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Best Buy has a sale on the 2024 Samsung Frame TV and you can save up to $200

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Best Buy has a sale on the new 2024 Samsung Frame TV

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Right now at Best Buy, popular sizes of the Frame are on sale. For a limited time, you can save up to $200. If you’ve been thinking about giving your living room, family room or bedroom a quick and easy makeover, one of the easiest things you can do is hang one of Samsung’s latest Frame smart TVs on your wall, select your favorite works of art and let the TV showcase that art whenever you’re not watching your favorite shows or movies. 

Here’s what you can save on each size of the Frame TV right now at Best Buy:

Similar savings is also being offered directly from Samsung on most sizes of the Frame. This smart TV continues to be a top pick among the CBS Essentials readers and with good reason. After all, an already feature-packed television set just got better. 

Between the design of the Frame TV itself and the incredibly realistic way it’s able to display famous works of art (so each looks like a real painting), it’s easy to decorate and personalize your living space. You get the ability to choose artwork to match a room’s color scheme, your mood or a genre preference.

Since it’s less than one inch thick, when hung on a wall, the Frame TV looks like a traditional picture frame. This means you no longer have to look at a black rectangle when you’re not watching TV. And of course, whenever you want to watch live TV or stream content from any of your favorite video streaming services, whatever you watch will look and sound fantastic. 

Grab the 2024 edition of Samsung’s Frame TV and benefit from all of its exciting features, including a matte finish, which greatly reduces glare; the ability to showcase a broader selection of artwork; and, for the first time, Pantone validation for color accuracy. This makes art and whatever you’re watching look even more realistic. Everything we love about the Frame TV (see our full review of the 2023 edition) is still on offer in this updated 2024 version. 

As always, you can buy an optional, magnetically attachable bezel to make the Frame TV look like it’s in a traditional picture frame. You can choose a bezel design (between $200 and $300 each) that matches the decor of any room. 




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“Dangerous heat” expected to spread up West Coast, break records, according to forecasters

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Temperatures are expected to soar along the U.S. West Coast on Friday and Saturday, the National Weather Service said, warning that “dangerous heat” will likely spread up the West Coast as it intensifies.

Forecasters said temperatures will be 15-30 degrees above average for much of the West Coast Friday, and “numerous record-breaking temperatures can be expected through the next few days,” the weather service said.

Heat watches and warnings are in place across multiple states, including large swaths of California, as well as parts of Nevada, Arizona, Oregon and Washington.

In parts of California and southern Oregon, temperatures could blast into the triple digits, the weather service said. California is expected to experience some of the worst effects of the heat wave on Saturday, forecasters said, with temperatures likely to reach into the 110s.

“Locally higher temperatures into the 120s are possible in the typical hot spots of the Desert Southwest,” it said.

The Los Angeles National Weather Service said on Thursday night that a “Red Flag Warning” was in effect until late Friday night due to “hot, dry and windy conditions.” The warning signifies increased risk of fire danger. The weather service warned residents to use caution with open flames as the dry conditions could fuel the spread of fire.

The heat wave coincides with the Thompson wildfire, which engulfed Butte Country in Northern California this week and forced thousands to flee their homes. Evacuation orders were downgraded to warnings on Thursday.

Over the weekend, the heat wave is expected to shift east to the mid-Atlantic and the Southeast.



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Antisemitism in Europe drives some Jews to seek safety in Israel despite ongoing war in Gaza

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Ashdod, southern Israel — There will be a decisive second round of voting in France Sunday after the far-right National Rally Party, led by Marine Le Pen, won big against centrist President Emmanuel Macron in the first round of the national election exactly one week earlier.

Le Pen’s party has a history of racism, antisemitism and islamophobia dating back decades. Some prominent Jewish figures in France — which is largely considered to have the biggest Jewish population in Europe — say there’s been more antisemitism lately not only from the far-right, but also from the left.

Tension has mounted across Europe since the start of Israel’s war with Hamas in the Gaza Strip, with massive rallies, most of them pro-Palestinian, held in major cities across the continent.

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Protesters hold placards and wave Palestinian flags as they take part in a “National March for Gaza” in central London, June 8, 2024.

BENJAMIN CREMEL/AFP/Getty


Harrowing images from Gaza have fueled outrage and, in some alarming cases, antisemitism has been seen and heard. In one of the most worrying examples, some people even celebrated on the streets of London on the day that Hamas militants killed some 1,200 people in their unprecedented terrorist attack on Israel.

Nearly 40% of antisemitic incidents in the world last year took place in Europe, and there was a spike after that Oct. 7 attack by Hamas. In Germany, they nearly doubled. In the U.K., they more than doubled. And in France, they nearly quadrupled.

Those incidents and the underlying hatred behind them have prompted some Jewish families to move not further away from the war, but toward it — to Israel.

Requests from French Jews to relocate to Israel have soared by 430% since October.

Among those who have already made that move are Sarah Zohar and her family, who lived a comfortable life in France — until her children were attacked while walking to sports practice.

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Sarah Zohar pushes her children on a merry-go-round in a playground in Ashdod, southern Israel, where they moved after facing antisemitism in France amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip.

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They packed their bags and moved to the southern Israeli city of Ashdod, remarkably only about 15 miles from the Gaza Strip, which Hamas ruled for almost 20 years and from which it launched its attack in October.

“I feel safer here,” Zohar told CBS News, but she doesn’t pretend it’s been an easy transition for her family.

“I have a child, 12 years old, and he’s told me, ‘I don’t want to go to Israel, because I don’t want people to come to my house and kill me with a knife and take my head off,” she said. “I told him: ‘You have nothing to be afraid. We have an army to defend us.'”

About 2,000 miles away, back in Paris, Rabbi Tom Cohen said Jews were remembering the antisemitism of World War II, and for some, it felt like “we didn’t get past it, and it is still here — it just has changed form, like many viruses change and mutate.”

CBS News met Guila and Eitan Elbazis as they moved into their new home in Ashdod after leaving their lives in London.

They showed off their new bomb shelter room. 

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Guila and Eitan Elbazis show CBS News’ Chris Livesay (left) the safe room in their new home in Ashdod, southern Israel, after the couple moved from London to raise a family and escape rising antisemitism.

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“Hopefully, please, God, there won’t be any rockets, but as you can see, this door is bulletproof, and it locks up,” Giulia said.

As the Elbazis start a family, they decided they’d rather contend with the threat of Hamas and Hezbollah on their doorstep than with hatred on the streets of London.

“I think there’s a general sense of fear and anxiety and lack of comfort in London,” Eitan said.

“Like I have to hide who I am to be safe,” agreed Giulia.

They said they felt safer in Israel, “hands down. Without even thinking about it.”

“We have institutions here to defend us,” said Eitan.

Giulia added that while Israel is a country at war, “this is home,” and for them, it’s a home where they don’t have to hide who they are.



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Keir Starmer becomes new U.K. prime minister after Labour Party’s landslide victory

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Keir Starmer becomes new U.K. prime minister after Labour Party’s landslide victory – CBS News


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Voters delivered a historic blowout win for U.K.’s Labour Party on Thursday, ousting the Conservative Party that had controlled the country for 14 years. Keir Starmer became Britain’s new prime minister after meeting with King Charles III and Rishi Sunak’s resignation. CBS News foreign correspondent Imtiaz Tyab has more.

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