Orlando Sentinel

Couple finding lottery loophole inspires film

‘Jerry & Marge Go Large’ stars mirror salt-of-earth values

- By Josh Rottenberg

Some people spend their whole lives fantasizin­g about winning the lottery. Jerry Selbee figured out how to actually do it in less time than it takes to make a cup of coffee.

In 2003, Selbee had recently retired and settled down with his wife, Marge, in the sleepy, one-stoplight town of Evart, Michigan, (population 1,900) when he came across a brochure in a convenienc­e store for a state lottery game called Winfall. Reading the fine print, Selbee — a math whiz who had spent much of his career as a materials analyst at a Kellogg’s cereal factory — quickly realized that the lottery had a mathematic­al flaw that would mean guaranteed winnings if he bought enough tickets.

“I looked at the odds, I looked at what the payoff would be, and I did a risk-reward analysis,” the plain-spoken, pragmatic Selbee, who is now in his 80s, says from his Michigan home. “It took me less than two minutes to figure out that that game could be profitable.”

After Jerry tested out his theory, winning nearly $16,000, he and Marge began to spend countless hours buying and poring over thousands of tickets in the Winfall game and, later, a similarly structured lottery in Massachuse­tts. As their winnings started to accumulate, they set up a corporatio­n called GS Investment Strategies LLC and invited a couple dozen family members and friends in Evart to join. By the time both lotteries had been shut down in 2012, the Selbees and their partners had grossed more than $26 million from the venture.

Then life for the Selbees grew quiet again, just the way they like it. Until Hollywood came calling.

The Selbees’ story, as chronicled in a 2018 Huffington Post article by Jason Fagone, has become the inspiratio­n for the movie “Jerry & Marge Go Large,” now streaming on Paramount+. Oscar nominees Bryan Cranston and Annette Bening star as the couple in the gently comic feel-good film.

“‘Jerry & Marge Go Large’ is not a story that is going to change anyone’s life, but you know what? It could change your day,” says Cranston. “Coming out of COVID, it feels like the time is right for this. We need a little breath-mint kind of entertainm­ent just to feel better and connect again.”

After the publicatio­n of the Huffington Post article, the Selbees’ story quickly became a hot commodity, with at least 17 bidders vying for the rights.

“It just exploded,” says “Jerry & Marge” screenwrit­er Brad Copeland, who chased the rights with “The Blind Side” producer Gil Netter. “There were different directors, there was Scarlett Johansson calling the family — there was a lot of interest because it is a great story.”

Reading Copeland’s script amid the grim headlines of 2020, director David Frankel (“The Devil Wears Prada,” “Marley & Me”) immediatel­y sparked to it. What the story might have lacked in thrills — no FBI agents kicking down doors, no over-the-top greed and extravagan­ce a la “The Wolf of Wall Street” — it more than made up for in homespun charm. (The film takes a few small liberties, shifting the action to the present and amping up the conflict between the Selbees and a group of college students who also discovered the lottery’s loophole.)

“The idea of two people over 60 finding a new adventure that reinvigora­ted their romance and their town seemed like the perfect antidote to the pandemic,” Frankel says. “That earnestnes­s was important. They’re making money, which in many other contexts is the root of all evil. But here, it’s doing a lot of good.”

After spending a few days with the Selbees, Cranston and Bening were even more determined to do justice to their salt-ofthe-earth values and more than 60-year marriage.

“Marge didn’t have stars in her eyes or anything, which I just loved about her,” says Bening. “She’s tough — she raised six kids and her family called her Marge the Sarge. But with Jerry there’s a little twinkle there, and she genuinely enjoyed their adventure.”

For Cranston, Selbee represente­d the moral antithesis of his turn as drug kingpin Walter White in “Breaking Bad,” who employed a similarly exacting intellect to become a criminal mastermind. “When you’re doing research like this, you just want to be open to receiving

the essence of people that you’re looking at,” says Cranston. “There was a lot of time when we were just sitting with Jerry and Marge on the back porch rocking away or going for a drive or having a meal with them somewhere. It was just really sweet.”

Sweet as they may be, folksy Midwestern retirees are not generally considered the sexiest subject matter for Hollywood

— or the most desirable moviegoing demographi­c. Going against that youthobses­sed grain, “Jerry & Marge” is directly pitched at a segment of the public that the industry often neglects. The film is the fledging release from producer Amy Baer’s Landline Pictures, a label that launched last year under independen­t studio MRC

Film to develop film and TV projects for an over-50 audience.

For the Selbees, whose town doesn’t have a movie theater, seeing their story turned into a film has been hard to wrap their heads around. “We’re just a retired couple living in northern Michigan with nothing special about us,” says Jerry. “Marge would rather not be in the public too much. I don’t mind it myself, but she is far more reserved about that.”

The Selbees kept careful records of everything they did for the IRS and never broke a single law. Exploiting a loophole in the lottery was never about getting famous — or even about getting rich — for them. As the winnings piled up, Jerry bought a new truck and a camping trailer. The couple renovated their home and helped put money toward their grandchild­ren’s and great-grandchild­ren’s educations. But there were no fancy sports cars, no new hot tub, no lavish vacations.

“It really did not affect our lives in any way other than give us more financial security for our future,” says Jerry. “Other members (of the corporatio­n) bought a timeshare or took cruises. Marge and I didn’t do any of that. We just enjoyed life as it was.”

Still, Jerry has continued to keep his eye on other lotteries, looking for a similar flaw that could tip the odds in his favor. “There’s one in Florida that’s similar but not quite the same,” he says. “The Winfall was such a unique game. That was the only one you could win without being lucky, just based on pure mathematic­al and statistica­l probabilit­ies.”

 ?? JAKE GILES NETTER/PARAMOUNT+ ?? Annette Bening and Bryan Cranston as Marge and Jerry Selbee in “Jerry & Marge Go Large.”
JAKE GILES NETTER/PARAMOUNT+ Annette Bening and Bryan Cranston as Marge and Jerry Selbee in “Jerry & Marge Go Large.”

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