Penthouse June 2009 — Back Issue
Penthouse June 2009 June 2009 magazine back issue
Click image to enlarge
Penthouse (USA)  Magazine Back Issue
June 2009
UPC: 07447002242806
ISSN: 0090-2020
Vol. 40  Issue 10
Year: 2009
Format: Digital PDF
Rating: 4/5 (1 review)
  • Covergirl & Centerfold Pet of the Month Kagney Linn Karter (Nude) photographed by Emma Nixon
  • Pimp My Bride! Find The Right Guy For Your Wife
  • Howard Stern's Strip Beer Pong
  • Go Coastal - Girls And Golf: Make Myrtle Beach A Bachelor-Party Mecca
  • Kitchen Casanova: A Chef's Sizzling On-Site Sexcapades
Purchase Options
📄 Digital Download — PDF
USD $9.99
🛒 View Cart
Browse by Year
1969 | 1970 | 1971 | 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 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PICTORIALS
38 Keys Our Heart
Tristen and Tiarra shone at the Key Girl of the Year contest.
65 Horsin' Around
Pet of the Month Kagney Linn Karter
86 Sweet Tarts
Shawna Leneé & Audrey Bitoni
102 Going Green
Sasha
120 Party Girls
Dakota & Rebecca
FULL FRONTAL
9 Revealing Entertainment
10 Flicks
Summer movie fight cards.
14 Sounds
Green Day's new concept album.
16 DVDs
Was Fanboys worth the wait?
17 Reads
Brotherly love; Masters & Johnson.
18 Joystick
Larry Laffer's latest.
LIFE ON TOP
21 Gone Fishing!
All you need to reel 'em in.
24 Freewheelin'
Hot new rides heat up Daytona's Bike Week.
30 Pet Peeves
Shawna Leneé
32 The Pour House
Touring Scotland's distilleries
FEATURES
34 The Penthouse Top 40
Animated vixens who fuel our fantasies.
By Rebecca Swanner
48 Twenty-two: The Magic Number
The age when guys finally get the upper hand.
By Drew Magary
50 Hollywood Heat Wave
These 20 sexy starlets will rock our box office.
By Jeff Koyen
58 Carolina-copia
Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, has been transformed into a bachelor-party land of plenty.
By Ken Baron
80 Mongol Rally Part Two Halfway through the world's most absurd car race, things really begin to go wrong.
By John Rico
96 Shirts & Skin
Beer pong becomes America's favorite drinking game, thanks to Howard TV On Demand.
By Jennifer Peters
112 Working Stiff
A kitchen Casanova tells all to Ronnie Koenig.
116 Dear Dr .Z
How to find a guy for your wife.
By Victoria Zdrok, Ph.D.
DEPARTMENTS
4 Forum
98 Erotic Fiction
114 Hard News
130 X-Rated Video
Features
  • Covergirl & Centerfold Pet of the Month Kagney Linn Karter (Nude) photographed by Emma Nixon
  • Pimp My Bride! Find The Right Guy For Your Wife
  • Howard Stern's Strip Beer Pong
  • Go Coastal - Girls And Golf: Make Myrtle Beach A Bachelor-Party Mecca
  • Kitchen Casanova: A Chef's Sizzling On-Site Sexcapades
Magazine History

Penthouse is a men's magazine that was founded by Bob Guccione in 1965. It combines urban lifestyle articles and soft-core pornographic pictorials, that eventually, in the 1990s evolved into hardcore. Although Guccione was American, the magazine was founded in 1965 in the United Kingdom, and started selling Penthouse in the United States in September 1969. At the height of its success, Guccione was considered to be one of the richest men in the United States.

For many years Penthouse fell somewhere in between Playboy and Hustler in terms of explicitness (and respectability). Almost from the start the pictorials showed female genitalia and pubic hair when this was still considered by many to be obscene. Simulated sex, but not penetration or male genitalia, followed, then, several years later, male genitalia, including erections, could be seen. In addition, Penthouse attempted to maintain some level of reading content, although usually of a more sexually oriented nature than Playboy.

Probably the most famous issue of Penthouse was its September 1984 issue, which was the largest selling issue of any magazine in history. This issue featured photos of Vanessa Williams, who was the current Miss America, from early in her modeling career. Williams posed for the series of black and white photos with another female model, engaging in simulated lesbian acts. While Williams' pictures created the most publicity at the time, the issue would later become even more controversial because of its centerfold, Traci Lords. Lords posed nude for this issue at the beginning of her career as an adult film star. It would later be revealed that Lords was underage throughout most of her career in pornography and was only fifteen when she posed for Penthouse. As a result, the issue is illegal to own if the centerfold is intact, falling under the laws against child pornography. The September 1984 issue also featured an interview with John Travolta, a feature on Boy George, and a pictorial on a pornographic actress, Hyapatia Lee.

In 1992, an issue between the magazine and United States Navy surfaced. The United States Navy reacted negatively on the issues of circulation and distribution around the military base. Distribution and sale of adult titles is said to be inconsistent with the rules and regulations concerning sexual harassment and human dignity.

The Military Honor and Decency Act signed by President Clinton in 1996 stated that the Secretary of Defense may not permit the sale or rental of sexually explicit material on property under the jurisdiction of the Defense Department. Also, a 1998 Supreme Court ruling held that a military base is not a public forum.

In 1998, caught between the widespread availability of pornography on the Internet and the growing popularity of non-explicit "men's magazines" like Maxim, Penthouse decided to change its format and began featuring sexually explicit pictures (ie: actual oral and vaginal penetration). It also began to regularly feature pictorials of female models urinating, which up until then had been considered a defining limit of illegal obscenity as distinguished from legal pornography. The new format ended up losing subscriptions and newsstand circulation for the magazine.

Videocassettes gained popularity and the steady rise of the Internet are some reasons that caused the steady decline of Penthouse Magazine circulation and other pornographic magazines like Playboy Magazine and Hustler Magazine. The Internet provided a cheaper and multiple avenues of satisfaction for customers who sought privacy. After struggleing for years, in April 2002, Guccione announced that Penthouse Magazine was going out of business.

On July 2003, Bob Guccione lost his famous Penthouse Mansion. The mansion was composed of two townhouses built in 1879. Rebuilt in 1920s by Jeremiah Milbank, it was one of the largest private residences in Manhattan. At the height of prestige, Guccione bought the mansion in 1975.

On August 12, 2003, General Media, the parent company of the magazine, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. In October 2003, it was announced that Penthouse magazine was being put up for sale as part of a deal with its creditors. In October 2003, an announcement of the sale of Penthouse Magazine circulated.

On October 4, 2004, General Media emerged from bankruptcy and was renamed the Penthouse Media Group. It is now owned by Marc Bell, a south Florida real-estate developer, who intends to soften the content of the magazine.

Starting with the January 2005 issue, Penthouse Magazine no longer showed pictures of an explicit nature, being touted as an alternative to FHM Magazine. Penthouse Magazine nixed explicitly nude photos of male and female genitalia. The change improved the declining sales. However, sales still did not reach the same circulation numbers of Penthouse Magazine at the peak of the magazine

In 2005, Penthouse Media Group had a total circulation of 326,358 copies. Penthouse Magazine continues to increase sales as it works to become a competitor of the adult entertainment genre.

Customer Reviews  Write a Review
4
out of 5
★★★★☆
Based on 1 review
George Andraous June 17, 2009 ★★★★☆
Good
Great magazine chock full of great content.