Quote #135111
Weekends don't pay as well as weekdays but at least there's football.
S. A. Sachs
About This Quote
This quote needs no introduction—at least for now. We're working on adding more context soon.
Interpretation
The line juxtaposes economic reality with cultural consolation: weekend work may be less lucrative (or less valued) than weekday labor, yet it comes with a compensating pleasure—football as a ritual of leisure, community, and distraction. The humor depends on a familiar trade-off in working life: time versus money. By framing football as a kind of non-monetary wage, the quote suggests how entertainment can soften dissatisfaction with pay or conditions, and how modern schedules often force people to seek meaning in small, predictable rewards rather than structural change.



