The episode that will likely go viral. Mark and Jenna realize they haven't had sex in 47 days. The solution? They decide to schedule a "date night." The comedy comes from the bureaucratic hell of coordinating a babysitter, Mark’s work deadline, Jenna’s book club, and a mysterious stomach bug that hits the youngest child exactly at 7:00 PM. The finale of the episode features the couple lying in bed, exhausted, high-fiving because they "almost did it." The laugh track is deafening, but the silence afterward hits harder.
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.”
By: The TV Vanguard Staff
In an era where prestige dramas dominate the watercooler talk and streaming services cancel beloved comedies after two seasons, the survival of a niche, independently produced sitcom is nothing short of a miracle. But That Sitcom Show isn’t just surviving; it is thriving. With the release of That Sitcom Show Vol. 7- Still Married With Issues, the series proves that the funniest territory on television isn't a post-apocalyptic wasteland or a high-stakes courtroom—it is the messy, unmade bed of a middle-aged marriage.
Volume 7 arrives with a subtitle that feels less like a logline and more like a surrender. Still Married With Issues acknowledges the elephant in the living room: these characters aren't getting a fairy-tale ending. They are getting a refinanced mortgage, a teenager who rolls their eyes at quantum speed, and a sex life that requires scheduling two weeks in advance.
Here is everything you need to know about why Vol. 7 is the sharpest, most emotionally resonant entry in the series to date. That Sitcom Show Vol. 7- Still Married With Issues
In a television landscape obsessed with escapism, That Sitcom Show dares to look directly into the fridge with the expired condiments and the lingering smell of last week's leftovers. Vol. 7- Still Married With Issues does not offer solutions. It offers solidarity.
It says: "You are not crazy for being annoyed that he leaves the toothpaste cap off. You are not alone because you fantasize about the silence of a hotel room. You are normal. And somehow, that is both the problem and the solution."
Rating: ★★★★½ (4.5/5) Tagline: Love is real. So is the pile of laundry on the chair.
Stream Vol. 7 now and remember: Every marriage has issues. The secret is laughing at them before they become the season finale.
Have you watched "That Sitcom Show Vol. 7- Still Married With Issues"? Drop your favorite "issue" in the comments below. And yes, we see you, Mark. Put the socks in the hamper. The episode that will likely go viral
The quintessential American sitcom has always been obsessed with the "happily ever after," but That Sitcom Show Vol. 7: Still Married With Issues
leans into the messy, hilarious reality of what happens after the credits roll on the wedding episode. While earlier volumes focused on the "will-they-won't-they" tension of dating, Volume 7 captures the endurance sport of long-term partnership.
The brilliance of this installment lies in its refusal to romanticize the grind. It treats marriage not as a destination, but as a negotiation table
. Whether it's the high-stakes drama of who forgot to start the dishwasher or the quiet, shared shorthand of a couple who can hold an entire conversation with just a raised eyebrow, the show finds its heartbeat in the friction of domesticity What makes "Still Married With Issues" resonate is its relatability
. It mirrors the shift from the "honeymoon phase" to the "mortgage and melatonin phase." The humor isn't derived from a lack of love, but from the absurdity of trying to maintain an individual identity while being legally and emotionally tethered to another person's quirks. It suggests that the strongest bonds aren't built on grand gestures, but on the ability to laugh at the same disaster for the twentieth time. By: The TV Vanguard Staff In an era
In an era of prestige TV dramas, Volume 7 reminds us why the multi-cam sitcom format survives: we want to see our own beautifully flawed lives
reflected back at us, preferably with a punchline that makes the "issues" feel a little lighter. Should we break down the character dynamics
of the lead couple, or would you like to explore how this volume compares to the previous seasons
The genius of That Sitcom Show Vol. 7- Still Married With Issues is its thesis statement: Happiness in marriage is not the absence of problems, but the acceptance of specific, manageable problems.
Earlier volumes (Vol. 3: Baby Proofing the Apocalypse) focused on solving issues. Vol. 7 focuses on managing them. Mark will never put his socks in the hamper. Jenna will never stop moving the furniture without warning. The writers understand that the "issues" aren't bugs in the system; they are the system.
One standout scene in Episode 4 ("The Garage Hoard") shows Mark defending a broken elliptical machine he hasn't used since 2019. "It represents potential," he argues. Jenna replies, "It represents the reason I park in the driveway during hail season." They don't resolve the garage issue. They just move the elliptical four inches to the left. The audience applauds. It’s the most honest depiction of marital compromise ever captured on screen.
Volume 7 of That Sitcom Show proves that marriage doesn’t get easier—it just gets funnier. Still Married With Issues ditches the studio audience for a more intimate, confessional feel, as the show’s core couple (played with exasperated chemistry by returnees Jenna Drake and Marcus Cole) navigate the chaotic middle years of matrimony.