
Beat the heat with this early Prime Day deal on the Ninja CREAMi
New York Post may be compensated and/or receive an affiliate commission if you click or buy through our links. Featured pricing is subject to change.
Amazon just dropped big news for deal hunters: Prime Day 2025 is officially expanding to four full days, running July 8 through July 11, making this year's event double the shopping, double the savings, and double the shopping fun.
If you're asking when Amazon's Prime Day is or what happens on Prime Day, here's the rundown: it's Amazon's biggest sale of the year — and it's just around the corner.
But if you can't wait that long, good news, early Prime Day deals are already live! If you love the costly appliances like a Ninja Air Fryer for easy dinners or the Ninja CREAMi for ice cream, the products are officially marked down.
The Ninja CREAMi Ice Cream Maker is currently under $200, and it ships free in just two days with your Amazon Prime membership. Not a member? Start a free 30-day trial to unlock this deal and access all the hottest Prime Day savings early.
Amazon
This viral machine turns almost anything into ice cream, gelato, milkshakes, smoothie bowls, and more, with seven one-touch programs and total ingredient control. Keto? Vegan? Dairy-free? You're covered. And with a heatwave rolling in, there's no better time to chill out.
Not sure if you want to buy this TikTok-famous machine? Check out our firsthand review after putting it to the test. With seven one-touch programs and total ingredient control, it turns just about anything into ice cream, gelato, milkshakes, or smoothie bowls. And with how easy it is to use, why bother buying ice cream again, especially with recent Breyer's recalls?
So, is Prime Day a scam? No, and deals like this one say otherwise.
For over 200 years, the New York Post has been America's go-to source for bold news, engaging stories, in-depth reporting, and now, insightful shopping guidance. We're not just thorough reporters – we sift through mountains of information, test and compare products, and consult experts on any topics we aren't already schooled specialists in to deliver useful, realistic product recommendations based on our extensive and hands-on analysis. Here at The Post, we're known for being brutally honest – we clearly label partnership content, and whether we receive anything from affiliate links, so you always know where we stand. We routinely update content to reflect current research and expert advice, provide context (and wit) and ensure our links work. Please note that deals can expire, and all prices are subject to change.
Looking for a headline-worthy haul? Keep shopping Post Wanted.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
13 minutes ago
- USA Today
🕶️ Designer deals: Shop early Prime Day savings on Tory Burch sunglasses, Ray-Ban frames
🕶️ Designer deals: Shop early Prime Day savings on Tory Burch sunglasses, Ray-Ban frames During this time of year, I have one thing on my mind: Amazon Prime Day. The annual sales event, which takes place every year in July, is touted as Amazon's biggest sale of the year. And after Amazon confirmed that its 2025 Prime Day event will now take place over four days (as opposed to its usual two), this year's sale is primed—see what I did there—to be its biggest ever. While Prime Day 2025 doesn't officially kick off until July, in the days that lead up to the massive Amazon sale, shoppers can take advantage of early Prime Day deals on a number of items right now! You can now save on items from coveted Apple devices to Amazon best-sellers like the Waterpik Aquarius and even fashion staples like designer sunglasses. One category we're spotting lots of hot deals on is sunglasses. There are tons of sunglasses on sale at Amazon, all from top brands like Tory Burch, Ray-Ban, Oakley, Michael Kors and more. Be sure you take advantage of these limited-time summer discounts and shop the best early Prime Day sunglass deals below. Shop the best early Amazon Prime Day deals on sunglasses More: Amazon Prime for Young Adults is back! Do you qualify for the discount? Find out here More: Beat the summer heat with hot savings on Dreo fans at Amazon More: Top 10 best early 4th of July patio furniture sales to shop now When is Amazon Prime Day 2025? Amazon has officially revealed that the Prime Day 2025 sale will run from Tuesday, July 8, through Friday, July 11. The official Prime Day savings start at 12 am PT/3 am ET on Tuesday, July 8. Do I need to be an Amazon Prime member to shop Amazon Prime Day? Yes—an Amazon Prime membership guarantees you access to the deals. Amazon's July Prime Day sale favors members, as the event offers tons of special Prime-exclusive discounts on best-selling Amazon products. Plus, joining Prime helps guarantee you get other perks like fast shipping all year long, access to Prime Video, Prime Reading and Prime Gaming and more. How much does an Amazon Prime membership cost? New members can try one week of Amazon Prime benefits for just $1.99. Prime then costs $14.99 per month or $139 per year.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
PUCO Approvals Relieve Bloom Energy of The Regulatory Burden, Says Morgan Stanley
Bloom Energy Corporation (NYSE:BE) is among the 13 Best Hydrogen and Fuel Cell Stocks to Buy According to Analysts. Morgan Stanley noted that Bloom Energy Corporation (NYSE:BE), American Electric Power, and data center clients Amazon Data Services and Cologix have all had their energy projects approved by the Public Utility Commission of Ohio. A bird's eye view of a power generation platform with a power plant in the background. This regulatory approval removes a significant overhang associated with commercial uncertainty and permits the projects to move forward as planned. Morgan Stanley maintained its Overweight rating on Bloom Energy Corporation (NYSE:BE) with a $30 price objective after the ruling. The certification strengthens Bloom Energy Corporation (NYSE:BE)'s strategic advantage in the clean energy market and removes a major barrier to developing partnerships with significant data center clients. Investor confidence in these transactions had traditionally been hampered by regulatory ambiguity. Bloom Energy Corporation (NYSE:BE) can now proceed with deploying its fuel cell-based energy solutions, designed for major energy users like Amazon and Cologix, following the Public Utility Commission's ruling. This development reinforces Morgan Stanley's optimistic stance and improves visibility into future revenue streams. While we acknowledge the potential of BE as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: 10 High-Growth EV Stocks to Invest In and 13 Best Car Stocks to Buy in 2025. Disclosure. None.


