"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.
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. that sitcom show vol 7 still married with issues work
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. "That Sitcom Show Vol 7: Still Married with
Volume 7 leans heavily into the extended family dynamic. Now that the couple is "locked in," the in-laws treat their home like a second residence. The comedy shifts from the couple trying to impress the parents to the couple trying to evict them. It’s a realistic portrayal of how marriage is rarely just two people; it’s a merger of two annoying families. Now, they co-manage a small print shop after
This is the emotional core of the volume. Trying to pay for their daughter’s braces, Alex and Jamie launch a poorly branded Etsy store selling "Yoga themed candles." The stress of packing boxes at 2 AM leads to a rare, unbroken four-minute fight scene. No laugh track. No music. Just two tired people whispering about equity and effort. It is brutal, beautiful, and broke the show’s rating records.
For the uninitiated, That Sitcom Show follows the chaotic lives of Alex and Jamie, a couple who have been "happily-ish" married for twelve years. In Volumes 1-3, we watched them navigate buying a house. In Volumes 4-6, they survived parenting a toddler. Now, in Volume 7, the battlefield has shifted from the living room couch to the office cubicle.
"Still Married with Issues Work" specifically addresses the crisis of identity that hits when your spouse becomes your business partner, or when the office romance has long since soured into "what time is the daycare pickup?"