Most of my jobs were pretty good; they were either fulfilling (volunteering at a hospital, or teaching) or required little effort(tech at a bank, engineering consulting).
I suppose my least favorite job was being a technology analyst at a large bank. The workload was boring, but very light; I was doing around 35 hrs (and actually working maybe 10 of it) a week while making 70k+ (not that much for NYC, but can easily live off it). If I were a very successful sports handicapper, I would probably want a position exactly like that, and spend most of the day working on modelling sports and reading papers related to applied stats.
However, I am not a successful sports bettor, and that position offered essentially no career path or potential. In addition, those positions are usually among the first to get cut during the bad years.
I suppose my least favorite job was being a technology analyst at a large bank. The workload was boring, but very light; I was doing around 35 hrs (and actually working maybe 10 of it) a week while making 70k+ (not that much for NYC, but can easily live off it). If I were a very successful sports handicapper, I would probably want a position exactly like that, and spend most of the day working on modelling sports and reading papers related to applied stats.
However, I am not a successful sports bettor, and that position offered essentially no career path or potential. In addition, those positions are usually among the first to get cut during the bad years.