What Are the Odds?

By: Natalie Josef (View Profile)

About one out of every three people in the United States thinks that winning the lottery is the only way to become financially secure. But the odds of winning a single state lottery are about 18 million to 1.

That’s why I laugh at my friends who buy lottery tickets—to me, it’s just throwing money away. The likelihood you’ll be killed by lightning is roughly 2,650,000 to 1—a lot more likely than winning the lottery.

Have you ever wondered how the odds stack up against each other? For instance, did you know that your odds of winning an Olympic medal are roughly the same as drowning in the bathtub? Check out these odds:





Odds of dying from a dog bite: 1 in 20 million
Odds of becoming a saint: 1 in 20 million

Odds of becoming president: 1 in 10,000,000
Odds of dying from parts falling off an airplane: 1 in 10,000,000

Odds you will be injured by a toilet this year: 1 in 10,000
Odds of finding a four-leaf clover on the first try: 1 in 10,000

Odds of spotting a UFO today: 1 in 3,000,000
Odds of dying from food poisoning: 1 in 3,000,000

Odds of dying from a shark attack: 1 in 300,000,000
Odds of dying from Measles: 1 in 300,000,000

Odds of a child being in a fatal automobile accident: 1 in 23,000
Odds of being wrongly declared dead by a Social Security data entry mistake: 1 in 23,483

Odds of writing a New York Times best seller: 1 in 220
Odds of dating a millionaire: 1 in 215

Odds of getting AIDS from heterosexual sex without using a condom: 1 in 5,000,000
Odds of dying from contact with hot tap water: 1 in 5,005,564

Odds of winning an Academy Award: 1 in 11,500
Odds of bowling a 300 game: 1 in 11,500

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Comments
posted: 07.30.2008
Lena Vazifdar
So you are telling me I have more a of a chance of dating a millionaire than writing that New York Times best seller I have been working on? Great.
posted: 07.20.2008
Fulano
King, thanks for your post. The author should have cited her source. I've done my share of ranting over how wrong the stats are, but the real problem is poor "journalism" (if you can call it that) by not revealing her source. She should either give credit where due or explain her methodology if she came up with any numbers on her own. Thumbs down to Natalie Josef for not just repeating these false statistics, but also for taking someone else's work and passing it off as her own.
posted: 07.20.2008
King
I would like anyone who is reading this article to visit the website which was the source for most of the material. http://www.funny2.com/odds.htm Thanks very much!
posted: 07.19.2008
Fulano
No, wait! It gets better. There are only 17 people alive in the USA that are lottery winners or will win sometime in their lifetime. However, there are 30 people in the US who have been president or will become president in their lifetime. Huh?
posted: 07.19.2008
Fulano
So there are only 17 state lottery winners alive in the United States right now? (306 million divided by 18 million). Wrong!!
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