Now is the winter of our discontent. That last heating bill nearly caused a coronary, and this month’s will only be worse. Holiday credit-card bills are coming due. And tax time is just around the corner. A buck don’t buy what it used to. So how about something for free?
Music and movies, books and booze, electronics, furniture, even a car — all can be yours for nothing (or next to it). You just gotta know where to look, and how to avoid gimmicks and scams. From thousands of legal MP3 downloads to cool public-domain movies to e-books and even free phone service, the Internet is a treasure trove of freebies. You’d be surprised by the largesse of big corporations, especially when they’ve got new products to spread the word about.
"The Internet has totally revolutionized everything," says Bob Kalian, who’s scored "many thousands of dollars" of free stuff over the years and has been authoring the continuously updated The Best Free Things in America (Roblin) with his wife Linda since 1979. "It’s been an encouragement for companies, because they can offer free things on their Web site and pay nothing in printing or mailing costs. It’s made everything a lot simpler, a lot faster, and a lot more comprehensive."
Just try Googling "free stuff" and look what pops up. More than 18 million pages, a lot of flashy sites hyping fishy offers that seem too good to be true. And, as the adage holds, they probably are.Lee Seats’s About.com page isn’t one of them, however. He specializes in separating the wheat from the chaff, and his site is comprehensive and regularly updated, offering sound advice and links to the best of what’s around. Seats tirelessly researches the countless freebie offers out there, differentiating "between things you’re most likely to receive and things where you’ll just end up on spam lists."
For every legit site like Totallyfreestuff.com,Freethingsusa.com, orFatwallet.com, there are hundreds of spammers and scammers who just want your personal info for their own nefarious purposes. Discerning between them is usually just a matter of common sense. But, says Seats, "it’s amazing how many people don’t have a lot of common sense."
You do, though, right? And so to the hunt ...
Music
File-sharing has filled hard drives with billions upon billions of free songs over the past seven or so years. But file-sharing is illegal. And after the RIAA excises its $8000 settlement, those Nickelback MP3s don’t look so free after all.
The good news is that online stores don’t just sell CDs. Most offer free downloads to whet your appetite.Amazon.com features MP3s by name acts including My Morning Jacket and Aimee Mann. They’ve even got exclusive tracks like "Eyes" by Boston’s own Apollo Sunshine.Insound.com is an indie-rock Amazon, and offers dozens of free downloads by artists such as Cat Power and Deerhoof. EveniTunes offers a couple free downloads from up-and-coming artists every week. Who knows? One may be from the best band you never heard in your life.