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Ambitious, but Lazy

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Itzhak Stern: Let me understand. They put up all the money, I do all the work. What, if you don't mind me asking, would you do?
Oskar Schindler: I'd make sure it's known the company is in business. I'd see that it had a certain panache. That's what I'm good at: not the work, not the work. The presentation.

Although hard work doesn't necessarily guarantee success, it is generally accepted that if you want to achieve something, you have to work for it. After all, no matter how naturally talented someone is, they still have to put some effort into achieving their goals, something that most people agree with.

Sadly, ambition and a strong work ethic don't necessarily go hand-in-hand.

Some people have incredible ambitions but don't have the patience or desire to actually work for said ambitions. Maybe they're naturally talented and view the idea of actually trying at something as beneath them. They could be Spoiled Brats who are used to having everything handed to them. They might feel that their willingness to take shortcuts makes them smarter than the "sheeple" who insist on achieving their goals via hard work. Typical methods used by these characters include taking credit for others' work, manipulating others into doing the heavy lifting for them, or building/exploiting connections to people who can help them achieve their goals.

Needless to say, characters who display this quality tend to end up all the worse for it; perhaps their efforts to avoid work result in them putting in more work, or they end up humiliated by someone willing to put in the work to achieve their goals. Sometimes these characters might undergo Character Development, and decide to work for their goals; other times they refuse to learn their lesson and insist on trying to take shortcuts no matter how much it bites them. On rare occasions, the character might actually achieve their goal, only to end up losing what they gained because of their laziness.

Sub-Trope of Lazy Bum.

Compare Cheaters Never Prosper, Evil Is Easy, Get-Rich-Quick Scheme, We Have Become Complacent, and His Own Worst Enemy.

Contrast The Slacker, Professional Slacker, Determinator, Dismotivation.


Examples:

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    Anime & Manga 
  • In Inuyasha, Tokajin was once a lazy apprentice sage searching for any way of becoming a full-blown sage so that he could get out of his apprenticeship. As chance would have it, one day he found one of the shards of the shikon jewel and, not understanding its power, threw it at a nearby tree. The tree happened to be Ninmenka, the demonic human-faced fruit tree, and the jewel shard granted it the ability to speak to Tokajin, promising him power if he ate its fruit. Lazy as he was, he ate the fruit and became Ninmenka's slave, compelled to gather others to feed it in exchange for the promise of immortality.
  • Pokémon: The Series:
  • The Rising of the Shield Hero:
  • Dimitri in Yu-Gi-Oh! GX wants to be a great duelist, but unlike every other character in the series who creates their own, unique decks and strategies, Dimitri simply copies the decks of great duelists, which does nothing to improve his skills. After being defeated by Judai/Jaden, Dimitri has to have it outright explained to him that great duelists have to be willing to create their own decks and strategies.

