If you’ve ever had a whispered argument in a Target parking lot over something neither of you remembers, Vol. 7 will feel like a warm, hilarious, slightly judgmental hug. It’s comfort comedy for the long-haul partnered.
Rating: ★★★★☆ (4/5)
One star off only because the couple next to us laughed too knowingly.
Would you like a fake cast list or mock poster tagline to go with this?
Here’s a solid content breakdown for “That Sitcom Show Vol. 7 - Still Married With Issues” — perfect for a comedy album, web series episode, or stand-up special segment. That Sitcom Show Vol. 7- Still Married With Issues
Early reviews for That Sitcom Show Vol. 7- Still Married With Issues have been glowing.
For the uninitiated, That Sitcom Show follows the lives of Mark and Jenna Gallagher, a couple from the fictional suburb of Overbrook. We met them in Volume 1 as newlyweds tripping over moving boxes. By Volume 4, they had twins and sleep deprivation. By Volume 6, they were navigating the "roommate phase."
Vol. 7- Still Married With Issues picks up exactly 18 months after Volume 6’s cliffhanger—where Mark almost took a job across the country and Jenna almost had an emotional affair with a yoga instructor. Spoiler alert: They didn’t leave. They didn’t cheat. They went to couples therapy for three sessions, decided it was "too expensive," and now weaponize therapeutic jargon against each other during arguments about dishwasher loading. If you’ve ever had a whispered argument in
The "issues" in the title are not dramatic, explosive betrayals. They are the slow, grinding irritants of cohabitation. This is the show’s secret sauce. While other sitcoms rely on misunderstandings that could be solved by a single text message, That Sitcom Show understands that real marital issues are repetitive, boring, and profoundly hilarious.
That Sitcom Show Vol. 7- Still Married With Issues is available for digital purchase and streaming on the [Your Streaming Platform] network. A full bundle of Volumes 1-7 is also available for those who want to watch the tragicomic descent from fresh-faced romance to "did you pay the life insurance premium?"
If you are married, this show will feel like a documentary. If you are recently single, it will serve as the most effective birth control ever produced. If you are dating someone new, watch it together. If you survive all ten episodes without checking your phone, you might be ready for a real relationship. Would you like a fake cast list or
Most sitcoms end when the couple gets back together. That Sitcom Show begins there. At the close of Volume 6, Mark and Jenna survived a near-divorce triggered by Mark forgetting to pick up their son from soccer practice (the seventh time) and Jenna secretly opening a credit card to fund her candle-making side hustle.
Volume 7 opens with the tagline: “We stayed together for the kids. Now the kids are in college.”
The "Issues" in the title are not the dramatic, cinematic issues of infidelity or addiction. They are the insidious, boring issues. The ones that rot a relationship from the inside out. We are talking about:
After seven seasons of marriage, they’re still together — barely. From laundry fights to silent treatments with laugh tracks, volume 7 proves that “happily ever after” actually means “we’ll argue about the thermostat later.”