Background Black owned media like magazines, newspapers, and media have acted as ways for promoting Black excellence, equality, social justice and news in the Black community for generations. Due to segregation and discrimination there has always been the need to create "safe Black spaces" to produce Black content. Players Magazine is an example of a Black space created to allow the production of Black content in its appropriate outlet. Players Magazine holds great significance because of how long its lasted. Historically, Black newspapers and magazines longevity isn't nearly as long as Players Magazine has been.
Making Players Unique One of the justifications for
Players was representation of Blacks for the African American public. However, there are a significant number of Black publications, for example
Ebony, with the same target audience. What made
Players unique was its intended purpose. In the past Playboy was considered an erotic magazine that fulfilled the adult males fantasies about women. Today it is considered a way for black/ African American community to get a look into the newest fashion trends and significant cultural changes for the time. for Black people, it also featured information on trends in movies and music, politics, and Black culture. A magazine such as
Ebony featured content on "black history, entertainment, business, health, occupations, personalities, and sports" (Glasrud) with a goal of inspiring Black people and showing models of success. Both publications featured uplifting content relevant to black people, and clothed cover models, but
Players featured seductive images, sexual icons, a centerfold, and three-to-four page spreads.
Ebony also released annual swimsuit issues but the pictures could hardly be considered racy.
Colorism in Players The content of
Players brings to mind
Mireille Miller-Young's 1980's research on the adult entertainment industry
A Taste for Brown Sugar primarily "Colorism and the Myth of Prohibition". She writes about colorism through its link to the
antebellum era. At this time the "trade in black women as sexual slaves ... was known for prizing very light-skinned black women." They were valued for their proximity to whiteness but also fit stereotypes involving sexuality—being seen as exotic or sexually aggressive. Miller-Young also mentions another magazine marketed to black consumers,
Jet, that highlighted primarily lighter-skinned models on its covers. This colorism blocks opportunities for the diversity found among black women to be seen as desirable and reinforces the politics within pornography and the sex media. While there are instances of
Players magazine portraying colorist tendencies, for the most part, it was productive in showing the wide range of hair types, skin colors, and body types of black women, setting it apart from mainstream white sex media.
Change in Content Over Time The creative direction that
Players reached for in their content often changed. Whereas "by the mid-1970s, Holloway House Publishing and
Players had developed an effective formula for publishing black material, Morriss and Weinstock created specific rules, dictating the kind of texts that could be published in
Players. Stories about African American history, black politics, international black issues, or African American arts such as sculpture or painting were prohibited. In their minds the only marketable black material was 'authentic ghetto literature'."
Players formula grew so strict that it included explicit rules surrounding acceptable, publishable content. "[
Players] could never publish any story about blacks in history ... No stories about the slave trade. No stories about emancipation. No stories about blacks in history at all ... no stories about Jamaica's
Trenchtown, or South Africa, or
apartheid ... You can do stories about music, but not about these arts that no one is interested in. Paintings, sculpture, and classical jazz ... No stories about politics". When the only representations audiences see of minority characters are negative, these portrayals manifest to society. These images influence how audiences view minorities. Minorities also face implications from this by internalizing these representations. Negative representations that are internalized are demoralizing and reduce self-esteem. These representations impact our expectations for characters in thinking about stereotypes, and the kinds of characters that we expect certain bodies to portray. According to Miller-Young, black women are undervalued in the porn industry. Some examples that manifest themselves in the porn industry, is the binary that exists for black women; you are either a Mammy non sexual, or the
Jezebel, inherently available and hyper sexual. Black women are also disproportionately viewed as aggressive, domineering, and unfeminine. Whereas black men are depicted as animalistic and hyper masculine.
Hyper-sexuality of Black Women According to book writer
Marquita Gammage, when a simple Google search is done about the players magazine one can tell that most of the women on the cover's are Black women. Players magazine provides many cultural ideas for the Black community but at what cost to black women? The hyper-sexualization of Black women is not only prevalent in the Players magazine but has always been prevalent in media. The negative representation of Black Women have been shown through hip hop. Depictions like the "baby mama" or the "sex-crazed gold-digger" paints this picture of how Black Women are seen as easily accessible at a cost. She also says that because these views of Black Women are so easily influenced by media it is easy to take advantage of a Black Woman's image. Leading people to believe that they too can profit off of the Black Woman's image. == Featured Models ==