From my experience, its rarely what you expect it to be.
Programming jobs vary so vastly depending on the company and position that it usually ends up being different from the stereotype, for better or for worse. This is because the stereotype is an average, not a mode or median, in a sense.
From my experience, I'd say the most important thing at a programming job is your boss. A good boss can shield you from incompetent and/or ignorant management. A good boss can help motivate you to do a better job and ensure that people who need assistance can call on resources from other employees on similar projects. Conversely, we all know the legends of what bad bosses can do. If you want to enjoy your first programming job, try to meet the boss before you get hired. Odds are he or she won't be an ideal, but hopefully you can at least avoid the worst of the DailyWTF-level horror stories.
In terms of expectations, I'd say at the vast majority of companies the expectations are probably lower than you think they are. Its hard to understand how people can get away with doing near-nothing for months (a'la a rather famous DailyWTF involving a brilliant Paula) until you actually get hired at a place where such a thing is possible.
The hardest part about a new programming job is learning all the specifics of the application you're going to be working on. I had this especially badly; I dived into a massive system with dozens of applications and tools and knew nearly nothing about how they were coded, and sometimes nothing whatsoever about the basics of the spec that governed them. Despite the fact that I knew far more about my field of expertise than anyone else there, this didn't help one iota when I had to write code for anything outside of it, where I had to learn everything from scratch.