Talk:Mega Millions

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If I purchased 176 million tickets am i guaranteed to win 376 million and pay taxes on profit only? This would be a bad deal only if you have to split it with more then 1 person?

True. In theory you could do that. However, lottery regulations state that you must fill out each little slip by hand! An Australian businessman tried to do this when the Australian jackpot hit astronomical levels, but couldn't get all of them filled out in time. Google it, and I think you'll find something. If you have any questions, please contact me at my talk page. Ian Manka 04:39, 7 March 2007 (UTC)
The cash prize is only 220 million. So you would be laying out 176 million to win 44 million more, which will be reduced to about 25 million after taxes. This is assuming you do not split with anyone. If you do split with someone, which is not unlikely, you immediately take a 66 million dollar loss. This is a terrible strategy... and if you had $176 million and really wanted$44 million more, I am sure you could do it more easily with investments. 68.36.197.244 06:12, 7 March 2007 (UTC) edit: my numbers are off slightly because your buying all those tickets would cause the jackpot to grow. It is still negative expectation due to the split. And as said above, youd have to hire 100s of people to buy all those tickets.

In 1992 an Australian syndicate ("International Lottery Fund") consisting of 2,500 investors really did buy the state of Virginia's U.S.$27 million lottery, which at the time used a five-ball (possibly a six-ball) system which kept the odds at around 7 million to one, buying lottery tickets for about 5 million of the 7 million possible number combinations. The syndicate won the lottery, but the state of Virginia refused to pay, and took the case to court. The state lost their case. The state paid the syndicate their lottery winnings, and then changed the state's lottery rules to prevent buyouts like that from happening again simply by (a) limiting the number of tickets that a purchaser could buy at any one time, (b) requiring that all tickets be personally purchased at any point where the state's lottery tickets were sold. To buy the Virginia lottery, the syndicate used teams of ticket-buyers, giving those buyers sheets of lottery numbers that they were to use to fill out and buy lottery ticket cards. Additionally, according to an article in the March 3, 1992 Milwaukee (Wisconsin) Journal, the sydicate purchased a large block of tickets directly from the "Farm Fresh" convenience store chain (a Virginia state lottery ticket vendor) by giving them a check for U.S.$ 3 million, essentially buying the tickets "in bulk". K. Kellogg-Smith (talk) 12:07, 30 March 2012 (UTC)

I did a little assessment of this, you'll be pleased to know.

If you purchased 176 mil tickets, based on the statistics from this page, you would win $493,711,741 including all other tiers assuming you took it as a straight one time payment (from an investment of$175,711,536). This would yield a headline return (profit) of $318,000,205 (that being 493,711,741 - 175,711,536). However, if the jackpot was shared with another player, your return would be$87,000,205. If the Jackpot was shared 3 ways, your return would be $10,000,205 (which hardly makes it worth the effort, once you take into account a cost loading of say$0.10 to for time to purchase each ticket (17.5m) you'd actually have a loss. If the Jackpot was shared 4 ways, your return would be making a headline "profit" of $-28,499,795 (ie, a loss), with actual loses of approx 17.5 mil more (once again, based on our 10c for administration and purchasing time in purchasing all these tickets). Obviously, if you were one of 5 winners, it would -$51,599,795. (and say an actual "profit" of -69,170,948 after admin cost).

These wins might also then be taxable. But for a before tax return, you would be looking as follows. 1 winner 170.98% ROI 2 winners 39.51% ROI 3 winners -4.31% ROI 4 winners -26.22% ROI 5 winners -39.37% ROI

Before taking into account taxation, but including the cost of purchase and estimated administrative burden. Which means, it would be quite a long punt, as even without rules prohibiting such behavior (or at least making it difficult), you only really stand a chance to not lose if you are the only winner, or only share the jackpot with one other (which when the jackpot is very high (ie, heavily advertised) is virtually impossible).

If you were wanting to do this, you would probably do it in Pennsylvania where there is no state tax on lottery wins (my examination shows most states levy a 4-7% tax) (California is the same - except california doesn't pay fixed amounts for the other classes of wins but rather based on a % which (for a big purchase game would be less ideal most likely).

US Federal taxes of say between 25- 35% would apply on the profits.

I probably don't have to say this, but the effect of the purchasing a randomised "multiplier" of 2, 3, or 4x for 2x the stake, doesn't make matters better. It makes the ROI much worse.

