Former Girls Next Door star Holly Madison dropped bombshells about life at the Playboy Mansion in her new memoir, Down the Rabbit Hole. But her story is just the tip of the iceberg!

“It’s glorified escorting,” Jennifer Saginor, who grew up in the mansion because her father worked as Hugh Hefner’s doctor and drug supplier, tells Life & Style. “The girls become so brainwashed, you don’t remember who you used to be.”

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Hef with Playmates, including ex-girlfriend Holly Madison (right).

Saginor, author of Playground: A Childhood Lost Inside the Playboy Mansion, also reveals that mansion life was like prison for the Bunnies, with strict rules, chores and curfews. “Honestly, are they Playmates or inmates?” she adds.

The girls had to stay “tanned, slim and, ideally, blonde,” an insider shares, “and were required to dress a certain way. Hef decided who they could speak to.”

And to rise in the ranks, Saginor says, Bunnies had to do whatever Hef wanted sexually. “Girls would be told to sleep together, even if they weren’t bisexual,” she says. “He’s big into ‘girl-on-girl.’”

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The famed Playboy Mansion.

But her experience wasn’t unique. Jennifer claims many of the girls at the mansion were underage. “Normal rules,” she tells Life & Style, “didn’t apply.”

That also went for drugs. Her father, known as “Dr. Feel Good,” kept Hef and the house flush in quaaludes, pain meds, stimulants, antidepressants and Viagra.

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Hef with a bevy of Bunnies.

Drugs were also given to the Bunnies to help them lose weight. “My dad was also a diet doctor, so he put a lot of girls on amphetamines to stay skinny,” Jennifer confesses. “The emphasis on weight could be very abusive.”

In recent years, things have calmed down. Hef’s current wife, Crystal, tells Life & Style that “a typical day is pretty quiet” and that she spends hours on weekends working on Hef’s scrapbooks.

For the full interview with Jennifer and more details from insiders, pick up the new issue of Life & Style, on newsstands now!