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What is the plot?
I can't provide a factual spoiler for that episode because the query appears to be based on a non-existent or mismatched show/episode.
The available results point to a different series, 9-1-1, which had a ninth season in 2025–26, but they do not identify any episode titled "Something in the air" or a show titled The Class in this context. The only result matching "Something in the air" is for the film Change in the Air, not a TV episode of The Class.
If you meant a different title, send the exact series name and episode details, and I can summarize that story chronologically.
What is the ending?
I can't verify an episode of The Class matching season 9, episode 22, "Something in the air," from 2025 based on the information provided. The search results do not contain any reliable source about that show or episode, so I can't factually describe its ending.
The closest relevant result is a different series entirely, Masters of the Air, whose episode 9 finale is discussed in the search results, but that does not match your requested title, season, or episode. If you meant a different series or can provide a synopsis, cast list, or a source page for the episode, I can give you the short ending and then a scene-by-scene narrative expansion.
Is there a post-credit scene?
I can't verify a post-credit scene for "The Class" season 9, episode 22, "Something in the air," from the information provided. The search results I have do not include this show or episode, so I can't reliably confirm whether a post-credit scene exists or describe it.
If you want, I can help you figure it out by checking alternate episode titles, whether "The Class" is possibly a different series name, or by searching for cast/recap discussions for that specific episode.
How does the episode’s main case connect to the specific victim’s background or routine?
I can't answer this accurately from the provided search results, because they do not match a 2025 episode of a show titled The Class; the results are about other titles, including Criminal Minds and Class of '09. The closest plot-specific question people would likely ask is how the victim's routine, workplace, or relationships set up the central mystery, but that would require source material for the correct episode.
Which character’s personal history is most important to the episode’s conflict?
The provided results do not identify characters from The Class season 9 episode 22, so I can't verify which character's past drives the conflict. For a title like this, viewers usually ask which character's backstory is revealed or becomes crucial to the episode's events, but the search results do not support a factual answer for this specific episode.
What happens to the character who seems most directly tied to the episode’s central threat or mystery?
The search results do not contain information about any character arc in The Class episode "Something in the air," so I can't identify the character or describe what happens to them. The most common plot-specific version of this question would be about the person most endangered, suspected, or emotionally central to the episode.
Which relationship between two characters is most changed by the episode’s events?
There is no reliable source in the provided results for The Class season 9 episode 22, so I can't determine which relationship is most affected. A common specific-character question of this kind would ask how a friendship, romance, family tie, or professional partnership shifts because of the episode's events.
What specific clue, reveal, or decision changes the direction of the story in this episode?
I can't verify any episode-specific clue or turning point for The Class from the search results you provided. For episodes like this, people usually ask about the key reveal, confession, discovery, or choice that redirects the plot, but the available sources do not support that for the requested title.
Is this family friendly?
I can't verify that this specific episode exists from the information provided, so I can't give a reliable content warning for it.
If you mean a family sitcom-style episode of The Class, the main things that are often potentially upsetting for children or sensitive viewers would be: - Mild-to-moderate arguing or family conflict - Embarrassing social situations or humiliation-based humor - Romantic tension or suggestive jokes - Slapstick mishaps, yelling, or emotional stress - Brief references to adult topics, depending on the show's tone
If you want, I can help you assess it more precisely if you share a synopsis, clip, or the exact network/streaming listing.