In real life it's apparent that a lot of thought went into everything.
He shows you their individual living quarters (smaller than closets but he says he likes his and doesn't need more space) and he shows you how he sleeps in a sleeping bag and his two laptops (one has the internet, which is only up about half the time) and another laptop connected to the Station's LAN, which has work schedules and stuff. They also have iPads and old 20th century style written notebooks. He shows you all kinds of science experiments and where the crew eats, how they eat, what they eat and how they cook it. There's a dinner table (up against a wall), but nobody sits there but floats around instead. The don't set things on the table since nothing 'sets', though the table is velcro and they stick stuff to it. They gather to watch movies while floating there. There are gym facilities, including a treadmill and a weight lifting machine, and he opines on how well they work in zero G (pretty well, actually). And there's their toilet where they take craps and urinate in zero G, and shows you the gear for that. (Admit it, everyone's wondered.) He says that it's 50 year old technology, but it works well. Solid waste is put in non-returnable supply capsules and burns up, while urine is recycled.
Everyone seems to wear sock feet and they hook their toes in little padded bars in strategic spots, to keep from floating around.
My first impression is how messy it looks (like my house!) with stuff everywhere. Except here there isn't any up and down, and there isn't any floor in zero G. All the walls have gear and cabinets and jumbles of cables and stuff. They call down 'nadir' and up 'zenith'. So they might say when encountering a 6-way junction (front-back, up-down, left-right) 'moving nadir'. It looks like a maze.
The coolest place on the Station is the cupola, a bump on the station's side with windows all around. Great views. The astronut says that he'd like to spend all his time there, but unfortunately they make him work.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QvTmdIhYnes
This gives an idea what it looks like inside, with a colorfully dressed female astronaut in the picture. You can see the blue toe-hook bars above and below her.
The cupola --