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Superstore Apr 2026

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

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 Superstore

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. : From the eternal optimist Glenn Sturgis to

: 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 : One of the show’s signatures was its

: It tackled heavy topics like gun control, undocumented status, and the lack of paid maternity leave without losing its comedic edge.

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

An authentic workplace comedy that actually understands the "grind," (2015–2021) captured the messy, hilarious, and often heartbreaking reality of American retail life better than almost any other show in its era.