The photometric space-borne survey missions CoRoT and Kepler were designed mainly to discover transiting planets. However, they are capable of much more. Thousands of eclipsing binaries were detected in their lightcurves. In addition, using a novel method named BEER, non-eclipsing stellar binaries and even lower mass companions were detected. In this talk I will review shortly the BEER algorithm, which identifies the periodic lightcurve modulation caused by the combined Beaming, Ellipsoidal, and Reflection effects induced by short-period companions. A summary of the ground-based radial velocity follow-up campaign will be given, as well as the discovery census. A special attention will be given to the confirmation of 72 new BEER binaries in CoRoT fields using the AAOmega multi-object spectrograph at the AAT. In addition, I will describe BEER's discovery of the hot Jupiter Kepler-76b.