sponsor crazyfitnessguy podcast

Become a sponsor of The CrazyFitnessGuy® Show

Do you want to sponsor The CrazyFitnessGuy® Show – an autistic‑led podcast about gentle, realistic wellness for autistic and neurodivergent adults? Fill out the form below and we will follow up to see if we are a good fit for each other.

This show reaches autistic and neurodivergent adults who are tired of high‑pressure, “no excuses” wellness content and who want calmer, sensory‑friendly, step‑by‑step support instead. Sponsors who align with that mission get in front of listeners who deeply value trust, clarity, and honesty.


What kinds of sponsors we accept

To protect the audience and keep the podcast aligned with its mission, we do not accept sponsorships from companies or brands related to sex, drugs, alcohol, religion, money, or gambling.

We are looking for sponsors whose products or services connect to:

  • Healthy living and wellness

  • Productivity and focus

  • Motivation and mindset

  • Gentle habit‑building and lifestyle support for autistic or neurodivergent adults

If you are unsure whether you are a fit, you can still complete the form and share details about your brand, and we will review it.


Ad spaces and pricing

All ads are host‑read or personally approved to keep things authentic and aligned with the show’s voice.

 

AD SpaceDescription Price
Pre-Roll - Per Episode1 - minute AD$25
Mid-Roll - Per Episode1 - minute AD$50
Pre-Roll - 6 Months1 - 3 minute AD$350
Mid-Roll - 1 Year1 - 2 Minute AD$800
OtherCustomAsk About Pricing

 

 

 


FAQ For Sponsorship Form Page

1. Who is this sponsorship form designed around?
This sponsorship form is built around autistic and neurodivergent adults who feel overloaded by typical health and fitness content and are looking for calm, sensory‑friendly support instead of pressure and perfectionism.

2. What kind of audience will my sponsorship reach?
You’ll reach autistic and neurodivergent adults, often 18–40, who spend a lot of time online, struggle with burnout, sensory overload, and executive dysfunction, and want small, realistic ways to feel healthier and calmer without becoming “hardcore fitness people.”

3. Why does this audience trust CrazyFitnessGuy® more than typical wellness brands?
They’re skeptical of hype and toxic positivity. They connect with CrazyFitnessGuy® because it is autistic‑led, honest about mental health and burnout, and focused on tiny, doable changes instead of extreme transformations or guilt‑based messaging.

4. What kinds of brands are a good match for this audience?
A good match is any product, service, or tool that genuinely helps autistic or neurodivergent adults make life calmer or more manageable: simple fitness or movement solutions, sensory‑friendly gear, routines and planning tools, mental health and burnout support, or gentle productivity and focus tools.

5. What kinds of sponsors are not aligned with this audience’s needs?
Anything built on shame, fear, or “no excuses” is not aligned. The show does not accept sponsors related to sex, drugs, alcohol, religion, money, or gambling, and avoids offers that push extreme diets, aggressive sales tactics, or unrealistic “fix your life fast” promises.

6. How does this sponsorship respect sensory and mental health needs?
Ads are kept short, host‑read or personally approved, and written in calm, clear language so they don’t feel like loud, jarring interruptions. The goal is to present your brand as a gentle option people can explore at their own pace, not a demand for instant change.

7. What sponsorship options can I request on this form?
On this form, you can ask about pre‑roll and mid‑roll ads per episode, a 6‑month pre‑roll package, a 1‑year mid‑roll package, or a custom arrangement. These options let you start with a smaller commitment or build a longer‑term presence with this specific audience.

8. What details should I include so you can tell if my offer fits this audience’s life?
In the form, explain what your brand does, how it supports autistic or neurodivergent adults, and which problems it helps with—like overwhelm, burnout, sensory overload, planning and routines, or confusion about health advice. Clear context makes it easier to see if it truly fits.

9. What happens after I submit the sponsorship form?
After you submit, the team reviews your brand, your ad idea, and your chosen package to see if it’s a good fit. If it is, you’ll receive an email to confirm details, refine the ad text, schedule episodes, and discuss payment before anything goes live.

10. Can you help adjust our ad copy so it speaks better to autistic and neurodivergent listeners?
Yes. If your sponsorship is approved, the team can suggest edits to make your ad more autism‑friendly: simpler language, less pressure, more concrete benefits, and clear expectations, so listeners feel invited—not overwhelmed.

11. Is filling out this sponsorship form a commitment, or just a starting point?
For brands, this form is a starting point, not a binding contract. It signals that you want to support this audience and gives the team enough information to decide if your brand, message, and budget are a good match before you commit to a package.

12. Why are you so strict about sponsor fit for this audience?
Many autistic and neurodivergent adults have been burned by inaccessible, pushy, or dismissive health and wellness advice. Being strict about sponsor fit protects their trust and keeps ads feeling like genuine support for their lives, not just another noisy sales pitch.