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Debonair Magazine India Models -

The magazine’s editors had to navigate a fine line, arguing that their pictorials were "art" or representations of the female form in good taste, rather than "obscenity." The constant police raids and court cases surrounding the magazine highlighted the tension between the Indian state's desire to control public morality and the rising tide of liberalization in the 1990s. The Debonair model became the inadvertent frontline soldier in the war for freedom of expression in India.

By the early 2000s, the rise of the internet and more "acceptable" avenues for bikini modeling—like the Kingfisher Calendar —began to erode Debonair's unique position. While it eventually evolved to incorporate digital trends, it remains a nostalgic touchstone of 80s and 90s Indian pop culture. Debonair Magazine India Models

Editor Vinod Mehta utilized a clever defense strategy. He packed the magazine with essays by writers like Ruskin Bond and Frank Simoes. This allowed readers to possess the magazine under the guise of intellectual pursuit. 4. The Challenges for Models The magazine’s editors had to navigate a fine

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