CAMPUS NEWS from last year: McGill Girls pose for Playboy
Heads up, you could be sitting beside the next bunny
About 60 McGill students stripped down to their skivvies and birthday suits this week, vying for the opportunity to appear in a special issue of Playboy. The legendary men's magazine was in Montreal last week casting for its "Girls of the Top 10 Party Schools" spread.
Playboy recently ranked McGill tenth on its annual list.Auditions were held at a hotel on Sherbrooke over three days. After filling out forms asking for information ranging from measurements to hobbies, potential playmates were taken into a bedroom suite where they were asked to remove as much clothing as they were comfortable with.
Each woman then posed for a handful of Polaroid pictures.Some ladies donned lingerie, while others went completely nude, perhaps taking to heart the words of David Rams, a photographer who has been on the Playboy masthead for about 10 years."We probably won't pick you if you don't take your top off," he said with a smile as a surprisingly demure set of applicants completed paperwork.
"Why show up for a Playboy casting if you're not going to take your clothes off?" Gen Friesen, who said she attended casting to "break the mould of chemistry students," posed topless."I'm a bit of an exhibitionist, [so] I was comfortable being nude," said Friesen, U2 Chemistry, adding that she decided to try out after friends encouraged her. Most applicants described the shoot as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. "A lot of girls do it so that they can look back and say, 'I was hot before I had kids,'" said Eden Orfanos, producer of the shoot.
The girls were picked to represent McGill's party-school title. According to a statement released by Playboy the list was determined by editorial staff, who considered aspects of the campus social scene such as proximity to off-campus entertainment, general vibrancy, social opportunities and male-to-female ratio.McGill officials were not pleased with the ranking."This is clearly a promotional or marketing gimmick," said Jennifer Robinson, associate vice-principal communications. "It is not credible and not appreciated."Robinson said she found it unfortunate that the magazine is using McGill's name.
"We are known for very high-quality students, professors and research," she said. "This is the first time that we have ever been ranked in something like this."Theresa Hennessey, publicity manager at Playboy, said that being featured as a top-10 party school does not detract from a university's image nor trivialize its academic merits."I don't think it tarnishes the university's image at all," Hennessey said. "We're not saying that it isn't a great place to get an education. [Rather], it is also a great place to have a social college experience."Hennessey said that Playboy hasn't received any complaints from other schools in the ranking, which also includes University of California at Santa Barbara and Florida State University. Though McGill may take issue with its appearance on the list, Playboy is not violating university policy by recruiting local students."We don't do anything on campus," Hennessey said.
"We make it clear that we are not affiliated with the universities." Students, campus groups ambivalentIn all, six McGill students were selected to pose for the magazine. They were photographed over three days in different settings, the primary location being a loft owned by a McGill PhD student. Madison Chi, U2 Anatomy and Cell Biology, posed for the magazine after attending the casting call with her roommate. She asked that the Tribune use a pseudonym.
Chi said she was surprised that she had been selected."You picture these magazines as featuring only the skinniest girls with the biggest breasts," she said. "But then my roommate called from her photo shoot and said they wanted me to come in and pose."Though Chi felt slightly awkward "getting into it," her overall impressions of the experience were positive."It was really laidback and relaxed," Chi said of the shoot. "They looked us in the eye while talking [to us], even though we were in lingerie."
The reaction of campus groups was subdued. Liberated Bodies, a club that promotes healthy body image, did not applaud or condone the recent recruitment."We do not want to dictate what others should find liberating or oppressive," the club said in a statement. "We also respect the decisions of the women who chose what was right for themselves when posing for Playboy."The Union for Gender Empowerment was unavailable for comment. (Liz Allmang, McGill Tribune)
The "Girls of the Top 10 Party Schools" issue of Playboy hit newsstands on April 7. It's not too late to bare all for Playboy. Check out www.playboy.com/on-campus/collegecastings.
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9 comments:
Frankly your inclusion of this article not to mention your upcoming publication bodes ill for the future of McGill University as a serious academic learning environment. People come to this university to prepare for a lifelong committment to a serious career goal, not to buy into a sensationalistic handmedown Playboy marketing ploy designed to demean women and sell stupid magazines. This is a travesty. Shame on you.
If you people think Playboy is exploiting us girls, do you not think we have something to say about it, or is it also your opinion that only air-heads can be exploited?
Umm.. Gwen, there really is not an argument to be made here. One can choose to turn any issue into a specious conflict for its own sake. For example, choose one of the following three options most palatable to your taste: 1.boycott McDonalds 2.work at Wallmart 3.join Anti-war movement. Exactly. One has nothing to do with the other. Your equating Playboy on campus to hindering education is tantamount to correlating bad diet to bad employment. Playboy does not cause Stupidity. Ignorance and Intolerance does. You can be assured that there are plenty of young women on Mcgill campus who eat at McDo, shop at Wallmart hate war, and may or may not be smart sexy and savvy all at same time, irrespective of Playboy's apparently omnipotent presence on campus.
hOLY SHIT babe, that's a mouthful alright. But my question is WHERE ARE THE HOT CHICKS ?!!!!
Ain't at McGill dats for sure. Everyone knows hot chicks don't go to McGill. Are you kidding me? Try Chez Paree!!
wow, totally unimpressed by this magazines' publication. just another magazine about sex....where's the f-ing creativity man...i see sexy images everyday just taking the metro. who gives a flying shit if mcgill students are both smart and "sexy". in my opinion this magazine is only a reflection of how cliched and mediawashed/brainwashed alumni from McGill can be.
if you think you are doing anything revolutionary, or even interesting for that matter, i beg to differ my damey. i'm bored just thinking about the magazine and its contents. definetly don't want to run into the magazines editors or its models on campus or any other place. GOD, this magazine is so f-ing boring!
Javier
why thank you javier, your comments and the time and care that you evidently divested to reflect your innermost feelings mean a lot to us. we noted particularly your wonderfully understated usage of the much maligned "-" in lieu of "uck" in 'fucking', twice in fact. thank you for sparing our sensitivity to gross 7-letter swear words. also big kudos to you for using your real name in spite of signing in as anonymous... unless of course you are in fact 'bob'.
admiringly yours,
the entire redlight team
ps. with your permission we would like to forward to you a courtesy copy of our first issue?.. um..we would just need your full name and address you can simply forward that to me in confidence by email. hopefully with your continued support and participation we can move forward and outsell playboy worldwide.
LOL!! Good one there, Michaela
The majority of mcgill student public are pathetic people. You now what i mean. Clones, bigots, spoiled, unaware, unsympathetic.
I'd say 5% of mcgill students are rad, the rest completly baffle me!
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