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West Elm Presidents’ Day sale starts today: Our top furniture deal picks

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West Elm


Furniture retailer West Elm is launching its Presidents’ Day sale today and we’ve discovered some awesome deals on some of its most popular furniture pieces. Act now to get up to 60% off rugs, up to 50% off modern furniture for your living room and up to 40% off bedroom furniture and bedding. Plus, if you use code EXTRA15 at checkout, you’ll get an extra 15% off on select clearance items. 

The West Elm Presidents’ Day sale is the perfect opportunity to give the favorite rooms in your home a facelift with some stunning new furniture pieces. Read on for our top Presidents’ Day furniture deal picks at West Elm, or tap the button below to head straight to the West Elm sale.


Osborn sofa: $1,280 and up (Up to 20% off)

Osborn Sofa

West Elm


This stunning sofa is available in two sizes (82-inches or 92-inches) in your choice of almost 40 fabric styles representing a wide range of colors.

Right now, select fabrics and colors are up to 20% off. The starting sale price of this couch is $1,280, but this might increase based on your fabric and color selection.

The couch features a kiln-dried engineered wood frame; plastic shadowline support legs in a black finish; high-gauge sinuous spring and webbed cushion support; and the cushions have fiber-wrapped, high-resiliency polyurethane foam cores.

The 82-inch version of the coach measures 82 x 39.5 x 29 inches. It comfortably fits two adults. Allow up to five weeks for delivery.


Mid-century 8-drawer dresser: $1,599 (Save $100)

Mid-Century 8-Drawer Dresser

West Elm


Made from kiln-dried, sustainably sourced wood, this beautifully crafted, eight-drawer dresser measures 59 x 18 x 43.1 inches. It comes in three colors: acorn, pebble or cerused white. The varied drawer sizes allow you to stow everything from clothes and bedding to accessories.

We love the mid-century look of this dresser, with its tapered legs, angular base and beveled front edges. This dresser is part of West Elm’s mid-century furniture collection, which also includes a closed nightstand, bed, storage bed, open nightstand, six-drawer dresser, side tables, an armoire and a matching mini desk.

Whether you enhance your bedroom with just one piece or take advantage of the entire collection, you’ll love the craftsmanship and timeless elegance that this collection offers.

Best of all, most of the other pieces in the mid-century collection are also on sale, so you can put together a cohesive new look at a great price.


Airy Cotton Voile solid quilt and shams: $100 (33% off)

Airy Cotton Voile Solid Quilt & Shams

West Elm


Even if your bed isn’t from one of West Elm’s beautiful collections, you can still capture the charm and elegance that this brand is known for by upgrading all of your bedding. Right now, all of the pieces in the Airy Cotton Voile collection are on sale for up to 56% off.

Each piece is soft to the touch. It features a texture that we believe offers an elegant and timeless take on traditional cotton bedding. It has a lightweight look and feel with a subtle drape, while pick stitching gives it a minimalist tufted appearance.

The handcrafted, queen-size quilt shown here is currently 33% off, so you can purchase it for just $100. The collection is available in your choice of four colors, including alabaster, celadon, ocean and light sienna.


Weldon expanding dining table: $960 (20% off)

Weldon Expandable Dining Table

West Elm


This expandable dining table is made from an oak veneer over an engineered wood top. It can be expanded between 60-inches and 80-inches. 

For a limited time, you can add it to your dining room for just $960, which represents a savings of 20%.

The included drop-in leaf adds up to two additional seating spaces. Meanwhile, the tablet itself is held steady using wishbone-style legs that are made from solid wood (and all of the wood is kiln-dried for added durability).

With no leaf inserted, the table measures 60 x 39 x 29.5 inches. With the leaf, it measures 80 x 39 x 29.5 inches and can comfortably seat between four and eight people. West Elm offers many different dining room chair options that nicely coordinate with the table.


Modernist wood and lacquer media console: $1,499 (save $300)

Modernist Wood & Lacquer Media Console

West Elm


Available in two sizes — 68-inches or 80-inches, this entertainment center is on sale for $1,499 — that’s $300 off its regular price. 

This piece offers a sleek and sophisticated look that frames richly-grained wood in a white lacquer case. This provides a lovely contrast of matte and shine. Metal drawer pulls and pin legs finish off the entire media console’s look.

