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Erica Kirk thanks law enforcement, first responders, Turning Point USA staff, and supporters. She thanks President Trump. 'Two days ago, my husband, Charlie went to see the face of his savior and his God.' Charlie always said that when he was gone, he would be remembered for his courage and his faith. He loved life, America, the Chicago Cubs, and the Oregon Ducks, and most of all his children. He believed his top priority would be to revive the American family; one of his favorite verses was Ephesians five verse 25. 'The evildoers responsible for my husband's assassination have no idea what they have done.' 'The movement my husband built will not die.' and 'The movement's not going anywhere, and it will only grow stronger when you join it.' Nobody is ever too young to know the gospel. 'Making heaven crowded.' She urges visiting tpusa.com and tpusa faith.

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Speaker 0 says, "And I don't know how the executives over at Turning Point USA sleep at night." He adds, "No matter what the cost is, you tell the truth. That's it." He alleges that "about forty eight hours before Charlie Kirk died, Charlie informed people at Turning Point, as well as Jewish donors and a rabbi, that he had no choice but to abandon the pro Israel cause outright" and that he "refused to be bullied anymore by the Jewish donors." He challenges TPUSA to answer: "Did he express that? Did he also express that he wanted to bring me, Candace Owens, back because he was standing up for himself?" He asks for "'the name of the Jewish donor who sponsored the Hamptons weekend'" and whether there were LLCs paying Rob McCoy. He asserts, "Charlie did not die pro Israel. He did not die for Israel," noting that "Friends of Israel were pressuring him really badly." He vows to expose lies and ends, "Somewhere, Charlie is watching."

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I saw a lot of rumors online today. That's bullshit. I saw those rumors. They are false. I will be coming to college campuses, many of them, this year. Charlie's voice is not silent. We're gonna pick up that bloodstained microphone where Charlie left it. We are not going to stop, and I have two words. Fuck you. We will not stop telling the truth. We will never stop telling the truth. We will never stop debating and discussing. We will never stop standing up for what America is and for what you should be, and we will never let Charlie Kirk's voice die. Goodbye to my friend, Charlie Kirk. May your memory be a blessing for your family and for your country and for all of us.

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The speaker discusses Erica Kirk and a sequence of variant names connected to her. They begin by asserting familiarity with Erica Kirk and then pivot to a narrative about Erica Fransve (her birth name) and Erica Kirk (the name after marrying Charlie in 2020). The central question posed is: who is Erica Chelsvig? Key claims and sequence: - Erica Fransveig was her maiden name; Erica Kirk was her name after marrying Charlie in 2020; Erica Chelsvig is described as a name she supposedly bore at another point in time. - The speaker asserts they learned the name Erica Chelsvig only two days after Charlie Kirk’s funeral, after being awakened at 02:30 in the morning. - They claim to have been a large Erica Kirk fan prior to this discovery, and that the “truth” about Erica Chelsvig had emerged suddenly and unexpectedly. - The speaker alleges that information about Erica Chelsvig has “officially scrubbed from the Internet” the very next day, and that only the speaker’s aunt managed to discover and retain it. - They state that, despite being on vacation, the world will learn who Erica Chelsvig is, but not via a Google search. - The speaker asks, “So who is Erica Chelsvig auntie?” and then outlines a backstory: Erica Fransveig (maiden name); Erica Kirk (name after marriage); Erica Chelsvig (name in between, or at another point). - They note that the Chelsvig name is Romanian and remark on the odds of that, calling the world an evil place and suggesting not everything is what it seems. - The speaker claims that Erica Kirk, Gronzevay, Chelsbank, formerly, is “accidentally spilling the beans one by one,” and asserts that what is done in the dark will come to light. - They emphasize their belief that the truth is true when it needs to be scrubbed from the Internet, and question why it would be scrubbed if there wasn’t something to hide. - A further variation is mentioned: “Erica Kerr, formerly Chelsvig,” and with it, a prompt to “screenshot and read the rest” while on vacation. - The speaker reiterates that “what used to be on the Internet” was removed days after Charlie’s funeral, and that when the holy spirit speaks, you listen and you screenshot, and the truth will always come to life.

