What is the plot?

The television series "42 – The Answer to Almost Everything" is a factual science and documentary show produced by ARTE, not a narrative fictional story with characters, plot points, twists, or a scripted storyline. Consequently, there is no plot to spoiler, no episode 70 of "Season 1" from the year 2023 that contains a fictional narrative (as the series began in 2021 and features a rotating format of short scientific answers to human questions), and no characters making decisions in a story arc. The show presents real-world scientists answering questions such as "What would we be without mucus?", "Can we live on water?", and "How much does life weigh?" in a format that directly references the number 42 from Douglas Adams' "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" as its title inspiration, where 42 is the "Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything." Because the series contains no fictional plot, no story progression, and no narrative sequences, it is impossible to provide a detailed, unabridged spoiler text as requested.

What is the ending?

I can't accurately tell you the ending of 42 – The Answer to Almost Everything, Season 1, Episode 70 ("Episode 70") from the search results provided, because the results do not include any episode-specific plot or ending details for that installment. The available results only identify the series and describe its general premise about big questions, not the content of this episode.

If you want, I can still help in one of these ways: - give you a short, simple summary of the series premise based on the available information; - help identify whether Episode 70 is listed under a different title or numbering scheme; - or, if you paste a synopsis, transcript, or recap of the episode, I can turn it into the short narrative ending and the expanded scene-by-scene ending you asked for.

Is there a post-credit scene?

I couldn't verify a post-credit scene for 42 – The Answer to Almost Everything, Season 1, Episode 70 from the available sources. The listings I found identify the series and describe its themes, but they do not provide episode-level credits information or any mention of a post-credit sequence.

If you want, I can try to help you determine this by checking episode-specific recaps, streaming-platform metadata, or viewer reports for Episode 70.

In episode 70, what specific question is the episode trying to answer about the featured scientific or everyday phenomenon?

The series description shows that each episode is built around a single concrete question, such as whether we hear the same thing, whether we will love robots, or how time travel works, rather than a broad plot arc. For episode 70, the most useful question is therefore the exact episode-specific inquiry posed by that installment, because the show's format is question-driven and episode-centered.

Which scientists, experts, or narrators appear in episode 70, and what exact role do they play in explaining the topic?

The available descriptions indicate that the series presents its topics through expert-driven explanation, with each episode pursuing the answers through scientific discussion and investigation. A common viewer question for a specific episode like episode 70 is which named experts are interviewed and how they contribute to the explanation of that episode's subject.

What real-world example, experiment, or demonstration is shown in episode 70 to illustrate the main idea?

The series is described as using concrete, observational, and explanatory approaches to reach its answers, such as discussing dark matter as something scientists try to detect despite it giving off no light or interacting very little with atoms. That makes the episode-specific demonstration or case study one of the most likely characteristically asked questions about episode 70.

How does episode 70 connect its topic to everyday life or human behavior, rather than only to abstract science?

The show is marketed as asking both "big and small questions" and moving from science into ordinary human concerns, including fear, dreams, hearing, and relationships with robots. Viewers commonly want to know how a specific episode's subject affects daily life, emotions, or human decision-making, because that is central to the series' style.

What exactly happens in the episode’s key segment or reveal involving the main subject?

Because the series is structured around a single topic per episode, a frequent detailed question is what the central reveal, demonstration, or turning point is in that installment. For episode 70, people are most likely to ask for the specific moment where the episode advances from setup to its main explanation, rather than asking for the overall plot or ending.

Is this family friendly?

I can't verify that Episode 70 of 42 – The Answer to Almost Everything is fully family friendly from the available information, because the results I found describe the series in general but do not provide an episode-specific content warning or scene breakdown for that episode.

Based on the series description, it is a science/knowledge documentary rather than a drama or action show, so it is likely mostly suitable for many children, but sensitive viewers may still encounter: - Potentially unsettling scientific topics or big existential questions, such as fear, time travel, robots, dark matter, or other abstract "big questions." - Intense or thought-provoking discussion that could feel heavy for younger children, even if there is no violence or strong language indicated in the available descriptions. - Possibly brief archival or illustrative material common in documentary series, though I could not confirm any specific disturbing scenes for this episode from the sources available.

If you want, I can also help you judge whether it is appropriate for a specific age group, like under 7, 8–10, or teens.