    Fan Works 
  • Fall of Starfleet, Rebirth of Friendship:
    • Rhymey is this in contrast to the Ambitious, but Diligent Rainbow Dash in both training and romance; when it comes to training, Rainbow Dash is willing to push her limits, in contrast to the racial supremacist Rhymey, who prefers to coast by on his race's natural abilities. In addition, when it comes to winning over Fluttershy, Rainbow Dash prefers to get to know her as a person and make her happy via compromise which results in a Relationship Upgrade, Rhymey would rather use abuse, Gaslighting and Mind Control rather than get to know Fluttershy as a person or put effort into improving himself.
    • Grand Ruler is a lot like Rhymey in the relationship department; rather than improve himself to win over Celestia, he resorts to using the Orb of Reality to rewrite reality into one in which she is his wife, with no personal growth necessary on his part.
  • The My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic Hate Fic Friendship is Failure puts a twist on this in that the audience is expected to sympathize with characters who display this trait alongside some form of Pride:
    • Talon Ted combines this trope with Small Name, Big Ego; he dreams of being an actor, but scoffs at the idea of getting a degree, even though he kept getting turned down. Even after his sister forces him to get a degree in order to help him get an acting job, he refuses to do so because his pride was hurt. In addition while the narrative claims he is an amazing actor, his only acting skills consist of copying other actors' performances rather than trying to create his own style.
    • Stone Heart mixes this trope with Can't Take Criticism; he is a writer who gets lousy reviews, but expects his audience and critics to accept his crappy writing rather than take the time to listen to his critics and improve his own skills.
  • Many Naruto fanfics portray Sasuke this way, having him rely upon his Sharingan's Power Copying abilities to steal jutsu rather than training. In addition, in works where Naruto becomes a God-Mode Sue, Sasuke often schemes to steal whatever made his rival so powerful. This contrasts sharply with Sasuke's canonicial characterization; while the Sharingan does grant him several abilities, he still trains excessively, even to his own detriment (i.e. overusing his Mangekyou Sharingan during training to the point that he nearly makes himself blind).
  • Raise Yourselves Up (We're Done) presents Miss Caline Bustier this way. Despite pawning off the bulk of her responsibilities as a teacher onto Marinette as her 'Class President', she doesn't think twice before banning her and Chloé from joining their peers on their annual class trip. Nor does she lift a finger to help her new Class President Alya and the rest of her students with any of their fundraising efforts, make any plans or reservations or anything that's required for said trip. Not only does she neglect their passports, she doesn't even clear the trip with the school board! And even after this is all revealed, she still tries to convince Marinette and Chloé to let her class tag along on their vacation plans, while blithely ignoring how all of those things she neglected to deal with are still undone.
  • In Scarlet Lady, Chloé Bourgeois combines this trope with Nominal Hero and Hates the Job, Loves the Limelight; after stealing the Ladybug Miraculous from Marinette, she sees it as an opportunity to become a famous superheroine. Being a Spoiled Brat who is used to having everything handed to her, she accomplishes this by sitting back and letting Chat Noir do all of the hard work of fighting the akumas, before using her World-Healing Wave to heal the damage and steal the glory. This mainly works since the Miraculous Cure is their only way of magically fixing the fallout of akuma attacks, and the other heroes can't reclaim the Earrings from her since they don't know her Secret Identity.
    • This is mirrored by how Chloé conducts herself as a civilian; she has Sabrina do all her homework for her, and repeatedly tries to plagiarize others' hard work and pass it off as her own. During "Reverser", her efforts to insult several of her previous victims' artistic endeavors backfire when they calmly remind her of how she'd tried stealing those very same things from them before:
      Chloé: (pointing at Juleka and Rose) No one cares about your dumb baby unicorn songs!
      Juleka: You seemed to care when you helped XY rip us off. We literally have a recording contract.
      Chloé: (whirling on Marinette) Y-your designs are trash!
      Marinette: Gabriel Agreste and Jagged Stone don't think so. And you also tried stealing my "trash" designs. Twice.
  • Tough Love: Bella has big plans for her future: becoming a vampire and living eternally with the Cullens, leeching off of their riches. To her father's frustration, she puts no effort into her schooling or at her job, arrogantly assuming that Ms. Newton will never notice that she's been artificially inflating her hours and Stealing from the Till. Charlie also observes that she doesn't even act like she cares about the Cullens, which causes Edward to realize how she's been manipulating him and break things off.

    Films — Animated 
  • Gaston in Beauty and the Beast could be considered a romantic variant of this trope; despite desiring Belle because she is the one woman in the village who isn't interested in him, unlike The Beast, who puts genuine effort into changing himself for Belle's sake and actually tries to treat her as a person rather than a prize, Gaston would rather use his natural charm and charisma, or failing that Blackmail mixed with Murder the Hypotenuse to make her his wife.
  • Chicken Run: Mrs. Tweedy wants to be rich and famous, but prefers having others handle all the hard work for her. The only way she contributes to her husband's farm is by terrorizing the chickens and killing anyone who doesn't lay eggs. When she decides to switch their business from eggs to chicken pies, she invests in a massive automated machine that she makes her husband assemble and maintain for her, while advertising them as "Mrs. Tweedy's Homemade Chicken Pies".
  • Kung Fu Panda 4: The Chameleon intends to become the greatest kung-fu master of all time, though rather than actually learning any of its skills or techniques, she resorts to abducting other masters and forcefully stealing their abilities for herself. While she gives the Freudian Excuse that she did want to legitimately learn once but was rejected by all prospective kung fu teachers for her allegedly being too small, she remained as an extremely wealthy crime boss for many years and had the money and resources to possibly hire a kung fu teacher from at least some part of China but evidently decided not to do that, which has the side effect of making her look like both a Rich Bitch and a Lazy Bum who didn't have the drive or motivation to match her ambition.
  • Scar in both versions of the The Lion King is this at his core; his Evil Plan to become king, while brilliant, essentially boils down to "make the hyenas do all of the grunt work while I reap the benefits." Once he actually becomes king, the Pride Lands turn from a lush savanna teeming with life to a wasteland because of his negligence in actually ruling his kingdom.
  • Shark Tale: Oscar dreams of becoming a "somebody", but would rather rely on Get Rich Quick Schemes to instantly climb to the top than do anything that requires actual effort. Despite the fact that this behavior has landed him in debt to The Mafia, Oscar has the brilliant idea of gambling the money he owes on what he thinks is a rigged seahorse race (with the said assumption being based on a random conversation he happened to overhear that he had no way of verifying).

