logo

$65 MILLION LOTTO MAX WINNER FROM NEWMARKET TO "RETHINK" HOW TO TELL FAMILY ABOUT LOTTERY WINDFALL

Cision Canada22-05-2025

TORONTO, May 22, 2025 /CNW/ - of Newmarket was excited to tell his wife and adult children that he'd hit the LOTTO MAX jackpot and was about to become Ontario's newest multi-millionaire. Mark won the $65 million jackpot prize from the March 28, 2025 LOTTO MAX draw. But his two attempts to break the remarkable news – first to his wife and then to his children – didn't quite land the way he'd hoped. Still, the experience has become a hilarious tale that will live on in the family archives!
Mark was up early, enjoying his breakfast, when he decided to check his LOTTO MAX ticket completely unaware of the life-changing surprise that awaited him. He likes to check the winning lottery numbers one by one on OLG.ca. After matching three numbers, Mark began to pay closer attention to what he was doing. Then came four…five…and six. Finally, he matched all seven numbers, but didn't grasp exactly what this meant. "I've been playing the lottery for 30 years, and when I counted all seven numbers, I was disappointed that I didn't match the bonus number," Mark recounted during his OLG Winner Celebration in Toronto. "Then I realized there are only seven numbers with LOTTO MAX, and I got the BIG ONE! When I saw there was only one winner and the jackpot was $65 million, I started jumping for joy, saying, 'Touchdown!'"
Mark's wife was still sleeping at the time, and he silently debated, "Is this important enough to wake up my wife, who loves her sleep? So, I decided to share the news by saying, 'Honey, do you want to kiss a millionaire?' Funny enough, she sternly said, 'No,' and tried to go back to sleep." Mark convinced his wife to get out of bed and meet him downstairs so he could show her his winning ticket. "She looked at the ticket and thought, 'So what...?' So, I told her to go take a shower to fully wake up. When she came back, the reality of this win started to settle in, and she began crying tears of joy."
The retired business software analyst and his wife decided to tell their grown children the astonishing news face to face. "We called to make sure they were home, and I said to my wife, 'Don't tell them anything – just say we're coming over.' When they answered the phone and my wife started to talk, she began crying again. She said, 'We're coming to see you… I can't tell you why… but everything's alright.'" Mark started laughing and said, "Oh good, now they think someone died!"
As the couple pulled up to the house to visit their children, Mark's wife turned to him with an important request. "She asked me if I could hold her coffee so her hands would be free to give them a hug and then she started to cry again," Mark smiled. Despite the initial tears from Mark's wife, their children were overcome with emotion when they were finally told the great news. "I felt so good to tell them, and it's a dream come true to now be able to provide for them in so many incredible ways!"
Mark also plans to surprise some immediate family members with a portion of his windfall. "They're probably not going to believe it at first because you don't expect someone to suddenly come out of the blue and give you a gift like this."
When asked what's on his bucket list, Mark was quick to answer, "I want to travel the world for its food! I want to go to Italy, and especially France. I love French bread, French wine, and… oh my, French cheese!" He also mentioned another aspiration that may be out of reach, despite having $65 million in his bank account. "I want to buy a castle, but wife won't let me," he laughed.
Mark concedes it will take some time before the reality of hitting the LOTTO MAX jackpot truly sinks in. "The LOTTO MAX commercials say, 'Dream Bigger,' but I still haven't quite gotten that in my head. I always dreamt of winning a couple of million, but this amount is just baffling! I just feel so grateful and blessed that this win came my way."
For the video and photos of Mark's winner celebration and the moment he checks his bank account, please see the link below:
Winners Celebration Video and Photos:
https://f.io/1-PCQ_-S
(Link good for 30 days – no password needed)
Link contains:
File 1 – Winner Photos
File 2 – Winner Video - Broadcast ready version & Winner Video - Web ready version
File 3 – Social Posts
LOTTO MAX players in Ontario have won over $9 billion since 2009, including 115 jackpot wins and 937 MAXMILLIONS prizes, right across the province. LOTTO MAX is $5 per play and draws take place on Tuesdays and Fridays.
Important to know – 100 per cent of OLG's profits are invested in Ontario, so when you play LOTTO MAX, you are playing for Ontario.
OLG supports safe play and wants to keep the fun in the game. That's why OLG is proud to be a leader in promoting responsible gambling with our globally recognized PlaySmart program.
OLG is a crown agency that contributes to a better Ontario by delivering great entertainment experiences for our customers. Acting in a socially responsible way, OLG conducts and manages land-based gaming facilities; the sale of province-wide lottery games; Internet gaming; and the delivery of bingo and other electronic gaming products at Charitable Gaming Centres. OLG is also helping support the horse racing industry in Ontario. Since 1975, OLG has generated approximately $62 billion for the people and Province of Ontario to support key government priorities like health care; the treatment and prevention of problem gambling; and support for amateur athletes. Each year profits from OLG's operations also support host communities, Ontario First Nations, lottery retailers and local charities across the province.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lotto Max - $20 million jackpot won in Québec Français
Lotto Max - $20 million jackpot won in Québec Français