The smaller version of this media center features two side compartments, one middle drawer and one open cubby. It’s designed to accommodates a flatscreen TV that’s up to 60 inches wide.


Viv swivel chair: $559 (up to 20% off)

Viv Swivel Chair

West Elm


Available in dozens of fabric and color options, this Viv Swivel Chair starts at $559, but which fabric and color you select will determine its final price and the discount you receive (which will be up to 20% off).

When sitting in this chair, the channeled back wraps around you, while the plush cushioning provides maximum comfort. The swivel base rotates 360-degrees. The frame is made from kiln-dried pine and uses an engineered frame with reinforced joinery.

The chair measures 29.5 x 31 x 29.5 inches and can be the perfect addition to a living room, guest room or bedroom. The chair is part of West Elm’s popular Viv collection which includes a handful of luxury seating options.


Simple bed frame, queen-size: $359 (20% off)

Simple Bed Frame (Queen)

West Elm


Available in a twin, full, queen or king size — and in your choice of white or acorn — this “Simple” bed frame offers a minimalist design that can be used with or without an optional headboard. West Elm’s Shelter, Myla, Camilla, Emmett or Andes headboards are the perfect companion to the bed frame.

The frame itself (in queen) is now priced at $359, which is 20% off. It features a solid, engineered wood frame with mahogany veneer and includes solid pine support slats. It’s also designed to accommodate most standard mattresses, with or without a box spring.

Need a new mattress for this bed? Check out all the Presidents’ Day mattress deals available right now — you can save up to 50%.


Mid-century bookshelf: $599 (25% off)

Mid-Century Bookshelf

West Elm


This bestselling Mid-century bookshelf from West Elm will nicely integrate with the decor in almost any room, thanks to its elegant and timeless mid-century silhouette design. This piece works well as a traditional bookshelf or as a display unit. It’s made from kiln-dried, sustainably sourced wood.

For a limited time, this five-shelf bookcase is 25% off, so you’ll pay just $599. It measures 38 x 15.4 x 70 inches. When delivered, it will be assembled and set up in the room of your choice.




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How Vladimir Kara-Murza won a Pulitzer Prize from a Russian prison

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How Vladimir Kara-Murza won a Pulitzer Prize from a Russian prison – CBS News


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Kremlin critic Vladimir Kara-Murza won the Pulitzer Prize for columns he wrote while imprisoned in Russia. Here’s how he did it.

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Statements of Heritage Insurance to 60 Minutes

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Florida whistleblowers on insurance companies


Florida insurance carriers used altered hurricane damage reports, whistleblowers say

13:26

Prior to 60 Minutes’ Sept. 29, 2024 broadcast, which featured correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi’s report on Florida insurance, we reached out to Heritage Insurance for comment on our story, “After the Hurricane.”

The company responded to 60 Minutes with the following statement:



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Caitlin Clark, Napheesa Collier, Aliyah Boston talk WNBA season | 60 Minutes

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In June of 1984, Larry Bird and Magic Johnson met in the NBA Finals for the first time; the following week, Michael Jordan, Hakeem Olajuwon and Charles Barkley were drafted; and the league would never be the same…Forty years later, the WNBA arrives at a similar hingepoint. A rookie class, as good as advertised, has made a seamless transition from college to the pros, blending with established stars. Sports have a knack for bending stats to fit desired narratives, but the W’s growth figures astound. TV ratings have spiked 153% from last season—and that’s before the playoffs, which began last week… Gradually, then suddenly, this 27-year-old league has become a prominent player in the modern sportscape. 

Never mind her slick drives in traffic, the deadeye passes…

…the three-pointers like this.

Caitlin Clark: Hello.

Jon Wertheim: Hey. How are you? Jon.

Caitlin Clark: Caitlin. Nice to meet you.

Jon Wertheim: Good to see you… 

A few weeks ago in Indianapolis, we asked Caitlin Clark

Caitlin Clark: Ask me the hard hitting questions… 

…to pinpoint the signature moment of this signature season…and, well we didn’t see this coming… but neither did she.

Caitlin Clark: I remember we were in New York and Jonquel Jones set– a good screen on me, and my– I actually popped my eardrum, ruptured my eardrum just on a screen.

Jon Wertheim: Your eardrum?

