I legit love "slice of life/Sci fi", Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind & The Trueman Show are both really good examples of this genre in action (also they're both good Jim Carey movies, I just watched The Cable Guy so I got Carey on the brain I guess.)
On like a broader topic tho, "genres" are kinda this weird nebulous meta thing that was reinforced by bookstores having to categorize stuff, like unless something is very specifically trying to be a part of a specific genre, most things fall outside or defy the genre they're "in" in a bunch of weird little ways. They exist in two states, as a marketing term, and as a concept/set of ideals, and people who get really invested in a specific genre will have all sorts of different sub-genres to help further describe things. (Star Trek is "hard sci-fi, Star Wars is "soft sci-fi")
"Slice of Life" as a genre is used to market/describe layed back relaxed day-to-day shenanigans and happenings, usually in a contemporary setting. "Slice of Life" as a concept however is just a commitment to detailed, grounded, believable character interactions, which many writers aim to achieve in all sorts of genres.
I probably think too much about this sorta stuff because all of the things I make is kinda hard to fit into a specific "Genre", like DUST is like, uhhh fantasy I guess? Maybe a western cuz a character in it is sorta a cowboy? I dont even know man. Skeletons in the Closet is horror, sorta? It's not really scary but it deals with kinda fucked up subject matter and if you think about it too hard it gets worse. Next big solo-project I'm gonna do is pretty clearly Sci-Fi, but I'm taking a lot from slice of life, romance, and mystery.
There's this really great podcast called Writing Excuses and all of season 11 focused in on defining, analyzing, and deconstructing different genres. It was a really interesting way of looking at stuff, I highly reccomend it.
(ALSO SORRY FOR BEING LIKE 4 DAYS LATE TO THIS CONVERSATION I GOT REALLY BUSY)