By comparison, the ROI paying twice the stake to get the multiplier (using the odds as shown on the page) is:

1 winner 58.09% ROI 2 winners -7.64% ROI 3 winners -29.55% ROI 4 winners -40.51% ROI 5 winners -47.08% ROI

Ergo, it's a bum deal.

21:41, 31 March 2012 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.179.32.125 (talk)

Probability

I have a question. It says the mega ball is numbered one through 46, therefore the odds of getting only the mega ball correct should be 1:46, but it is listed as one in 75. Am I missing something? Im not going to edit it myself, since Im not sure if I'm missing something.

1 in 75 is the odds of getting JUST the mega ball with no other numbers, as in you have no regular numbers match and the mega ball matches. Getting the mega ball with another number (or more) is worked into the odds for the other combinations which is where the 1 in 46 odds "go". Hope that makes sense. Gront 23:19, 30 December 2006 (UTC)

Exactly, The 1 in 75 odds quoted are the odds of winning $2, or the odds of matching ONLY the Mega Ball.Ahussey 16:55, 11 February 2007 (UTC) I don't understand where the number "75" comes from. What's the mathematical formula? Because there are 46 mega balls, the odds of making it alone should 1 in 46. 61.9.126.41 The number "75" comes from the fact that for every 75 tickets you buy, on average 1 will qualify for the mega ball only prize.. It cannot be 1 in 46 because some of the tickets that match the mega ball will also match more numbers and qualify for a higher prize. 68.36.197.244 09:10, 5 March 2007 (UTC) Ok, then I have a new question, how the heck did they come up with the odds of hitting the mega millions as 1 in 175,711,536? Since you have to pick 5 different numbers from 1-56 and then 1 number from 1-46, shouldn't the odds be 1 in 21,085,384,320 (56 * 55 * 54 * 53 * 52 * 46)? Actually this comes down to figuring out how they got the 1 in 3,904,701 for the non-Mega Ball hit since that is 175.7 Million / 46. Help me out here? BTW - for those wondering about the 1 in 75, that is 1 in 46 * the odds of NOT hitting any other number.ronb 3:33, 6 March 2007 (UTC) • The reason is that the order of the first 5 numbers doesn't count, because they're always reordered to ascending order. So if the balls come out as 1 2 3 4 5 | 6, that's the same as 2 1 5 4 3 | 6. You were calculating ${}_{56}P_5 \times 46 = 21085384320$ when really you should be calculating ${}_{56}C_5 \times 46 = 175711536$ Hope that helps. (maybe the jackpot calculation should go in the article?) — jmorgan (talk) 19:59, 6 March 2007 (UTC) And for those who don't have a mathematics degree, the above statement breaks down to this: Because there are 56 numbers (which can be used only once) on the Pick 5 side of the equation and only 5 slots to fill (with the order of the numbers being drawn inconsequential), the equation becomes 56x55x54x53x52 divided by 5x4x3x2x1 times 46 or 458377920/120 x 46 = 175711536. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.242.46.108 (talk) 18:30, 29 March 2012 (UTC) • Doesn't require a math degree, that's a Probability 101 question. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 205.232.191.16 (talk) 16:43, 30 March 2012 (UTC) The numbers are correct for the probability but are not right if they are labeled odds. See the definition of Odds. I am changing the title of the column to Probability to make the article more correct. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 198.190.9.225 (talk) 15:27, 9 June 2008 (UTC) Income Tax In the intro Laws and regulations vary slightly and are generally governed by the applicable laws in the state where the ticket is sold. Mega Millions winnings are generally exempt from :state income tax in California, New Jersey, Texas, and Washington. In the next section Mega Millions winnings are exempt from state income taxes in California and New Jersey. Presumably the intro is correct, and the other sentence doesn't mention the other states, but I don't know for sure. Regardless one of the sentences should be removed. --CVaneg 23:57, 21 July 2005 (UTC) Texas doesn't have state income tax (for anything). California exempts lottery winnings from state income tax. Don't know about the other states.Gront 23:19, 30 December 2006 (UTC) I don't believe Washington has a state income tax, either. 69.42.13.45 (talk) 06:32, 14 March 2012 (UTC) The most difficult lottery game to win in the world? The odds of winning the jackpot in Powerball are 1 in 146,107,962. But the odds in winning the jackpot in Mega Millions are 1 in 175,711,536. Is it true to say that Mega Millions is the most difficult lottery game in the world in terms of making the jackpot prize? I don't know any lottery game that has more odds. 61.9.126.41 Yes, the jackpot odds of Mega Millions are steep. However, the overall odds are 1:40. Mega Millions actually is a much better game than, say, New York Lotto (terrible payout) or Massachusetts Megabucks (still no cash option). 216.179.123.146 13:52, 27 April 2007 (UTC) March 2007/Protection I suggest that this article be protected until the drawing after the current jackpot ($370/ possible 470 million).

