What is the plot?

I can't provide a reliable complete spoiler for that episode because the premise appears to be incorrect: in the available sources, The Good Wife season 1 episode 2 is titled "Stripped," not "Her Honour," and I don't have source support for a 2025-produced episode matching that description.

If you want, I can still help in one of these ways: - give a detailed chronological spoiler for season 1 episode 2, "Stripped," based on available sources - help identify the correct episode title if "Her Honour" refers to a different show or a different season

What is the ending?

I can't reliably answer that as asked, because the show details in your prompt do not match the available source material. The results describe the original The Good Wife series, and its episode titled "Dramatics, Your Honor" is from season 5, not a 2025 season 1 episode called "Her Honour."

If you want, I can do one of these: - Give you the ending of the actual The Good Wife episode that matches the sources I have - Help identify the correct 2025 show/episode if you share the network, cast, or a synopsis - Summarize the ending of a specific episode title if you confirm the exact series

Based on the sources provided, the closest documented ending is the series finale of The Good Wife, where Alicia's actions in court save Peter from jail, and Diane responds by slapping Alicia for the betrayal.

Is there a post-credit scene?

No post-credit scene is indicated for this episode. The available information for Season 1, Episode 2 of The Good Wife identifies the episode as "Stripped" and summarizes the main plot, but does not mention any post-credit or extra scene after the ending credits.

If you want, I can also give you a detailed scene-by-scene summary of the episode's ending so you can see whether there was any final stinger or tag scene.

How does Alicia get involved in the case of the teacher accused of killing her ex-husband in episode 2?

In the episode's central legal thread, Alicia is pulled into a murder defense involving a 26-year-old second-grade teacher, Jennifer Lewis, who is accused of killing her ex-husband. The setup places Alicia in the position of evaluating a client whose personal life has collapsed into a criminal accusation, forcing her to navigate both the legal stakes and the emotional weight of the woman's circumstances.

What specific role do Alicia’s personal connections and reputation play in her early work at the law firm?

Alicia's return to law is not treated as a neutral career move; the firm is already aware of her public profile as the wife of the Cook County State's Attorney, and that connection matters to the partners. The available material says Diane Lockhart values Alicia's work and her connections, while Will Gardner is also invested in bringing her into the firm, showing that Alicia's personal history is directly tied to the opportunities she receives.

Who is Will Gardner, and why is his relationship with Alicia important in the early episodes?

Will Gardner is Alicia's longtime friend, former law school classmate, and a partner at the firm where she begins working again. The source material also notes that he is interested in rekindling their former relationship, which makes him more than just a professional contact and places him at the center of Alicia's early emotional conflict.

What happens in Alicia’s first major case, and why is it significant for her character?

In the first major case referenced in the available material, Alicia handles a case involving Jennifer Lewis, the second-grade teacher accused of killing her ex-husband, and she wins her first case. That outcome matters because it establishes Alicia as competent in the courtroom again and marks an early professional success after her return to legal practice.

How does the episode reflect Alicia’s struggle between her legal career and her personal life?

The available episode information shows Alicia operating in a legal environment shaped by her marriage, her public image, and her past with Will Gardner, all while taking on emotionally charged cases. Her work at the firm is tied to both her reputation and her relationships, so the episode places her in a constant tension between professional reinvention and the unresolved personal history that follows her into the office.

Is this family friendly?

The Good Wife is generally not family friendly for young children; it is a legal/political drama built around adult conflict, scandal, and mature relationship themes.

Potentially objectionable or upsetting elements that may come up include: - Sexual scandal and adultery-related content, including public humiliation tied to a spouse's misconduct. - Domestic and relationship conflict, with betrayal, tension, and emotionally heavy scenes. - Themes of corruption, crime, and prison/legal trouble, which can be unsettling for sensitive viewers. - Sexual-assault-related subject matter appears elsewhere in the series, indicating the show can include serious adult allegations and discussions. - Mature political and workplace power struggles, which may include harsh language or emotionally intense confrontations even when explicit content is limited.

For episode 2 specifically, I don't have episode-specific scene details in the provided results, so I can only judge based on the series' overall tone and subject matter.