


Things don’t seem to be much better at home where the selfish heavy drinker roams alone and ignores her familial ties. She isn’t exactly a popular employee of the month or life of office parties though her colleagues’ rejection doesn’t stop her from crashing a baby shower to steal a slice of cake. In another, she belittles the familial relationships of her assistant.

A senior executive at a New Jersey-based hedge fund, Kate routinely agitates and insults fellow employees-in one instance, she offends a pregnant co-worker so severely that in real life, her controversial rudeness would have resulted in a lawsuit. We soon find out just how unusual good deeds are for her, when Steinel takes us back a week where a perennially dissatisfied Kate treats everyone she crosses paths with awfully. It all starts with a voiceover, as these sorts of films often do-Kate wonders how she ended up in the midst of a raunchy, open-air gathering of Juggalos (those face-paint-wearing, seemingly vulgar, party-crazed rebels) just by doing something nice for someone for once.
