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Jeff Bezos Reveals His Dream Job: Making Slow, Expensive Cocktails for Impatient Customers

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos says if money weren't an issue, he'd be a craft-cocktail bartender. The catch? He admits he's painfully slow at it and would need a sign warning customers they can get their drinks "good or fast," but definitely not both.

The Billionaire's Bar Fantasy

What does someone with a $253 billion net worth dream about doing for work? If you're Jeff Bezos, the answer isn't launching more rockets or acquiring newspapers. It's making cocktails. Very, very slowly.

In a 2017 conversation with his brother Mark Bezos, the Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN) founder opened up about his "fantasy job" when asked what he'd love to do if money weren't a consideration. The answer? Bartending.

"I pride myself on my craft cocktails. I do have this fantasy that I want to be a bartender," Bezos admitted, laughing as he noted his brother already knew this about him.

Bezos acknowledged he's "glamorized the job" in his mind, but said he genuinely loves two key aspects of bartending: talking to people and perfecting the art of a well-made drink. It's an oddly relatable ambition from someone who built one of the world's most powerful companies.

There's Just One Problem

Bezos knows his bartending fantasy has a fatal flaw: he's terrible at the actual pace required to work in a real bar.

"I'm super slow," he joked during the conversation with his brother. He admitted he takes his sweet time crafting each cocktail, which would be a disaster in any establishment where customers expect their drinks sometime before last call.

His solution? Charge premium prices to compensate for the glacial service. Bezos said his imaginary bar would need a sign behind him spelling out the deal clearly: "You can have it good or you can have it fast."

It's the kind of honest self-awareness you don't always hear from billionaires. Bezos knows he's glamorizing the profession, and he knows he'd probably fail at it in reality. But the fantasy persists anyway.

From Bartending Dreams to Building Empires

While Bezos dreams of slinging cocktails, his actual career path went in a slightly different direction. He founded Amazon (AMZN) in 1994, and the e-commerce giant now carries a market capitalization of $2.46 trillion. Bezos stepped down as Amazon's chief executive officer in 2021.

Beyond Amazon, Bezos owns The Washington Post and founded Blue Origin, a space company focused on making space travel safer and more affordable. His net worth of $253 billion ranks him fourth on the Bloomberg Billionaire Index.

Interestingly, before Bezos became a tech mogul, he had an entirely different career plan. "I wanted to be a theoretical physicist and so I went to Princeton and I was a really good student," he said in a 2018 conversation.

But a particularly difficult math problem that he and his roommate couldn't solve became a pivotal moment. That struggle made Bezos realize he would never become a great theoretical physicist, ultimately redirecting his career toward technology and business.

Other Billionaires Who Started Behind the Bar

Bezos isn't the only billionaire with bartending in his background. Before rising to fame on "Shark Tank," Mark Cuban worked as a bartender in Dallas at a spot called Elan. Cuban soon discovered he wasn't suited to taking orders from others—a realization that probably worked out well for him in the long run.

The difference, of course, is that Cuban actually did the bartending job before moving on to build his fortune. Bezos is still in the fantasy stage, dreaming about a career move that would almost certainly result in very frustrated customers and terrible Yelp reviews.

For now, Bezos will have to content himself with making slow, meticulous craft cocktails for friends and family rather than paying customers. Given his net worth, he can probably afford to take as long as he wants.

Jeff Bezos Reveals His Dream Job: Making Slow, Expensive Cocktails for Impatient Customers

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos says if money weren't an issue, he'd be a craft-cocktail bartender. The catch? He admits he's painfully slow at it and would need a sign warning customers they can get their drinks "good or fast," but definitely not both.

The Billionaire's Bar Fantasy

What does someone with a $253 billion net worth dream about doing for work? If you're Jeff Bezos, the answer isn't launching more rockets or acquiring newspapers. It's making cocktails. Very, very slowly.

In a 2017 conversation with his brother Mark Bezos, the Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN) founder opened up about his "fantasy job" when asked what he'd love to do if money weren't a consideration. The answer? Bartending.

"I pride myself on my craft cocktails. I do have this fantasy that I want to be a bartender," Bezos admitted, laughing as he noted his brother already knew this about him.

Bezos acknowledged he's "glamorized the job" in his mind, but said he genuinely loves two key aspects of bartending: talking to people and perfecting the art of a well-made drink. It's an oddly relatable ambition from someone who built one of the world's most powerful companies.

There's Just One Problem

Bezos knows his bartending fantasy has a fatal flaw: he's terrible at the actual pace required to work in a real bar.

"I'm super slow," he joked during the conversation with his brother. He admitted he takes his sweet time crafting each cocktail, which would be a disaster in any establishment where customers expect their drinks sometime before last call.

His solution? Charge premium prices to compensate for the glacial service. Bezos said his imaginary bar would need a sign behind him spelling out the deal clearly: "You can have it good or you can have it fast."

It's the kind of honest self-awareness you don't always hear from billionaires. Bezos knows he's glamorizing the profession, and he knows he'd probably fail at it in reality. But the fantasy persists anyway.

From Bartending Dreams to Building Empires

While Bezos dreams of slinging cocktails, his actual career path went in a slightly different direction. He founded Amazon (AMZN) in 1994, and the e-commerce giant now carries a market capitalization of $2.46 trillion. Bezos stepped down as Amazon's chief executive officer in 2021.

Beyond Amazon, Bezos owns The Washington Post and founded Blue Origin, a space company focused on making space travel safer and more affordable. His net worth of $253 billion ranks him fourth on the Bloomberg Billionaire Index.

Interestingly, before Bezos became a tech mogul, he had an entirely different career plan. "I wanted to be a theoretical physicist and so I went to Princeton and I was a really good student," he said in a 2018 conversation.

But a particularly difficult math problem that he and his roommate couldn't solve became a pivotal moment. That struggle made Bezos realize he would never become a great theoretical physicist, ultimately redirecting his career toward technology and business.

Other Billionaires Who Started Behind the Bar

Bezos isn't the only billionaire with bartending in his background. Before rising to fame on "Shark Tank," Mark Cuban worked as a bartender in Dallas at a spot called Elan. Cuban soon discovered he wasn't suited to taking orders from others—a realization that probably worked out well for him in the long run.

The difference, of course, is that Cuban actually did the bartending job before moving on to build his fortune. Bezos is still in the fantasy stage, dreaming about a career move that would almost certainly result in very frustrated customers and terrible Yelp reviews.

For now, Bezos will have to content himself with making slow, meticulous craft cocktails for friends and family rather than paying customers. Given his net worth, he can probably afford to take as long as he wants.