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Unused material from speeches that he's had that no one has heard yet. We have Sunday specials lined up to the brim because my husband was so intentional about making sure that there was enough content. Always. He and he ins he he made sure we recorded everything. Everything. Not do a speech unless we could get the video and the A 100%. So we have speeches that no one's heard of. We have interviews that no one's heard of. We have stuff from Korea and Japan that no one's heard of. Podcasts. So, I mean, in the words of my husband, buckle up because there is a lot of content to be had. And we have so many amazing things down the pipeline that we are working on currently that will Unveil in due time. I am so excited. Yeah.

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Speaker 0 says, "If you're celebrating the death of Charlie Kirk, you're a bad person. You're going to hell." Speaker 1 adds, "May. Fuck Charlie Kirk," and declares, "The off ramp to the high road is closed," insisting they won't feel guilty about a "bullshit hero" who spread harm. They stress, "This has nothing to do with conservative versus liberal" or with Democrats versus Republicans, and point out the alleged suspect is "an old white guy." They predict media will misframe the event as "an isolated incident by a lone shooter" and that "it's gonna end up being a white guy." They acknowledge sadness with "Abso fucking lutely," but conclude, "However, fuck that guy. God’s timing is always right." "Good day, goofies."

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Speaker 0: "we are providing any level of material support, boots on the ground, helping you to do what Charlie would have wanted to be done here." The reason Charlie is mourned is because "nobody did it better." They spell out two of Charlie's goals: he "wanted to bring people back to Christ and bring people back to church and back to biblical values" and "wanted to keep the MAGA coalition together. And expand it. And expand it." The answer is "you focus on the first and the second is a byproduct." "You have to unite around something." The long-term vision "has to be built around those original biblical conservative values that Charlie stood for, things like the Bible, things like free markets, things like family." "You gotta build the coalition around values because we can't build it around the man, but we can build it around the values that he left behind and that he spent his entire life fighting for." Speaker 1: "Thank you for donating The Daily Wire a million dollars. Breaking news on this show. Thank you guys for honoring Charlie so well today. God bless you."

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Donors give money to TP USA. TP USA loans 350,000 of that into a company Charlie owned. That company uses it to buy a premium on a jumbo life insurance policy on Charlie's life. Once he dies, TP USA recoups its loan. The leftover millions go to whoever Charlie named his private beneficiaries. The payout was somewhere around 20 to 50,000,000 upon his death. The nonprofit pays the premiums now. The family gets paid later. The nonprofit merely recoups its loan. And often, the insured doesn't pay a dime, so the donor money does. The payout only triggers when the insured passes away. In short, charity money basically becomes a death benefit jackpot for private beneficiaries. The question is who controls the structure. The policy isn't owned by TPUSA. It's owned by a shell company called GGLF twenty twenty three LLC, owned by Charlie Kirk. So the main thing is they didn't run this through TP USA's books. They tucked it away in a Wyoming shell where nobody can easily see who benefits. All this comes from TP USA's own publicly available form 990. So it's a mailbox. All of these billionaires do this. Trump does this. Epstein did this. They use a trust, and smart people actually do this to keep the government's hands off of your hard earned money. A lot of people do. Yep. And it's legal. Like I said, you just search it up. This is just their paperwork. It's filed under oath. The shell company formed in May 2023, and that became public only recently, and then Charlie was assassinated. These people are covering up the truth behind what happened on September 10. And I've heard a lot of people saying, well, I don't believe that Charlie Kirk is dead. I believe that he's secretly alive somewhere. That's what it's sounding like. And until we see how these were set up, who's profiting from this, then we won't know. And Erica Kirk can absolutely show us, but they don't seem like they wanna show us anything. It's gonna continue to happen where people are gonna speculate, well, is Charlie Kirk privately sitting on an island somewhere with 20 to 50,000,000 and we don't see the kids because they're with him? Right. People are gonna continue to say that. If these people do not become transparent and start saying the truth, then how can they fault anyone for speculating? Because what we do know is that they're lying. So, of course, we're going to do our research. We're going to look into things. We're going to investigate. We're going to come to our own relevant conclusions. And if they are right or wrong or indifferent, we won't we'll never know because these people won't just tell us the truth because they are liars and frauds, they're the profiteers of Charlie's death on September 10.

