Jonah From Superstore [repack] -
We laugh at Jonah because he is exhausting. We root for Jonah because he is us—or at least, the version of us that hasn’t given up yet. In the harsh glow of the big-box store, Jonah Simms turned out to be the best thing on the shelf.
Jonah from Superstore is the ultimate millennial archetype: the overeducated, underemployed, anxious mess who talks too much about systemic change but actually shows up to do the work. He is the guy who gets made fun of for caring too much, in a world that has become addicted to cynicism. jonah from superstore
The turning point for the character comes in Season 2’s "Halloween Theft," where he accidentally cuts his finger and, in a panic, threatens a lawsuit. But by Season 6, that same anxious energy is weaponized for good. He spearheads the unionization effort. He walks the picket line. He risks his job—a job he once treated as a hobby—for people he once treated as characters in his redemption arc. What makes Jonah Simms a great feature subject is his tragic vulnerability. Ben Feldman plays him with a constant, trembling energy—as if Jonah is always one bad customer away from a full breakdown. His relationship with Amy (America Ferrera) is a masterclass in "right person, wrong timing." He proposes to her in the middle of a tornado (literally) and gets a "maybe." He follows her to California, only to return alone. We laugh at Jonah because he is exhausting