Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A $5 million jackpot won by German Medina Zapata on a Premier 7’s scratcher purchased at a San Francisco liquor store. Many people can gamble or play games of chance without harm.
The top prize was fixed at $3 million; the minimum guaranteed prize was $1,750. While Big Spin Scratchers remained in circulation in 2009, winners who would previously have spun the wheel on The Big Spin had the option to spin the wheel—untelevised—as an alternative to going to the Make Me a Millionaire show, which succeeded The Big Spin.
The self-proclaimed “King of the $20 Scratchers” says it’s his biggest win so far. Lottery player lands huge jackpot in California. ‘Thought I scratched it wrong’
The Big Spin is the California Lottery's first television game show.. It ended with a fixed top prize of $3 million and a minimum guaranteed cash prize of $1,750. The total cash and prizes given in 2007 came out to $17,872,500, the most money given away in a game show that year, therefore being "the biggest money game show on Earth" as its introduction stated.
He won the top prize in the California Road Trip Riches game, officials said. Despite his million-dollar jackpot, Saelee plans to keep playing since lottery proceeds benefit California schools.
The remaining five each receive $2,000 and 500 Make Me a Millionaire scratchers (250 Make Me a Millionaire scratchers in Season 2). Millionaire pays a minimum of $10,000 with a jackpot starting at $1,000,000 and increasing by $200,000 each time it is not won.
A Visalia man won millions from California Lottery scratchers, officials announced Thursday. Humberto Corona Davalos of Visalia won $5 million, the largest prize possible on a scratcher ticket in ...
Lottery games with "lifetime" prizes, known by names such as Cash4Life, Lucky for Life, and Win for Life, comprise two types of United States lottery games in which the top prize is advertised as a lifetime annuity; unlike annuities with a fixed period (such as 25 years), lifetime annuities often pay (sometimes for decades) until the winner's death.