IN EVERY ISSUE
10 WTF!
This month, FHM readers rebuke Brooke Hogan's anti-mustache stance, drive nails
through fingers and beg for cash.
HOMBRE
16 FITNESS
Obese? Decrease with help from Jenny McCarthy.
20 GADGETS
Win the trappings of the ultimate Super Bowl party.
24 SPORT
Tiki Barber runs all the way to the post-season.
26 DRINK
Legitimize your cellar drinking: Build a home bar.
32 STYLE
Respect the elders of the men's grooming game.
36 WINTER
Facts colder than a hug from a father you never knew. Ever.
38 MONEY
Cheating at the poker table? Doyle Brunson knows it.
40 WHEELS
Meet the winners of FHM's inaugural car awards.
42 HEALTH
When calling in sick with a cold, have the facts at hand.
44 WORK
Your IT guy secretly mocks—and spies—on you.
49 SCANNER
Samuel L. Jackson and Young Jeezy talk—and Morgan Webb embarrasses the
lame.
110 FASHION
The Rome SDS snowboard crew tears the Chilean Andes a stylish new one.
128 LADIES CONFIDENTIAL
Twin sisters press their bosoms together in the name of truth! Plus, Beth and
Isaac.
FHM or For Him Magazine is an international monthly men's lifestyle magazine. The magazine began publication in 1985 in the United Kingdom under the name For Him and changed its title to FHM in 1994, although the full For Him Magazine continues to be printed on the spine of each issue. Founded by Chris Astridge, the magazine was a predominantly fashion-based publication distributed through high street men's fashion outlets. Circulation expanded to newsagents as a quarterly by the spring of 1987. FHM was sold from EMAP to Bauer in December 2007.
After the emergence of James Brown's Loaded magazine (regarded as the blueprint for the lad's mag genre), For Him firmed up its editorial approach to compete with the expanding market and introduced a sports supplement. It then went monthly and changed its name to FHM. It subsequently expanded internationally.
FHM became one of the best-selling magazines in Britain during the mid to late 1990s, selling more than 700,000 copies per month by 1999. Towards the end of the decade the lads' culture in which the magazine thrived began to die off and publishers turned to celebrity-oriented titles to boost overall sales.
In December 2006 it was announced that FHM will be discontinued in the United States. Its final print edition was the March 2007 issue, turning to an all-digital format with the launch of FHM Online. FHM is still being printed in the United Kingdom.