When I was ten, McDonald’s Monopoly came to Canada for the first time.
First off, when you’re ten, McDonald’s has a major impact on your entire life. Our local McDonald’s – the one just down the street from my school, St. Clement’s – got a drive-thru when I was eight, and for all of us this was an amazing thing. (My mother complained about it for months. She suspected it would cause traffic accidents. She was not correct.) When I was nine, they built a Playland in the basement of the McDonald’s, and by god you better believe that, regardless of the fact that at nine we were definitely stretching the possibilities of what Playland could offer, we played in that goddamn Playland like there was no tomorrow.
It wasn’t that we didn’t understand that McDonald’s did contests. But prior to McDonald’s Monopoly, we had never really known a contest that was really understandable on a kid level. It was always your basic sweepstakes for a plane trip or something, and you had to fill out a card. You know. Adult stuff. (Kids never want to fill out cards. You give a kid an entry requirement of ten jumping jacks, that’ll work. But a card? No.)
McDonald’s Monopoly was different. You collected pieces to win prizes, and they were Monopoly pieces! We all knew Monopoly. Most of us hadn’t yet realized that Monopoly is a terrible game, so additionally we all liked Monopoly. And the prize was a million dollars. When you’re a kid, you understand a million dollars: it is money forever. This was relatable. So we all started collecting pieces.
Now, as adults, we know that McDonald’s Monopoly is just your basic lottery draw. One of the properties in any given set is rare: Atlantic Avenue and Marvin Gardens are a dime a dozen, but Ventnor is as rare as a high-value scratch-and-win ticket. That’s how the prize system works. But the thing about being nine is that you don’t understand that, not at first anyway. You think all you have to do is get Ventnor Avenue and you win the trip to Disney World, and clearly someone must have it, because you have the other two.
An schoolyard black market in McDonald’s Monopoly pieces arose almost immediately. Trading was fast and furious: everybody had two or three pieces, and some people had as many as six or seven. The smarter kids soon realized that piece-for-piece deals were mediocre compared to “a piece and something else for a piece and something else.” My best trade, in retrospect, was Illinois Avenue, Tennesee Avenue and Park Place for St. Charles Place and a COBRA trooper. (My reasoning was that COBRA had lots of troopers, so when I played with GI Joes I clearly needed more COBRAs. The trade brought me my second – who never actually had his own gun, so he had to borrow the other trooper’s pistol. I never actually got another basic COBRA trooper. Cobra Commander thus had two flunkies, which later in life would make The Venture Brothers‘ 21 and 24 resonate for me.)
However, I was not the best trader in the schoolyard. That honour went to Sammy. Sammy wasn’t especially brilliant at haggling or quicker on the draw than average, but he had one advantage the rest of us did not: both of his parents worked, so they brought home McDonald’s for dinner a lot. This meant that Sammy ate a lot more McDonald’s than the rest of us. We were relying on the one family trip per week or every other week to Mickey D’s, plus begging for game pieces when we went there after school.
Sammy, on the other hand, got the equivalent number of game pieces that the rest of us might get in a month in the first week of play. This meant two things: firstly, he had a lot more pieces to bargain with. And secondly, he figured out much sooner than the rest of us that the game was not a simple “collect pieces of equal rarity to get a prize,” but that it was instead a lottery and that all the pieces that weren’t rare were completely worthless. What this meant, in practice, was that Sammy was willing to trade multiple pieces for absolutely anything else he considered to be of value: baseball cards, comics, toys, you name it. He sometimes asked for a piece, presumably just to keep up the illusion of piece equality for as long as he could.
Sammy’s dominance in the market demanded challenge, and my friends and I tried our best to match his seemingly inexhaustible supply. We went after school every day, asking for free pieces. After a week, the McDonald’s stopped giving out free pieces, so we upped the ante, buying small ice cream cones. (Which were thirty-nine cents, just to make you sick at the sense of inflation over time.) Two weeks later, the McDonald’s stopped giving out free pieces with small ice cream cones, so we upped the ante again, buying regular hamburgers – but hamburgers cost seventy-nine cents, and that was too expensive to be a daily purchase for schoolkids in the mid-80s.