Who won it? Was it Ed Nabers? Did I spell his name correctly? Moonwalkerwiz 01:08, 8 March 2007 (UTC)
Is it just me or do some of you also feel profound jealousy towards winners of lotteries. Life isn't fair!!! On the other hand, I heard somewhere that 90% of lottery winners end up with major family problems, mental issues, etc... so I guess thats our silver lining. The thrill only can last for so long... 67.112.122.163 05:12, 8 March 2007 (UTC)

Minors winning lottery prizes

Many US jurisdictions allow minors to receive lottery tickets as gifts, although of course all US lotteries have a minimum age to purchase them, which is 18 for all Mega Millions states, while a few of the MUSL/Powerball lotteries have higher minimums. An exception is Virginia, whose lottery prohibits minors from winning (now, what if an underage person finds a Virginia Lottery jackpot winning Mega Millions ticket?) 216.179.123.110 13:53, 16 May 2007 (UTC)

Odds for the second prize?

I can't get the same answer as the odds for the second prize as listed (all 5 numbers but not the mega ball.) This should be the number of possible winning tickets out of the total number of tickets. So, Combin(5,5)*Combin(45,1) for the 5 correct numbers and the 1 wrong mega ball. That comes out to 45 possible tickets. 45/175,711,536 is about 1 in 3,904,700.80. So the odds as listed are off by 91. Molybdenum1 14:52, 17 May 2007 (UTC)

791 was just a typo. Why didn't you fix it to 701 yourself, you were right. 68.36.197.244 04:30, 9 June 2007 (UTC)

Non-jackpot Prizes

Like most lotteries in America, the jackpot prize in Mega Millions is taxable. Meaning if you win it and select lump sum payment, approximately half of it will taken as tax. Are the prizes other than the jackpot also taxable?202.69.172.203 09:38, 21 May 2007 (UTC)

