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Still Married With Issues Work — That Sitcom Show Vol 7

For the uninitiated, That Sitcom Show (TSS) follows longtime couple Mark and Jenna, now in their 17th year of marriage. There are no zany neighbors who burst through the door, no mistaken-identity farces, no "very special episodes." Instead, each volume is a tight, four-episode arc filmed in real-time, focusing on a single, mundane crisis.

Volume 1 was about replacing a broken dishwasher. Volume 3 covered a contentious PTA meeting. Volume 5? A two-hour argument over the correct way to fold fitted sheets.

Critics scoffed. Audiences wept with recognition.

Vol 7: "Still Married with Issues Work" raises the stakes—slightly. This season’s trigger is a letter from their homeowners’ association about an unaddressed gutter leak. That’s it. A gutter. But as the four episodes unfold, that gutter becomes a metaphor for every unresolved argument about money, sex, parenting, and the silent resentment of a partner who doesn’t empty the lint trap.

Let’s break down what makes this season work—and why the keyword "that sitcom show vol 7 still married with issues work" is resonating with search traffic. that sitcom show vol 7 still married with issues work

This season, our leads (let’s call them “Mike” and “Carol”) aren’t just fighting about who left the wet towel on the bed. Now, they co-manage a small print shop after Carol got promoted over Mike. The result? Every work argument becomes a marriage fight, and every marriage fight gets filed in HR’s inbox.

The show’s genius moment (Episode 4):
Mike passive-aggressively “accidentally” orders 10,000 pens that say “Carol’s idea” instead of the company logo. Carol responds by changing the office Wi-Fi password to “Mikeneedsacouch.” It’s funny—but also painfully real.

A Hilarious Look at "Happily Ever After" (And the Headaches That Follow)

If classic sitcoms have taught us anything, it’s that the wedding is the finale, but the marriage is the whole series. In the highly anticipated That Sitcom Show Vol 7: Still Married with Issues, the honeymoon is officially over—and we wouldn’t have it any other way. For the uninitiated, That Sitcom Show (TSS) follows

Volume 7 takes a sharp, witty turn away from the "will they/won't they" tropes of earlier seasons and dives headfirst into the chaotic, relatable, and laugh-out-loud reality of long-term commitment. Here is why this volume is the most relatable entry yet.

"That Sitcom Show Vol 7: Still Married with Issues Work" is currently streaming on indie platform Buffer TV, with all previous volumes available for rental. Each episode runs under 30 minutes—perfect for watching with your partner before you inevitably argue about who picked the show.

There is a secondary "marriage" plot in Volume 7 involving Steven Hyde. He discovers he is married to a woman named Samantha (a stripper) due to a drunken ceremony in Las Vegas.

The subtitle’s double meaning is the show’s philosophical core. In therapy-speak, couples are told to "do the work." But TSS asks: what does that actually look like at 6:47 PM on a Tuesday, when you’re both exhausted, the kid has a fever, and someone just used the last of the coffee creamer? Volume 7 dedicates an entire episode (Episode 3:

"Issues work" is:

Volume 7 dedicates an entire episode (Episode 3: "The Ladder and the Lie") to Jenna asking Mark to simply look at the gutter. Mark says he did. Jenna knows he didn’t. The camera holds on their faces for four unbroken minutes. No laugh track. No music. Just the sound of a refrigerator humming. It is the most suspenseful TV sequence of the year.

No spoilers, but the final scene subverts everything. The gutter gets fixed (off-screen, by a neighbor). Mark and Jenna sit on the couch, not touching. The remote sits between them like a demilitarized zone. Jenna says, "The dryer is making a noise." Mark replies, "I know." Cut to black. No resolution. Because that’s the point.

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