It also features cast members from popular local English and Chinese Sitcoms Under One Roof, Phua Chu Kang Pte Ltd, Police & Thief, Living with Lydia, Happy Belly, My Grandson, the Doctor, Can I Help You?
In the film, an events and promotion department director and a blue-collar worker technician swap souls after a freak accident at a fictional government agency Work Allocation Singapore (WAS).
Tanya Chew (Fann Wong) is an events and promotion department director at a fictional satutory board known as WAS and Lim Teng Zui (Gurmit Singh) is a single father, with a daughter, Xiao Mei, and works as a blue-collar worker technician at WAS as well, along with their assistants Blackjack (Brandon Wong), Bamboo (Suhaimi Yusof), and their advisors Bee Hwa (Lina Ng) and Nancy (Amy Cheng).
WAS holds a boardroom meeting led by CEO Alan Lui (Samuel Chong) and directors Eric Tan (Moses Lim) and Lau Chee Hong (Steven Woon).
Lim and the crew consisting of Blackjack and Bamboo then decide to receiving a stern rebuke from the security guard named Muthu (David Bala) in the process.
"Lim" learns of his poor living conditions and eventually discovers that Chew's mother, despite being well-fed, collects cans in her free time due to heavy estrangement from her daughter.
In an attempt to save it from closure, "Chew" and "Lim" plan a Job Fair Exhibition which, after a decision by the board, must operate with a small budget and scale.
Back at the department, "Lim" and "Chew" learn that the Job Fair will take at least three months to organize, due to red tape and lack of information from various ministries.
In the chaos, Minister Seto discovers the loose backdrop and dislodges it, providing an improvised exit route for the stage members to escape unharmed.
The development of this film began when Neo pitched the idea of Fann Wong during one of their backstage meetings, though they can't agree regarding the location of the agreement.
[1] It was inspired by the then third Prime Minister of Singapore, Lee Hsien Loong's speech at the 2006 National Day Rally about the lack of professionalism among Singaporean workers.