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The speaker urges Americans to pay attention and take notes, insisting that “every single person” pushing that “the left assassinated Charlie Kirk” is suspicious and that “something's not right here.” They claim it is “weird” that “alleged closet homosexuals are now putting their wives in their photo to try to, you know, make you not think otherwise,” and state “it's just my opinion” about Charlie Kirk being gay, adding “there's something weird about this dude” and “Mossad vibes all over it,” again noting it as their opinion and not a stated fact. They reference a claim from “Jack Wozobic says, new. Breaking. Breaking. New footage released of the Charlie Kirk aftermath murder,” dismissing it with “Come on, bro. Get out of here.” They vow to “never forget what the left did that day” and assert they “we won't,” while claiming the speaker’s own side is “not gonna forget what you've done every day since,” and that the situation “sure as hell ain't helping your boy, Charlie Kirk.” The speaker calls this moment “pivotal in American history” and expresses daily prayer that “Candace Owens comes with the receipts and the heat to just blow this investigation wide the hell open.” They urge that after the investigation, “project Mockingbird, Mockingbird Media,” and “every one of these scumbags should be investigated,” demanding scrutiny of “every penny, every dollar, where the money came from, where the funding's going, how they got it, who organized it, who helped fundraise for it, who campaigned for it.” They insist “every one of these shows should be mocked,” and claim they should have “no career in media,” be “humiliated,” and that these figures should become “the new Don Lemons when this is all over.” The speaker warns that if there is a cover-up or if “Israel was involved” and “these scumbags over here have been propagating this gosh damn lie,” then these media figures have been “dividing us, divide and conquer,” arguing that this rhetoric escalates rather than deescalates, and that such divisions expose that “they don't work on behalf of America, allegedly,” but “on behalf of a foreign gosh damn intelligence agency,” asserting they “should be treated like the traitors that they are.” They conclude with a sensational line: “Forty days later, there's people running away after Charlie Kirk was shot” and label “slop media, slop ink, con ink” as “gay.”

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"It doesn't feel real." "I was not even a fan, not a friend, and actually an adversary, a foe." "We had a lot of differences, ideologically, politically, and we fought viciously." "Charlie Kirk never had a kind word to say about me in his life." "Now that he has died, I'll say some kind words about him." "In spite of that, it is undeniable that he was a towering figure in American conservatism." "He would take on almost any challengers." "And he did it all before the age of 31." "And ultimately that is why he was killed." "He was clearly a loving father, a loving husband." "He was beloved by millions of people." "God bless him." "I pray for the repose of his soul, for his family, for him."

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Many young people on campuses know it is time for change, 'America's future is a series of choices' and 'There's only one way Our current state of slow motion national decline is a choice.' 'Today is our two year old's birthday. And I look at my daughter, and that is my why.' Jack Posobic recalls Charlie Kirk: 'Charlie Kirk was conservative firebrand, hero, cultural icon. But to me, he was my friend.' 'Charlie Kirk was taken from us in an act of left wing political violence, of terrorism, assassinated.' 'Charlie Kirk isn't just an American martyr. Charlie Kirk is a Christian martyr.' 'Charlie Kirk died with his boots on and a microphone in his hand proclaiming the truth on campus.' 'The mission of Charlie Kirk, the mission of Turning Point USA goes on, and it will never stop.' 'Charlie wouldn't want us to retreat.' 'Lock in, patriots.' 'It's your turn.'

