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What is the plot?
The query appears to mix up titles: the only result matching "313" is This American Life episode 313, "Parental Guidance Suggested," not a TV drama episode called Life Is Life, season 1, episode 313.
The episode opens with the framing that the program will present three acts, each centered on a child and an adult facing a difficult situation together.
In the first act, "Two Possibilities, Both of Them Bad," the story focuses on Kenya, an inmate who appears in a white prison jumpsuit and speaks with seriousness and composure about her situation. Her personal history is introduced through the conversation around her daughter Jasmine, who is nine years old and appears in the story through a video exchange with her mother. The structure of the act follows the mother and daughter interviewing each other, with the emotional weight coming from the fact that both are trapped in separate but connected difficult circumstances.
The act develops around the central impossibility of the choice facing the parent and child, with the story emphasizing the tension between maternal love and the consequences of Kenya's incarceration. The details presented in the transcript frame the relationship as intimate and strained at the same time, with Jasmine's age and the prison setting underscoring how young the child is and how separated the two are.
In the second act, "The Grandma Letters," the episode shifts to a miserable teenager and his miserable grandmother who correspond by letter. The act builds its progression through their written exchanges, using the letters to reveal the bitterness, frustration, and emotional distance that define their relationship. The story's movement comes from the gradual disclosure of how each sees the other and how their correspondence becomes a vehicle for resentment as well as connection.
In the third act, "My Angels in the Centerfolds," the episode follows a 10-year-old girl who starts her own business using a phone, a collection of index cards, and her father's old Playboy magazines. The story details her practical, improvised entrepreneurial effort and shows how she assembles the materials and information she needs to begin selling her service. The act centers on her initiative and the mechanics of how she turns limited resources into a functioning business.
The episode ends after completing the three-act structure, with each story having been presented as a separate case of a young person navigating a difficult or unusual relationship with an adult.
What is the ending?
I can't reliably give the ending for "Life Is Life," season 1, episode 313, from the results provided, because the search results do not identify that show or episode. The results instead appear to refer to other series, especially Supergirl, and do not provide source material for the requested episode.
If you meant Supergirl season 3, episode 13, "Both Sides Now" / the "Stay" recap in result 1 is the closest match, and its ending is this: Julia briefly regains control from Purity, Supergirl and the team try to protect her, and then Reign arrives, confronting Julia just as the situation becomes even more dangerous.
If that is the episode you want, I can rewrite the ending in the short, simple narrative style you asked for, and then expand it scene by scene.
Is there a post-credit scene?
I can't verify a post-credit scene for Life Is Life, season 1, episode 313 from the provided results because none of the search results are about that show or episode. The results instead refer to unrelated titles such as Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, Life is Strange, and other unrelated content.
If you want, I can still help by: - checking whether this episode is listed under a different title or numbering scheme, - summarizing any source material you have for the episode, - or helping you identify the correct show/episode if "Life Is Life" was meant to be something else.
Is this family friendly?
I can't reliably assess whether "Life Is Life" season 1, episode 313 is family friendly from the search results provided, because the results do not match that TV episode and instead point to unrelated podcasts, radio transcripts, and other media.
If you want, I can still help in one of these ways: - If you share the correct episode title, I can evaluate likely content concerns. - If you want a general parental-content check for the actual show, I can summarize common warning categories such as profanity, sexual content, violence, substance use, and disturbing themes once I have the right episode information.
At present, I can't confirm any specific objectionable or upsetting scenes for children or sensitive viewers without risking inaccuracy.