Rachael Chow, a high-flying marketing student, is assigned to Cream Makers Inc. (CMI), a production company operated by oddballs, as an intern. Although she has desires of working for a bigger, higher-class marketing company, she discovers that she is stuck with this internship. While she tries to clarify her situation to anybody who can help her, Rachael gets educated on an important client, Sunny Bee (dubbed the “George Clooney of Singapore”), who is on his way to the company for a meeting.
During a meeting, Rachael learns that Sunny Bee intends to produce a music video for his comeback. She chances upon the name Chang’E. Having no idea of who she is, Rachael asks Joshua, the company’s creative director. She receives an exciting crash course on the legend of a woman who floats to the moon.
Every music video production requires the right talent to be in front of the camera, and this requires casting sessions. The role of Chang’E is up for grabs and every soul has turned up for auditions. Rachael is tasked with going through the talents. There, she encounters an actor who insists on auditioning for a role that does not reflect the casting call.
Troubled by budgetary woes, the music video turns out to be more expensive than the producers thought. Gene brings Rachael along to meet a potential sponsor, who does not seem to be in tune with Sunny Bee’s vision. They also meet Tong Hua Hua, a lady boss of a fish ball company. Rachael learns just how peculiar meetings between sponsors and producers can be.
Still plagued by a poor budget, Rachael manages to find a potential sponsor from a super car company. Upon arriving at the company, Rachael discovers that a frienemy she recognises works there too.
"Method Acting. Noun. Definition: An acting technique in which an actor aspires to complete his or her emotional identification with a part. Rachael is about to come face-to-face with an animal who just might be completely lost in the role.
Sunny Bee has his mind set on having Korean dancers in his music video, but it is a daunting task for producers to find and pay such performers. Gene tasks Rachael to find such people, but to avoid typical means of going to an agency to search for them due to the expensive fees. What idea can Rachael come up with to find Korean dancers?
Stress and chaos ensue on the production set. As a newbie to production, Rachael tries to cope with the madness. Adding to the fray, the actress playing Chang’E begins to make demands, making the production of the music video more difficult.
Rachael will show you the “life-hacks” of a production that might be useful for you in real life!
Sunny Bee is missing! As the production crew tries to find him, Rachael discovers him hiding in the costume room. Stricken with self-doubt, Sunny feels that his comeback is going south. Rachael attempts to cheer him up.
Lights! Camera! Action! Rachael is trying to keep the whole production together as Murphy’s Law continues to surface. Whatever that can go wrong, will go wrong. As the crew works hard to maintain the schedule, big trouble begins to spark, brewing in the corner.
Rachael has survived it all. On the last day of her internship, she reminisces about the good times she had with these oddballs at Cream Makers Inc.
Watch the Music Video now!