![]() This vibe comes with a black satin bag with purple lining. They unfold in a stupid manner, the text looks like a flood warning or something (seriously, every section is prefaced with a PRECAUTION about something, like that this vibrator will not protect against STIs or pregnancy), and the language is clinical. And its instructions are hands-down the worst of the three. The Tri-Phoria’s box did not want me to open it in this lifetime, AS YOU CAN SEE. So I’ll be tackling the non-disposable offerings, just in case you are ever wandering the drugstore aisles in a small town, desperate for something that vibrates - and doesn’t die when you need it most. How could I resist trying the device born of such a revelation?Īnd while I was at it, I thought, why not try the other two attempts at “real” vibrators made by Durex and LifeStyles? All these companies make disposable crap that takes terrible batteries (these ones are easily sniffed out by locating the refrain “20 minutes of quivering pleasure” on the packaging), but I’m not selfless enough to try those. ![]() They kept telling us vibrators, vibrators. ![]() James Daniels, vice president for marketing at Trojan, said: “ The idea really came from consumers. The newest model on the shelves is the Tri-Phoria, created by the condom company Trojan after a study the company conducted in 2008 in partnership with the Center for Sexual Health Promotion at Indiana University revealed that over half of American women had used vibrators, and of that group, nearly 80 percent had shared them with their partners. ![]()
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