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Bob Bartlett, 67, of Houston, was a regular Playboy reader for years before he became legally blind in 1981. He signed up for the radio service three years later. "I listen to her every chance," he said. "It really is one of my favorite shows. Some people say it's filth. It's not. She helps me be current in pop culture." Taping for The Blind is a nonprofit group that records and broadcasts dozens of newsweeklies, tabloids and other periodicals to thousands of blind people, primarily around Texas, 24 hours a day. The programming is aired at no cost to more than 3,000 subscribers who have special radios that accept the organization's signal. It's also available online. Playboy has been a staple of the lineup for some 15 years. "I do think it's a lot more classy magazine than a lot of them out there," Moser said. Moser acknowledges that when she came to the job three years ago, the idea of airing Playboy "sounded inappropriate to me." But after she heard it, "I liked it. It was very neutral. You know, this is good. I'm not offended." Hanks had been reading pet magazines for a couple of years for Taping For The Blind when the Playboy spot opened up about a year ago. "The guy who did Playboy got married and his wife didn't want him to do Playboy anymore," she said. "They just asked me." She became the first woman to handle the assignment. "What guy would want a man to read Playboy to him?" she said. "That would be a little strange. Doesn't that just give much more dimension if a woman is actually doing it? It's not a lurid lecherous guy slobbering all over it. "It's a lurid lecherous woman," she laughed. ___ Online:
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