    Literature 
  • The Edge Chronicles: Thaw Daggerslash is a particularly dark version. Whilst a charming, capable, and dedicated Sky Pirate who possesses a variety of useful skills, with great ambitions to be captain of his own great sky ship and become a legend in his own right, he's never succeeded as he is unwilling to start at the bottom and work his way up to become Captain as is tradition. As such he masterminds a ruthless plan to murder Captain Wind Jackal, by impersonating his hated archenemy Turbolt Smeal and luring him and his crew into increasingly dangerous traps, all whilst he ingratiates himself to said crew, thus when Wind Jackal dies he can take over. When this gambit fails and the crew instead chooses Wind Jackal's son Quint, Thaw flat out aligns with the dreaded Leaguemasters to help them wipe out all the sky pirates, as long as they give him the ship after the crew's killed.

    Live-Action TV 
  • Community: Jeff Winger often tries to get something without putting in a lot of effort, always either falling flat on his face or doing more work than he would have to put in honest effort.
  • A large part of why The Gang's schemes on It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia nearly always fail, even on the odd occasion where it was a decent idea in the first place, is because they start dialing it in almost immediately as soon as it looks like some real work might be required, will take any available shortcut, and will outright force a shortcut if none are available.
  • In The Paper, Amanda observes that Giana "usually doesn't do anything" while everyone else is hard at work. As one example of this, Giana waits until the last possible minute to write her editor-in-chief application essay.
  • Parks and Recreation: This epitomises Tom Haverford, who constantly has big dreams of expanding out from his mid-level local government post and breaking into the glamorous and highly paid worlds of media marketing, celebrity culture, and high-end style. However, despite possessing some legitimate talent and expertise in networking, PR, event planning, and style, Tom is at heart a lazy guy who prefers to goof off and focuses most of his efforts on finding ways to do the least work whilst still receiving the most credit. Thus his early business ventures and attempts fail (sometimes quite spectacularly i.e. his Entertainment 720 see's him blowing millions on flashy and pointless expenses, whilst only figuring out what the company actually could do right before they go bankrupt) due to his attempts at taking shortcuts, prioritising the exciting parts over the essential or getting distracted and simply not bothering to put the actual work in. His arc throughout the series sees him slowly outgrowing these tendencies and working towards becoming a successful businessman, though it's not till near the end he fully succeeds in moving past his inherited instincts to slack off.
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation: In an alternate timeline seen in "Tapestry", Jean-Luc Picard turned out this way due to never having been stabbed in the heart during a bar brawl when he was an Ensign, and thus never having learned the lesson that life is fleeting and you have to take risks to get anywhere in life. Forty years later, he has only advanced a single rank (to junior Lieutenant) and constantly talks about wanting to become a captain one day, but never takes concrete action to make that happen.
    Troi: Hasn't this been the problem all along? Throughout your career, you've had lofty goals, but you've never been willing to do what's necessary to attain them.
    Riker: I'd have to agree with the Counselor. You talk about wanting more... but when it comes to doing something about it, you hang back. If you want to get ahead, you have to take chances. Stand out from the crowd. Get noticed.

    Tabletop Games 

    Theatre 
  • In Yotsuya Kaidan, a major source of Iemon's problems is his attempts to rise in society through shortcuts rather than honest work. He became a ronin because he stole from his former master, he murders his way into a marriage to Oiwa, and then he tries to weasel his way out of the marriage by hiring a pimp to rape Oiwa so that he can claim she is Defiled Forever and divorce her, which instead results in her death, but not before she curses him and becomes a vengeful ghost.