Caitlin Clark: Yeah, it was actually, it was a really good screen by– by JJ. She’s a tremendous player, but I think that just kinda speaks to the physicality of the league. It’s just she kinda got me in the right spot. 

Caitlin Clark
Caitlin Clark

60 Minutes


Jon Wertheim: You smiled when you told that story. Good clean basketball play.

Caitlin Clark: It’s a good story. I think it’s something that I’ll always remember, like, coming into this league.

Jon Wertheim: Triple doubles, tho– those are all well and good, but it’s the eardrum rupture that– 

Caitlin Clark: That’s probably more memorable, honestly.

Then again, maybe it’s fitting…as this is the season the WNBA lowered its shoulder, made its presence felt, and expanded its reach.

These fans came to central Indiana from…Newfoundland, Canada. 

Jon Wertheim: And you’re here why?

Fan: Just to see the Fever game. 

Fan: Caitlin Clark.

Clark—22, in number and in age—just led the Fever to the playoffs…She’s unquestionably the league’s main attraction …but not the only one. Another rookie, Angel Reese, made her mark too. 

But the real breakthrough star of this WNBA season is…the W itself.

Building off a college season in which—unimaginable just a few years ago—the women’s championship game outdrew the men’s, W games can draw more eyeballs than NBA games do….League wide, attendance is up 48%.

In Minnesota, Napheesa Collier is this season’s Defensive Player of the Year…

She just dropped 80 points in the first two playoff games. Collier was drafted in 2019 and bridges two eras of the WNBA….we asked her about the difference this year.

Jon Wertheim: Home and away, you look into the crowds. What are you seeing?

Napheesa Collier: People, which is what we want. (laugh) It makes the game so, so fun. It’s like you’re sixth-man when you’re at home. And then when you’re away, you just can’t wait to silence the crowd. And that’s, like, the best feeling ever. 

Jon Wertheim: You figured out a way to benefit from a full crowd even when it’s rooting against you.

Napheesa Collier and Jon Wertheim
Napheesa Collier and Jon Wertheim

60 Minutes


Napheesa Collier: Yeah. It’s almost more fun (laugh) when you’re, like, in a packed arena with the other team. And you hit, like, a big three or a big block or something. And you hear them all go, “Oh.” That’s– I love that feeling.

Jon Wertheim: That’s every bit as motivating.

Napheesa Collier: It really is.

Silencing crowds? Not an issue when the WNBA debuted in 1997, eight teams paired with eight existing NBA teams. From the jump, franchises came and went—the Houston Comets, won the first four titles…only to fold. But amid the instability, the WNBA was giving a generation of girls aspiration and inspiration…. When Clark was growing up in Iowa, already running circles around the boys, her dad took her to see a WNBA game in Minnesota. She returned home hellbent on adding distance to her jump shot.

Caitlin Clark: Like begging my dad to, like, tear up some grass and pour more concrete so I could have an entire three-point line in my driveway. 

Jon Wertheim: Did that really happen? You– you extended your range–

Caitlin Clark: Oh yeah.

Jon Wertheim: –by dumpin’ more concrete?

Caitlin Clark: Yeah. ’cause it was, like, kind of slanted. Our driveway was, like, slanted, so I only had a three-point line on one side of the driveway. So… told my dad he had to tear up all this grass, and he did. 

Likewise, her Fever teammate, six-foot-five center Aliyah Boston—last season’s Rookie of the Year—had grand ambitions. 

Aliyah Boston: So when I first picked up a basketball, at first, I was like, “I want to go to college,” and that was really my goal. Until probably about sophomore year. I was like, “Yeah. Everything I do is for the number one pick.” 

Jon Wertheim: I love that. So– so making the WNBA, that’s– became, like, a secondary goal (laugh) at some point. You– you wanted to be the number one pick.

Aliyah Boston: I wanted to be the number one pick.

Aliyah Boston
Aliyah Boston

60 Minutes


She was. Then, this spring, came Clark, Reese, Cameron Brink and the 2024 vintage…

Jon Wertheim: Did you have the level of confidence that this draft class seems to?

Napheesa Collier: I don’t think anybody has (laugh) the level of confidence this draft class does. I think that’s what’s so amazing about them actually is they don’t act like rookies. It feels like nothing gets them down. And I think that’s amazing.

