Site Meter Reflections on Playboy: Sex makes Social Darwinists of us all

April 22, 2009

Sex makes Social Darwinists of us all

For the second time in its history, Playboy has a second-generation centerfold. Carol Eden (Miss December 1960) is the mother of Simone Eden (February 1989); Gale Olson (August 1968) is the mother of Crystal McCahill (May 2009). “It’s a different kind of Darwin Award: the Playmate gene, passed from mother to daughter, ensuring survival of the fittest and constant attention from males of the species,” says McCahill’s Playmate article. The Darwin reference brings to mind the role of evolutionary psychology in explaining the Playboy phenomenon, yet it also points to nature’s unfairness in letting individuals vary so much in degree of sexual attractiveness. Cultures may differ in what they find attractive, but every ideal will leave somebody out. Every celebration of beauty casts a shadow of cruelty.

Of course, this goes for both sexes. Decades before Candace Bushnell wrote Sex and the City, Helen Gurley Brown wrote Sex and the Single Girl, thereby establishing herself as the female Hugh Hefner. The 1962 book, which would soon help her become editor in chief of Cosmopolitan, encourages the sophisticated single woman to avoid “the weirdies, the creepies, the dullies, the snobs, the hopeless neurotics and mamas’ darlings.” Reading this passage, I am unnerved by the thought that I may fall into a category of undesirables. Nevertheless, I appreciate Brown’s aesthetic, sybaritic attitude towards the opposite sex. Somehow, on behalf of all men everywhere, I can’t help being flattered.

A related earlier post:
Guest essay: Admiration and despair, or how I read Playboy

Posted by Brian Sorgatz at 4:55 PM

  • Anonymous Kimberly left this comment at April 22, 2009 8:24 PM  
    Considering how our readership demographics might in some ways be diametric opposites, it's amazing how similar our subjects were today.

    I absolutely love your blog. It's some of the best-written stuff I've found out there. Thanks for reading mine also. I'm always encouraged by your comments.
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