Penthouse magazine spreads
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#Penthouse magazine spreads for free#
Among his lesser-touted accomplishments was publishing and designing Omni, a canonical science-fiction magazine, producing films, collecting fine art, fighting for free speech, muckraking, painting and patronising hundreds of writers and artists. It's the life's work of an artist-pornographer, a misunderstood millionaire who towered over the publishing industry for 30 years before his company General Media Inc went bankrupt in 2003.īob Guccione may be best known for Penthouse, but he was a Renaissance man. Today, Jeremy and his business partner and film producer Rick Schwartz own of one of the most unique media artefacts in the world – the Guccione Collection. The final piece was the phone numbers, which led Jeremy to the real jackpot lingering with a creditor in Phoenix: the entire Guccione estate. A Japanese film reel of Caligula, the bloated Dionysian-porno-biopic Guccione produced against great odds in 1976. The combined total of Jeremy's purchases that day amounted to a substantial portion of Guccione's abandoned stuff: hundreds of slides, photographs and personal letters. It was the treasure he had been hoping for: the personal photographs of Bob Guccione, publishing magnate and kingpin of the Penthouse empire. In a hasty negotiation, he bought the entire storage unit for $2,000 cash, loaded the contents into his SUV, and drove breathlessly to the nearest gas station to dig through the boxes. The Russian contractor "thought the slides were garbage and didn't give a shit about them," Jeremy told me. Then he spotted the boxes, piled up near the trashcans. He'd hoped the contents of this unit might hold something of immense value: the rest of a unique collection Jeremy had discovered in the neighbouring unit.
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When Jeremy arrived at the warehouse, he saw the contents of the storage unit the Russian had bought spread out: household stuff, junk and pottery.