The Kevin Trudeau Show: 12-17-11

December 17, 2011 by admin  
Filed under Archives

Have you ever realized just how corrupt all these drug companies are? Kevin explores why some drug companies are too big to nail! Plus, the author of Undateable, Anne Coyle, stops by to reveal the secret list of over 311 things that perfectly eligible guys manage to wear, say, or do to make themselves completely undateable. Click here to learn more about Anne Coyle and her hilarious, but overly educational book!

Health:
Monsanto GM Seed Ban Overturned By US Supreme Court
Radiation Causes Breast Cancer
Pain Relievers Can Raise Heart Risks
10 Foods You Should Never Eat
Eating Disorder Label Leaves Many Untreated
Trans Fats and Partially Hydrogenated poison
People Are Finally Waking Up And Looking To Alternative Medicine
Once Scarce, H1N1 Vaccines Now Trashed

Government:
Obama’s Aunt Wins Asylum, Stays In US
Fake Pilot Flew Passenger Jets For 13 Years
Too Many Judges Want Authority Beyond Their Constitutional Role

NWO:
Feds Find Pfizer Too Big to Nail

Wealth:
Spirit Airlines To Charge $45 For Carry-Ons

Everything Kevin:
Become An Insider!
Kevin is on YouTube!
Sign Up For Kevin’s FREE Podcast
Follow Kevin on Twitter
Become Kevin’s Friend on Facebook
Kevin’s Film Club
Kevin’s Book Club

Take Trudeau on the Go! Click here to download this show to your iPod, mp3 player, or PC through iTunes!

Click Below to Watch the Kevin Trudeau Show LIVE!

The Kevin Trudeau Show: 9-24-11

September 24, 2011 by admin  
Filed under Archives

Today, find out who Kevin calls the biggest drug pushers in America, and what the solution is to fix all the problems in this country!

Plus, the author of Undateable, Anne Coyle, stops by to reveal the secret list of over 311 things that perfectly eligible guys manage to wear, say, or do to make themselves completely undateable. Click here to learn more about Anne Coyle and her hilarious, but overly educational book!

Health:
Monsanto GM Seed Ban Overturned By US Supreme Court
Radiation Causes Breast Cancer
Pain Relievers Can Raise Heart Risks
10 Foods You Should Never Eat
Eating Disorder Label Leaves Many Untreated
Trans Fats and Partially Hydrogenated poison
People Are Finally Waking Up And Looking To Alternative Medicine
Once Scarce, H1N1 Vaccines Now Trashed

Government:
Obama’s Aunt Wins Asylum, Stays In US
Fake Pilot Flew Passenger Jets For 13 Years
Too Many Judges Want Authority Beyond Their Constitutional Role

NWO:
Feds Find Pfizer Too Big to Nail

Wealth:
Spirit Airlines To Charge $45 For Carry-Ons

Everything Kevin:
Become An Insider!
Kevin is on YouTube!
Sign Up For Kevin’s FREE Podcast
Follow Kevin on Twitter
Become Kevin’s Friend on Facebook
Kevin’s Film Club
Kevin’s Book Club

Take Trudeau on the Go! Click here to download this show to your iPod, mp3 player, or PC through iTunes!

Click Below to Watch the Kevin Trudeau Show LIVE!

The Kevin Trudeau Show: 4-7-10

April 7, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Archives

Kevin was right AGAIN!! Today, Kevin enlightens you with all of the latest new reports he has been talking about for years, including how Swedish Scientists have found that calcium leads to a longer, healthier life. Sound familiar?

Once Scarce, H1N1 Vaccines Now Trashed
Maximize Your Downline
People Are Finally Waking Up And Looking To Alternative Medicine
Depression, Cancer Treatments Feeding Big Pharma Machine
Prozac’s New Competition
Lazy Man’s Way to a Fortune
Chemicals Linked To Early Puberty in Girls
Spirit Airlines To Charge $45 For Carry-Ons
Become a Perpetual Money Making Machine

Plus, best-selling GMO author and independent filmmaker, Jeffrey Smith, stopped by to give you the inside story behind genetically modified food and how it affects your health. Click here to learn more about The Seeds of Deception.

