It's safe to say that when you're watching a feel-good sitcom,afs 394 asu religion sex power and eroticism you don't expect to fear for your favorite characters' lives. But Superstorepulled that rug out from under us with the Season 4 finale, "Employee Appreciation Day," sending Mateo Liwanag (Nico Santos) into custody of ICE for being an undocumented immigrant.
"We’ve always had in the back of our minds since we introduced the storyline that that was one potential move we could do," showrunner Justin Spitzer told Mashable via phone interview. "We had originally planned on doing it about two-thirds of the way through the season, and then just the way stories unfolded and arcs were working out, it just sort of pushed it later."
Mateo's immigration status was first revealed in Season 2, but only to Cheyenne (Nicole Bloom). At the time, says Spitzer, the decision wasn't especially calculated, but seemed like an interesting subversion of expectation and a fun way to juxtapose Glenn's (Mark McKinney) Olympics patriotism with Mateo's more jaded outlook.
By Season 4, it's practically an open secret among the Cloud Nine staff, but a mark of love and trust that few of them have revealed their knowledge to one another (even Jonah and Amy). Spitzer and his writing staff originally planned for the ICE raid to happen earlier in the season, but it made for a more fitting finale as the characters and stories of the season played out.
SEE ALSO: Thursday's 'Superstore' was part of a pivotal Hollywood momentBecause of that, seeds of this climax were sown throughout the season. Mateo revealed his status to Glenn, who fabricated a social security number for Mateo at great personal risk. In an early episode, Mateo suspected Sayid (superb new addition Amir M. Korangy) had overheard the truth and might reveal it to protect his own good faith as a refugee.
"We’re hoping that the audience will think that he’s going to manage to get away in a more classic sitcom ending," said Spitzer. "We try to be real and relatable wherever possible, and most of the time people don’t get away. It felt like a more interesting move for the series to discuss going into the future, to figure out what does Mateo do now that he’s been found out and detained."
Most of the episode follows the frenzied employees as they try to sneak Mateo out of the store or hide his presence with an onslaught of customers. Dina tries to lead him to safety with the help of Cheyenne and Amy, but in the end, Mateo himself calls it. "It's over," he tells them.
This is far from the first time Superstoretackled a hot-button social issue with expert writing from larger-than-life characters. Spitzer insists the show doesn't try to have involved, intelligent conversations, but it has done an exceptional job tackling #MeToo ("Back to School"), cultural appropriation ("Costume Competition"), the environment ("Cloud Green"), and now immigration – without even alluding to the political spectrum or naming any prominent public figures.
"Employee Appreciation Day" references ICE, but nothing further regarding immigration policies, detainment, or family separation. For Mateo and his colleagues, this is a micro issue about one person they care about, and that's what drives it home.
"We don’t try to reach to talk about some issue that wouldn’t effect our employees in some way, and when we do deal with an issue, we’re not really tackling it head on," Spitzer says. "We’re not trying to draw out all the sides of it and have this intelligent conversation where both sides are represented and intelligent points are made. The comedy comes from how our characters are dealing with it."
Spitzer is stepping away as showrunner between Seasons 4 and 5, but assures that Santos and Mateo will still be very much part of the show. With a few exceptions, Superstorehas always taken place in one location with a coterie of characters, but this seismic shift newly expands the show's universe. The rules as we know them have been broken – and there's nothing more Superstorethan that.
Catch up on previous seasons of Superstorewith Hulu or NBC.
Topics NBC Immigration
In Memoriam: Marina Keegan by The Paris ReviewA Great Stag, Broad8, rue Garancière by The Paris ReviewSelling, Banning, and Walking by Sadie SteinDr. Seuss, Tintin, and a Really Late Library Book by The Paris ReviewHappy Golden Anniversary! by Sadie SteinOur New Tote, Designed By ... You! by The Paris ReviewBacon, SciA Labor of Love, Resurrected by Sadie SteinSinner vs. Bublik 2025 livestream: Watch French Open for freeHappy Golden Anniversary! by Sadie SteinSlang and Secrets: Happy Monday! by Sadie SteinOwls, Hatred, and Blurbese by Sadie SteinHemingway on “The Lady Poets” by Sadie SteinMoon Madness by Sadie SteinAuden, Furious and Peripatetic by Sadie SteinPEN Presents: “Reviewing Translations” by Sadie SteinGarcia Márquez Lives, Clockwork Orange Is Fifty by Sadie SteinSinner vs. Bublik 2025 livestream: Watch French Open for freeDear Betty Draper Francis, Stop Weighing Your Food by Adam Wilson Pay What You Weigh at the Ground Round The Morning News Roundup for January 12, 2015 Rimbaud’s Poetry Inspired an MIT Professor to Rob a Bank The Case of the Arabic Noirs All the News Not Fit to Print by Stephen Hiltner What It’s Like to Write About the Dead Every Day The Morning News Roundup for January 5, 2015 The Morning News Roundup for December 16, 2014 The Missing Borges A Return to Skateboarding How Horror Games Like “The Evil Within” Violate Our Trust The Jimmy Winkfield Stakes by Michael Lipkin The Making of an American All the News Not Fit to Print An Interview with Thomas Pierce Are Foreclosed Homes the New Haunted Houses? The Answers to Walter Benjamin’s Riddles You Wouldn’t Think Slipping on a Banana Peel Is Funny, But … What Does “Dickensian“ Really Mean, Anyway? Stanisław Barańczak’s “This Is Not a Conversation for the Telephone” by Dan Piepenbring
3.057s , 10195.078125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【afs 394 asu religion sex power and eroticism】,Unobstructed Information Network