Cision Canada

time3 hours ago

  • Cision Canada

Lotto Max - $20 million jackpot won in Québec Français

MONTRÉAL, June 4, 2025 /CNW/ - Last night's $20 million Lotto Max jackpot was won with a selection sold in Québec. The draw results are posted on Loto-Québec's website, About Loto-Québec Loto-Québec has been delivering entertainment to Quebecers for over 50 years, and its operations benefit Québec as a whole. The corporation has paid out over a billion dollars in prizes across Québec since the beginning of the year. Major prize winners are listed on the Winners page in the Lotteries section of Read their stories. The responsible commercialization of lottery and gaming products is central to Loto-Québec's operations. The corporation has been granted the highest internationally recognized certification in responsible gaming by the World Lottery Association.

2025 Sobey Art Award shortlist revealed Français
2025 Sobey Art Award shortlist revealed Français

Cision Canada

time17 hours ago

  • Cision Canada

2025 Sobey Art Award shortlist revealed Français

Six finalists announced for Canada's most established contemporary visual arts prize OTTAWA, ON, June 3, 2025 /CNW/ - Six of Canada's most compelling contemporary visual artists have been shortlisted for the 2025 Sobey Art Award, Canada's most established contemporary visual arts prize since 2002. Today, the National Gallery of Canada (NGC) and the Sobey Art Foundation (SAF) are excited to unveil their names. They are: Tarralik Duffy for the Circumpolar region. A multidisciplinary artist and designer from Salliq, Nunavut, Duffy uses various mediums like drawing, photography, sculpture, textiles, printmaking, and salvaged materials to explore contemporary Inuit culture and pop culture. Tania Willard for the Pacific region. Willard, a mixed Secwépemc and settler artist, uses land-based art to promote Indigenous resurgence through collaborative projects like BUSH Gallery and language revitalization in Secwépemc communities. Chukwudubem Ukaigwe for the Prairies region. Born in Nigeria, Ukaigwe is an artist, curator, and writer influenced by experimental music, literature, history, and futurism. His work aims to create immersive audiovisual environments, examining subject-object divides and fracturing time and relativity. Sandra Brewster for the Ontario region. The child of Guyanese parents, Brewster is a Toronto-based Canadian artist. Her practice reflects a multilayered sense of identity, born of a collision between place and time. Swapnaa Tamhane for the Quebec region. Tamhane's practice is dedicated to materials such as cotton and jute, leading to the making of handmade paper, archival research, and textile installations. She also collaborates closely with artisans in Gujarat, India, in a skill-sharing process. Hangama Amiri for the Atlantic region. Amiri works predominantly in textiles, examining notions of home, and how gender, social norms, and geopolitical conflict affect the daily lives of women in Afghanistan and the diaspora. The figurative tendency in her work reflects her interest in the power of representation, especially through everyday objects such as passports, vases, and celebrity postcards. "On behalf of the Sobey Art Foundation, I extend our warmest congratulations to the six exceptional artists who have been named to this year's Sobey Art Award shortlist. We are incredibly proud to support their remarkable achievements and look forward to celebrating their ongoing contributions to the Canadian contemporary visual arts landscape in the months ahead," said Rob Sobey, Chair, Sobey Art Foundation. "Congratulations to the six outstanding artists shortlisted for the 2025 Sobey Art Award," said Jonathan Shaughnessy, Director, Curatorial Initiatives, National Gallery of Canada; and Chair, 2025 Sobey Award Jury. "Through paintings, drawings, textiles, video, sculpture and multidisciplinary installations, their works capture