"That Sitcom Show Vol. 7: Still Married With Issues" delivers another hilarious and heartwarming season of television, tackling real-life issues and relationships with humor and sensitivity. The Harris family's ongoing struggles and misadventures will continue to resonate with audiences, solidifying the show's place as a beloved and enduring sitcom.
Comedy writer and showrunner Alex Horne (no relation to the Taskmaster host) describes this volume as "Territorial pissing in the domestic wild." That Sitcom Show Vol. 7- Still Married With Issues
"That Sitcom Show Vol. 7" reflects a wider modern trend where adult studios move away from generic setups to favor highly detailed pop-culture parodies. By mimicking specific intellectual properties, creators tap into established audience familiarity. This structure keeps viewers engaged by combining nostalgic television tropes with unrated adult fantasy. "That Sitcom Show Vol
What separates this compilation from modern single-camera dramedies is its fierce commitment to traditional sitcom architecture. Volume 7 leans heavily into the physical comedy and rhythmic delivery required by the multi-camera setup. Comedy writer and showrunner Alex Horne (no relation
For those willing to shift their expectations, this volume offers a rewarding, cathartic look at the grind of married life. It suggests that being "still married" isn't a failure of passion or a triumph of love, but simply a decision made every morning at the coffee pot. And in that mundane, awkward, and very real reality, there is perhaps the greatest, most relatable sitcom joke ever told.
That Sitcom Show Vol. 7- Still Married With Issues is a direct-to-video, low-budget independent film that functions as an explicit, satirical parody of the sitcom genre. Directed by Linnea Dugan and released on DVD on January 11, 2022, the film uses a cast of adult industry actors to directly spoof the conventions of mainstream comedy—particularly the tropes of romantic relationships and marriage. It achieves this by employing the traditional sitcom structure, including the use of a laughtrack, while subverting it with absurdist and adult-oriented humor.