How To Make Money Buying Mortgage Notes
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Bailout Riches!: How Everyday Investors Can Make a Fortune Buying Bad Loans for Pennies on the Dollar $3.16 What is the investment opportunity from America’s financial crisis? Somewhere north of one trillion dollars of debt–mortgages, credit cards, and other forms–will be written off and sold to buyers at pennies on the dollar. It gets even better: There are ways to buy that debt with no money of your own.Society’s collective pain from this crisis means that it’s unlikely to occur ever again on this … |
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Agent Cody Banks $6.26 Rated: PGSynopsis: Frankie Muniz, the eminently likable Golden Globe- and Emmy-nominated star of Malcolm in the Middle, has a license to thrill as a 16-year-old CIA agent in this irresistible blend of Spy Kids and James Bond. Like the Bond films, this one begins with a stunt-filled prologue (involving extreme-skateboard action in pursuit of a runaway car with an infant inside). And in true Bond fashion, there are way-cool gadgets, sleek sports cars, and sinister villains plotting world domination. But unlike Bond, our man Cody is more shaken than stirred when it comes to talking to beautiful girls, and his mission is to reach a scientist who is in the employ of a sinister research enterprise by getting cozy with his daughter (Hilary Duff). In a turn that would make Emma Peel of The Avengers look demure, former Law & Order assistant D.A. Angie Harmon turns up as Cody’s statuesque, leather-clad handler. While not as inventive as the Spy Kids films, Cody Banks is as sleek as an Aston-Martin, with a charismatic cast, a savvy sense of humor, and enough stunts and heroics to make Cody Banks a franchise-worthy name in its own right. Donald LiebensonA teen learns that all the gadgets in the world can’t help him overcome his awkwardness around the opposite sex in this big-budget family entertainment. In Agent Cody Banks, Malcolm in the Middle star Frankie Muniz plays a young man plucked from suburban obscurity to be trained as a CIA super-agent. His mission? Get friendly with his classmate Natalie (played by another teen TV star, Lizzie McGuire’s Hilary Duff) so that he can uncover her father’s diabolical scheme to create indestructible robots. To compound his problems, Cody also has to deal with the same stresses as any adolescent: nagging parents, insufferable classwork, and a fragile sense of self-esteem. Agent Cody Banks was produced by MGM, not coincidentally the studio responsible for another popular spy franchise, the venerable James Bond series. Michael HastingsPRODUCTION AND TECHNICAL NOTES:Aspect Ratio: Pre-1954 Standard (1.33.1)Presentation: Pan & ScanSound: Dolby Digital 5.1 SurroundFeatures: Deleted scenes; Outtakes; Exclusive sneak peek at Cody Banks sequel; Agent Action: Never-before-seen footage of the film’s incredible stunts; Multi-angle sequences: Storyboard-to-film comparisons; Three featurettes: “Frankie Muniz Going Big,” “How to Talk to Girls,” and “Cool Makeup Tricks by Hilary Duff”; “Developing Agent Cody Banks”: A behind-the-scenes look at the film’s preproduction process; “Creating Cody’s World”: An in-depth tour of the film’s sets and costume designs; “Posting Cody Banks”: An exciting exploration into the film’s music and special effects; Director’s Diary: A making-of overview from the director’s chair; Audio commentary by director Harald Zwart, Frankie Muniz, and Angie Harmon; English 5.1 audio; French and Spanish stereo surround; English, French, and Spanish subtitlesLanguage: English, Français, EspañolSubTitles: English, Fran |
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By the Banks of the Holly : Notes and Letters from the Desk of Bernard Mollohan $45.78 No Synopsis Available |
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