‘Penthouse’ founder’s son reveals if Bob Guccione and Hugh Hefner had ‘animosity’

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Bob Guccione made a name for himself in the adult entertainment industry when he launched the men’s magazine “Penthouse” in 1965.

The periodical of raunchy record was considered direct competition to Hugh Hefner’s “Playboy” magazine.

Guccione, who died in 2010, and his exploits were documented in the recent A&E “Secrets of Penthouse” and his son, Nicholas Guccione, got candid with Fox News about his dad’s friendship with Hefner ahead of the show.

Nicholas revealed that his father and the late publisher “were on the same team.”

“There was no animosity whatsoever,” he went on. “We wanted to showcase the beauty of the female form through beautiful photography. And we were both part of the sexual revolution [in America].”

Both “Playboy” and “Penthouse” had featured erotic photography and softcore adult content dusting their heydays.

Nicholas then explained that he encountered Hefner, who passed away in 2017, “purely by chance when I lived in Los Angeles in the ‘90s.”


Adult models Sasha Vinni and Leslie Glass cozy up to Bob Guccione at the “Penthouse” Pet Video Release party in New York City, 1994.
Getty Images

“He was very cordial, had no entourage. We were in a little hole in the wall on Sunset Boulevard, a strip club. … He was on his own, just like me. … We were both on the same team and we knew it. And we wanted to break new ground,” he recalled.

Enter “Hustler” CEO Larry Flint, another trailblazer in the magazine porn business.

Nicholas also remembered meeting Flint back in the day and joked that the Larry Flynt Publications president “was a different animal.”


playboy
Hugh Hefner founded “Playboy” in 1953.
FilmMagic

He pointed out that Flint’s outlet had taken “it one step further than ‘Penthouse.’”

“Hustler” was introduced in 1974 and featured more hardcore pornographic media such as showing female genitalia and simulated sexual acts.

“At one point, they published a cover of a woman going through a hamburger meat grinder and coming out as ground meat. Now that’s disgusting,” Nicholas sighed.


Penthouse
“Playboy” and “Penthouse” were both major payers in the adult entertainment business.
AFP via Getty Images

“We weren’t close with ‘Hustler’ and Flynt. They were a little bit skewed. But as far as ‘Playboy’ and ‘Penthouse,’ I think we both had a wonderful and healthy representation of lovely ladies showing off their beauty.”

“Secrets of Penthouse” goes behind the scenes about the rise and fall of Guccione and his “Penthouse” empire through interviews with family members and those who knew him best.

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