It does bother me! It bothers me more that there seems to be a sick little trend developing in the last decade or so where you must give yourself, body and soul to your employment.
It's seems to be that people are enthusiastically accepting working beyond their scheduled work hours for no extra pay. I wonder if they have so little self direction or personal interests that they need their job to leech into their personal time. This ain't for me as I've always seen work as my "cobbler's trade" as Einstein put it.
Work is supposed to enable people to have the means to enjoy life. It seems that a bunch of halfwits decided that they should usher in a new paradigm, one more similar to Victorian work houses, just prettier to look at.
Now, if you want to sacrifice some of your personal time to a genuine career, that's great. The problem is, this culture is permeating into dead end jobs where there's little to no opportunity for advancement. Nevertheless, people seem to be sacrificing their lives for a prize that they can never win.
I just don't get it! If I'm going to work, I work what I sign up for, any extra is on my own terms. I will do as I agreed, then I want to go home, see my cat, read, play music. That's what my labor bought me. If I can't do that, then what's the point?
Also, it occurs to me that if after working say 8 hours, for the agreed compensation and I went to my boss saying, "You know what, I'm going to have to ask you to, go ahead and pay me an extra 35% this month. Yeeeeaaah, I spent a bit too much on video games and you are going to have to sorta, play catch up with that..." I would be subject to some ridiculous tirade. But it's no different than expecting people to work 35% extra for nothing!