Dictionary Definition
hustler
Noun
1 a prostitute who attracts customers by walking
the streets [syn: streetwalker, street girl,
hooker, floozy, floozie, slattern]
2 a shrewd or unscrupulous person who knows how
to circumvent difficulties [syn: wheeler
dealer, operator]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- One who hustles
- A pimp
- A prostitute
- a male prostitute who sells his services to men
Translations
one who hustles
- Finnish: huijari
a pimp
a prostitute
- Finnish: prostituoitu
- 繁體中文: 男妓
a male prostitute who sells his services to men
- Norwegian: gutteprostituert (boy prostitute), mannlig prostituert (male prostitute)
- Portuguese: michê
Extensive Definition
Hustler is a monthly pornographic magazine aimed at heterosexual
men and published in the United
States. It was first published in July 1974 by Larry Flynt.
It was a step forward from the Hustler Newsletter and The Hustler
For Today's Man which was cheap advertising for his strip club
businesses at the time. The magazine grew from a shaky start to a
peak circulation of around 3 million (current circulation is below
500,000).
Hustler was one of the first major men's
magazines in the United States to break the taboo that existed in
the early seventies by showing much more explicit views of the
female
genitalia than other popular magazines of the time such as the
relatively modest Playboy. Today,
Hustler is still considered more explicit than such well known
competitors as Playboy and Penthouse.
It frequently depicts hardcore
themes, such as the use of sex toys,
penetration
and group
sex.
Larry Flynt's
Hustler empire also includes the Hustler casino in Gardena,
California, as well as Hustler
Hollywood, a chain of Hustler stores that sells adult-oriented
videos, clothing, magazines and sex toys. The chain's flagship
store is on Sunset
Boulevard in West
Hollywood.
Regular features
Of particular infamy are Hustlers cartoons, which have often featured blatantly violent and misogynistic themes. Gang rape, botched abortions, incest, child sexual abuse and racism have all been featured at one time or another as recurring motifs in the cartoons. One long-running cartoon, "Chester the Molester", presented the ongoing misadventures of a child molester in his attempts to coerce young children into sexual activity with him. While such material has earned Hustler much criticism from feminists and other critics, Flynt and his supporters defend the cartoons as bawdy social satire. Similar defenses have been advanced on Hustlers behalf by more scholarly writers, most notably Laura Kipnis in her essay (Male) Desire and (Female) Disgust, published in 1993.Another feature of Hustler is a column called
"Asshole of the Month." In every monthly issue of the magazine,
some public figure is selected for severe criticism as that month's
asshole. An illustration showing a photograph of the criticized
person's head emerging from the anus of a cartoon donkey is shown
alongside the article. The column was alternatively written by
various Hustler staff writers, including Jim Dawson,
Lee Quarnstrom, Michael Stott, Jerry Kindela, and Stuart
Goldman. Goldman and Dawson (who later became known as the
"Most Hated Man In Porn") were also charged with inventing all of
the "Letters To The Editor." They then made up the responses to
these letters, employing a multitude of pseudonyms.
In the 1970s, Hustler ran a comic strip feature
entitled "Honey
Hooker". In each installment, Honey would have graphic sexual
encounters with any male (or female) she ran across. She might be
in American colonial times one month or in a Super-Bowl locker room
the next. This feature was designed to compete against Playboy's Little
Annie Fanny and Penthouse's
Wicked
Wanda. In keeping with Hustlers focus on the seamier and less
romantic aspects of sexuality, Honey Hooker, unlike Fanny and
Wanda, was explicitly portrayed as being a prostitute.
There is also a section called "Beaver
Hunt" which features photos of amateurs sent in for a cash
prize--a similar idea to Gallery's
"Girl Next Door."
