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Screw magazine
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Screw is a weekly pornographic magazine aimed at heterosexual men and published in the United States. It was first published in 1968 by Al Goldstein as a response to a burgeoning sexual revolution and to the supposedly air-brushed soft-pedaled sexuality in magazines such as Playboy. Printed weekly in tabloid form, the magazine quickly succeeded, reaching a circulation of 500,000, and making armies of enemies among conservatives and the “moral hypocrites” in government that Screw had vowed to fight.
Screw is best known for its alarmingly frank representation of sex, in both lurid photographs and prose that has continually pushed close to the edges of protected speech.

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Screw is a weekly pornographic magazine aimed at heterosexual men and published in the United States. It was first published in 1968 by Al Goldstein as a response to a burgeoning sexual revolution and to the supposedly air-brushed soft-pedaled sexuality in magazines such as Playboy. Printed weekly in tabloid form, the magazine quickly succeeded, reaching a circulation of 500,000, and making armies of enemies among conservatives and the “moral hypocrites” in government that Screw had vowed to fight.
Screw is best known for its alarmingly frank representation of sex, in both lurid photographs and prose that has continually pushed close to the edges of protected speech. Founder Al Goldstein has won a series of obscenity cases.
In 1974, Al Goldstein told Playboy magazine, “We lead the league in tastelessness. Our photographs are filthier and our stories more disgusting. We make no effort to be artistic.”
Co-editor was Jim Buckley who produced the film "It Happened in Hollywood" in 1973 featuring Goldstein and himself.
Screw’s embrace of the film Deep Throat guaranteed the film’s success and simultaneously ensured Screw’s place in publishing and as an innovator and trend-setter.
Over the years Screw has become known for its vicious attacks on celebrities, politicians, and pretty much anyone who has crossed Goldstein, from car rentals to local restaurants.
Screw is also legendary for its covers, which have featured a Who’s Who of American underground cartoonists, such as Robert Crumb, Vaughn Bodé, Wally Wood, and Danny Hellman.
In 1982, Goldstein was sued by Pillsbury after their “doughboy” logotype was spoofed in Screw. Goldstein won that case and the right to parody corporate logos is now firmly entrenched as protected speech.
In the 1990s, as business began to slip due to new competition from free adult weeklies and the internet, Goldstein became weighed down in a feud with his son Jordan and began filling the magazine with personal attacks against his “ex-son” and his ex-wife. Many observers noted that as Goldstein’s famous hate rants became more heated, the magazine lost focus and drifted from its editorial goals.
In 2003, after suffering through several well-publicized harassment trials, ill health, reckless spending and mismanagement, Screw declared bankruptcy. Goldstein, never responding adequately to an adult market now dominated by the internet, said at the time "we are an anachronism; we are dinosaurs; we are elephants going to the bone cemetery to die.... The delivery system has changed, and we have to change with it if we want to survive."
Later that year Screw was purchased and re-launched by DJK Productions, a consortium of former employees. Former High Times publisher Mike Edison, himself a former Screw freelancer, was named as editor-in-chief. He is only the second person to hold that position in thirty-five years.
Screw is now published bi-weekly with a circulation of 20,000.
In almost forty years of continuous publication, there have been almost 2,000 issues of Screw, making it one of the most durable and long-lasting publications in American history.
The first Screw movie, produced by Joe Gallant and Kenny Law, was scheduled to be released in 2007.
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