soundcloud.com has tons of radio, categories and musicians offering their music for free. And you can also check out sites similar to soundcloud here Most decent sites have mobile apps now too.
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Now that, as of today, I have all six colors in my possession, I need not compete with the rest of you for them. So here's some information on where to get the pillows.
Amazon will work. Third-party sellers usually. I got Dark Blue Squid from one of them there.
Overseas: http://www.similarsites.com/site/hlj.com
I got my other five pillows from play-asia.com. I got Callie, Marie, Inkling Boy, and Inkling Girl from AmiAmi. Check sites like that.
They are very high-quality, adorable, and cuddly.
Don't stop there. Use a tool like http://www.similarsites.com/ or http://alternativeto.net/ to find similar companies and businesses to those advertising on similar podcasts.
Do research into companies advertising on those podcasts. Who are they? What do they sell? Where do they hang out online, and how can you reach out to them?
Dig up emails of the people who make decisions - founders, CEOs, CMOs, and start talking to them. Be honest, be direct, be human. Don't be afraid to lead with your actual numbers: 60k unique, interested audience members per month is a fantastic resource.
A good way to find something that interests you without blowing big money is to
1) use online resources to learn about and explore different disciplines. Coursera, UCB Webcast, code acadamy, academic earth, etc.. http://www.similarsites.com/site/webcast.berkeley.edu
2) visit the school library and read the introductory textbooks for a variety of disciplines until you find something interesting. Either search the course reserves section or look up the intro textbooks for intro classes on the course description / syllabus.
3) you may just need take a small break, do some volunteering and working and hopefully those life experiences may lead you towards certain disciplines. Or they might let you know what you DON'T want to do so you won't waste your time.
My original vision was to have a user-based rating system, but with implementation time, I decided against it. Do you feel like a "team" of 10-15 people rating the sites lacks an authenticity that Amazon has with it's reviews?
http://www.similarsites.com/ actually is for finding similar sites. I was imagining, for example, that someone has a specific goal - if it is discovering new music, they'd narrow by category or search by tags.
I definitely see the benefits in your preferences, though.