Categories: Entertainment

Meet the man who scammed Ronald McDonald

Imagine going out for a burger and coming home with $1 million. That’s the tantalising prize McDonald’s offered its US customers in the ‘90s, and who could resist, right? But when you play and play and never seem to win big, it can start to feel like the game is rigged.

Of course, you know it isn’t. Or is it?

The answers to all these questions have been laid bare in McMillion$, HBO’s six-part documentary series about the McDonald’s Monopoly scam, which is now streaming on Showmax.

The hit series is #26 on Rotten Tomatoes’ Best TV of 2020 So Far list, with a 87% critics rating – making the highest rated true crime series on the list according to Showmax.

“In 1989, McDonald’s decided to do something fun with their marketing strategy. To pull off their ambitious plan, they brought in marketing experts Simon Marketing, who developed a Monopoly game with a lucky ticket system that put customers in line to win anything from free food to $1 million.

“It was the fast-food mega-franchise’s most successful promotion ever and ran for years in countries across the world. But in the US, from the game’s inception to 2001, there were almost no legitimate winners. And yet, McDonald’s paid out million$ in prizes.”

Mcmillion$ tells the story of the biggest scam in the history of fast food which ran for over a decade, had links to organised crime and netted $24 million worth of illegal profits. But it wasn’t until the FBI received an anonymous tip-off in 2001 that anyone began to suspect something was rotten over at McD’s.

When the FBI started their investigation, they had no idea how big the case would become, but as connections between the prize winners turned up one after another, they began to seem less and less coincidental.

And one name kept cropping up: Uncle Jerry.

“Jerry Jacobson, an ex-cop turned security officer and the head of security for Simon Marketing, seemed to be at the centre of it all. Of course, pulling off a scam on this scale takes at least a few accomplices, but finding an ‘associate’ or two – or even 53 – isn’t too hard when you’re dangling a guaranteed prize-winning ticket.”

Dogged and unorthodox investigative work, undercover sting operations and fake interviews turned up a network of co-conspirators from ordinary folks to psychics, strip club owners, shifty ex-cons and even the Mafia.

The events of the scam and how it was uncovered are narrated by the participants in the case along with archival footage and exclusive firsthand accounts from the FBI agents who brought down the scheme, as well as McDonald’s execs who were themselves defrauded, the lawyers who tried the case, and the culprits and prizewinners who profited from the complicated scam, as well as the people who were often unwittingly duped into going along with the ruse.

Disappointingly, the trial for the Mcmillion$ scam ended up being far less sensational than expected due to its start date – 10 September 2001 – just one day before the 9/11 attacks, which ended up dominating news headlines for months thereafter.

The series is executive produced by Mark Wahlberg, Emmy-nominee Stephen Levinson, who produced Ballers, and Archie Gips, who is responsible for celeb doccies like Wahlburgers, Braxton Family Values, Katy Perry: Part of Me, and Justin Bieber: Never Say Never.

Click here to watch McMillion$ on Showmax.

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By Citizen Reporter
Read more on these topics: CrimedocumentaryMcDonalds