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‘The Bear’ Offers a Rare and Honest Look at Life After Suicide Loss

For many viewers, The Bear is one of television’s most compelling dramas. But for those who have lived through the loss of a loved one to suicide, the acclaimed FX/Hulu series resonates in a much deeper, often painful way.

The show follows Carmy (Jeremy Allen White), a young chef who steps in to run his family’s Chicago restaurant after the tragic suicide of his brother. His relentless work ethic, his retreat into the grind of daily life, and his struggles with fractured family dynamics mirror the reality many survivors of suicide loss know all too well.

Unlike most series, The Bear goes beyond using tragedy as a mere plot device. Through Carmy’s grief and drive for redemption, it highlights how art, community, and purpose can become lifelines for those left behind.

For survivors, the desire to “fix” the unfixable — to rewrite the past and save the person they lost — is familiar. Carmy’s obsessive push for perfection and meaning captures that experience. It is not a tidy or linear healing process, but rather an ongoing struggle to balance unbearable pain with the possibility of growth.

This portrayal challenges the way society typically discusses suicide. Too often, conversations about such loss are silenced, clouded in stigma, or reduced to oversimplified ideas like “everything happens for a reason.” Survivors are portrayed as permanently damaged, their grief hidden away to make others more comfortable.

The Bear refuses that narrative. Instead, it presents Carmy as fully human — flawed, grieving, guilt-ridden, but still capable of connection and love. His late brother Mikey (Jon Bernthal) is also remembered not just for his death, but for his humor, charisma, and fierce devotion to family. The series insists that both the grieving and the lost deserve to be seen in their wholeness, not reduced to tragedy.

For many who have endured similar loss, this representation is both triggering and healing. It acknowledges the silent, isolating struggles survivors face, while offering a reminder that grief can coexist with community, art, and resilience.

Every day, around 132 Americans die by suicide. Their families and friends are often left to navigate the aftermath in silence, carrying burdens of stigma and shame. By telling Carmy’s story with honesty and compassion, The Bear opens space for dialogue around a subject too often left in the shadows.

In doing so, it gives survivors what society often withholds: recognition, empathy, and permission to grieve without apology.

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SpaceX wins $733M Space Force launch contract

The U.S. Space Force has awarded SpaceX a contract worth $733 million for eight launches, reinforcing the organization’s efforts to increase competition among space launch providers. This deal is part of the ongoing “National Security Space Launch Phase 3 Lane 1” program, overseen by Space Systems Command (SSC), which focuses on less complex missions involving near-Earth orbits.

Under the contract, SpaceX will handle seven launches for the Space Development Agency and one for the National Reconnaissance Office, all using Falcon 9 rockets. These missions are expected to take place no earlier than 2026.

Space Force launch contract

In 2023, the Space Force divided Phase 3 contracts into two categories: Lane 1 for less risky missions and Lane 2 for heavier payloads and more challenging orbits. Although SpaceX was chosen for Lane 1 launches, competitors like United Launch Alliance and Blue Origin were also in the running. The Space Force aims to foster more competition by allowing new companies to bid for future Lane 1 opportunities, with the next bidding round set for 2024. The overall Lane 1 contract is estimated to be worth $5.6 billion over five years.

Lt. Col. Douglas Downs, SSC’s leader for space launch procurement, emphasized the Space Force’s expectation of more competitors and greater variety in launch providers moving forward. The Phase 3 Lane 1 contracts cover fiscal years 2025 to 2029, with the option to extend for five more years, and the Space Force plans to award at least 30 missions over this period.

While SpaceX has a strong position now, emerging launch providers and new technologies could intensify the competition in the near future.

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