    Toys 
  • Transformers: Several Transformers have a version of this as a Fatal Flaw.
    • Most famously, Starscream is the Trope Namer for The Starscream. He wants to be Decepticon leader, but in many series where he actually succeeds (e.g. the IDW Publishing comics), his leadership tends to be wanting due to apparently thinking that all he needs to do is become a leader and respect and awe will come in accordingly.
    • Hot Rod:
      • Hot Rod wants to be acknowledged as a great hero, but is generally portrayed as a Glory Hound due to thinking that's the quickest way of making a good name for himself. His incarnation in the Transformers: More than Meets the Eye goes on wacky adventures and drags his crew along, until eventually they get so sick of his aimless galivanting that they join The Mutiny against him. In comparison, his incarnation in the Ladybug books has done the hard work of actually earning the respect of his fellow Autobots by being a reliable friend and comrade, and so by the time of the Nebulos books, he's the Autobot commander.
      • This can also be seen with what happens whenever Hot Rod becomes Rodimus Prime: in The Transformers, at the beginning of the third season, he's excited and cheerful, basically acting like he did as Hot Rod. By the end of the season, he's not shy about moaning and groaning about how hard it is to actually be a leader, and when Optimus Prime is seemingly brought back from the dead he's all too eager to turn command back over to Optimus, despite numerous warning signs that something is off. His counterparts in The Transformers (Marvel) and The Transformers: Regeneration One are much more dour and serious, due to having actually grown into the role of commander.
    • Many iterations of Grimlock want to become Autobot leader in place of Optimus Prime. The problem is this is usually due to their belief that their raw power means they deserve to be leader, and so they can't be bothered with the other aspects of leadership like careful planning or concern for their subordinates. In The Transformers (Marvel), twice Grimlock is essentially handed his desired goal of becoming Autobot leader, and both times have ended in disaster note . Many versions of Grimlock do genuinely have the intelligence and skill to become good commanders, but the problem is most of them also think that leading a team like the Dinobots makes them qualified to lead the entire faction and they don't need to learn anything more.
    • The Transformers: Animated version of Bumblebee wants to become a member of the Elite Guard, but he's also a slacker who isn't interested in doing the hard work of slowly climbing his way up the ranks (and he isn't The Ace like Optimus Prime, who was fast-tracked to joining the Guard until an incident that essentially killed his career). The bio of his "Elite Guard Bumblebee" toy outright notes that Bumblebee adopts that look thinking that if he looks the part, he might get accepted into the group.

    Video Games 
  • Baldur's Gate: When the player meets Melicamp, he claims to be the student of the powerful wizard Thalantyr, but when they visit Thalantyr, he scoffs, saying that Melicamp only came to him hoping for quick results, and turned to thievery when he didn't get them. (Melicamp's shortcut to power got him more than he bargained for; the bracers in Thalantyr's safe were cursed, turning him into a chicken.)
    Thalantyr: A student wishes to LEARN! This fool wishes only to have knowledge.
  • Fire Emblem: Three Houses: Despite Linhardt being an extremely intelligent and knowledgeable student at the Garreg Mach Officers Academy, his work behavior is beyond lazy. From constantly sleeping to immediately tuning out any conversation that doesn't interest him, it's quite clear that Linhardt only works when it interests himself.
  • In Hi-Fi RUSH, Kale Vandelay has wanted to be the CEO of Vandelay Technologies his whole life but was consistently passed over for promotion by the previous CEO, his mother Roxanne. Angered by this but too lazy to actually do anything to make himself worthy of the position, Kale creates SPECTRA a Mind Control program to force his way into the CEO seat by brainwashing Roxanne. But once he's actually the CEO, he doesn't want to do any of the work of predicting market trends or coming up with new products or directions for the company. So he plans to use SPECTRA to remove that part of the equation to make people buy Vandelay products.
  • Gristol Malik from Psychonauts 2 is the former prince of Grulovia whose family lost their position when they were forced to flee when the evil psychic Maligula they were using as an enforcer turned on them. Gristol wants to revive Maligula so that she can be his enforcer again and he can retake the throne. The 'lazy' part here is that while he's a brilliant schemer, he gives absolutely no thought to the outcome of his plan other than "I'll be able to laze around eating buckets of caviar again" and doesn't bother to do the most basic of research about who Maligula was and why she went on rampages. His plan is ultimately self-defeating because Maligula isn't really a person; she's a mental construct formed by a powerful psychic's mental breakdown over accidentally causing a massacre, and as such she's essentially a Generic Doomsday Villain and utterly unreasonable.

    Web Animation 
  • Refreshing Stories: Fusei is a high school student who slacks off all the time but still manages to get good grades, which he claims to be a result of him being a natural genius, but he's actually had his dad, a CEO blackmail one of his workers (who looks just like Fusei) into doing his schoolwork and tests in Fusei's place. Fusei tries to use this trick in order to get into a good university, however on the day of the entrance exams, Hiroshi tricks him into going into the classroom while the lookalike is also there, exposing Fusei as a cheater. After he is exposed, Fusei literally states that, as the son of a powerful CEO, universities should beg to have someone like him attend and that he shouldn't have to work to get in.

    Web Videos 
  • Apple Texts. Dillon, unlike his hard-working brother Jack, avoids hard work on principle, viewing it as "beta male" behavior, and believes that an "Alpha Male" should get ahead by gaming the system. In practice, this means that he does things like pretending to be blind to manipulate people into giving him charity, trying to bully his brother into doing his work for him, and trying to sleep with his boss's daughter to easily climb the ranks (despite already being married). This comes back to bite him, as he not only has to pay alimony to his wife as a result of cheating but also gets fired as a result of slacking off on his work.

    Western Animation 

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