1:14:01
	I needed this.
1:14:06
	You know, the Greeks
didn't write obituaries.
1:14:09
	They only asked one question
after a man died:
1:14:13
	"Did he have passion?"
1:14:19
	How do I look?
1:14:25
	Like a jackass.
1:14:29
	- Good luck, man.
- Thank you.
1:14:44
	[Dean]
Jonathan Trager,
1:14:46
	prominent televisionproducer
for ESPN,
1:14:49
	died last night from
complications of losing
his soulmate and his fiance.
1:14:55
	He was 35 years old
and soft-spoken and obsessive.
1:15:00
	Trager never looked the part
of a hopeless romantic.
1:15:03
	But in the final days
of his life,
1:15:06
	he revealed
an unknown side of his psyche.
1:15:09
	This hidden
quasi-Jungian persona...
1:15:12
	surfaced during
the Agatha Christie-like pursuit
for his long-reputed soulmate,
1:15:17
	a woman whom he only spent
a few precious hours with.
1:15:21
	Sadly, the protracted search
ended late Saturday night...
1:15:25
	in complete and utter failure.
1:15:29
	Yet even in certain defeat,
1:15:31
	the courageous Trager
secretly clung to the belief...
1:15:33
	that life is not merely
a series of meaningless
accidents or coincidences.
1:15:37
	Uh-uh. But rather
it's a tapestry of events...
1:15:41
	that culminate in
an exquisite, sublime plan.
1:15:45
	Asked about the loss
of his dear friend, Dean Kansky,
1:15:49
	the Pulitzer Prize-winning
author and executive editor
of the New York Times,
1:15:52
	described Jonathan as a changed man
in the last days of his life.
1:15:56
	"Things were clearer for him, "
Kansky noted.
1:15:59
	Ultimately, Jonathan concluded
that if weare to live life
in harmony with the universe,