1.) Janitor at a Porno Theatre
Janitor, in itself, is a pretty bad job. But, porno theater janitor is
the worst job on the list. The main responsibility of the porno theater
janitor is to take his mop and rag and wide up after each show is
finished. Unlike a traditional theater, it’s safe to assume that sticky
substance under the chair is something other than Coca-Cola Classic! At
least you get to see all that porn for free and you’ll probably be very
popular among your male friends, although this is probably not a job
you want to talk about with your mother, or your wife for that matter.

2.) Guard at Buckingham Palace

Guard duty at Buckingham Palace is
regarded as one of the worst jobs in the British Army. Besides the fact
that they have to stand for hours, no laughing allowed, they also have
to look their best. Soldiers spend several hours each day cleaning and
pressing their uniforms and polishing their boots in preparation for
one of the many kit inspections that they are likely to face before
taking up their positions outside one of the royal palaces. Any soldier
whose turn-out is less than immaculate is likely to face a variety of
punishments, such as extra guard duty.
3.) Animal Masturbator
Researchers who want animal sperm -to study fertility or for artificial insemination-have a suite of attractive options:

They can ram an electric probe up an animal’s rectum, shove an artificial
vagina onto the animal’s penis, or simply do it the old-fashioned
way-manual stimulation. The first option, electroejaculation, uses a
priapic rectal probe to send electricity pulsing through the animal’s
nether regions. “All the normal excitatory signals that stimulate
ejaculation, like touch, sight, sound and smell, can be replaced with
the current from the probe,” says Trish Berger, professor of animal
science at the University of California, Davis. “It’s fascinating. Of
course, this is a woman talking.” Electroejaculation generally requires
anesthetizing the animal and is typically used on zoo dwellers. The
other two methods-the artificial vagina, or AV, and the good old
hand-require that animals be trained to the procedure. The AV-a large
latex tube coated with warm lubricant -is used primarily to get sperm
from dairy bulls (considered the most ornery and dangerous of bovines).
The bull gets randy with a steer; when he mounts the steer with his
forelegs, a brave technician, AV in hand, insinuates himself between
the two aroused beasts and deftly redirects the bull’s penis into the
mock genitalia, which he must then hold tight while the bull orgasms.
(Talk about bull riding!) Three additional technicians attempt to
ensure this (fool)hardy soul’s safety by anchoring themselves to
restraining ropes attached to a ring in the bull’s nose. Alas, this
isn’t always absolutely effective: Everyone who’s wielded an AV has had
at least one close call, and more than a few have been sent to the
hospital. The much safer “digital pressure” is used mostly with pigs,
who are trained from an early age to mount a small bench while the
researcher reaches around with a gloved hand and provides appropriate
pleasure-er, pressure.
4.) Sewers Cleaner

Ramesh Sahu works in the sanitation
department of Calcutta, cleaning out the city’s sewers. On a regular
basis, Rakesh sits in a low crouch at the bottom of a seven-foot-deep
manhole, sloshing away in a swirl of human waste and sediment. Equipped
with a hoe and a steel bar, and wearing only a pair of loose purple
underpants, Rakesh empties the thick black sludge from a clogged sewer
into a bucket that his fellow crew members hoist up and dump in the
middle of a narrow road. A small mountain of decaying excrement
accumulates between the manhole and a rickety wooden vegetable cart.
Two co-workers reach down and yank Rakesh out by his sore, extended
arms, his body splattered with putrid muck. At 27, with a wife, three
young daughters and a monthly income of about $100, he has been a
sewage worker for the Delhi Jal (Water) Board for the past 10 years.
5.) Brazilian Mosquito Researcher

