The difficult events continue in the life of an unemployed woman called Piki. But her life changed after he found work, and he worked as a producer in the Sabahi program. She took the post, and now she has to try to get him to do the job right. They have to do this while falling in front of the handsome Adam, and trying to save the offer from low ratings. Will Becky be able to hold onto the job of her dreams and grace?
Watching McAdams juggle all the pieces provides much of the laughs, but both Keaton and Ford get some positively hilarious traction as Colleen and Mike clash on the air and compete for the spotlight.
A cut above the usual rom-com tripe while remaining several notches below the caliber of talent involved.
AV Club
November 11, 2010
The message of Morning Glory -- that austere TV journalists could stand to lighten up a bit -- may be dubious, but Michell and his cast sell it persuasively.
Director Roger Mitchell and the great cast bring so much energy and humour to Morning Glory that it becomes an enjoyable, if completely unaffecting, piece of escapist fluff - just like good breakfast television.