- Pepsi Billion Dollar Sweepstakes
The Pepsi Billion Dollar Sweepstakes was a contest, announced by
soft drink company Pepsi Cola onApril 10 ,2003 , beginning onMay 1 and ending onSeptember 14 , all of the same year. For the contest, Pepsi printed one billion special codes, which could be redeemed either on the Pepsi website or via postal mail, and of which onemillion were instant cash winners (eg a $20 instant prize). Of all the codes redeemed, which Pepsi estimated to be 200 million-300 million, only 1,000 were chosen in a random drawing to appear in a two-hour livegameshow -styletelevision special.On the evening of September 14, the final day of the contest, the now-defunct
WB network aired the special, entitled "Play For A Billion", and hosted byDrew Carey . The special had ten people picked from the audience out of the thousand who won the right to be competing on the special. The host would then offer some cash to the contestants to give them a choice-- take the money and run, or risk it by seeing if they were not the closest to the winning number. The players had to wait 10, 20, and eventually 30 seconds for each result. After the rounds were done, the last person left won $1,000,000 and a chance to turn the million into $1,000,000,000, the highest prize on any US game show (counting specials and lottery shows). The winner's six-digit number had to match the number that achimpanzee selected to win the grand prize. In the 2003 version, Richard Bay ofWest Virginia claimed the million-dollar guaranteed prize, but did not win the billion (his number was 2-2-8-2-3-8, the winning number was 2-7-8-2-3-8). The next year, Jon Kenney ofNatick ,Massachusetts , won a guaranteed million dollars, but like Richard, did not win the billion. That year's show was hosted byDamon Wayans andTom Bergeron Pepsi, unable to assume the risk of actually losing $1 billion, had an insurance company owned by Warrren Buffett's
Berkshire Hathaway , the largest stockholder in cola-rivalCoca-Cola , underwrite the contest, reportedly for a seven-figure premium.The $1 billion prize was an annuity to be paid in 40 annual payments as follows:
Years 1-20: $5 million each (subtotal: $100 million after 20 years)
Years 21-39: $10 million each ($290 million after 39 years)
Year 40: $710 million (balloon payment)
There was a cash option of $250 million if the billion-dollar prize were to be won. The guaranteed $1 million (see above) was paid in lump sum in both instances.
References
* "Money Magazine",
April 10 2003 , "Pepsi's billion-dollar monkey"
* "Money Magazine",September 4 2003 , "Pepsi's $1B chimp arrives"External links
* [http://money.cnn.com/2003/04/09/news/companies/pepsi_billion_game/index.htm Pepsi's billion-dollar monkey]
* [http://money.cnn.com/2003/09/04/pf/saving/pepsi_monkey_game/index.htm Pepsi's $1B chimp arrives]
* [http://pepsistuff.yahoo.com/ Pepsi Billion Dollar Sweepstakes]
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