the vitality of artmaking in this country today while touching on subjects pertinent to contemporary Canadian identity. We're excited to work with each of these artists and bring their richly diverse material practices together this fall for the always highly anticipated Sobey Award exhibition." A total of $465,000, in prize money will be awarded, including the $100,000 grand prize. Each of the shortlisted artists receives $25,000 and each of the remaining longlisted artists receives $10,000. The winner of the award will be announced at a special celebration on November 8, 2025. An exhibition featuring works by the six shortlisted artists will be held at the Gallery, opening on October 3, 2025, and running until February 8, 2026. The jury This year's independent jury overseeing the longlist selection process and shortlist deliberations is made up of contemporary arts curators and a past winner of the Sobey Art Award, with representation from each of the regions, as well as an international juror. They are: Laakkuluk Williamson Bathory, winner of the 2021 Sobey Art Award, for the Circumpolar region; Zoë Chan, curator, Richmond Art Gallery, Pacific region; Alyssa Fearon, Director/Curator, Dunlop Art Gallery, Prairies; Betty Julian; Senior Curator, McMaster Museum of Art, Ontario; Anne-Marie St-Jean Aubre, Curator of Quebec and Canadian Contemporary Art, Gail and Stephen A. Jarislowsky Chair, Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Quebec; Rose Bouthillier, contemporary art curator and writer based in Maberly, Newfoundland and Labrador, Atlantic; and Carla Acevedo-Yates, curator, writer and researcher working across the Americas, international juror. For more information on the 2025 shortlisted and longlisted artists, please visit: About the Sobey Art Award The Sobey Art Award (SAA) is Canada's preeminent prize for Canadian contemporary visual artists. Created in 2002 with funding from the Sobey Art Foundation (SAF), the SAA has helped to propel the careers of artists through financial support and recognition in Canada and beyond. The SAA has been jointly administered by the National Gallery of Canada (NGC) and SAF since 2016. The past SAA winners are: Brian Jungen (2002), Jean-Pierre Gauthier (2004), Annie Pootoogook (2006), Michel de Broin (2007), Tim Lee (2008), David Altmejd (2009), Daniel Barrow (2010), Daniel Young and Christian Giroux (2011), Raphaëlle de Groot (2012), Duane Linklater (2013), Nadia Myre (2014), Abbas Akhavan (2015), Jeremy Shaw (2016), Ursula Johnson (2017), Kapwani Kiwanga (2018), Stephanie Comilang (2019), Laakkuluk Williamson Bathory (2021), Divya Mehra (2022), Kablusiak (2023) and Nico Williams (2024). About the Sobey Art Foundation The Sobey Art Foundation was established in 1981 by the late Frank H. Sobey who was a dedicated collector of Canadian art. The Sobey Art Award was founded in 2002 as privately funded prizes for Canadian contemporary visual artists. The award aims to promote new developments in contemporary visual art and attract national and international attention to Canadian artists. About the National Gallery of Canada Founded in 1880, the National Gallery of Canada is among the world's most respected art institutions. As a national museum, we exist to serve all Canadians, no matter where they live. We do this by sharing our collection, exhibitions and public programming widely. We create dynamic experiences that allow for new ways of seeing ourselves and each other through the visual arts, while centering Indigenous ways of knowing and being. Our mandate is to develop, preserve and present a collection for the learning and enjoyment of all – now and for generations to come. We are home to more than 90,000 works, including one of the finest collections of Indigenous and Canadian art, major works from the 14 th to the 21 st century and extensive library and archival holdings.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store