Jon Wertheim: Not a lot of impostor syndrome going on–

Napheesa Collier: Not a lot. No. 

New confidence. Old school hoops… This is the league of choice for the basketball purist.…all passing and precision.

Napheesa Collier: Obviously– the men are really fun. They’re very athletic. They can dunk and all those things. But if you’re a true fan of basketball, I think that ours is really interesting. Because we play it the right way. We play it really smart. Our– season is shorter also. So, you know, we go a lot harder I think in our games.

Twelve teams of 12 players. 144 of the world’s best…A’ja Wilson of the Las Vegas Aces—the league’s reigning champs—is a three-time MVP, including this season. Her game, equal parts grace and power. 

And there’s the O-G, Diana Taurasi, still doing this in her early 40s.

Caitlin Clark: A lotta these players are who I grew up watching on TV and wanting to be like, and now I get to play against them.

Jon Wertheim: Now they’re guarding you on the perimeter.

Caitlin Clark: Yeah, it’s pretty cool.

Clark herself already has a trademark shot: a jumper from just inside midcourt….the logo 3.

Caitlin Clark: Are you guys gonna make me shoot–in these nice clothes?

Jon Wertheim: We got confidence in you.

Caitlin Clark: That’s crazy. I’m not even warmed up either–

Caitlin Clark: I only shoot from back there in games if I’ve, like, made a couple. Then you get a free pass to, like, launch– launch a long three. 

Caitlin Clark and Jon Wertheim
Caitlin Clark and Jon Wertheim

60 Minutes


Jon Wertheim: So that’s a free pass with the coach? Or that’s a free pass with yourself, with your own basketball values–

Caitlin Clark: Both, both, both

Jon Wertheim: What would you say your range is?

Caitlin Clark: I don’t know. Sometimes I–I feel like I’m closer than I– than I am. Like, I don’t feel that far back, especially in a game. I don’t know. I kinda just lose sight of where I actually am, which is probably a good thing. 

Jon Wertheim: But you know you’re, like, one dribble (BALL) past mid-court sometimes.

Caitlin Clark: Yeah, couple dribbles past mid-court. 

Part of her process: gauging the distance… this isn’t like shooting a free throw. Logos vary court-to-court. 

Caitlin Clark: Like I would always wanna see how big the logo is. ‘Cause, like, some people have, like, bigger logos at center court, some have smaller ones. So it’s, like, if it’s pretty big, I can usually get there. I can probably get it here from here.

Jon Wertheim: All right.

Caitlin Clark: But I’m not– (ball) do you want me to try–

Jon Wertheim: Heck, yeah. (ball)

Caitlin Clark: OK, but you have to try second. 

Jon Wertheim: All right. 

Caitlin Clark: Let’s see. 

Jon Wertheim: All right. 

Caitlin Clark: This is my off day. You guys are putting me through a workout, it’s crazy. It’s crazy. I didn’t know I was signing up for this. There we go–

Jon Wertheim: Bang…

Caitlin Clark: Whoo. 

The bottom-of-the-net success has changed the W’s balance sheets. Corporate sponsors have arrived. 

So have the celebrities. The league recently signed a media rights deal that will pay $200 million a season, more than a three-fold increase….Cathy Engelbert is WNBA commissioner.

Jon Wertheim: The Caitlin Clark phenomenon. How do you describe it?

Cathy Engelbert: She’s clearly an unbelievable player, came in with an unbelievable following, has brought a lot of new fans to the league. If you look at our historic season around– our attendance, our viewership, Caitlin, Angel too, Angel Reese, Rickea Jackson, Cameron Brink. This class of rookies, we will be talking about them a generation from now. 

Jon Wertheim: I notice when you’re asked about Caitlin a lot, you– you bring up other rookies as well. 

Cathy Engelbert: No league’s ever about one player. That player could get hurt or whatever. So I think it’s just to give recognition that in sports, people watch for compelling content and rivalries. And you can’t do that alone as one person. 

Though the commissioner touts league rivalries, competition has also brought out a certain ugliness…. this season saw an onslaught of vitriol – often racist – targeting players…this in a league that is 75% black.

Here’s veteran star Breanna Stewart, earlier this month, welcoming new fans, but demanding they act respectfully.

