Say you have three writers, two earn zero and one earns $30,000 a year. Two of the three writers (most writers) would be better off “getting a minimum wage job and spending their entire paycheck on lottery tickets” than writing.
It would depend on the variance of the lottery. But my first impression of the quote was that it was referring to high variance lotteries that offer the chance of becoming super rich, rather than low variance lotteries that can’t make you rich but will usually return a portion of the money you spent.
At any rate, the survey found that about 1 in 10 authors earn enough money to live off writing alone. Those are tough odds, but nowhere near the 1 in 175,000,000 odds of winning the Powerball.
Say you have three writers, two earn zero and one earns $30,000 a year. Two of the three writers (most writers) would be better off “getting a minimum wage job and spending their entire paycheck on lottery tickets” than writing.
It would depend on the variance of the lottery. But my first impression of the quote was that it was referring to high variance lotteries that offer the chance of becoming super rich, rather than low variance lotteries that can’t make you rich but will usually return a portion of the money you spent.
At any rate, the survey found that about 1 in 10 authors earn enough money to live off writing alone. Those are tough odds, but nowhere near the 1 in 175,000,000 odds of winning the Powerball.