How the scratch off lottery changed America : Planet Money

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A collection of very popular California Lottery scratcher tickets. It is sold in many stores with a payout of various amounts. Tickets are listed at $1-10 a piece
A collection of very popular California Lottery scratcher tickets. It is sold in many stores with a payout of various amounts. Tickets are listed at $1-10 a piece

Americans spend more on scratch lottery tickets per year than on pizza. More than all Coca-Cola products. Yet the scratch ticket as a consumer item has only existed for fifty years. Not so long ago, the idea of an instant lottery, of gambling with a little sheet of paper, was strange. Scary, even.

So, how did scratch lotteries go from an idea that states wanted nothing to do with, to a commonplace item? It started in a small, super-liberal, once-puritanical state: Massachusetts. Adults there now spend – on average – $1,037 every year on lottery tickets – mostly scratch tickets. On today’s episode, a collaboration with GBH’s podcast Scratch & Win, we hear the story of… the scratch-off lottery ticket!

This episode was hosted by Ian Coss and Kenny Malone. Scratch & Win from GBH is produced by Isabel Hibbard and edited by Lacy Roberts. The executive producer is Devin Maverick Robins. Our version of the podcast was produced by James Sneed. It was edited by Alex Goldmark, engineered by Valentina Rodriguez Sanchez, and fact-checked by Sierra Juarez. Alex Goldmark is Planet Money‘s executive producer.

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Music: SourceAudio – “Melting Pot,” “Timeless Glow,” “Blurry Creatures,” and “Chicken Bone.”

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