Christopher Russell,Kathryn Kohut,Stephanie Bennett,Darien Martin
New Yorkers Olivia and Amber have been best friends since they were children and are now longtime roommates, their general routine, with their recently added third friend, gay Justin, complaining about their lives while they conversely regale in all that city life specifically in New York City has to offer. After a three week business trip away in her job as a registrar for an art gallery, a job she hates and considers no more than as a glorified delivery person, Olivia returns home to discover that Amber has gotten engaged, her fiancé Dylan who she has only known for six weeks and was only a casual fling three weeks ago in he visiting New York City as a Wyoming rancher. In Amber planning on becoming a Wyoming rancher's wife, Olivia believes Amber is making the biggest mistake in her life in they both being a city girls through and through. Purely as a measure to show that mistake, Olivia arranges for a week long bachelorette getaway for Amber, Justin and herself to a Yellowstone dude ranch, she not telling either of them of their destination until they get to the airport, and further that they are expected to work on the ranch until they actually arrive. Olivia may not have thought the plan through in she herself too required to do that work, which she is ill-equipped mentally to do. The ranch itself is owned and operated by the McLeary family, widowed Wade and his adult son Travis, who have only converted it into a dude ranch to deal with what they hope will only be a short term debt problem, with Olivia, Amber and Justin their first guests. Travis has resisted this change regardless of the reason in having little patience for especially city slickers who will only impede the actual operation of the ranch. As such, there is initial animosity between Olivia and Travis. Beyond whether this trip will do what Olivia wants it to do with regard to Amber, Olivia and by association Travis may get a different view of their respective lives as they are forced to spend more and more time together, lives that may bridge that urban/rural divide stemming from them as people holistically, and not just a city girl and cowboy, respectively.—Huggo