The black market lasted about a month. That was about as long as it took us to realize the true nature of McDonald’s Monopoly. Sammy, by that point, had cleaned up on a level previously undreamt of on the schoolyard – he was the Proposition Joe of St. Clement’s, except nobody shot him in the end. The pieces we had collected were thrown out, worthless. When McDonald’s Monopoly came back the next year, we were not enticed. We had been burnt.
We knew now that Ronald McDonald was not a friendly clown. He was a lying bastard, and Grimace, Birdie, Mayor McCheese, Captain Crook, the McNugget Buddies and the Hamburglar were his willing accomplices, his McDonaldland Mafia. And, thanks to McDonald’s, we were never that young again.
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27 users responded in this post
Monopoly is awesome. You’re a terrible game!
And that’s before you knew the whole game was rigged from the inside.
:-p I mean, I almost don’t know if this is a bad thing. Would you rather get wise to these scams when you’re eight years old swapping paper tokens on the school yard, or when you’re eighteen and furiously scratching lottery tickets you think will pay for college?
And, to be fair, the Monopoly McDonald’s game does perfectly encapsulate the lesson that the original Monopoly game is supposed to teach. Once you have all the money, you really just get to push everyone else around until you eventually clean up and win.
Monopoly came to our McDonalds in 1987, when I was just out of high school and unimpressed by my college options. A friend and I went on one of those life-changing road trips, Rhode Island to Florida, in my ancient, creaky, and ultimately doomed Chevy Nova, and we survived on the “instant win” tickets.
All the way down I-95, we were able to shmooze and grin and flirt our way to bags full of the Monopoly pieces.
It was Hostess Chips Bingo that did it for me.
I had 21 pieces, meaning any new piece would have given me a bingo. We bought enough chips that summer to desalinate the dead sea.
To make matters worse, a few months earlier, a friend of mine actually won a freaking LOTUS. His dad had to claim the prize, but man that was a sweet care. This of course re-enforced the belief that contests were winnable.
The current version of Monopoly is far more insidious. Just about all large-scale contests now require you to sign on to the website with a code that identifies the location you visited, and fill in all your personal and demographic information.
McDonald’s is now training kids to play fast and loose with their privacy.
McDonald’s is now training kids to play fast and loose with their privacy.
Judging from some of the social network sites and camwhores out there, the concept of “most if not all of the Internet is public” wasn’t sinking in before this contest.
BAW BAW BAW
I’m lovin’ it.
Ahhh, I remember this.
Once, I had two yellow properties and my friend Kyle had the third yellow property, and we were like, “Hey, we could go in on this together and split the prize!” But the prize was a car, a Pontiac Sunfire or something.
“How are we going to split the car, Kyle? Also, we are 11 and won’t be able to drive for years.”
“Well, we can’t split a car. But my mom should get it, because she really needs a car. Ours is almost dead but we can’t afford a new one.”
“No deal!”
And then Kyle cried, because I wouldn’t give him the chips and his mom so desperately needed a car. She really did, too: she was a single mom and they didn’t have a lot of money.
BUT THAT IS NOT HOW FREE MARKET ECONOMICS WORKS, KYLE’S MOM!!!!!!!!
Well, you’re one up on me. I didn’t figure out how to play actual Monopoly until I was like 21, by which point casinos were a more enticing way to spend time and energy.
Man, I feel like a complete simpleton. I STILL love McDonald’s Monopoly. You get game pieces! And they match! Then again, maybe it’s not that I have the functioning brain capacity of a nine-year-old, maybe I’m just an OCD with strong collecting tendencies.
Yeah, it only ever causes me to get slightly more McDonald’s, except for the first time I lived on the same block as one.
RIP, 24.
My main beef with the contest was how to get the pieces. The first Monopoly, it seemed like EVERYTHING gave pieces. Medium fries, medium drink, larges, if your sandwich came in a box, they all had it.
Then they pulled back. You want tokens, you get up early enough to grab a hashbrown, or you supersize your meal, or buy whatever sandwich they’re trying to save from obscurity.
I’ll probably go a time or two during the game period (about my normal frequency), and I’ll still think as I pull off the pieces, “Someone has to win the million. Why not me?”
When ‘The Phantom Menace’ came out, I worked really hard to avoid spoilers and managed it very well until the day before the movie came out, when I thought reading a review of the soundtrack in the local paper would be safe. The article commented that the track “The Death of Qui Gon” was especially lovely.
