I've worked, and I've been at college. Based just on the hours, I prefer working. Based just on the pay - working definitely wins, because it's actually profitable.
No, I don't want any 80 hour weeks. I'm not looking to define my life based on my job. A job is what helps enable you to enjoy what you really want in life - unless you're one of the 0.0...1% of people who genuinely enjoy their jobs.
College for me is extended job training. Expensive job training. If I was to go to college for what I liked, well, I wouldn't be in college, because I wouldn't have a clue what to go for. Maybe a little bit of each: electronics, nuclear physics, astrophysics, theoretical physics, philosophy, quantum physics, computer engineering, mechanical engineering...but just enough to get an overview, to see if it's something that would be challenging and interesting, and then move on. I'd wind up with 2-4 semesters of each, with no degree in anything. They have a kind of job for people like that, and it tends to involve an overused inquiry concerning potato slices which have been immersed in hot vegetable oil.