In October last year, a landmark Herne Bay home sold for $24 million - at the time the most expensive house sale of the year, and all without an official real estate listing.
Last year in March, investors were asked to pay $24 million for 1 per cent of the New York Yankees baseball team.
And in May this year, the Los Angeles Times reported that special interest groups had already forked out $24 million in the lead-up to the United States elections.
It would also buy four Steve Austins (The Six Million Dollar Man, times four).
Dare I raise it again, but it'd constitute a deposit on another New Zealand flag referendum.
But those four examples are perhaps of little use to those of us in real terms.
So, I've discovered a more enlightening view of winning $24 million.
The Welsh are paying $9 to beat the All Blacks this weekend, hence if you placed $2,666,666 on the Dragons, and they pulled off the impossible, you'd win $24 million.
Maybe that rather unlikely likelihood best illustrates the odds of winning Lotto.