Fox Business Host Pleads With Colleague To Endorse Playing Powerball

Charles Payne Continues Fox's Bad Coverage Of The Lottery

Gerri Willis Shuts Down Fox Business' Powerball Promotion

A Fox Business panel discussing the January 13 Powerball drawing, which could be worth up to $1.5 billion, briefly went off message after one of the network's business analysts advised viewers against buying a ticket by correctly noting “your chances [of winning] are nothing.”

On the January 12 edition of Fox Business' Varney & Co., business reporter Gerri Willis interrupted guest host Charles Payne's monologue on the record-breaking Powerball jackpot by repeatedly saying “don't buy the lottery ticket.” Willis explained that she advises her own mother against spending money on the lottery “every week” and reiterated that “your chances [of winning] are nothing” if you do purchase a Powerball entry. Payne repeatedly asked Willis to reconsider her position on playing Powerball, saying, “a buck, you can't put a buck on this thing? A buck? You can't put 2 bucks on this?”:

Payne's passionate defense of buying Powerball tickets echoes an earlier segment from Fox News. On the January 9 edition of Fox & Friends Saturday, co-hosts Anna Kooiman and Clayton Morris were joined by supposed lottery “expert” Richard Lustig to discuss the still-growing Powerball prize pool. The segment claimed to offer viewers “proven strategies” to win the lottery, including advice like “buy as many tickets as you can afford” and “never miss a draw”:

The January 9 segment was circulated widely on Twitter and derided by several media outlets. Business Insider called it "literally the worst piece of advice about the lottery ever given," explaining that “your likelihood of winning is still incredibly low, even if you buy a bunch of tickets.” ThinkProgress Economic Policy Editor Bryce Covert took to Twitter to advise her followers against buying lottery tickets, including the Fox & Friends Saturday segment in a long piece of research explaining how state-sponsored lotteries are essentially "a regressive tax on the poor."

The odds of purchasing a ticket with the winning combination to Wednesday's Powerball drawing are approximately 1 in 292.2 million. The odds of being struck by lightning in a lifetime are 24,000 times greater than that.

Contrary to Fox's previous guidance, you cannot meaningfully increase your odds of winning by purchasing extra tickets or playing every week. Your odds of winning any single drawing never change -- they are always 1 in 292.2 million. And buying enough two-dollar tickets to give yourself winning odds is preposterously expensive -- purchasing $1 million worth of tickets would give you just a 0.17 percent chance of hitting the jackpot, whereas approximately $292 million worth of tickets would still put your winning odds at no better than a coin flip.