... at least for a couple of years, and at least for the short B comedies they were making in the production code era. Losing Darryl F. Zanuck at about the same time didn't help matters either, but I digress.
Skip Houston's (Rudee Vallee's) band and dancer Bonnie Hayden (Ann Dvorak) are both on the same radio program, and go about antagonizing each other for no good perceivable reason. Secretly, Skip is trying to help her by planting positive comments in the columns about her performance and the fans' reaction. In fact, the fans are lukewarm. The two are starting to fall in love, but when Bonnie gets fired, she blames Skip and gives him the cold shoulder. Complications ensue.
In the precode era, Warner Brothers could turn out a zippy fresh 75 minute comedy pretty easily - some fresh precode one liners and situations punctuated by musical numbers after Busby Berkeley brought musicals back into vogue. But then the production code came along and all of that stopped for awhile, and dreck like this was made for a couple of years. Another film in the same vein as this is "I Live For Love". The problem is that the jokes that could pass the censors just weren't funny.
In this case, trying to pass for humor, you have bandmembers that smash each other over the head, men doing a fan dance, and Allan Jenkins telling jokes that weren't funny when bustles were still in fashion. For some reason, the wonderful Helen Morgan is imported to sing a torch song, but it just doesn't fit here at all. Plus Dvorak and Vallee have zero chemistry. The only bright spots are Robert Armstrong as a thug who wants to be a crooner and Ned Sparks as a sardonic agent.
I'd avoid this as it truly is awful.