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Shopping season off to strong start

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Decked out in her shopping gear, Sheryl Kinsey, front, of West Richland, takes her first haul to the car with her granddaughter Elizabeth Reed, left, 16 months, daughter Chrissy Reed, of West Richland and daughter Melissa Kinsey of Kennewick at Columbia Center Mall in Kennewick, Washington, Friday, November 23, 2012. (Photo by Kai-Huei Yau/Tri-City Herald/MCT)

(MCT) — Opening their doors earlier than ever for Black Friday paid off for retailers as shoppers mobbed malls thick with sales, snapping up electronics, toys and other deals.

Despite the chaos, early signs point to a blockbuster shopping day for merchants — with stores raking in even more than the record $11.4 billion for Black Friday they reported last year. More comprehensive numbers are expected Sunday.

“Overall, it was a smash hit,” said Britt Beemer, a retail expert at America’s Research Group who has been tracking holiday sales nationally for more than three decades. “In all the years I have been out, I have never seen such crowds in my life.”

Target, Sears and the Disney Store reported a surge in customers. Wal-Mart said it was the retail behemoth’s best Black Friday sale ever. Mall operators saw long lines, and shoppers scooped up even some full-price items as well as bargains in stores and online.

The shopping frenzy cheered merchants and Wall Street, which enjoyed a big boost Friday.

Protests erupted over working conditions at dozens of Wal-Marts nationwide, including one that led to the arrest of nine people blocking a street in Paramount, Calif. And two people were shot in what police said was a scuffle over a parking spot at a Wal-Mart in Tallahassee, Fla.

Bargains continue through Sunday as an estimated 147 million shoppers are expected to hit the malls over the long weekend. Customers said they liked what they saw and took their enthusiasm straight to the cash register.

“You can’t miss out on that deal, man!” said Robert Perez, 26, who skipped Thanksgiving dinner altogether to buy two televisions at a Target in Glendale, Calif., for $147 each, a $103 discount for each TV.

“If I stayed at home eating turkey, I would have told myself, ‘I could have gotten the TVs,’ ” he said.

Lauren Sweeney, 31, of Whittier, Calif., hit the Third Street Promenade in Santa Monica, Calif., on Friday morning, zooming through seven stores in less than four hours for clothes and gifts for co-workers and family. The sales director, who was strategically shopping with her sister, mother and stepmother, said she was more confident in the economy and planned to splurge more on Christmas presents.

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