What to Expect in 'Fire Country' Season 4: Loss, New Leadership & Spinoff Ripples
What to Expect in 'Fire Country' Season 4: Loss, New Leadership & Spinoff Ripples
Buddy TV7-9 minutes 9/10/2025
Season 4 of Fire Country comes in blazing on October 17, 2025, when CBS airs the premiere at 9/8c (with streaming on Paramount+ the next day). Leading into the finale of Season 3, a brutal cliffhanger set the stage: Vince Leone (Billy Burke) perished in a deadly blaze. That decision reshapes Station 42, the Leone family, and even the new spinoff series
Vince’s Death & Fallout at Station 42
The Season 4 trailer—released September 23, 2025—confirms that Vince does not survive the collapse of the Zabel Ridge fire scene, while his wife Sharon (Diane Farr) and father Walter (Jeff Fahey) are also trapped inside. In one haunting moment, Bode (Max Thieriot) pleads, “I will never forgive this,” as Jake (Jordan Calloway) restrains him from rushing in. At Vince’s funeral, Bode vows: “I’m going to spend the rest of my career protecting my father’s town, my father’s station, and my father’s mission.”
Co-creators Tony Phelan and Joan Rater defended the decision to kill off Vince as a narrative necessity. Phelan explained, “We felt like it was time for the show and the characters to have a loss … that would force them to really reassess where they were and what they were doing.” Rater added: “to play Vince’s death as a gimmick or a [gasp moment] didn’t feel right … prepare the fans and really get into Vince’s death early on and how is this going to impact us.” Because of this, Vince’s absence looms heavily over every character. Phelan teased a “two‑hour single evening event” crossover between
Enter Brett Richards: Shawn Hatosy’s New Command
To fill the void at the top of Station 42, Shawn Hatosy joins as Battalion Chief Brett Richards—becoming a critical presence in Season 4. In Collider’s reporting, Richards is characterized as someone “no stranger to loss himself,” whose arrival may rescue or destabilize the crew further.
Hatosy, age 49, appears in first-look photos grinning with authority in his new uniform. His character is tasked with assessing whether Station 42 should be dissolved or rebuilt. Phelan explained: “We have been tasked with … deciding, do I dissolve this fire station? Do I reassign everybody, or is there something here that can be saved and reassembled?” In trailers, Richards is shown overseeing drills with 42’s team and watching the tension between Bode and Jake.
How Bode, Sharon & Jake Will Cope
Thieriot says Bode will be pushed into darkness by the magnitude of this loss. He describes Bode’s natural tendency toward compartmentalization crashing headlong into grief. “I’m so worried that Bode is going to put everyone so far ahead of himself that he’ll explode this season,” Thieriot told TV Insider. Bode “hasn’t experienced a loss like this” since his sister died.
Already-strained relationships will crack further. Thieriot says Bode will “question every decision that everybody makes,” putting added pressure on colleagues like Jake. Though Bode is expected to hit moments of complete despair (“I mean, you can’t really get knocked down any further”), the season also charts his path back to strength: “this season is really about rising from the ashes and overcoming.”
Sharon and Bode’s grief plays out in parallel, not together. Rater noted that “she doesn’t want to burden him, he doesn’t want to burden her, and they grieve separately,” despite their inherently interwoven history. Their estranged emotional states will test the family’s bond.
Sheriff Country Connections & Crossovers
The death of Vince (Mickey’s brother-in-law) echoes beyond Station 42. The spinoff Sheriff Country launches concurrently—its premiere also arriving October 17—and will run back-to-back before the two series swap timeslots. Showrunner Matt Lopez states, “There will be crossovers going in both directions … it’s in some of those episodes that you’ll really be feeling [that loss] for those especially who knew Vince, so, Mickey, her dad [W. Earl Brown].”
Executive producer Tony Phelan confirmed the crossover will be visceral: “a two‑hour single evening event … we’ll see how these two worlds crash into each other and they help each other.” Phelan and Rater emphasized the care taken to avoid playing Vince’s death merely as a shock beat—insisting it be woven deeply into both shows’ emotional logic.
Cast & Key Players for Season 4
- Max Thieriot as Bode Leone (son of Vince)
- Diane Farr as Sharon Leone (Vince’s wife)
- Jordan Calloway as Jake Crawford (Bode’s longtime friend and rival)
- Stephanie Arcila as Gabriela (exiting at premiere)
- Jules Latimer as Eve (a member of the firefighter crew)
- Shawn Hatosy as Brett Richards, the new battalion chief
- Billy Burke as Vince Leone (deceased) — his exit forms the crux of the season’s conflict
- Jeff Fahey as Walter (Vince’s father)
- Morena Baccarin as Mickey Fox (now leads Sheriff Country)
- W. Earl Brown as Mickey’s dad (crossover focal point)
Why Season 4 Must Change the Game
In past seasons, legacy and redemption dominated. But now, the very bedrock of the show—its patriarch—has been removed. Phelan noted that much of Seasons 1–3 leaned on Sharon and Vince as surrogate parental figures. Losing Vince “means that we’ve got to find new combinations and that leads to new emotional journeys for our people.”