WIRED
an hour ago
- WIRED
Amazon Rebuilt Alexa Using a ‘Staggering' Amount of AI Tools
Jun 18, 2025 2:29 PM From writing code to testing the new Alexa+, Amazon engineers used generative AI throughout the build process. We talk to Amazon's Daniel Rausch about the next version of the voice assistant. Daniel Rausch, vice president of Alexa and Echo for Amazon. Photo-Illustration: WIRED Staff; Photograph:Daniel Rausch, Amazon's vice president of Alexa and Echo, is in the midst of a major transition. More than a decade beyond the launch of Amazon's Alexa, he's been tasked with creating a new version of the marquee voice assistant, one that's powered by large language models. As he put it in my interview with him, this new assistant, dubbed Alexa+, is 'a complete rebuild of the architecture.' How did his team approach Amazon's largest ever revamp of its voice assistant? They used AI to build AI, of course. 'The rate with which we're using AI tooling across the build process is pretty staggering,' Rausch says. While creating the new Alexa, Amazon used AI during every step of the build. And yes, that includes generating parts of the code. The Alexa team also brought generative AI into the testing process. The engineers used 'a large language model as a judge on answers' during reinforcement learning processes where the AI selected what it considered to be the best answers between two Alexa+ outputs. 'People are getting the leverage and can move faster, better through AI tooling,' Rausch says. Amazon's focus on using generative AI internally is part of a larger wave of disruption for software engineers at work, as new tools, like Anysphere's Cursor, change how the job is done—as well as the expected workload. If these kinds of AI-focused workflows prove to be hyperefficient, then what it means to be an engineer will fundamentally change. 'We will need fewer people doing some of the jobs that are being done today, and more people doing other types of jobs,' said Amazon CEO Andy Jassy in a memo this week to employees. 'It's hard to know exactly where this nets out over time, but in the next few years, we expect that this will reduce our total corporate workforce as we get efficiency gains from using AI extensively across the company.' For now, Rausch is mainly focused on rolling out the generative AI version of Alexa to more of Amazon users. 'We really didn't want to leave customers behind in any way,' he says. 'And that means hundreds of millions of different devices that you have to support.' The new Alexa+ chats in a more conversational manner with users. It's a more personalized experience that remembers your preferences and is able to complete online tasks that you give it, like searching for concert tickets or buying groceries. Amazon announced Alexa+ at a company event in February, and rolled out early access to a few public users in March, though this was without the complete slate of announced features. Now, the company claims that over a million people have access to the updated voice assistant, which is still a small percentage of prospective users; eventually, hundreds of millions of Alexa users will gain access to the AI tool. A wider release of Alexa+ is potentially slated later this summer. Amazon faces competition from multiple directions as it works on a more dynamic voice assistant. OpenAI's Advanced Voice Mode, launched in 2024, was popular with users who found the AI voice engaging. Also, Apple announced an overhaul of its native voice assistant, Siri, at last year's developer conference—with many contextual and personalization features similar to what Amazon is working on with Alexa+. Apple has yet to launch the rebuilt Siri, even in early access, and the new voice assistant is expected sometime next year. Amazon declined to give WIRED early access to Alexa+ for hands-on (voice-on?) testing, and the new assistant has not yet been rolled out to my personal Amazon account. Similar to how we approached OpenAI's Advanced Voice Mode that launched in last year, WIRED plans to test Alexa+ and provide experiential context for readers as it becomes more widely available.