For PPC campaigns, SEO, article writing or niche evaluation - this tool will help you with a comprehensive list of highly relevant keyword suggestions to create and improve your message and connect with your audience better.
We help you find actual phrases people use to find information, products and services.
Depending on who is searching for what on which platform, there are different patterns involved. That's why we have many different sources so you can pick and chose those that match your audience best!
Leo started where any reasonable detective would: the personals. All Categories meant everything—for sale, housing, gigs, lost & found, community, and the dark, forgotten corners of “strictly platonic.”
Searching for "Molly Maracas" in All Categories
The breakthrough. Not in Music or Artists . In Housing . A sublet listing from 2012: “Room for rent, quiet tenant preferred. Current occupant is a traveling instrument repairer. Goes by ‘Molly Maracas.’ She only comes home once a month, sleeps on the floor, and leaves tiny bone shavings everywhere. Very clean otherwise.”
Molly Maracas had vanished from the internet ten years ago. No social media, no archived news articles, not even a grainy yearbook photo. The only proof she’d ever existed was a single, bizarre transaction log on Finch’s private server: Searching for- Molly Maracas in-All Categories.
A Gig posting on a dead music site. “Seeking percussionist, ‘Molly Maracas.’ Experimental noise band. No pay. Must provide own apocalypse.” Leo called the band’s old number. A raspy voice answered: “She showed up. Didn’t speak. Played those maracas like she was trying to crack the sky. Then the power went out. When the lights came back, she was gone. So were my good extension cords.”
There, in the Local History – Unverified section, was a leather-bound book. Title: The Apocryphal Percussionist, by M. Maracas.
Not a person, exactly. A ghost.
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Love it – keep up the awesome work :)
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Leo started where any reasonable detective would: the personals. All Categories meant everything—for sale, housing, gigs, lost & found, community, and the dark, forgotten corners of “strictly platonic.”
Searching for "Molly Maracas" in All Categories Searching for- Molly Maracas in-All CategoriesM...
The breakthrough. Not in Music or Artists . In Housing . A sublet listing from 2012: “Room for rent, quiet tenant preferred. Current occupant is a traveling instrument repairer. Goes by ‘Molly Maracas.’ She only comes home once a month, sleeps on the floor, and leaves tiny bone shavings everywhere. Very clean otherwise.” Leo started where any reasonable detective would: the
Molly Maracas had vanished from the internet ten years ago. No social media, no archived news articles, not even a grainy yearbook photo. The only proof she’d ever existed was a single, bizarre transaction log on Finch’s private server: Searching for- Molly Maracas in-All Categories. In Housing
A Gig posting on a dead music site. “Seeking percussionist, ‘Molly Maracas.’ Experimental noise band. No pay. Must provide own apocalypse.” Leo called the band’s old number. A raspy voice answered: “She showed up. Didn’t speak. Played those maracas like she was trying to crack the sky. Then the power went out. When the lights came back, she was gone. So were my good extension cords.”
There, in the Local History – Unverified section, was a leather-bound book. Title: The Apocryphal Percussionist, by M. Maracas.
Not a person, exactly. A ghost.