Tory Johnson is presenting a new batch of GMA Deals & Steals summer solutions that begin at $20 and include discounts as large as 67% off, available on GMADeals.com while supplies last.
Shoppers will find name brands among the markdowns — the page highlights NYDJ and Pom Pom London — and all of Johnson’s Deals & Steals are collected at GMADeals.com. The promotion is positioned as limited: offers start at $20, the steepest advertised discount is 67% off, and the deals run only while inventory remains.
“We have exclusive "GMA" Deals & Steals on summer solutions,” the promotional copy notes, and the page makes clear that purchases through the shopping links will result in a commission payment to ABC and to Tory Johnson. Visitors can email help@gmadeals.com for assistance with a deal.
On the date of publication of the Good Morning America article, GMA Deals & Steals offered these summer solutions starting at $20; shoppers who click the links on the listed date(s) will receive the savings the page displays. The shopping links leave ABCNews.com and GoodMorningAmerica.com and are operated under different terms and privacy policies, the sale page warns.
The mechanics matter because the promotion is tightly constrained. There are no rain checks, and no back orders are available unless specified by the individual vendor. Shipping rates quoted on the sale are valid in the continental U.S. only, and the page cautions that prices may change from the date of publication.
That combination — steep discounts, limited stock and strict fulfillment terms — creates a practical tension for buyers. A marked item can disappear if inventory runs out; a deal listed at $20 could be gone the next hour, and the sale does not promise restocking or a pre-order option unless a vendor explicitly offers it. For customers outside the continental U.S., shipping terms may add cost or make an order impractical.
The commercial relationship is also explicit. The shopping links are affiliate-style: ABC and Tory Johnson will receive a commission for purchases made through them. That is disclosed on the deal page and is part of how this kind of television-promoted retail operates — the program highlights merchandise, supplies a pathway to buy, and receives compensation when sales follow.
For anyone planning to buy, the practical steps are straightforward. Use the links on GMADeals.com on the listed date(s) to capture the advertised price, check vendor notes for any limited exceptions to the no–back-order rule, and factor in that shipping estimates apply only to the continental U.S. If a problem arises, email help@gmadeals.com for assistance.
The clearest conclusion is also the simplest: these GMA Deals & Steals summer offerings are genuine discounts on recognizable brands, but they are exactly the kind of limited, time-and-stock-bound promotions that reward speed. If a shopper wants a specific NYDJ or Pom Pom London item at the advertised price, they should move quickly — the sale’s terms leave little room for delay or guarantee.