Political stance
Hustler has long had a left-wing editorial policy on economics, foreign policy, and social issues. This distinguishes it somewhat from other pornographic magazines, which generally embrace progressive ideas about free speech and morality issues, but remain conservative, libertarian, or neutral on other matters such as the economy. Flynt and Hustler are also noted for having a more populist and working-class outlook than the more upscale-oriented Playboy and Penthouse. Throughout the 1980s, Flynt used his magazine as a podium with which to launch vitriolic, obscenity-laden attacks on the Reagan Administration and the Religious Right, and even published a short-lived political magazine called Rebel. During the controversy surrounding Bill Clinton's impeachment, Flynt publicly announced his sympathy for Clinton, and offered cash rewards to anyone with information regarding sexual impropriety on the part of the president's critics. In 2003, Flynt ran unsuccessfully for the office of Governor of California during that state's recall election.Every month Hustler is mailed, uninvited and for
free, to the office of each member of the United
States Congress. This practice began at some point between 1974
and 1983, and it continues as of 2006.
In an interview, Flynt explained, "I felt that they should be
informed with what's going on in the rest of the world ... Some of
them didn't appreciate it much. I haven't had any plans to
quit."
In a 1983 parody
of an advertisement for Campari, Hustler
described the then-prominent fundamentalist Protestant
minister Jerry
Falwell having a drunken, incestuous encounter with his
mother in an outhouse. Falwell sued Flynt, alleging libel and
intentional infliction of emotional distress. The case was
ultimately decided by the
Supreme Court in Flynt's favor. The decision strengthened
free
speech rights in relation to parodies of public figures (see
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell).
Publisher
Hustler is officially published by LFP, Inc, which is presumably controlled by Flynt. The abbreviation "L.F.P." originally stood for "Larry Flynt Publications".A Canadian version of Hustler is published by a
Quebec-based firm. This magazine is not owned by Larry Flynt, but
is licensed to publish material from the American version. In
general, Canadian Hustler imitates the appearance and tone of its
American counterpart, with Canadian content added. In 1999, the
magazine created a minor controversy in Canada by inviting readers
to submit sexually explicit stories about Sheila
Copps, a left-leaning member of the Liberal cabinet.
An Australian version of Hustler is published by
an SA-based firm. This magazine is not owned by Larry Flynt. In
general, Australian Hustler imitates the appearance and tone of its
American counterpart, with Australian content added.
Related magazines
LFP, Inc. publishes several other magazines that use the Hustler brand:- Hustler's Taboo, which specializes in fetishistic material, such as the depiction of sexual bondage and urolagnia.
- Barely Legal, a primarily softcore magazine focusing on models between 18 and 23
- Asian Fever, focusing on Asian models
- Hustler XX, a more generic hardcore offering
- Hustler's Leg World
- Hustler's Chic Magazine, a pornographic magazine started by Larry Flynt, of Hustler fame in 1976, presented as being aimed at a more upscale clientele than Hustler.
Websites
The LFP Internet Group, LLC, operates Hustler.com and a number of related sites, where it sells pictures and videos with content similar to that in its magazines.See also
External links
hustler in Bulgarian: Хъслър
hustler in Catalan: Hustler
hustler in German: Hustler
hustler in Spanish: Hustler
hustler in Basque: Hustler
hustler in French: Hustler
hustler in Japanese: ハスラー (男性誌)
hustler in Polish: Hustler
hustler in Portuguese: Hustler
hustler in Finnish: Hustler
hustler in Swedish: Hustler
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
B-girl, Cyprian, Jehu, Paphian, activist, ball of fire,
beaver, big-time
operator, bustler, busy
bee, call girl, daughter of joy, doer, dynamo, eager beaver, enthusiast, erring sister,
fallen woman, fille de joie, flier, go-getter, goer, harlot, hell-driver, hooker, horse racer, human
dynamo, humdinger,
hummer, jockey, live wire, man of action,
man of deeds, meretrix,
militant, new broom,
operator, painted
woman, peeler, political
activist, poule, powerhouse, prostitute, racer, runner, rustler, scarlet woman, scorcher, self, sizzler, speed demon, speeder, starter, stepper, stew, streetwalker, take-charge
guy, turfman,
unfortunate woman, wheeler-dealer, white slave, whore, winner