A happier earmark of growth: The WNBA announced plans to expand from 12 teams to 16. And for the first time this season, players travel on charter flights.

Aliyah Boston: I mean, that’s amazing. I– I miss my points a little bit. It’s OK.

Jon Wertheim: Oh, your miles? Your air miles.

Aliyah Boston: I miss my little points.

Jon Wertheim: No Delta miles–

Aliyah Boston: My little miles.

Jon Wertheim: –this year.

Aliyah Boston: No Delta miles but it’s ok. I think this is great, too, especially for recovery. You’re able to get back on that plane, get right back home after a game. The women that came before us, it’s like, this is because of you guys. Like, you guYs worked all this and now here we are. We’re able to step into that. And it’s– it’s a blessing for us.

Napheesa Collier recalls the old days on the road, staying two-to-a-room.

Napheesa Collier
Napheesa Collier

60 Minutes


Napheesa Collier: We used to have to stay in, like, the team accredited hotels and now we can stay wherever. So a lot more five star hotels which is nice.

Jon Wertheim: Five star hotels flying private.

Napheesa Collier: I know. We’re living the life.

Jon Wertheim: Life’s good. You’re living the life.

Napheesa Collier: We’re like professional athletes or something.

The surge in success this season is about more than the basketball. The arrival walk to the locker room is now a fixture in pro sports— W players absolutely own this space…social media rocket fuel that engages fans. Players love it, Caitlin Clark included. 

Consistent with the life cycle of other successful pro sports leagues, the players are done taking one for the team… They now want to get paid. Note the upcoming collective bargaining negotiations between the league and the players…A rookie salary for the 42-game season? $76,000. Base salary for the MVP? $200,000…Yet, the median NBA player salary this season: roughly $12 million.

Jon Wertheim: You talk about this growth and these ratings numbers. What’s a fair salary?

Aliyah Boston: I mean, someone like me, I love multiple commas just because, like, we deserve it. That’s– we come in here night in, night out. We work hard. You see the viewership numbers up. You see everything up. I mean, I’m– I’m all for it, ’cause I love a comma.

Jon Wertheim: Like a comma in that salary.

Aliyah Boston: Yeah.

As a union leader, Napheesa Collier will be at the bargaining table….The NBA shares revenues with its players roughly fifty-fifty and she wonders: is the W willing to do the same? As for commas?

Napheesa Collier: Of course, that would be obviously amazing. I don’t know how realistic. Like, that is obviously the goal. And I hope that we can get there. 

Jon Wertheim: How much should we compare NBA and WNBA?

Napheesa Collier: We’re not asking for the same salaries as the NBA. What we’re looking for is rev shares. They’re making that because of rev shares. And so that’s what we’re wanting. That’s how we close that gap.

Jon Wertheim: How we’re sharing that pie.

Napheesa Collier: Yeah, how we’re sharing it.

Meantime, building on this watershed season, the women of the WNBA will keep shooting their shot. 

Caitlin Clark: There we go.

Jon Wertheim: Bang. You knew that when it left your hands?

Caitlin Clark: I know when I’m gonna miss–I know when I’m gonna make it. The worst is when it feels good and you still miss–

Jon Wertheim: But you know as soon as– soon as it leaves your fingertips.

Caitlin Clark: If it feels good, yeah. So, like, if I miss it and it feels good. Like, that’s fine.

Jon Wertheim: You’re OK with that.

Caitlin Clark: You feel good about your shot, yeah.

With that as encouragement, from this season’s Rookie of the Year, we finally gave in. 

Caitlin Clark: I think you have to go now. Come on. Let’s see if you can get it there–

Jon Wertheim: Two more, two more. You know, I have no legs.

Caitlin Clark: No, I feel confident. Let’s see.

Jon Wertheim: I’m wearing this jacket.

Caitlin Clark: Oh.

Jon Wertheim: Uh, terrible.

Caitlin Clark: That’s not bad. Get it there. 

Jon Wertheim: Oh my god. 

Caitlin Clark: You got to jump. 

Jon Wertheim: Tight rims.

Jon Wertheim: I’m tellin’ you.

Caitlin Clark: No. (laugh) I think that might just be you, honestly.

Produced by Nathalie Sommer. Associate producer, Kaylee Tully. Broadcast associate, Elizabeth Germino. Edited by Craig Crawford.



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