The arrival of Brett Richards promises to recalibrate power dynamics. The younger firefighters must now prove themselves without Vince’s guidance. As Phelan put it: “So much of Bode’s life … his energy has just been about achieving that. And now … without his father … that is going to seriously put him on his heels.” That internal crisis is the dramatic heart of Season 4.
What Fans Should Watch For
- The emotional journey of Bode, from grief to growth, as he tries to protect his father’s legacy while rebuilding himself.
- How Brett Richards balances authority with empathy and whether he’ll clash with Bode or earn his trust.
- Sharon and Bode’s separate grief arcs—and whether/when they come together.
- The fallout in Jake’s relationship with Bode as blame, ambition, and resentment surface.
- Major crossover episodes with Sheriff Country, especially in the early episodes.
- Long shadows from Vince’s absence—who steps into leadership, and whether other characters falter under the pressure.
After three seasons of legacy, redemption, and transformation, Fire Country Season 4 confronts its boldest experiment yet: removing its anchor and asking whether the flame can be reignited. With Shawn Hatosy’s Brett Richards pressing the reset button and Bode forced into unexpected terrain, this season promises emotional risk, raw stakes, and a crucible from which few characters will emerge unchanged.
Fire Country season 4 premieres Friday, October 17, 2025, on CBS (9/8c) and Paramount+. Don’t miss it.
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San Francisco 49ers Quarterback Brock Purdy Is Not Worried About Mac Jones Taking His Job

Brock Purdy warms up before an NFL Preseason game between the Chargers and 49ers on August 23, 2025.
San Francisco 49ers quarterback Mac Jones had had a hot start to the 2025 season filling in for injured starter Brock Purdy which has led to a lot of chatter around the football world about if there is a quarterback controversy in San Francisco.
But according to 49ers general manager John Lynch, that chatter is not bothering Purdy one bit.
Lynch on any potential tension in the quarterback room:
"A cool quality about Brock Purdy is he's one of the most self assured, humble people. It's one of the things that appealed to us… I think we all feel fortunate that we found a backup who can go in and play like a… pic.twitter.com/LHByyFymwk
— KNBR (@KNBR) October 9, 2025
“A cool quality about Brock Purdy is he is one of the most self assured, humble people,” Lynch said on KNBR’s Murph and Markus show on Thursday October 9. “It’s one of the things that appealed to us…I think we all feel fortunate that we found a backup who can go in and play like a starter and earn us tough hard fought wins.”
In that one quote, Lynch simultaneously reassured 49ers fans that the organization still clearly views Purdy as the starter and Jones as the backup, and said that even if there turns out to be a QB controversy in SF, he expects Purdy to be nothing but the most supportive and professional guy in the locker room.
Regardless of how you feel about the 49ers quarterback situation and how it plays out from here on out, Purdy’s humility is great for team culture.
Purdy’s Humility Has To Do With His Christian Faith
Being self confident and team first is hard to do when it feels like the whole world believes you should lose your job.
And yet, Lynch said that Purdy has remained that way. How is that possible?
If the past is any indication, Purdy’s Christian Faith is likely what is behind his ability to have a good mindset amidst this situation.
Purdy leaned on his faith when the 49ers drafted him last in the 2022 NFL draft, giving him the title of Mr. Irrelevant, which is something that he talked about with legendary college football quarterback Tim Tebow on a podcast back in 2024.
“So grateful for that, being drafted last, and for [God] to be able to choose me to have this kind of story,” Purdy said. “For my glory? No, for His glory. So that’s what brings me joy.”
It seems like no matter what happens to Purdy, he is going to approach his new situation with humility and gratitude.
Mac Jones Has Also Been Humble, Supportive Of Purdy
The humility of the San Francisco 49ers’ quarterback room is a culture that goes beyond just Purdy.
Mac Jones has downplayed the idea of a QB controversy several times in his public comments.
Even after Jones and the 49ers’ most recent win against the Los Angeles Rams, a game in which Jones played the best football in his career and had every reason to feel full of himself, Jones strongly reiterated that he sees himself as the backup QB.
“They brought me here to be a backup,” Jones said. “That’s my job. Brock is the starter of this team. Right now he’s dealing with something, and for him to go out there last week and play, when you know he probably wasn’t at full health, he cares about this team.”
Mac Jones was asked if he views himself as the starting QB going forward:
"Brock's the starter of this team … I'm just trying to get some wins for him so it helps us down the line."
He has also said in recent weeks that he and Brock are good friends, a relationship that started before the two even played together on the 49ers.
“Brock’s one of my best friends and I want him back out there,” Jones said.
49ers fans could learn a great deal from the public comments of Mac Jones and Brock Purdy, and just support both guys and root for them both to have success and the highest possible level.
Because they’ll certainly cheer one another on.