The Death Cleaners help Suzi, a sassy 75-year-old woman surrounded by phallic souvenirs from her travels and a lifetime of photos from her years as a singing waitress, let go of the past and remind her that she's not dead yet.
Shana knows she can be uptight, but talking to friends about a terminal cancer diagnosis is daunting; the Death Cleaners help her face her fear of discussing "the end."
The Death Cleaners help Lindsey after her mother and extended family leave everything they don't want at her house, causing her to lose her personal style.
The Death Cleaners aid Sue, an artist who helped build a lesbian-safe section of Kansas City in the 80s, who hasn't been able to clean her "organized heaps" of art since the love of her life died of COVID-19.
The Death Cleaners help Godfrey face his grief by helping him clean a basement full of his deceased parents' things that he doesn't want to get rid of.
Flora and Jeff, finally empty-nesters after raising eight kids, are ready to death clean, but their kids are against it because they want their childhood home just like they remember it.
Doug's fiancée Stephanie won't move in until he cleans up his extreme tiki collection and his dead ex-wife's stuff; the Death Cleaners help Doug clean the clutter in his heart as well as his home so he can welcome in a new chapter.
Before his passing, Kansas City Chiefs superfan Landan wanted to help his wife Tiffany and requested that the Death Cleaners help her move forward and clean his mancave.