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Superstore

The show famously incorporated the COVID-19 pandemic into its final season, highlighting how retail workers were deemed "essential" while being treated as replaceable by corporate. Here's how Superstore ended - Entertainment Weekly

Unlike many sitcoms that use a workplace as a mere backdrop for romance, focused on the mechanics of capitalism and how they impact people on the ground floor. Superstore

: It tackled heavy topics like gun control, undocumented status, and the lack of paid maternity leave without losing its comedic edge. The show famously incorporated the COVID-19 pandemic into

: From the eternal optimist Glenn Sturgis to the cynical but secretly soft Dina Fox , every character felt like someone you’d actually work with. : From the eternal optimist Glenn Sturgis to

Set in the fictional "Cloud 9" store #1217 in St. Louis, Missouri, the series balances absurdity with sharp social commentary on corporate culture, unionization, and the value of "essential" workers. Why Cloud 9 Stayed So Relevant

: One of the show’s signatures was its "customer cutaways"—brief, silent clips of shoppers doing bizarre things in the background, which perfectly captured the chaotic energy of a big-box store. A Bittersweet Finale

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