For Love or Money? One Couple Doesn't Have to Choose in This Lovely Spanish Lottery Ad

The lottery may not have much to do with fate, but it’s a lot like love—if you don’t play, you won’t win, says a new ad from Spain.

The three-and-a-half minute commercial for EuroMillions, the country’s national cash raffle, offers a twist on a classic romance—boy meets girl, boy chases girl, boy and girl win gigantic sum of money in long-shot gamble, boy and girl live happily ever after.

read more

New York Lottery Posts Fliers in Last-Ditch Search for Winner of Unclaimed $7 Million

The popular knock against the lottery is that you can play it, but you’re an idiot if you do, cause nobody ever wins. But a new campaign for the New York Lottery is about a different kind of problem—someone who actually won, but who’s yet to claim the $7 million prize, and almost a year later, is about to run out of time.

McCann New York has posted street fliers in Canarsie, the Brooklyn neighborhood that’s home to Milky Way Deli, where the winning ticket in a Cash4Life game last summer was bought. A sketch of the ticket and the headline “Have You Seen Me?” adorns one flier. A stick figure smiles dumbly on a second with the headline “Is This You?” The subtext of both is: Are you the fool who’s about to let seven figures slip through your fingers?

In other words, the whole thing is devious and hilarious because it’s playful and it also reinforces the perception that people actually win—and invites everyone who sees it to imagine how much smarter they would be if they did.

Of course, it doesn’t really seem like the New York Lottery’s heart is really in the mission of finding the lucky lost soul. The winner, whoever he or she is, bought the ticket last July 24 (and needs to come forward by the same date this year, or the money goes back into the pool). But the lottery only started its canvassing campaign yesterday (July 22)—and the super high production values of its posters pretty much say it all.

Maybe the whole thing is a grand hoax—and the organization has the really winner stashed away somewhere, to roll out at the last minute—or there’s no winner at all. Then again, none of that really matters in the end, because whatever $4 million lump sum pittance would be left after taxes still isn’t enough to live in New York anyway.

Gambling Debate Entangles Disney in Florida

Disney has long led the fight against the expansion of casinos in the state, but it also owns the Marvel superheroes, whose images appear on slot machines.

    

Giant Balls Float Down the River Thames in British Lottery Stunt

If you thought the giant rubber duck that drifted down the River Thames last year was a ballsy advertising stunt, check out the 26-foot-high, inflatable, lighted Lotto balls the National Lottery floated last week. Those are big balls. Very big balls. Each is the size of a double-decker bus, we're told in a YouTube video immortalizing the event. Each ball used 2,000 watts of light. Those are giant, electrified balls. Project manager David Chambers calls them "the biggest Lotto balls ever made." (I should hope so!) It took "a team of almost 30 people over 1,000 man-hours to get these balls ready," Chambers adds. Yes, adjusting big balls can be tricky. And: "We're going to use two tugs to take us from here, West India Dock, to the heart of the city." Two tugs, eh? Cheeky monkeys! (The campaign used the hashtag #giantballs, in case you thought it was just us.) The client's just lucky its massive balls didn't crash into a tour boat, or someone would've gotten the sack!