From Operation Varsity Blues to Theranos, I've got scam fatigue.
Like many, I'm still interested in conpeople cleverly wreaking havoc, but my desire to see every trickery turned into a miniseries has waned. Each week it feels like a new service is offering a new "too crazy to be true" tale of wrongdoing. It's why I've foregone a handful of recent true crime juggernauts, and haven't bothered to google older cases as of late. It's a scam-eat-scam world out there, with too many deceptions for the average viewer to catch up on. And yet...
It was the stuff of consumerist dreams, until the FBI discovered the thing was rigged.
Much to my chagrin, HBO's McMillions, premiering Monday,has reignited my fraud fervor, and left me wanting more scam docs than ever before.
The six-part docuseries examines the $24 million scheme that cheated thousands out of their chance to win big in a nation-wide promotional contest. It's an event many will have vague recollections of, but few have appreciated to its full complexity until now.
As those alive and eating french fries at the turn of the 21st century will recall, McDonald's Monopoly allowed customers to collect "properties" from food packaging and turn them in for prizes. The biggest winners (either snagging an "instant win" or matching a Park Place with the ever-elusive Boardwalk) could walk away with as much as $1 million.
It was the stuff of consumerist dreams, until the FBI discovered the whole thing was rigged. Someone, somewhere was hoarding the most sought after pieces, and McDonald's didn't know how they were doing it.
Spectacularly paced and instantly engrossing, HBO's McMillions starts with a tip from an anonymous caller. Viewers soon learn that the McScam almost went unnoticed, initially dismissed by investigators as a probable prank. But when Special Agent Doug Mathews (a rookie "bored" of studying health care fraud) took interest in the case, the story unleashed its wild and weird fury on him and the agency.
Serving as a de facto narrator, Mathews is an outrageously entertaining interview.
Instantly likable, the FBI Agent recounts the biggest case of his career with frantic enthusiasm. His and others' recollections are paired with silent reenactments of the investigation's most unusual moments: Burger and fry boxes pinned to evidence boards; multiple agents and suspects miraculously (and confusingly) sharing the same first name; Mathews walking into his inaugural meeting with McDonald's executives wearing a nugget-gold suit because why not.
The series mimics Mathews' sense of humor, accenting its bizarre subject with flippant on-screen text and appropriately befuddled producer comments. Snappy editing and a jazzy score make what could have been a dry re-telling into a nail-biting journey full of laugh-out-loud moments.
SEE ALSO: HBO's 'Avenue 5' charts a ballsy voyage to comedy's final frontierMcMillions alsouses a treasure trove of archival footage from the investigation, including numerous interviews with the fraudsters at its center, that are stunning to behold.
This show has more interesting characters than plenty of fictional worlds, with new, baffling people popping up every few scenes. If I didn't remember holding St. James Place in my hand at age 4 and adamantly believing that made me a millionaire, I wouldn't believe any of this was possible.
The merriment takes a backseat when appropriate, with certain moments pulling at heartstrings more than you'd expect. Like most true crimes, the McDonald's Monopoly fraud had real victims (not all of whom worked for the global fast food chain), and their stories betray fascinating information about the era in which this occurred. With the Clinton impeachment back in headlines and '90s fashion seeing another revival, a 2020 revisit to this particular crime is well-timed.
I've seen only the first three episodes of McMillions, so I can't tell you how this story ends — but it's off to one hell of a start. The end of episode 3 left critics on a cliffhanger, and not hunting down the answer for myself has been a test of wills.
As addicting as McDonald's itself, McMillionsis more than worth a watch. Suit up, strap in, and get fries with that because this is one six-week event scam fans shouldn't miss.
McMillions premieres on HBO Monday, Feb. 3 at 10 p.m. E.T.
Topics HBO
Inside Alice Munro’s Notebooks by Benjamin HedinJoe Rogan signs new $250 million, multiWild elephants get a lot less sleep than you doBetween the World and the Universe, a Woman Is Thinking by Sara NicholsonOld Friends by Devon BrodyWild elephants get a lot less sleep than you doAt the Great Florida Bigfoot Conference by Jason KatzWordle today: The answer and hints for February 6Doodle Nation: Notes on Distracted Drawing by Polly DicksonThe Ringo Starr of the Haiku Pantheon by Srikanth ReddyStory Time by Cynthia ZarinChasing It Down the Elevator Shaft to the Subconscious: Or, Getting Hypnotized by Jeremy ButmanWordle today: The answer and hints for February 5Pokémon Is All About Reading by Joseph Earl ThomasOn Being Warlike by Joyelle McSweeneyAmazon Echo device sale: Get up to 40% offDyson Airwrap deal: Get it for $479.99 at Best BuyThe Poetry of Fact: On Alec Wilkinson’s Moonshine by Padgett PowellWild Desire by Pedro Lemebel"Perfection You Cannot Have": On Agnes Martin and Grief by Cody Delistraty Make Me an Honorary Fucking Ghostbuster! by Samantha Irby Cooking with Varlam Shalamov by Valerie Stivers The Scientific Erotica Book Club by Tom Gauld Redux: My Definition of Loneliness by The Paris Review Viral TikTok eye massager deal: RENPHO Eyeris Eye Massager Redux: Poets on Poets by The Paris Review The ‘Lord of the Flies’ Family Book Club by Darin Strauss 8 moments of youth activism that have defined 2023 A Story in One Sentence by The Paris Review The Origins of Scandinavian Noir by Wendy Lesser Poets on Couches: Tess Taylor by Tess Taylor The Commute of the Future by Tom Gauld The Writer’s Obligation by Wayne Koestenbaum Quarantine Reads: The Book of Disquiet by Eddie Grace The Phony Warrior by Yoshiharu Tsuge CES 2024: 5 creepy or weird trends we're already seeing Classic Fiction with Binary Numbers by Tom Gauld Best smart home deal: The Echo Show 8 is on sale for a new all Redux: Nothing to Grind by The Paris Review Dog Philosopher by Tom Gauld
1.8409s , 10133.1484375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Drama Archives】,Charm Information Network