She works in a glass tower. He works with his hands. Cue the love story.
Wall Street power suits are getting steamrolled by steel-toe boots.
This winter, a growing number of high-achieving city women are swapping cubicles, KPIs and Slack notifications for something straight out of a wintry Hallmark movie: blue-collar boyfriends with calloused hands, pickup trucks, and jobs that don’t involve Outlook calendars.
Think less “circle back” and more “I’ll fix that.”
In the 2024 Hallmark movie “The Heiress and the Handyman,” Jodie Sweetin’s rich girl ditches the high life for a flannel-clad handyman, played by Corey Sevier. This holiday season, real-life single women are pining for lives like those depicted on the saccharine channel.Dubbed the rise of the real-life “Hallmark hunk,” the trend has corporate women in New York City and beyond swooning over men who look like they wandered off the set of a small-town rom-com: rugged, charming and blissfully unconcerned with office politics.
It’s “Sweet Home Alabama” energy, minus Reese Witherspoon’s love triangle and with a lot more Carhartt winter wear.
High heels meet steel-toe boots — and the sparks fly in “Sweet Home Alabama,” starring Reese Witherspoon and Josh Lucas. ©Buena Vista Pictures/Courtesy Everett CollectionWomen are openly romanticizing their lives with construction workers, electricians, farmers and mechanics, posting videos on social media that feel like the opening montage of a made-for-TV romance.
According to one expert, the appeal isn’t a return to 1950s gender roles — it’s relief.
“I don’t think these women actually want to go back to traditional gender roles. I think they just want a little weight taken off their shoulders and to feel like somebody is there to take care of them,” Dr. Jennifer Gunsaullus, a sociologist, speaker and founder of The Center for Courageous Intimacy, told The Post.
In pop culture, the fantasy has gone mainstream: Bella Hadid unexpectedly dating a cowboy, and Lana Del Rey marrying a “normie” alligator swamp tour guide.
And in a true-life Hallmarkian twist, a former Los Angeles marketing exec, Karinna Dvorsack, recently opened up about moving back to her Massachusetts hometown last year — then falling in love with AJ Fish, a former kindergarten classmate with “crazy dimples” who confessed he “had a huge crush on her” throughout elementary school.
“We met at the right time,” Dvorsack said of their renewed romance to the Cape Cod Times. They plan to wed in August 2026.
Is it any wonder there is endless discourse bubbling up about whether modern women are secretly craving a quieter, more “traditional” life — or just a man who knows how to use his hands?
“My favorite love trope: Busy corporate woman and domesticated blue collar man,” one coupled gal captioned a recent viral video, adding that she was “deeply obsessed” with her own off-the-grid beau, while another singleton wandering NYC streets denoted that she was “in search of: small town boy,” sharing: “Something about being in Midtown makes me feel like the burnt-out corporate girly lead in a romcom who needs to discover the true meaning of Christmas.”
One woman named Jenna even chronicled her own eyebrow-raising, true-life rom-com arc, from “ex corporate girlie” to divorcée who moves back to her small-town home and ultimately falls for her brother’s “blue collar best friend” — who is also her ex and “soulmate” with whom she reconnected and fell back in love.
On Monday, she shared that they plan to marry in five days. She even pitched the plot directly to the network, tagging: “Hallmark Channel what do you say?”
Call it a backlash to burnout, a rebellion against corporate dating, or simply seasonal cuffing with a flannel twist — but the Hallmark boyfriend is having a moment.
And for many women tired of glass ceilings and dating apps that feel like job interviews, the appeal is obvious: fewer emails, more elbow grease — and a love story that doesn’t require PTO.
Relationship experts say the fantasy isn’t about flannel — it’s about fatigue.
“Very high-achieving women still disproportionately carry the relational labor — the emotional and cognitive aspects of their lives — even when they’re in relationships,” sociologist Gunsaullus told The Post.
“I think there’s a component of this that represents burnout for women.”
She likened the Hallmark-hunk obsession to another cultural phenomenon fueled by exhaustion.
“Part of the appeal is decision fatigue. Women were tired of making decisions and wanted somebody who knew them, understood them and prioritized them,” Gunsaullus said.
The problem? The picture-perfect fantasy doesn’t always match real life.
“These men represent a break from all of that — but of course, it’s quite a fantasy,” she added.
Dr. Shamyra Howard, LCSW/CST, AASECT-certified sex and relationship therapist at We-Vibe, agrees the trend is less about romance — and more about regulation.
“One reason many women in corporate jobs are drawn to the blue-collar man is because it feels like relief,” Howard told The Post.
“Corporate life requires constant performance, decision-making, and emotional control. A lot of women are tired of being ‘on’ all the time.”
She said the Hallmark boyfriend represents something deeper than a pickup truck and a tool belt.
“It’s not really about flannel or rural life. It’s about craving ease, safety, and a softer pace after years of hustle,” Howard explained.
“I see this as the desire for nervous system regulation. Everything is so fast-paced now, and people’s minds and systems are overloaded. It’s a dream to come to a partner who induces calm, clarity and stillness,” she added.
But Howard cautioned against confusing escape with compatibility.
“Career-driven women are often always on the go and need to pay attention to burnout,” she said. “When you’re exhausted, escape can look like desire,” Howard said.
“If your career matters to you, make sure you’re not looking for a partner to rescue you from a life that just needs better boundaries and more pleasure built into it.”
Both experts stressed that Hallmark endings don’t come with a two-hour runtime in real life.
“Real relationships still require communication, compromise and emotional work, no matter the ZIP code,” Howard said. “Enjoy the idea, but stay grounded in reality. Choose the person, not the storyline.”
As Gunsaullus put it, the real takeaway isn’t about small towns — it’s about self-reflection.
“The biggest question for women is what this represents emotionally: Do you need rest, less pressure, or a partner who can really step up and meet you where you are?” she asked.

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