Scientists fighting malaria must study
the biting habits of the mosquito that spreads it. In Brazil, that’s
the Anopheles Darlingi, which doesn’t fall for the light or wind traps
researchers use in Africa: this smart little sucker will come near
scientists only when they offer themselves as bait. In the early
evening, when mosquito activity is busiest, a mosquito
dinner-researcher finds a nice buggy area and sets himself up inside a
mosquito-netting tent with a gap at the bottom. Mosquitoes fly in low
and get trapped inside, where theresearcher sits stoically, sacrificing
his skin to science. He needs focus only on his legs to keep him busy:
whenever a mosquito chooses a drumstick dinner, theresearcher draws it
into a mouth tube and then expels it into a container. Veteran
researcher Helge Zieler used to put himself on the menu twice a week.
On his best evening, he caught 500 Anopheles in 3 hours. Meanwhile, of
course, the skeeters feasted on his entire corpus-a grand total of
about 3,000 bites, or an average of 17 per minute for 180 minutes on
end. “It’s not so bad,” he says, explaining that his personal response
to mosquito bites is an immediate itch that goes away naturally in a
few minutes. Except when his response is to contract malaria. Despite
taking prophylactic chloroquine, Zieler developed a case that took him
two years to shake.
6.) Portable Toilet Cleaner

This job is a sort of combination of
garbage collector and gastroenterologist, and arguably more disgusting
than both put together. Although most people in polite society
methodically avoid situations where they need to use a portable toilet,
modern outhouses can be lifesavers. As gross as they can be, they’d be
worse without the folks who clean them for a living. Using a tank and a
vacuum wand, cleaners must suck up all the waste in a portable toilet.
After picking up any stray toilet paper, they also wash down all
surfaces that could possibly be soiled, including the walls. This is
when a high-pressure hose comes in handy. Usually,cleaning one portable
toilet takes only a few minutes, and most workers clean from 10 to 60
of them a day. But it’s not always that easy: Portable toilets that tip
over require more damage control. Nevertheless, some cleaners grin and
bear it — and take home $50,000 a year.
7.) Flatus Odor Judge

Odor judges are common in the research
labs of mouthwash companies, where the halitosis-inflicted blow great
gusts of breath in their faces to test product efficacy. But
Minneapolisgastroenterologist Michael Levitt recently took the job to
another level-or, rather, to the other end. Levitt paid two brave souls
to indulge repeatedly in the odors of other people’s farts. (Levitt
refuses to divulge the remuneration, but it would seem safe to
characterize it thusly: Not enough.) Sixteen healthy subjects
volunteered to eat pinto beans and insert small plastic collection
tubes into their anuses (worst-job runners-up, to be sure). After each
“episode of flatulence,” Levitt syringed the gas into a discrete
container, rigorously maintaining fart integrity. The odor judges then
sat down with at least 100 samples, opened the caps one at a time, and
inhaled robustly. As their faces writhed in agony, they rated just how
noxious the smell was. The samples were also chemically analyzed,
and-eureka!-Levitt determined definitively the most malodorous
component of the human flatus: hydrogen sulfide.
8.) Cat Food Quality Controller

British man Jon Hanson had what he
describes as the worst job in his entire life: quality control on cat
food. His task involved several test as he describes. Test 1: Bury face
in a huge tub of it and sniff it to make sure it’s fresh. Test 2:
Plunge arms in it up to the elbows and grope for bony bits and take
them out. Test 3: Scoop up huge dollop of it, smear it flat on surface
and prod it with fingers to test how much gristle is there. Uggghh!
9.) Roadkill Remover

Pretty self-explanatory. Roadkill
collectors not only have the job of peeling the remains of dead
creatures in decay off the road in various states, they also get to do
it while braving oncoming traffic.
10.) Monkeys Chaser at a Safari

Marin from Canada was hired to work in a safari zoo. He had to be
caged-in in a car and drive around from one reserve to the next.
Monkeys always climb on top of the car and usually enjoy a free ride
for a while. At the exit of the monkey reserve is a zoo worker equipped
with a stick. His duty is to prevent monkeys from leaving the reserve
on a car. Imagine chasing monkeys in the glowing sun for eight hours.
|