My first job was at a movie theatre. I figured I'd work there for 6 months or so, get some heft to my resume, but 2 years later, I still can't bear to leave. I love it, and I've finally reached what is, in my opinion, the best position in a theatre: projection work (only the longest-hired people get taught how to do it, and I used to always stare up there in envy as the projectionist got to do his/her thing while I'd be stuck downstairs in concession or on door/floor). It's hot at a constant 25 degrees celcius/77 degrees fahrenheit (technically, it's an attic, lol, but it doesn't help that the air conditioning is broken), noisy with roaring projectors (but obviously that's not a major concern), lonely (I'm a shy loner type who hates dealing with people, so that works perfectly), dark (except for a lamp at the big desk, where I can read!). Only problem is that this theatre is relatively old, 40 years old, and the projectors know it. So we're constantly having problems and issues with lamps refusing to strike, platters refusing to spin, rollers spitting out film, and generally a whole circus of things that cause a movie to go into failure. But I love photography and since I never got to experience developing film, playing with movie film is the next best thing, and I just plain ol' love using my logical thinking brain to figure out why this or that is behaving in such a strange way. But oddly, sometimes the only way to get a projector to start behaving is to coo to it and treat it kindly, stroking it. Sounds nutty, but I swear it works. If you cuss at it and slap it about, sometimes it works, and sometimes it acts worse (out of spite, I like to think).
Only thing that I hate is that the air phone up there has to be as old as the building itself, so therefore I can't hear a thing through it. I can hear it ring, which causes panic (lol), because that means something is going wrong in one of the movies and since I can't hear the other person on the other end of the line, I have to figure out WHICH movie and WHICH problem, and FAST!
But the theatre is supposedly haunted, and since I'm a morbid ghoul, I love hearing the various stories about the spirit. I've yet to meet her, though if I get to thinking about her, I get the skeevies, what with all that dark space behind me, and dark space ahead of me, and no way of being able to see anything that may be lurking. It's very easy to get spooked in projection (that goes for everyone) probably because it's so dark and spacious, and that's where most of the "ghostly" occurrences have shown up.