Take Trudeau on the Go! Click here to download this show to your iPod, mp3 player, or PC through iTunes!


Click below
to hear The Kevin Trudeau Show RIGHT NOW!!!



Spirit Airlines To Charge $45 For Carry-Ons

April 7, 2010 by admin  
Filed under News Stories

April 7, 2010

AOL News

By Joshua Freed

Baggage fees have sneaked out of the belly of the plane and into the overhead bin.

Spirit Airlines will charge as much as $45 each way for a carry-on bag starting Aug. 1. Personal items like purses and laptop computers that fit under the seat will still be free.

The new fee makes Spirit the first airline to charge passengers to haul their own possessions onto its planes. It’s sure to seize the attention of passengers as well as airline executives who are probably glad that Spirit tried it first.

“I didn’t think anyone would go this far,” said Jay Sorensen, an airline consultant who specializes in airline fees.

Industry observers said Spirit’s move doesn’t mean it will spread to the big airlines. None of the major carriers changed their fees on Tuesday.

Spirit’s new charge for a carry-on is $45 if paid at the gate, and $30 if paid in advance. Spirit said on Tuesday that it reduced its lowest fares by $40 on average, so most customers won’t really pay more to fly. Customers who pay for space in the overhead bin will also get to board the plane earlier. The new policy limits paid carry-on bags to one per passenger.

Spirit CEO Ben Baldanza said having fewer carry-on bags will help empty the plane faster. He said the idea is to get customers to pay for individual things they want, while keeping the base fare low.

“The beauty of it is they will do what they think is best for them and will now have the choice,” he said.

Spirit is based in Miramar, Fla., and is privately held. Most of its flights carry leisure travelers from big airports in the U.S. through Fort Lauderdale and on to Latin America.

Like Ryanair in Europe, Spirit has relatively low base fares but charges lots of add-on fees, including $16 per round-trip ticket to book at its Web site. The only way to avoid the fee is to buy a ticket at the airport ticket counter.

It has fewer than two dozen planes. Its 150 daily flights are about one-twentieth as many as American Airlines and its regional partners offer.

Even though Spirit is a minor player, big airlines will watch it to see whether customers are willing to pay for carry-ons, Sorensen said. “It’s a potential source of revenue for an industry that still needs it.”

The problem with charging for checked luggage but keeping carry-ons free is that passengers lug as much onto the plane as they can, he said. Spirit’s move does help solve that problem, Sorensen said.

Spirit said it will add measuring devices at the gates to determine which carry-ons are free and which ones will incur the charge. Things like diaper bags, umbrellas, strollers, and reading material won’t count as a passenger’s free personal item.

The big airlines stepped gingerly when they started charging to check baggage in 2008, making a move, then watching to see who matched it. Now, all of them charge to check a bag on domestic flights except Southwest (two free bags) and JetBlue (one free bag).

Spirit CEO Baldanza said he’s confident the airline will stick with the new carry-on fee.

“Our decision to do it isn’t dependent” on other carriers following along, he said.

He said he doesn’t see the bag fee as a revenue boost as much as an operational help. Dealing with large carry-ons has delayed departures and slowed down unloading after a flight.

On domestic flights, passengers who pay in advance will pay $30 to carry on a bag, but just $25 to check it. That could encourage passengers to check more bags. Baldanza said that’s fine with him, since it costs the airline about as much to load one bag into the belly of the plane as it does to load 100 bags.

While it’s too soon to know whether passengers will accept the carry-on fee, it actually makes sense to encourage them to check bags as Spirit has done, said Genevieve Shaw Brown, senior editor at Travelocity.

Ever since checked bag fees began, “the boarding process has become more chaotic, there’s more tension among travelers fighting for space in the overhead bin,” she said. “It also becomes less efficient to board and deplane, which is not good for airlines that make money on being efficient.”

Click here for the full report.