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SYNOPSIS:
Jessica and Drew, who have only been dating for a few months, connected over their mutual passion of pushing the boundaries of art. Although they come from completely different backgrounds, their shared interest makes them a force to reckon with, at least in the YouTube world. They truly believe if they can introduce art into people's lives in surprising and creative ways it’ll change the world for the better. The problem is their method of introduction often means shoving their “artistic stunts” in people's faces…until they’re forced to stop (usually in handcuffs). When the pilot begins Jessica and Drew are arrested for their latest stunt. Jessica’s father Charles, a politician running for New York City Mayor, is in the middle of his campaign, and the arrest doesn’t help his numbers at the poll. Jessica’s adopted sister Rose is also an artist, although more New Age, mainstream type. Needless to say Jessica and Rose don’t get along. Rose also happens to be dating Charles’s Campaign Manager, Max, which no one in the family knows about. After Jessica and Drew’s arrest, Charles calls a meeting with the family. He tells Jessica he’s cutting her and Drew off financially. Determined to convince her father not to cut them off, Jessica offers for them to create a commercial that will appeal to the young, hip voters he hasn’t been reaching. Although Charles and Max have doubts whether they can pull it off, they agree to let them try, but only give them a few days to do it. If the commercial isn’t to their liking, Charles will still cut them off. Making matters worse, Charles insists on is including Rose in the commercial somehow. Jessica and Drew decide a big part of the commercial is tagging (with graffiti art) a pro-Charles image, on an old office building he used to work at. They team up with a teen artists’ gang called WD-40 to send the message of Charles’ hipness and community outreach home. As Jessica and Drew arrive to start tagging, everything that can go wrong does of course. First the artistic differences that have been building between Jessica and Drew come to a blow, which makes Jessica consider giving up. Then after they overcome their conflict they have to deal with a much bigger threat. A group of famous, hipster taggers, known as the Trio of Travesty, just happen to have plans to tag the same building the same night as Jessica and Drew. Max and Rose show up in the middle of a face off between Jessica and Drew and the Trio, and Rose ends up helping the Trio (who are big fans of her work). Devastated, Jessica confronts her and they finally say all things they’ve been holding back for years. Although their differences aren’t going to go away overnight, Jessica and Rose put them aside to deal with the real enemy, The Trio of Travesty. WD-40 tells them the only way to decide who gets to tag the wall is by having a beat box battle to the “death” (which is basically artistic embarrassment). Different roles of rapping, beat boxing, and dancing are assigned as Jessica, Drew, and WD-40 take on the Trio of Travesty. In the end everyone gives all their best efforts, but the Trio’s freestyle ability is too strong to compete with. Jessica and Drew have to figure out if there is any other way to beat the Trio, and carry out the tag they originally planned. This might be their only chance to convince Jessica's father...and they know it. In the end they are able to work with the Trio to create an amazing mural and overall make a kick ass commercial that speaks to the younger voters. Only problem is Charles and Max want them to keep doing it, and tell Jessica and Drew they won’t cut them off if they run the media for the campaign. Now Jessica and Drew are faced with the challenge of staying true to their art while creating it in the phony world of politics.