 3 Most Important Things in Life" by Harlan Ellison in its November 1978 issue. The three things in question were sex, violence, and labor relations, each illustrated by anecdotes from Ellison's life. The sex anecdote involved a less-than-successful assignation with a young woman, the violence anecdote was about witnessing a murder in a movie theater during a screening of Save the Tiger, and the labor relations anecdote was Ellison's version of the story of his being fired after only one morning at The Walt Disney Company for jokingly suggesting the making of a pornographic cartoon using the primary Disney characters. The piece has since been republished in Ellison's Stalking the Nightmare and Edgeworks 1. Oui also published short fiction.

A 1977 interview by Peter Manso of the then 29-year-old emerging actor Arnold Schwarzenegger on issues like sex, drugs, bodybuilding, and homosexuality produced some embarrassment 25 years later to candidate Schwarzenegger in the 2003 California gubernatorial campaign.

During the 1970s, Oui printed a copy of Shere Hite's questionnaire about female sexuality that was used as the basis of The Hite Report. Replies were received from 253 of the magazine's women readers.

Despite its popularity, Oui was unable to produce a profit. Furthermore, management realized that Oui was taking more readers from Playboy than from Penthouse. So, in June 1981 Playboy Enterprises, based in Chicago, ended its Oui experiment. The magazine was sold to Laurant Publishing Ltd. in New York; its new president and chief operating officer was Irwin E. Billman, former executive vice president and chief operating officer of the Penthouse Group.

During the 1980s the magazine maintained its distinction from Playboy by publishing graphic nude pictures like its rivals Penthouse and Hustler. Initially, Laurant featured celebrity nudity in Oui, peaking in 1982 with pictorials of Phyllis Hyman, Linda Blair, Demi Moore, and Pia Zadora. In the same year the magazine bought the short story "Down Among the Dead Men" by science-fiction writers Gardner Dozois and Jack Dann. The editorial plan was to return the magazine to the "younger Playboy image" that it previously had.

The 1990s found the magazine focusing on pop culture and youth-centered topics, with rock musician interviews and an increasingly large comics section that included R-rated versions of the X-rated Carnal Comics: True Stories of Adult Film Stars line, Rip Off Press's Demi the Demoness (later the first adults-only comic character to be adapted as a live action film), and a serialized version of Jay Allen Sanford's illustrated book Triple-X Cinema: A Cartoon History.

The magazine subsequently experienced a significant decline in circulation. As had many of its competitors, Oui expanded its photo content to hardcore in the early 2000s, which included depictions of couples having sexual intercourse, including explicit penetration. Oui ceased publication in 2007.

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