From Superstore [top] - Jonah

When Superstore premiered in 2015, Jonah (Ben Feldman) seemed like a walking cliché. He was the fast-talking, perpetually sweaty business school dropout who fled a failed career as a hedge fund trader after a panic attack. He arrived at the St. Louis Cloud 9 not because he needed the money, but because he needed to feel something. He mansplained socialism, mispronounced "bourgeoisie," and had a habit of turning huddles into TED Talks about unionization.

Unlike the performative activism of the modern workplace, Jonah actually stays. When the assistant manager, the tyrannical yet brilliant Dina Fox, calls him out for his privilege, he doesn't quit. When his rival (and eventual love interest), the cynical floor worker Amy Sosa, mocks his optimism, he doesn't retreat. He absorbs the mockery. He learns. jonah from superstore

The show never lets Jonah win easily. Every time he tries to be a hero—organizing a walkout, saving a bird in the warehouse, fixing Garrett’s broken leg—he ends up looking like a fool. His arches fall. His credit card gets declined. His ex-fiancée shows up to mock his "toy job." When Superstore premiered in 2015, Jonah (Ben Feldman)

On paper, he should have been unbearable. And often, he was. But Superstore pulled off a sleight of hand: it used Jonah as a Trojan horse for genuine working-class rage. Jonah’s defining characteristic is his inability to shut up. He is the guy who brings a copy of Das Kapital to a holiday party and tries to explain gentrification to a woman who just got evicted. He name-drops NPR and uses words like "problematic" unironically. The show’s true genius, however, was making us realize that Jonah’s cringe-worthy allyship eventually curdles into actual courage. Louis Cloud 9 not because he needed the