The finale of Stranger Things leaves viewers with an emotional cocktail: relief, nostalgia, bittersweet satisfaction — and perhaps confusion. What became of the military personnel and the compound? More puzzling, though, is a quieter moment near the end, when young adventurers Nancy, Robin, Steve, and Jonathan sit on a roof, reaffirming their friendship and readying themselves for adulthood. As a business professor and big fan of the show, I found myself frustrated when Jonathan shared his aspiration to make an “anti-capitalist” film. It is an odd note to strike in a series that has consistently portrayed markets and material progress in a largely positive light.
At its core, Stranger Things is a story about resisting control and reclaiming agency. Whether it is Vecna using people as vessels, government scientists exploiting children, Soviet agents operating through secrecy and force, or public-school systems enforcing conformity, the show repeatedly affirms the idea that no one has the right to commandeer another’s life. Free choice — and the defense of what one values — is treated as paramount. In the final episode, viewers are invited to cheer for better opportunities ahead for an unlikely band of friends.
Only a market-based system can enable progress, which is why Jonathan’s anti-capitalist stance feels so misplaced. Take Season 3, for instance, when capitalism was quite clearly on display. In “Chapter 8: The Battle of Starcourt,” Soviet agents operate in secrecy and with force in an underground base beneath a Midwestern shopping mall. The symbolism is unmistakable: a closed, authoritarian system hidden below an open commercial space. Above ground are voluntary exchange and decentralized activity; below ground are coercion and centralized control. The contrast could not be clearer.
Starcourt Mall itself is not depicted as a moral failing or cultural wasteland. It is where teenagers shop, socialize, and work. Steve’s friendship with Robin begins at Scoops Ahoy, their shared place of employment. Where we work, what we consume, and the process of an exchange or transaction often creates opportunities for human connection. Moreover, commerce facilitates responsibility, independence, and individuality.
Capitalism is featured throughout Stranger Things in the mundane choices that allow the characters to form identities and solve problems. From Nike sneakers and Members Only jackets to New Coke, cassette tapes, and record stores, the characters signal belonging, rebellion, and aspiration through what they wear and listen to. Max’s favorite song, “Running Up That Hill (A Deal with God)” by Kate Bush, became a favorite of many Stranger Things fans and went viral globally 40 years after its 1985 debut.
Consumer choices are expressive, not imposed: markets supply options rather than dictate meaning. Actually, Eleven’s attachment to Eggo waffles is a particularly telling example. It is not trivial product placement, but a symbol of preference, comfort, and agency — the opposite of the sterile control she experiences in Hawkins Lab. And the trips the kids take to stores like Radio Shack underscore how decentralized markets provide the tools for experimentation and creativity. The kids do not wait for institutions to rescue them; they buy, build, and improvise.
The finale reinforces this theme through Jim Hopper and Joyce Byers (Jonathan’s mother). Hopper shares news of a new job opportunity that offers better pay, more stability, and closer proximity to Joyce’s sons. The optimism that Hopper and Joyce share in that scene is not abstract or ideological; it is material. Hopper splurges on caviar and wine to celebrate, taking pleasure in providing for the woman he loves. Joyce, who spent much of the series barely scraping by, can finally imagine a life with less struggle.
For years, Joyce worked long hours at a convenience store for little pay, while Hopper stagnated in a run-down cabin, bored by routine policing duties. In the finale, both choose differently. Their desire to flourish is about wages, mobility, and the possibility that the past need not determine the future. Capitalism does not guarantee success, but it does make advancement possible through skill, effort, and risk-taking.
Even Jonathan’s own future rests on this foundation. He plans to pursue film studies in New York City, one of the world’s most dynamic cultural capitals because of its long history of entrepreneurship and consumer-driven growth. The creative freedom he seeks exists precisely because the city tolerates experimentation, dissent, and failure — though recent political shifts may test that tolerance.
Jonathan’s artistic ambitions, in fact, are enabled by capitalism. Creative industries thrive where property rights are secure and exchange is voluntary. The freedom to make an “anti-capitalist” film is itself a market luxury — possible because capitalism does not demand ideological conformity. Markets are social institutions, coordinating human plans without centralized command.
After seasons of interdimensional monsters and Cold War paranoia, Stranger Things ends by celebrating ordinary wins: better jobs, safer communities, chosen relationships, and the freedom to plan a life worth living. That makes Jonathan’s anti-capitalist declaration all the more puzzling. The true villains of Stranger Things are not found in market-based systems, but in systems of enforced coercion, stagnation, and the denial of choice. In reminding us how precious freedom is, the series inadvertently reveals an uncomfortable truth: capitalism is not the obstacle to the lives its characters imagine — it is the condition that makes those lives possible.

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