And today, thanks to an article about McDonalds Monopoly, I learned that Proposition Joe gets killed. I mean, it originally aired a few years ago, so it is obviously fair play, but this was not the article I was expecting spoilers for ‘The Wire’ in.
I’d just like to share with you a little bit of childish wonder: McDonalds in my area sells their small ice cream cones for 50 cents to this day. About twice a month, my wife and I head over there, get three cones (one for each of us and one for the dog), sit in the car and people watch as we enjoy a treat. It’s marvelous.
Darren, add my name to the list of “people who got The Wire unceremoniously spoiled for them by an article about McDonald’s Monopoly.”
And I had made it this far, too…
Dang. Was just about to start Netflixing The Wire. Even managed to mis-read that as Joe mearly got shot in the ass. So for me it got spoiled in the comments to an article about McDonalds.
1.) All you complainers know now is that Proposition Joe gets shot, not that he gets killed. A lot of people in The Wire get shot and live. I am not even slightly kidding.
2.) If you let this stop you from watching The Wire I will have to hunt you down and slap you with a giant fish repeatedly in the name of Art.
I never played McDonald’s Monopoly for the money. I played it for the free food. Yeah, I was pretty damned poor as a kid, but idiots who gave up free Extra Value Meals for multiple copies of Pennsylvania deserved to go hungry.
My sister and I are trying to figure out the ratio of white people killed in The Wire to black people killed in The Wire. Not to spoil it for everyone else, but it’s kind of skewed in one direction.
(Here’s a hint: I can think of only two white people who die over the course of the entire series off the top of my head, but I can think of several EPISODES where more than two black people die.)
Um, Darren? It is you who are “spoiling” The Wire for me, since I haven’t seen a single second of The Wire yet so the reference was meaningless and instantly forgotten. Until you cleared it up.
The McDonaldland Mafia. So it’s like the Sopranos ‘for kids’?
Suppose I got off lucky, then; before McDonalds started their Monopoly game, they were the go-to place whenever our family went ANYWHERE. Anytime we went on vacation or even a long drive, we ate almost exclusively at McDonalds. Guess our folks figured the cheap toys would help shut us up, plus the Playlands left us exhausted.
But when they first ran their Monopoly minigame, Mom and Dad started picking it up all the time. Until, during one of our trips, I became suddenly and violently ill from the constant junk food. We literally didn’t visit a McDonalds for YEARS after that; suddenly our trips involved lots of OTHER resturants.
So, yeah: you win. Loss of innocence trumps loss of lunch anyday.
I think the lesson here is: don’t read articles about anything ever, if you’re afraid of having something spoiled. Because you never know where spoilers will come from.
The equivalent that dominated *my* childhood days was scrounging Coke bottle tops from the school canteen. We were competing with the teachers, who were doing pretty much the same thing – but they lacked our smaller hands, faster reflexes and complete lack of a sense of shame. I ended up scoring 3 Simpsons-themed plastic cups and one TMNT one!
…Good times.
http://www.snopes.com/business/deals/pudding.asp
but, on the other hand,
http://www.snopes.com/business/deals/pepsijet.asp
Re: The Wire death ratios–most of the characters are also black, and it is not unfair to say that an urban street level drug gang in Baltimore might be primarily black, with the exception of the much less well-organized dealings in Season 2.
However, there are black characters from all walks of life, gangsters to addicts to mayors and commissioners of police. Not out of character for a majority (61%) black city.
Also my mother totally just spoiled the life lesson of Monopoly for me at around the same age. She didn’t even let me learn by getting burned, she just straight up explained it, probably because she hated Mickey D’s and only went there at the behest of her beloved younglings.
Once, when we were on one of our long vacation road trips, my Mom had us stop at a McDonald’s.
In my youth, I had conceived a dislike of McDonald’s and refused to eat there.
My Mom proceeded to attempt to physically forcefeed me a McDonald’s hamburger, in a scene that horrified my family (and probably caused them to lose their appetites).
Needless to say, this did not endear McDonald’s to me… I still won’t eat that toxic garbage.
Also…
The ratio of black to white is much more favorable on the Sopranos, and I don’t think any black people have been killed on Breaking Bad yet… well, onscreen anyway. (Although Latinos don’t make out so well.)