Stories with Purpose.
Built by Creators, Proven by Results
Reach Freaks isn’t theory. It’s practice, perfected. Our proprietary strategies were developed by content creators who have spent years in the trenches, testing, refining, and scaling what works. Every tactic we use has been battle-tested through trial, error, and real-world wins, producing measurable growth and sustainable revenue for our own shows before we ever offered it to clients. When you work with us, you’re not just hiring an agency — you’re partnering with a team that’s lived it, built it, and proven it.
Advertising & Sponsorship Sales
We forge high-value sponsorships that align seamlessly with a creator’s unique voice and audience. Every placement is built for long-term ROI, delivering meaningful brand integrations and partnerships that last.
Premium & Subscription Strategy
With a proven 9% listener-to-subscriber conversion rate and consistent representation in Apple’s Top 100 Global Subscriber shows, we design tiered offerings, retention systems, and audience funnels that turn casual listeners into loyal, paying subscribers.
Emerging Monetization Models
We identify and execute cutting-edge revenue opportunities from interactive digital experiences to next-generation fan engagement tools, keeping creators competitive and profitable in a rapidly evolving marketplace.
4. Invisible Choir The true crime genre has sometimes been accused of sensationalizing atrocities, but not Invisible Choir. Instead, host Michael Ojibway details violent tragedies through the lens of victims and the lingering effects on survivors. Murder often destroys not just victims’ lives, but the lives they touched, and this podcast shines a light on the way a community remembers and recovers. . Full list available here.
Michael Ojibway, who’s worked as a discrimination, harassment, and sexual assault investigator, created Invisible Choir™ to lend a voice to those who can’t speak for themselves—the missing, the dead, the unseen and unseeable. With a sympathetic voice and a focused, single-narrator style that will appeal to listeners of Casefile and True Crime Enthusiast, Ojibway guides the listener through an array of cases, like the baffling death of 17-year-old Kendrick Johnson, who allegedly died in a freak accident in his high school gym. It’s a case that’s been covered by more and more crime podcasts, but nowhere more exhaustively than here. Ojibway also makes particularly deft use of first-hand audio—from interviews, news footage, and a variety of other sources—so that even though Invisible Choir technically has one host, each episode contains a multitude of voices. Full story available here.