ALL lottery prizes in the US are taxable (including wins under $600.) You have to pay tax(es) on all winnings, whether they are in lump sum or annuity payments. You might be under the wrong assumption that "lump sum is less than the annuity"-the future payments include interest. Mega Millions, Hot Lotto, and Powerball cash option winners get the full present value of the annuity, paid in cash. 216.179.123.104 17:23, 21 May 2007 (UTC) The "full present value" of the annuity in cash is certainly "less" (numerically) than the total value of the annuity. However, the spending power is supposed to be equivalent. 68.36.197.244 04:34, 9 June 2007 (UTC) There are a number of games in the US where the cash option is a fixed percentage (in such cases always smaller) of the annuity, rather than a "floating percentage". In such games, a cash option winner is "gypped" since they do not receive the actual cash value (of the annuity.) The cash options in MM, PB, and Hot Lotto are always a "floating percentage" of the annuity value. 216.179.123.145 15:42, 16 June 2007 (UTC) 6 or 9? In billiards, the balls numbered 6 and 9 have a line at the bottom of the number looking like a parenthesis to avoid confusion between the two numbers. In Mega Millions, it is quite unbelievable how they're able to differenciate 6 and 9 without any extra markings on the balls.61.9.126.41 04:08, 2 June 2007 (UTC) You are right. I watched some videos of where the 6 and 9 are drawn, and the balls look identical to me: http://www.megamillions.com/winningpicks/last_25.asp • 6 = JavaScript:popupvid('video.asp?quality=high&date=5/15/2007') • 9 = JavaScript:popupvid('video.asp?quality=high&date=4/20/2007') My only guess is that the balls have some sort of orientation guide that I cannot see. Interesting question. 68.36.197.244 04:40, 9 June 2007 (UTC) I Tivo'd tonight's 11:00 drawing on ABC-New York DirecTV channel 86, ostensibly a high-def channel. In slow motion the balls (54, 5, 16, 49, 31, 19 - good luck!) each seem to have a tiny line of print under each number, using my imagination only slightly I can see "FIVE", "FORTY-NINE", etc. --CliffC 03:32, 20 June 2007 (UTC) <goes to check his tickets> When to choose cash/annuity I find it unfortunate NY and TX require Mega Millions players to have to choose either lump sum or annuity when they PLAY, instead of after they win. In these two states, jackpot winners who choose annuity are stuck with the annual payments. (All Powerball members allow the choice to be made after winning-to give winners a chance to get proper advice). 216.179.123.104 17:04, 10 July 2007 (UTC) • As of 9/15/2007, three of the last five MM jackpot winners have "chosen" annuity; normally, especially for Powerball, the choice is overwhelmingly for lump sum. This is disturbing news. I get the feeling that TX (its two most recent MM "winners" were for annuity) automatically defaults to "ANNUAL PAY" (this also applies to Lotto Texas) if the player makes no choice. What is especially sad is that one of the 8/31/2007 winners (two cash; the other two the wrong way) are two brothers; looking at their picture, they are obviously not young men, and even though they made the choice (two weeks) after winning, after having a chance to get prudent financial, legal, etc advice, they chose the 26 annual payments. Maybe MM needs to change the annuity to be like PB's (30 increasing annual payments) to discourage players/winners from choosing annuity, and to make$400m-$500m jackpots more likely. At least Rev Bunky in Maryland and the New Jersey winners did choose the cash. I'm concerned that one day, MM and PB will try to outdo each other to the point where either or both will make second prize (5+0) a "lifetime" annuity, instead of an all-cash prize. 70.107.41.96 14:32, 15 September 2007 (UTC) • You might be thinking of games such as MA Megabucks, which I believe is the only US lottery jackpot game that still forces winners to receive annuity payments in lieu of cash. Many scratch games also still have that problem. 216.179.123.146 17:38, 15 September 2007 (UTC) Winning numbers September 9,2014 Winning NJ Mega millions numbers are "10 39 52 57 74 mega ball 11 advertised value vs. actual value Edits of 12 January 2009 Hi, TVC 15. Your 17:07, 12 January 2009 edit summary didn't explain most of the changes that you made there. That edit restored some deficiencies in the article, which I had fixed earlier that day. If you have time, would you explain your reversion of the changes described in my edit summaries of 11:19, and 12:41, on 12 January 2009? I'm referring here to changes other than those related to the "advertised value vs. real value" discussion. Thanks, --LottsoLuck (talk) 21:53, 14 January 2009 (UTC) Hi LottsoLuck, thanks for your comment, and I see what you mean: [4]. There may have been a system glitch somewhere, perhaps because the edits were nearly simultaneous and may even have overlapped in time. In any event, I did not intend to make the changes that you are referring to, and I am sorry if I somehow caused them. Please feel free to restore them; if you prefer to revert the edit entirely, I will restore only the changes related to the advertised vs. real discussion.TVC 15 (talk) 22:16, 14 January 2009 (UTC) Yes, thanks; doing that revert sounds like the easiest way to handle this (well, certainly it's easier for me, but I think it shouldn't be burdensome for you). Then we can go forward on each of our specific points of interest. I just spent some time reviewing this and Powerball, and probably won't be able to do any new writing until the weekend. Since other edits might prevent a simple "undo" if I wait till then, I'll do that now. --LottsoLuck (talk) 08:26, 15 January 2009 (UTC) Why does 'Win for Life' and 'Lotto South' redirect here? There is a multi-state lottery game called Win for Life. The three participating states are Kentucky, Virginia and Georgia, with the drawings administered by the Virginia Lottery. Given that it does not appear to have anything to do with Mega-Millions (with Kentucky being a Powerball member state), why does Win for Life (and predecessor game Lotto South) redirect to the Mega Millions page? — SterlingNorth (talk) 12:44, 28 June 2009 (UTC) I took it upon myself to remove the redirect from Win for Life to here for the reason above. — SterlingNorth (talk) 13:17, 28 June 2009 (UTC) GA and KY are leaving WFL on January 30, 2011, replacing it with Decades of Dollars. VA also will be offering DoD. 207.210.134.83 (talk) 21:38, 18 January 2011 (UTC) Florida? This article mentions Florida joining the Mega Millions, when I'm pretty sure it has not. Check the Wikipedia Powerball Article. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.161.205.89 (talk) 05:07, 5 August 2009 (UTC) Assumption all Powerball States going to Mega Millions and vice versa Why is there the assumption all Powerball states are going to Mega Millions and vice version? Are there references or citations confirming these Lotteries are selling Mega Millions soon? IE... The Florida Lottery has not commited to selling Mega Millions and has no plans to do so at this time. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.121.179.67 (talk) 05:14, 10 February 2010 (UTC) record jackpots Global record for cash value jackpot 240 mil$ is not correct! In the UK there was a winner on 12 july 2011, he won 185 mil.€ or at that time 258.500.000 $taxfree cash. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 78.22.185.154 (talk) 09:46, 11 October 2011 (UTC) Edit request on 31 March 2012 The first line after the table in the Winning and Probability section reads: Overall probabilities: 1 in 306.11 for winning at least a$10 prize

