IMDb RATING
6.9/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Competing radio personalities in Chicago find common ground when they have to work together.Competing radio personalities in Chicago find common ground when they have to work together.Competing radio personalities in Chicago find common ground when they have to work together.
- Awards
- 1 win & 3 nominations
David James Lewis
- Scott Ryder
- (as David Lewis)
Emily Maddison
- Swimsuit Model
- (as Emily Bruhn)
Storyline
Did you know
- GoofsEarly in the movie, when Sonia is filling in at the Chicago station, her fiance calls the main switchboard of the station and the receptionist/operator patches him directly through to the on-air call-in line . . . and, unknowingly, she puts him on the air. Chances are something like that would never happen . . . particularly on a major market station. Sorry but, to this career broadcaster, that's a "red flag."
- Quotes
Nick Linden: Now that I see you two together, I don't really see you two together.
- ConnectionsFeatures BBC Sunday-Night Theatre: The Silent Village (1951)
Featured review
If you're looking for a standard Hallmark Romcom with a bit extra to it, this is the movie for you. She's a career-driven radio adviser to women, always advising her audience to "be an island" (especially after her fiancé dumps her); he's also in the business, but his métier is single men who want to stay that way.
With a set-up like that, of course they wind up as a wrangling advice couple on the same radio show. Also, inevitably they will fall in love, but they won't figure that out until the end of the movie.
In the meantime, they wrangle, and Alison Sweeney and Jonathan Scarfe are very good at that, speaking in short, clipped, snarky put-downs. Normally I would credit the writer, the actors or the director, but I'd really like to know who the editor of this one is. The cutting, although simple, helps the pace immensely, which is what editing is supposed to do.
There is nothing that is extraordinary in this one, but here's what happens when everyone does a good job: a superior result.
With a set-up like that, of course they wind up as a wrangling advice couple on the same radio show. Also, inevitably they will fall in love, but they won't figure that out until the end of the movie.
In the meantime, they wrangle, and Alison Sweeney and Jonathan Scarfe are very good at that, speaking in short, clipped, snarky put-downs. Normally I would credit the writer, the actors or the director, but I'd really like to know who the editor of this one is. The cutting, although simple, helps the pace immensely, which is what editing is supposed to do.
There is nothing that is extraordinary in this one, but here's what happens when everyone does a good job: a superior result.
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