Organizer re-invents Playground Conference

Annual three-day sex and relationship event to be replaced by series of talks

After a strong five-year run, there will be no Playground Conference in 2016 in Toronto, founder and executive producer Samantha Fraser announced during her closing remarks at this year’s event in November.

Fraser says the 2015 sex and relationship conference was the most successful edition to date, with over 300 attendees. Playground had also expanded to include an additional keynote speaker, a prom-style dance and a VIP dinner.

“There’s a few reasons why I want to take a break,” Fraser says, citing fatigue and increased rent at the conference’s most recent venue at the Carlton Street Holiday Inn

“I do most of the work myself, and that’s a lot to do. I’m also an events planner in my regular life as well, so I get a little tired of events,” she says.

Instead of a conference in 2016, Fraser says she will organize a series of quarterly presentations, the first of which will take place in the spring.

The new format will be more affordable for Fraser, and easier for her to organize, but she says many people will miss the conference. “[It’s] a place where people can come together for an entire weekend — it’s really immersive. This won’t be like that . . . and that’s a downside,” she says.

“[But] the other solution was to stop altogether.”

In addition to inviting locals to speak, she plans to include some of the many international experts who visit the city each year in order to run workshops at sex stores. And in keeping with the tone of Playground Conference, she wants each of the events in the series to have broad appeal.

Fraser hopes that Playground could return as a conference in 2017.

Jeremy Willard is a Toronto-based freelance writer and editor. He's written for Fab Magazine, Daily Xtra and the Torontoist. He generally writes about the arts, local news and queer history (in History Boys, the Daily Xtra column that he shares with Michael Lyons).

Read More About:
Love & Sex, News, Sex, Toronto

Keep Reading

An illustration of three shirtless people with short hair holding each other with their eyes closed. There are hearts in the background.

I had a threesome with my monogamous partner, and it couldn’t have been better

There’s more than one route into opening a relationship—waiting for the perfect moment is a good way to start
Collage of photos including a bucket, ladle and brush on a sauna bench; feet resting against the leg of a person in a bikini who is sitting on a bench; and one person whispering into another's ear

The queer community still needs places for public sex

Sex party promoters, kink community leaders and educators refuse to shy away from the more explicit aspects of the queer experience
Illustration of an older person with their eyes closed, reaching toward a younger person with their eyes open and arms outstretched; both are floating against a golden background, surrounded by birds

What my trans son taught me about freedom

I thought I had to fight every day just to exist. Then my son showed me that sometimes freedom is quiet
Hands holding a smartphone; messages between someone marked by Pride colours and someone marked as a robot; a few floating rainbow hearts, all under a purple filter

Will AI companions usher in a new age of queer courtship?

Anyone in a relationship with an AI companion is already having a post-gender romance