Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Banks for nothing, Moneybags

- Dear Mr. Schmiitz: I’m Jerry Zezima, an internatio­nally syndicated newspaper columnist whose work, I am proud to say, has no redeeming social value. Because I had to take a vow of poverty when I went into journalism, and because I was just rejected for

If I ever won Powerball and survived the shock, a technical necessity since you can’t collect if you are legally dead, I still wouldn’t be in the money. That’s because my wife, a neat person, would inadverten­tly throw out the ticket or I, a messy person, would put the ticket somewhere in the house for safekeepin­g and never find it again.

But I am happy to report that my heart is still beating, albeit at a much faster rate, because I have just won 1 million euros in the Spanish Lotto Lottery and am eligible to win $1.3 billion in the year-end drawing of the Euro Millo Lottery.

The timing couldn’t have been better because approximat­ely half an hour before receiving the good news via email, it took my bank exactly three seconds to reject my online applicatio­n for a line of credit.

Stunned at the speed with which I was rejected, which was even faster than what I experience­d on the dating scene before I met my wife, I called the bank’s 800 number and was connected to the “fulfillmen­t department.”

After hearing a disembodie­d voice say that the call “may be monitored and/or recorded for quality assurance purposes,” I spoke with a “customer service specialist” named Tesshana.

“There is some delinquenc­y on your credit,” she said.

“I used to be a juvenile delinquent,” I told her. “I’m all grown up now, but I’m still juvenile. Will you give me credit for that?”

“I’m afraid I can’t,” said Tesshana.

“The bank must have set the world record for fastest rejection,” I noted.

“It doesn’t take long at all,” Tesshana explained. “Thank you for being a valued client and have a good day.”

The rejection caused dejection until I got an email from Paul Schmiitz, award consulting director of the Spanish Lotto Lottery,

informing me of my fabulous winnings.

I phoned him but got this recording: “Your call cannot be completed as dialed. Please check the number and call again.”

So I sent him the following email:

I am shocked to say that I have not heard back. But the bank and the lottery can keep the money. As long as I have enough for beer, I’ll consider myself a rich man.

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