ABC Home | Radio | Television | News | Your Local ABC | More Subjects… | Shop

Email

Wall St women wanted for Playboy

Posted October 3, 2008 08:13:00

Playboy in the past has garnered attention for big business news themes.

Playboy in the past has garnered attention for big business news themes. (Getty Images: David Klein, file photo)

Playboy magazine is offering a new way to lose your shirt on Wall Street.

The adult entertainment magazine, long famous for its photo spreads of nude women and lessons in living the urbane life of the well-heeled bachelor, is launching a search for models to pose for its upcoming feature - "Women of Wall Street".

Playboy came up with the idea after the onset of the global financial crisis, which has vaporised fortunes and left Wall Street reeling.

The feature is planned for the February 2009 edition of the monthly magazine and its website.

"When the news gets bad, then maybe that's a chance to make people smile by coming up with something that puts a different twist on it," said Gary Cole, Playboy's photo editor.

Playboy and Playboy.com have in the past garnered attention for big business news themes.

It published "Women of Enron" and "Women of WorldCom" after the companies's spectacular failures. The magazine also ran a "Women of Wall Street" feature nearly 20 years ago.

Playboy is seeking current and former employees of the financial world. The magazine is especially interested in those with more senior job experience.

"It would be more interesting to have someone who's a financial analyst," said Cole.

Models must also prove that they are at least 18 years old.

"How many attractive women do you ... think there are working on Wall Street and the affiliated companies?" Cole said when asked how much success he thought Playboy would have in finding candidates. "There has to be thousands and thousands."

Playboy will likely photograph about 20 women, Cole said, adding that compensation would depend partly on how many women apply.

"Whether you offer them $US500 or $US1,000 or $US2,000 a piece, that's probably not going to change anybody's mind," he said.

"The reason they do this is because they want the attention, the opportunity, the experience of doing it. It's not really for the money."

- Reuters

Tags: arts-and-entertainment, popular-culture, offbeat, united-states

Listen

Thai riot police patrol inside Suvarnabhumi airport in Bangkok

Stranded Aussies

Some Australians stranded in Bangkok are being told that their travel insurance won't be valid.

Watch

Flu sufferer

Sick genes

Scientists say they've pinpointed certain gene combinations which make some suffer longer than others.

News

collosal squid

Giant squid

A giant squid carcass stops traffic as it is moved to a New Zealand museum.