I believe that the 1 in 306.11 statement is incorrect. I believe it should be 1 in 754.85.

There are 12 outcomes to the game, of which 6 outcomes do not result in a payoff of $10 or more. The losing outcomes (defines as payouts less than$10) are: a) 0 Regular, 0 Money Ball b) 0 Regular, 1 Money Ball c) 1 Regular, 0 Money Ball d) 1 Regular, 1 Money Ball e) 2 Regular, 0 Money Ball f) 3 Regular, 0 Money Ball

The number of times each can happen are: a) COMBIN(5,0)*COMBIN(51,5)*COMBIN(1,0)*COMBIN(45,1) = 105,707,700 b) COMBIN(5,0)*COMBIN(51,5)*COMBIN(1,1)*COMBIN(45,0) = 2,349,060 c) COMBIN(5,1)*COMBIN(51,4)*COMBIN(1,0)*COMBIN(45,1) = 56,227,500 d) COMBIN(5,1)*COMBIN(51,4)*COMBIN(1,1)*COMBIN(45,0) = 1,249,500 e) COMBIN(5,2)*COMBIN(51,3)*COMBIN(1,0)*COMBIN(45,1) = 9,371,250 f) COMBIN(5,3)*COMBIN(51,2)*COMBIN(1,0)*COMBIN(45,1) = 573,750

Total losing outcomes = 175,478,760

This is because footnote 25 lists a source that only gives the overall probability for winning any prize as 1 in 40, and does not list the 1 in 306.11 for winning at least $10. Done Thanks, Celestra (talk) 22:23, 31 March 2012 (UTC) Is it possible to put the correct mathematical probabilities in the "Winning and Probability" section below the table? The user Ohnoitsjamie amended the correct probability with a somewhat snide comment to referring to source citation 12. The problem is that he 1) misunderstood the problem and repeated an entry that is within the table -- incorrectly relaying the information because the entry below the table answers a different problem being asked; 2) pointed to a source which has *zero* relevance to the specific item (the MegaMillions site make no mention of the cumulative probabilities and should not be used as a source for that particular question). A subsequent edit is nonsensical as well. The original item, which had no source, was wrong. The corrected probability value has now been replaced a few times and the replacement entries are garbage, plain and simple. Both the user with the IP address of 206.248.158.184 and I have provided the correct number. What is the aversion to correct mathematical probability? — Preceding unsigned comment added by BigJoeDummy (talkcontribs) 20:13, 20 April 2012 (UTC) Megamillions and Powerball Needs attention: The Megamillions and Powerball table in Megamillions was missing some members as is the table presently in Powerball. Also, some of the dates differ in the tables. Which are correct? BiPolarCurious (talk) 14:02, 29 July 2012 (UTC) − == new mega oct13 / my own calculations / info == − − {| class="wikitable" − |- − ! mach !! winners !! prob. win: 1 in !! winners in % !! prize pool in %sales !! prize per winner − |- − | 51 || 1 || 258 890 850 || 0.00000039 || 32.58 || 84 337 935 (z) − |- − | 50 || 14 || 18 492 203.57 || 0.0000054 || 5.41 || 1 000 000 − |- − | 41 || 350 || 739 688.14 || 0.00014 || 0.68 || 5 000 − |- − | 40 || 4 900 || 52 834.87 || 0.0019 || 0.95 || 500 − |- − | 31 || 24 150 || 10 720.12 || 0.0093 || 0.47 || 50 − |- − | 30 || 338 101 || 765.72 || 0.13 || 0.65 || 5 − |- − | 21 || 547 396 || 472.95 || 0.21 || 1.06 || 5 − |- − | 11 || 4 584 573 || 56.47 || 1.77 || 3.54 || 2 − |- − | 01 || 12 103 359 || 21.39 || 4.68 || 4.68 || 1 − |- − | total(sum) || 17 602 844 || 14.71 || 6.80 || 50.00 || 7 − |} − − matrix 5/75 + 1/15 − − 1$ per line (combi)

