Afterwards, Judy's agent Murray, having worked hard to get her an audition with such a prestigious director, furiously drops her from his roster of clients.
At a call center specializing in customer service and phone sex, Judy has an interview with Lil, who is assertive but friendly.
Judy then attends interviews with other phone sex companies, including one run by a stripper, who offers her the opportunity to work unrestricted in her own home.
Her sports memorabilia-obsessed cousin and best friend Jimmy, who lives in the same apartment complex as her, worries that her new job might distract her from her acting career.
She bonds with "Bob Regular", a caller from Arizona who requests her specifically; Judy adopts the nickname "Lovely" especially for him.
When Bob tells Judy he is visiting New York on business, they agree to meet in person at Coney Island during her lunch break.
One night, Judy engages in a conversation with a sadistic caller who discusses his fantasy of strangling her, soon realizing he is the same abusive man who previously harassed her.
In Los Angeles, Judy attends an audition with Ron Silver who, like Tarantino, asks her to bare her breasts.
He shows his fondness for this beautiful heroine (Theresa Randle) by surrounding her with every bit of fun and flattery in his considerable arsenal.
Bold colors, a dance track of Prince songs, a parade of wild costumes, good-humored sexual teasing and warmly inviting cinematography by Malik Sayeed all contribute to this comedy's high-energy party mood.
"[7] Todd McCarthy of Variety said the film lacks "meaningful insight into Girl 6's character",[8] and Rolling Stone's Peter Travers commented Lee has "sucked the fun out of call-in sex and replaced it with sanctimonious prattle".