Jump to content

Weekly Playboy: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Removing link(s): Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Ran Asakawa closed as delete (XFDcloser)
m Removed deprecated parameter(s) from Template:Div col using DeprecatedFixerBot. Questions? See Template:Div col#Usage of "cols" parameter or msg TSD! (please mention that this is task #2!))
Line 27: Line 27:


Writers:
Writers:
{{div col|2}}
{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
* [[Bakusho Mondai]]
* [[Bakusho Mondai]]
* [[Yujiro Ishihara]]
* [[Yujiro Ishihara]]
Line 37: Line 37:


[[Gravure idol]]s:
[[Gravure idol]]s:
{{div col|2}}
{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
* [[Saki Aibu]]
* [[Saki Aibu]]
* [[Yui Aragaki]]
* [[Yui Aragaki]]
Line 62: Line 62:


[[AV idol]]s:
[[AV idol]]s:
{{div col|2}}
{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
* [[Mari Ayukawa]]
* [[Mari Ayukawa]]
* Hikari Hino
* Hikari Hino

Revision as of 01:05, 15 May 2018

Weekly Playboy
Weekly Playboy, November 16, 2009, with the cover person Nozomi Sasaki
CategoriesMen's magazine
FrequencyWeekly
Circulation195,834 (December 2015)[1]
First issueNovember 15, 1966[2]
CompanyShueisha
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese
Websitewpb.shueisha.co.jp

Weekly Playboy (Japanese: 週刊プレイボーイ, Hepburn: Shūkan Pureibōi), also known as Shūpure (週プレ) or WPB, is a Japanese weekly magazine published by Shueisha since 1966. Although the magazine publishes a variety of news and special interest articles, columns, celebrity interviews, and comics, it is considered an adult magazine. The target demographic is heterosexual men, and each issue features several nude pictorials of female models.

This magazine is not a regional edition of the American Playboy magazine; the Japanese edition of that magazine was published as Monthly Playboy (MPB) by Shueisha until its cancellation in January 2009.

People in WPB

Geinokai:

Writers:

Gravure idols:

AV idols:

Pink film actresses

Manga in WPB

References

  1. ^ "JMPA Magazine Data (October 2015 - December 2015)". Japan Magazine Publishers Association. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
  2. ^ "Shueisha Shōshi". Shueisha. Retrieved 26 May 2007.

External links