− − (z) cash avg.prize & before tax

− − — Preceding unsigned comment added by Geertes62 (talkcontribs) 23:16, 20 July 2013 (UTC)

Creation Date

This article cites the Mega Millions as being created in 2002. However, for the longest time, I retained the first lottery ticket I ever played as a souvenir, A MEGA MILLIONS ticket bought in Georgia in 1999. It clearly said, "Mega Millions," at the top, and NOT, "The Big Game." I would produce it but I no longer have it (got rid of it about five years ago when I moved), and you would call it "original research" anyway. Because of this, I've always suspected some sort of 1984-esque rectification about the Mega Millions' history. Then, I saw this...

The unaired 8th episode of The Dana Carvey Show, originally set to air in 1996, but withheld from television entirely, never to be seen until the DVD was released. It mentions the Mega Millions way back in 1996. I'm calling bullshit on this 2002 you've stated. If you're truly neutral, you'll update your article to reflect this information. 50.130.11.182 (talk) 20:18, 12 May 2014 (UTC)

"If you don't do everything I want, you're not neutral / that proves you're biased / you must be part of a conspiracy" is not really a compelling argument. And "calling bullshit" is not the sort of dialog we engage in on Wikipedia.
Second, re your personal recollection of your ticket: Yes, WP:OR. Sources must be verifiable.
Third, re the Drew Carey show: There is no reason to think that the lottery game name used on the show was not made up by the show's writers. In fact, this is likely, as TV shows go to some trouble to not use names of real-world companies, institutions, people, etc. Or to put it the other way around, the presence of a lottery game called "Mega Millions" in a TV show is not proof of existence of a game of that name in the real world (any more than The Dick Van Dyke Show proves that there was a couple named Rob and Laura Petrie living in New Rochelle, NY at the time). Another possibility is that the name was used for some games here and there prior to 2002... and then dropped, and then in 2002, adopted by the current "multi-jurisdictional" purveyors of the game. i.e. re your ticket, we have no way of knowing if the "Mega Millions" game it was for was the same game, operated continuously from 1999 through 2002.
But still... there's no proof that they're not the same game, either. An approach that is far more likely to get a productive response might be:
"I distinctly remember owning a "Mega Millions" ticket bought in Georgia in 1999. And the Drew Carey Show, in its unaired 8th episode (viewable on the DVD set), also mentioned a "Mega Millions" lottery game; this ep was supposed to air in 1996! Perhaps these were not really the same game as the game described here, and it's of course possible that the game mentioned in the TV program didn't actually exist outside of the show at all... but it seems to me that these should be investigated, with a view toward possibly changing the 'origin date' given in this article."
See? Ask for help, in a spirit of cooperation. The wording you've used is more likely to get you ignored... at best Jeh (talk) 09:37, 6 June 2014 (UTC)
Well, forgive me for not placing blind faith in Wikipedia's self-professed objectivity. I just happen to know from experience that the stereotypical Wikipedian confirmation bias pretty much runs the show here. Why do you think I don't have an account and I'm generally adversarial to you guys? You have earned that from me. Don't tell me how I should word things. Earn my respect the same way you earned my disrespect. I don't talk to everyone this way.
Oh, and by the way, while an episode of a television show (Nice of you to go back and change the show I said it appeared on. That was honest of you) could possibly use a fake name for a lottery, the ticket I bought in 1999 was the one and the same Mega Millions this show is about. It was the biggest lottery jackpot of all time at the time, which is part of the reason why I bought it, and that, among other things, is how I know that the very same Mega Millions existed at the time. You call that original research, but if I bought a ticket then, it's verifiable through other means. You have faith in Wikipedia's objectivity and desire for accuracy? You find it.50.130.11.182 (talk) 03:17, 22 June 2014 (UTC)
It's amusing that you accuse others of confirmation bias while simultaneously claiming that you "know" something to be true, with no evidence offered but your own claims of your own memory. The unreliability of personal recall is exactly why WP demands WP:RS. As for the show name, that was a mistake on my part. I apologize for the mistake but your accusation of willful dishonesty is completely inappropriate. I'm disengaging here... Goodbye. Jeh (talk) 05:16, 22 June 2014 (UTC)