CBS Mornings Deals spotlights everyday essentials with limited-time discounts
CBS Mornings Deals pushed pantry organizers, photo albums and kids’ toys, with discounts advertised as high as 40% off in limited-time sales.

A pantry organizer, a digital photo album and children’s dolls turned up in CBS Mornings Deals as the franchise pushed limited-time savings on items pitched as everyday essentials. The sales hook is simple, but the structure behind it matters: CBS Deals says it carries products from small businesses across the United States, and CBS says it receives commission payments when shoppers buy through cbsdeals.com.
The segment is fronted by lifestyle expert Elizabeth Werner on CBS Mornings and CBS Saturday Morning, making her the familiar face of the pitch. In one CBS video post, Werner highlighted a Smart Design over-the-door pantry organizer priced at 30% off the retail price. In another, she closed out a three-day savings event that featured products available for at least 40% off the retail price. Those percentage cuts show how the franchise leans on urgency and a hard deadline, a familiar tactic in TV-led commerce.
The product mix has also widened beyond kitchen storage and household basics. CBS video posts said Knocking’s chief content officer, Candi Carter, presented four items in one edition, including the Heirloom digital photo album. Another CBS Mornings Deals video said Werner showed items that included a line of children’s dolls and toys designed to promote empowerment and confidence. That suggests the segment is not just chasing deep discounts, but packaging practical buys with giftable, family-oriented products.

The storefront itself makes the business model explicit. CBS Deals states that the store is operated by Knocking under different terms and privacy policies than CBS, while CBS says shoppers’ purchases through the site generate commission payments. That arrangement is common in modern media commerce, but it underscores why viewers should separate genuine household utility from the showmanship of a limited-time sale. A pantry organizer can be a real fix for cramped cabinets, and a digital photo album can solve a storage problem for family pictures. A steep percentage off only matters if the item replaces something useful, not if it simply creates a deadline.
For readers evaluating these offers, the key question is not whether the discounts sound large. It is whether the product addresses a recurring daily problem, and whether the reduced price still beats the alternatives already available in the market. CBS Mornings Deals has built its identity around that promise, using commissioned online sales, small-business branding and short-lived promotions to turn television exposure into retail urgency.
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