That Sitcom: Show Vol. 7- Still Married With Issues
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.
Still Married With Issues isn’t about grand romantic gestures or divorce scares. It’s about the tiny, ridiculous skirmishes that make up a shared life. The writing is sharp, the timing is crisp, and the chemistry between Drake and Cole has aged like fine wine—or at least like a reliably functioning coffeemaker.
The season opens with a cold shot of a sticky note on the refrigerator: "Whoever finished the oat milk, the apocalypse isn't for another week. Plenty of time to buy more." What follows is a 22-minute war of attrition involving whiteboards, unsent text drafts, and a guest appearance by Jenna’s mother, who accidentally escalates the conflict by agreeing with both parties. This episode sets the tone: petty, relatable, and wincingly accurate. That Sitcom Show Vol. 7- Still Married With Issues
The leads, Devon Coley and Miriam Shu, are in their late forties, and they look it. There are no airbrushed close-ups. Coley’s Mark has bags under his eyes that tell the story of insomnia caused by doom-scrolling. Shu’s Jenna has a permanent furrow in her brow from squinting at fine print on insurance documents.
Their chemistry is no longer the "sparks fly" type. It is the "we have a shared Venmo history" type. In Episode 5, "The Sexy Spreadsheet," they attempt to rekindle their intimacy via a scheduled 8:00 PM "appointment." The resulting scene—where they are both in expensive loungewear, trying to be seductive while distracted by a notification that their Hulu subscription is about to renew—is a masterclass in tragicomic timing.
Title: The Ceiling Fan Debate
Setting: Bedroom. 11:47 PM.
Wife: Are you asleep?
Husband: Was.
Wife: Why is the fan on? It’s February.
Husband: I can’t breathe without it.
Wife: You’ve been breathing fine for 40 years.
Husband: Not since you stole all the blankets.
Wife: (sitting up) You know what’s loud? Your snoring. That fan is quiet.
Husband: Then why did you name it “Ralph” and yell at it last week?
LAUGH TRACK
Wife: I’m turning it off.
Husband: Fine. But when I wake up drenched in sweat at 3 AM, I’m opening the window.
Wife: It’s snowing outside.
Husband: Then we’ll finally agree on something — being miserable.
END SCENE
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.” That Sitcom Show Vol
Volume 7 consists of ten episodes, each targeting a specific "issue" of long-term marriage.