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Kristine DeBell – American actress and model known most prominently from her role in the 1979 film Meatballs and 1980 film The Big Brawl also starred in the title role of the 1976 pornographic film Alice in Wonderland. See also. Erotica and pornography portal; List of pornographic actors who appeared in mainstream films; Celebrity sex tape
Byte (stylized as BYTE) was a microcomputer magazine, influential in the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s because of its wide-ranging editorial coverage. [1] Byte started in 1975, shortly after the first personal computers appeared as kits advertised in the back of electronics magazines. Byte was published monthly, with an initial yearly ...
Non-pornographic "beefcake magazines" were widely available, and were generally purchased by gay men. From the late 1980s, a number of gay magazines and newspapers featured homoerotic nude or partially clothed male models but were not classified as pornography, for example Gay Times and QX Magazine. These have not been included here.
Disney Magazine (defunct) Dwell; Entertainment Weekly; Famous Monsters of Filmland; The Feet, a dance magazine (1970–1973) Film Threat (defunct) Flux (defunct) The Hollywood Reporter; Home Media Magazine (defunct) Media Play News; Modern Screen (defunct) Moving Pictures (defunct) The Pastel Journal; People; Photoplay (defunct) Popular ...
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The magazine's tagline in 1960 was "The man's magazine women love to read." Williams/Top Sellers/General Books. City Magazines published Parade until c. 1971, when it was sold to Williams Publishing, the publishing division of Warner Communications. By the 1970s, content had progressed to topless and nude photos of models.
Buckles received her Ph.D. from the University of California at San Diego. [2] in 1985. Her thesis was titled “Interactive Fiction: The Computer Storygame Adventure”; she felt strongly that these games would change our relationship to computers. Her dissertation board had members dead set against such a frivolous subject; she fought them ...
0192-4575. Kilobaud Microcomputing was a magazine dedicated to the computer homebrew hobbyists from 1977 to 1983. [1] It was one of the three influential computer magazines of the 1970s, along with BYTE and Creative Computing. It focused mostly on the kit-build market, rather than the pre-assembled home computers that emerged, and as the kit ...