Sexual Satisfaction for Women in Today's World
by Jenny Dolan
The Trinidad & Tobago Express look to Surprise Parties to help them overview the state of female sexuality in this great article! Read More...
The Bachelor Guy Talks To Guys...
Sit down. I've got some bad news for you. She fakes it. Maybe not all the time. Maybe it's only happened once or twice. But it's happened. Sorry, bubba, but some of that screaming has been pure When-Harry-Met-Sally-inspired theatrics. Why would she let you think she got off when the only thing she really wanted was getting you off... of her?
Trish, Donna & Lulu
Donna Wittrig, Surprise Parties VP, is invited onto Venus FM in Nashville to talk of the controversy surrounding the "Stop Faking It" Billboard, Surprise Parties, and the state of female intimacy in the United States!
Listen to Donna on Venus 102.5 FM
Indulge or not, sexuality is essential to the human experience. Kerry Day reports on the success of Surprise Parties across the country in its efforts to empower and educate women to reclaim their sexuality. Who's indulging? Read on to find out!
Download the article here: Raising Eyebrows
What happens when outdoor media tries to lump Surprise Parties in with 'downtown sex shops' in Nashville? Surprise Parties sets the records straight! Read the story and see how CEO Donna Wittrig positions the company for women across the country.
Read the article here: Nashville Scene
The Chicago Tribune
Surprise, Surprise: Home Parties Prove That, Even in the Most Demure Living Rooms, Sex Still Sells.
In a comfortable, middle-class ranch house in Bartlett — where guests are asked to remove their shoes before stepping across new vanilla-colored carpeting — the 22 women sip wine, nibble hors d'oeuvres and await the arrival of the sex lady.
Read the article here: The Chicago Tribune
The Chicago Sun-Times
Move over, Tupperware and Avon. Surprise Parties is putting the "IN" in in-home parties. But these home parties have become a lot saucier than the ones many women think of —parties in which they can buy makeup or storage dishes. Think lingerie and sex toys.
"The party environment normalizes the subject matter and there is no stigma attached if your friends are doing it too. It definitely helps to take away the embarrassment factor." — The Chicago Sun Times
Read the article here: The Chicago Sun Times
The Chicago Sun-Times
It's not exactly news that sex sells. It's just that its paraphernalia turns up in the darnedest places. Like the living rooms of nice, middle-class folks.
Some merchandising of the stuff transpired in Rose Spiller's Joliet home one recent Friday evening. Following a few suggestions delivered by Surprise Parties sales representative Heather Fennig, the half-dozen women who came to the party stocked up on lingerie, toiletries, scented candles and other items designed to add a bit of spice to their most private of lives.
— The Chicago Sun
Read the article here: The Chicago Sun Times
The Washington Post
Dawn, a customer service rep at the Department of Motor Vehicles, is today's sexually liberated woman. Skip the '90's; this is the Aught Age. She's not some free lovin' hippie throwback. Her brand of sexual awareness is post-post feminist, the marketing-age sexuality of "romance gifts" and "relationship aids", of lotions and potions, of scented candles and vibrators and flimsy filigreed garments like the one she finally winds up buying in blue.— The Washington Post
Read the article here: The Washington Post
The Tennessean
The way Surprise Parties does it is to offer an invitation-only, women-only event where those attending from newlyweds to grandmothers can see, touch, smell and taste a variety of what might be called products for lovers, or romance gifts.
Many would not be comfortable going to an adult products store, or even ordering by mail from a catalog. “We're not sleaze merchants,” Rhea said. “We're empowering women by offering them a way to spice up their romantic lives in a respectful, private way.” “We really do sell romance,” said Michelle Douglas, Surprise Parties District Manager for Middle Tennessee. — The Tennessean
Read the article here: The Tennessean
