It never fails. I leave my computer behind for a few days to celebrate Christmas, and when I get back, I find that the folks at both Sound Politics and Pull on Superman's Cape (linked below) have been crunching numbers to calculate the probabilities of having the Washington State governor's race turn out the way it has to date, albeit with Microsoft Excel spreadsheets. Of the two, I strongly recommend reading the detailed instructions posted at Pull on Superman's Cape, which I have used to create the Recounting Odds calculator, presented below:
As noted in the Pull on Superman's Cape article, the odds calculated from each consecutive recount may be multiplied together to determine the overall chances of the reported outcomes occurring consecutively, which in the case the of the Washington governor's race, was found to be 17,650,517 to 1. The following list of the relative odds of certain events occurring is hereby presented for your reference and your entertainment:
| Relative Odds | |
|---|---|
| Possible Events | Odds of Occuring |
| Being Audited by the IRS | 175 to 1 |
| Writing a New York Times Bestseller | 220 to 1 |
| Dating a Supermodel | 88,000 to 1 |
| Being Struck by Lightning | 576,000 to 1 |
| Getting a Royal Flush on the First Five Cards Dealt | 649,740 to 1 |
| Winning the California Lottery | 13,000,000 to 1 |
| Dying from a Shark Attack | 300,000,000 to 1 |
| Having a Meteor Land on Your House | 182,138,880,000,000 to 1 |
Update: I should have done this earlier, but the odds calculated by Stefan Sharkansky at Sound Politics of having the 59 vote "flip" is 32,258,064,516,129 to 1, which is roughly about six times more likely than having a meteor land on your house....