Dan and Lorie are writers of obituaries and weddings, respectively, and later rival editorial page contributors at the
Baltimore Sun. Shortly after starting their rivalrous, side-by-side columns, conservative Dan and liberal Lorie experience a case of opposites attracting. Close to three years after the column and their relationship commencing, a morning talk show appearance inspires a local channel to offer them a TV program. The point-counterpoint talk show will present their opposing views on various civic issues. Their great differences cause sparks to fly and ratings to soar. One day on air, they create a great scene, which piques the public's interest, while simultaneously causing their breakup. We then see the film is split, with the first half showing us his perspective of the three years of their relationship up until the on-air scene and the second half, hers. Dan is initially shown to be a womanizer and commitment-phobe. Early on, Lorie helps him hide from one woman he has jilted, later she sees his flirtatious interaction with women she perceives to be excessively sexily dressed and not very bright. He sees himself as a wolf, needing to be free. Then we see him mishearing and reading items on a menu, all connected to serious relationships and settling down. As Dan and Lorie get to know one another, they both discover they have feelings for each other. She carefully orchestrates their first close encounters, making it appear that she is avoiding another man, so that he dances with her. She subtly lets him know she has just dumped her boyfriend so he knows she is available and they have dinner together. Once they are resettled in their new office space as columnists, Lorie says she loves him, but Dan does not reciprocate. Obviously something he is not comfortable saying, he goes to a therapist but still cannot say it. Finally he tells her he loves her while she is sleeping. Unbeknownst to him, she has heard him and we see she is staggered. We come to the fateful live scene with the mug. Moments before they step on-stage, they argue in the
green room. Lorie discovers Dan had heard from Linda, and had made lunch plans with her. Jealous because of their past history, she asks if he will ever marry her and he tells her no. On the day of what is meant to be their last show, Dan pre-records his rebuttal. Then, Lorie does a live redo response to the previous day's topic, the merger of two highways—a veiled reference to their relationship—this time saying the proposal was a bad idea. She shows that her mug is clean, alluding to an off-hand remark he made, that if she ever cleaned the bottom of her mug, he would consider their relationship a success. The studio shows Dan's prerecorded rebuttal to the proposal, likewise reversing his view, accepting the proposal. Then he directly apologizes to her, asking for another chance, reappears on stage, and they embrace. ==Cast==