It is merely a deal.
A transaction between two friends. Two friends who are also highly successful business women. A fine sculpture for the employment of her friend’s younger brother. The man who has failed to grow up.
When powerful executive Tiffany Thornson is forced to take on ex-private school and rock star wannabe Spencer Harber as her assistant, personalities, correct tie knots and views inevitably clash. For Spencer the job is temporary until he and his band make it, but for Tiffany, a secret that has stopped her from finding true love is about to surface. Why is Spencer the one to discover it, and worse still, how has ruthless Tiffany allowed this to happen?
The contrast between lavish business trips to Paris and low-brough gigs in the basements of various pubs across London has both sides feeling they have home advantage. How can Tiffany get rid of the long haired upstart that is Spencer Harber without offending her good friend and, more worryingly, does she want to?
The sound business mantra that indecision is a sign of weakness comes to mind and there is nothing weak about Tiffany Thornson.
So what’s the problem?
I mean one cannot break a deal? Can they?
