The shortfalls were largest for Black and Hispanic students, as well as students in schools with high poverty rates. “We haven’t seen this kind of academic achievement crisis in living memory,” Michael Petrilli of the Thomas B. Many children and teenagers are experiencing mental health problems, aggravated by the isolation and disruption of the pandemic. Three medical groups, including the American Academy of Pediatrics, recently declared a national state of emergency in children’s mental health. They cited “dramatic increases in emergency department visits for all mental health emergencies.” Suicide attempts have risen, slightly among adolescent boys and sharply among adolescent girls. visits for suspected suicide attempts by 12- to 17-year-old girls rose by 51 percent from early 2019 to early 2021, according to the C.D.C. Gun violence against children has increased, as part of a broader nationwide rise in crime. In Chicago, for example, 101 residents under age 20 were murdered last year, up from 76 in 2019. School shootings have also risen: The Washington Post counted 42 last year in the U.S., the most on record and up from 27 in 2019. Many schools have still not returned to normal, worsening learning loss and social isolation. Head on over the The Hairpin to read more about the evolution and history of the bygone porn magazine, or at least to click over for the pictures.Once-normal aspects of school life - lunchtime, extracurricular activities, assemblies, school trips, parent-teacher conferences, reliable bus schedules - have been transformed if not eliminated. In a 2008 issue there was a penis per page, says Collins. Regardless, outraged readers got what they wanted: By 1989 the cover featured a shirltess man grasping a neon leotard. People were asking for, literally, pictures of penises." The demands also might have had something to do with the magazine's " unmentionable" gay readership. "When they first bought it the new publisher was like, 'We’re not going to have any penis because women don’t want to look at penises,' and again, it nearly put them out of business," explains Collins. Eventually, the "formula applied to Playgirl" involved "more erections." Though, at another point in the evolution, in 1986-at a time when you'd think ideas of female sexual desire weren't so dated-the magazine, under new management, again made the same mistake about its readers' desires. Since selling magazines to this exact demographic was crucial to Playgirl's survival, it adapted. "The thinking was that women didn’t want to see too much, and all these readers were like, we want to see actual penis." In 1973, deep into the sexual revolution, women (or men) buying a magazine for the explicit reason that it was full of hot dudes (to get off to), indeed wanted to see totally naked men. "So many people wrote in so angry there wasn’t actual penis," she said. The first ever issue had no full dicks, at all, which (surprisingly!) disappointed readers, Jessanne Collins, who wrote How to Be a Playgirl and worked at the magazine from 2007 through 2008, when it shut down, told Atlantic Wire contributor Jen Doll for The Hairpin. ĭespite editors assuming that the women of America didn't want penises in their porn magazines, twice in the history of Playgirl, readers demanded more full frontal nudity, showing the power of the invisible hand even in the making of sex mags. This article is from the archive of our partner.
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