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Amazon Prime Day sales kick off

Posted at 7:23 PM, Jul 11, 2016
and last updated 2016-07-11 19:23:42-04

Happy Amazon Prime Day.

Like New Year’s Eve fireworks displays, Amazon’s second annual global Prime Day will be rolling out in different countries as midnight strikes.

The 24-hour sale kicked off in Japan. The company’s effort to stir up summertime shopping mania is offering deals in 10 countries on a wide variety of products — electronics, kitchen appliances, jewelry, apparel. Lots of stuff.

In Japan, Amazon’s Fire TV stick and tablets are on sale, along with toys like Lego products. Pasta sauce costs ¥340 or $3.31.

In addition to Japan and the United States, the 24-hour sale is being held Tuesday in the U.K., Spain, Italy, Germany, France, Canada, Belgium and Austria. The deals go live at midnight local time in each country.

In the U.S., Prime Day starts at 3 a.m. ET since Amazon is headquartered in Seattle, which is three hours behind the East Coast.

Amazon previewed some of the thousands of deals that will go on sale in America.

U.S. customers will find steep discounts on TVs, including a Samsung Curved 55-Inch 4K Ultra HD Smart TV ($649.99), a 32-inch Roku Smart TV ($119.99) and a 32-inch LED TV ($99.99).

Amazon is also slashing prices on its own products in the U.S., including the Fire tablet, Echo, Fire TV and Fire TV stick.Toys from Nerf, Barbie and Fisher-Price will be discounted up to 50%.

Only Amazon Prime members qualify for Prime Deals. However, shoppers can sign up for a free 30-day trial membership. (Don’t forget to cancel before the 30 days are over if you don’t want to pay the $99 annual fee.)

Shoppers with an Echo device can use Amazon’s voice-command assistant Alexa to make purchases. Alexa users will also have access to exclusive promotions and can get $10 off their first purchase of at least $20 when they use the device.

Amazon launched Prime Day last summer to celebrate its 20th year in business. The inaugural sale brought in record global sales. On average, customers ordered 398 items per second, according to the company.

Some customers grumbled last year about the sale’s inventory levels as deals sold out fast. Others used the hashtag #PrimeDayFail to vent about product selection.

Amazon said it has worked with its vendors to beef up inventory this year. The Prime Day inventory of televisions will be twice as big as Black Friday and Cyber Monday combined.

But that doesn’t mean popular sale items — like TVs– will last. “They will sell out fast this year,” Amazon spokeswoman Julie Law said.

Amazon isn’t the only one offering hefty deals this week. Walmart announced Monday it will offer free shipping on every online purchase through Friday along with deals on electronics, apparel and some Apple products.