[1] In 1945 the name of the publication was changed to the more attractive title Alle Menns Blad (Every Man's Magazine) and it was published on a monthly basis.
[2]: 80–88 Alle Menns Blad stated appearing in August 1945 without any difference other than its logo from the four preceding issues that year.
At the beginning of the 1950s, the magazine started featuring photographs, many drawings, Western fiction, reports, and a series called Gamle norske kriminalsaker (Old Norwegian Criminal Cases).
In 1954 the magazine was sold to the company Romanforlaget, and in 1961 and 1962 four installments of Ian Fleming's The Spy Who Loved Me appeared in it for the first time in Norwegian.
[2]: 80–88, 179, 186 The feature Piker med futt (Girls with Spunk) followed this, with pictures and interviews of women with special backgrounds, including Åse Kleveland, Inger Lise Rypdal, and Grynet Molvig, and the magazine started printing crime stories selected from the works of Alfred Hitchcock.