A person shows his scan card for their personal selection numbers for a ticket for a Powerball drawing on Nov. 7, 2022 in Renfrew, Pa.(AP Photo/Keith Srakocic, File)
The Powerball jackpot climbed to an estimated $925 million after no players hit it big Wednesday night, continuing a stretch of lottery futility that has lasted for more than two months.
The winning numbers were: 1, 7, 46, 47, 63 and red Powerball 7.
The jackpot for the next drawing Saturday night remains the world’s ninth-largest lottery prize of all time, behind earlier prizes in the Powerball and Mega Millions games that all topped $1 billion.
The jackpot has grown so large because there have now been 30 consecutive drawings without a big winner, dating back to July 19. Powerball’s terrible odds of 1 in 292.2 million are designed to generate big jackpots, with prizes becoming ever larger as they repeatedly roll over when no one wins.
The largest jackpot was a $2.04 billion Powerball prize hit by a player in California in November 2022.
In most states, a Powerball ticket costs $2 and players can select their own numbers or leave that task to a computer.
The $925 million jackpot is for a sole winner who opts for payment through an annuity, doled out over 30 years. Winners almost always take the cash option, which for Saturday night’s drawing would be an estimated $432.4 million.
Those winnings would be subject to federal taxes, and many states also tax lottery winnings.
Powerball is played in 45 states as well as Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Shiri Reuveni-Ullrich, the founder of Rising Above Bakery, talks to Cheddar News about providing a unique opportunity for individuals with special needs to get work experience.
Cheddar News sits down with LeAnn Darland, Co-Founder of TALEA Beer Co, at her brewery in Brooklyn to find out how TALEA is disrupting the male-dominated business of craft beer, and paving the way for women in the industry.
Emmy award-winning actor Robert Blake, whose career triumphs were later overshadowed by a trial in which he was acquitted of killing his wife, died Thursday at age 89.
A letter claiming to be from the Mexican drug cartel blamed for abducting four Americans and killing two of them condemned the violence and said the gang turned over to authorities its own members who were responsible.
Trulieve CEO Kim Rivers is doubling down on creating a positive workplace for women — even as the percentage of women in executive positions in cannabis has stagnated in recent years.