Behind the Radicals (Johnsonverse)

Behind the Radicals is a 2012 American mockumentary directed by Timothy Hill that aired on WBC. In a parody of VH1's Behind the Music, it focuses on the fictional behind-the-scenes of the Radicals, a rock band used as the mascots of WBC (then known as JTV) from 1982 to 1991. It stars Jason Carmichael, Ashley Wallace, Casey Locklain, Brooke Pierce, Lane Pierce, and Clancy Brown, and is narrated by Jim Forbes.

Plot
In 1982, 18-year-old Dennis "Den" Isadore (Jason Carmichael) is a struggling singer. He gets booed at every club he performs at. One day, Den comes across his high school sweetheart Becky Jo Robbins (Ashley Wallace). Together, they decide to form the duo act Robbins and Isadore. However, on their first performance (at the Riviera, a seedy hotel on the Las Vegas Strip known for nude showgirl revues, and even then, they have to perform out on the parking lot across the street after they couldn't reserve a spot on time and ended up having a shouting match with its manager), Becky Jo accidentally flubs and says an ethnic slur instead of the correct lyric. This results in them getting booed off the stage and the end of their act, with the few people who visit feeling scammed.

It looks like Den and Becky Jo's music careers have ended, until Johnson Industries CEO Phil Stacker (Clancy Brown) notices them. Wanting to "reinvent" WBC, he decides to give them a call. Surprised at this, Dan and Becky Jo decide to take Phil up on their offer. The next morning, they go to Johnson Industries' headquarters at San Jose, California. There, they see Phil, who introduces them to Jeffrey "Jeff" Allen (Casey Locklain), who plays the drums, and Betty and Ben Leonard (Brooke and Lane Pierce), the backup singers. He decides that the band should have a name that appeals to kids of the time. Becky Jo comes up with the name "The Radicals", which Phil immediately agrees on.

For the 1982-1983 television season, the Radicals make their television debut in the "We're Cool" bumper, in which they perform a song of the same name. Despite people tuning out, Phil lies and tells them that they're not the cause of the newly-renamed JTV's lowest ratings in the network's history. Feeling famous, they decide to start up a new brand of clothes with Johnson's permission, which fails to sell one article of clothing. They decide to write a book called "How to Be, Like, Totally Radical", which again fails to sell one copy. With their dignity, they decide to start up a charity fund by claiming that they're using the money to donate to AIDS research. This time, it becomes a success, but what the people don't realize is that this is a front for the struggling Radicals to make money for themselves.

With the success of their "Radical Foundation", the Radicals, still working with JTV, decide to organize their first-ever concert. They sell a great number of tickets thanks to deceptive advertising, funded entirely by Phil, and though many of the crowds walk out immediately upon hearing the Radicals' first performance, it becomes an overall success due to the fact that for the first time, there are people who stayed throughout the show. By 1987, the Radicals' involvement has become limited after Phil decides to start improving the network, though he still allows them to do concerts. However, right after a midnight concert on October 10, 1991, the Radicals heard that Phil had been arrested and the Johnsons were about to regain control of Johnson Industries, with Sheldon Johnson, Jr. as the new CEO, JTV, in the process of renaming itself back to WBC, notifies the Radicals that they have been fired for being terrible.

After their firing, the Radicals try and fail several times to reinvent themselves with jazz, heavy metal, and punk rock, among others, eventually breaking up after a botched performance of "The Star-Spangled Banner" at Rockingham Speedway (then North Carolina Speedway) in 1996, in which they sing it in the form of rapping and even messing up several lyrics, that gets a molotov cocktail thrown in them by a violent heckler, killing Jeff in the process. The surviving members are remembered solely for their involvement with the Stacker Era, move to Italy and live the rest of their lives in a life of crime; they eventually follow through on a suicide pact on October 3, 2011, the fifteenth anniversary of their botched performance, and are found dead of gunshot wounds to the head in Den's home the next day.

At their funeral, only one person is present: a drunken hobo who thinks that it is the funeral of his son, and he walks away upon finding out that it isn't the case.