The leads have aged into their roles like a fine wine and a leaky faucet—comfortable, flawed, and endlessly watchable. The supporting cast, especially the nosy neighbor and the deadpan teenager, get more room to breathe, and the show is better for it. Episode 4 (“The Silent Treatment Goes Viral”) is an instant classic, while Episode 7 (“Date Night: Escape Room Edition”) achieves physical comedy that rivals the greats.
Warm, witty, and wonderfully familiar. Pour yourself a drink—you’ve earned it. 8/10 That Sitcom Show Vol. 7- Still Married With Issues
Does it break new ground? Not really. But that’s the point. Still Married With Issues isn’t trying to redefine the sitcom. It’s trying to remind you why you loved it in the first place: because marriage, for all its chaos, is funniest when you stop trying to fix it and just learn to laugh at the cracks. The leads have aged into their roles like
The leads have aged into their roles like a fine wine and a leaky faucet—comfortable, flawed, and endlessly watchable. The supporting cast, especially the nosy neighbor and the deadpan teenager, get more room to breathe, and the show is better for it. Episode 4 (“The Silent Treatment Goes Viral”) is an instant classic, while Episode 7 (“Date Night: Escape Room Edition”) achieves physical comedy that rivals the greats.
Warm, witty, and wonderfully familiar. Pour yourself a drink—you’ve earned it. 8/10
Does it break new ground? Not really. But that’s the point. Still Married With Issues isn’t trying to redefine the sitcom. It’s trying to remind you why you loved it in the first place: because marriage, for all its chaos, is funniest when you stop trying to fix it and just learn to laugh at the cracks.