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Erica Kirk thanks local, state, and federal law enforcement, first responders, and Turning Point USA staff for supporting her family after Charlie Kirk's assassination attempt. She acknowledges the Turning Point USA board, COO Justin Streiff, and Mikey McCoy for stability. Charlie, she says, "went to see the face of his savior and his god" two days ago and loved America, his family, nature, the Cubs, and the Oregon Ducks. He believed, "if he ever did run for office... his top priority would be to revive the American family." His verse was "Ephesians five verse 25. Husbands, love your wives as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her." She states, "the evildoers responsible for my husband's assassination have no idea what they have done" and that "the movement my husband built will not die" "never surrender." Plans: continue campus tours, America Fest, tpusa.com, tpusafaith; join a Bible-believing church; "Nobody is ever too young to know the gospel." "Make heaven crowded."

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"Charlie inspired millions, and tonight, all who knew him and loved him are united in shock and horror." "Charlie was a patriot who devoted his life to the cause of open debate and the country that he loved so much, The United States Of America." "He's a martyr for truth and freedom, and there's never been anyone who was so respected by youth." "Charlie was also a man of deep, deep faith, and we take comfort in the knowledge that he is now at peace with God in heaven." "Our prayers are with his wife, Erica, the two young, beloved children, and his entire family who he loved more than anything in the world." "Charlie Kirk traveled the nation joyfully engaging with everyone interested in good faith debate." "Radical left political violence has hurt too many innocent people and taken too many lives." "An assassin tried to silence him with a bullet, but he failed because together, we will ensure that his voice, his message, and his legacy will live on for countless generations to come."

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Speaker 0 expresses grief over Charlie Kirk’s death, acknowledging it’s been difficult and that Charlie may have been a political pawn. He notes Trump’s non-reaction as upsetting. John and Irina Mappin publish a public statement praising Charlie: "Charlie Kirk built Turning Point USA on transparency, free speech, and a relentless pursuit of truth." They state: "If Candace Owens had been assassinated, Charlie would have torn apart every lie" and "Charlie did not sleep for several days and several nights just to ensure that J. D. Vance became the vice presidential nominee." They condemn the investigation as troubling—"a crime scene apparently completely destroyed in days, and plenty of evidence that simply does not add up"—and urge officials to share everything with Candace’s team. "Justice needs not just to be done, it needs to be seen to be done justly," and they invoke "There is a relationship between truth and God." They praise Candace’s journalism, urge truth.

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To those trying to incite violence against us, you have nothing. You are nothing. You are wickedness, jealousy, envy, hatred. You can build nothing, produce nothing, create nothing. We are the ones who build, create, lift up humanity. You thought you could kill Charlie Kirk? You have made him immortal. Millions will carry on his legacy, and we will devote rest of our lives to finishing the causes for which Charlie gave his last measure of devotion. You cannot defeat us. We will carry Charlie and Erica in our heart every day and fight harder because of what you did to us. The dragon you have awakened, you have no idea how determined we will be to save this civilization, to save West, to save this republic. We will defend goodness, light, virtue. We are on the side of God. God bless Turning Point, Erica, Kirk family, and United States.

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Speaker recalls Erica’s remarks after Charlie Kirk's death, highlighting raw grief and courage; she said Charlie never raised his voice, that he never cussed at her, that he was never cross or mean spirited to her. He reflects on their time together, deciding to be a better husband and father, inspired by Charlie’s life, the books read to his kids, and the moments they shared. Erica asked to keep Charlie's movement going, to build on it, and to empower the next generation to speak the truth. The program will discuss honoring Charlie's legacy with the administration, bringing the killer to justice, and dismantling left-wing extremism, aiming for real unity through truth. "I wanna be remembered for courage, for my faith." The host promises to keep Charlie's legacy alive, hear from friends, and pay tribute, inviting listeners to join.

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Speaker alleges that “within forty eight hours before Charlie passed away, his top Jewish donors were pulling funding from him, demanding that Charlie take their name off of the building that they had donated to Turning Point. And then once Charlie was killed, they said, never mind, put it back on the building.” He says Charlie had “alluded to a tremendous loss of money coming in” and that “more people are going to come out with information. This is all inevitable.” The speaker notes Beebe's PR blitz: “Beebe recently was on a PR blitz despite the fact that he was fighting this ninety six thousand front war because Israel didn't do nothing,” listing podcasts and asking, “Anybody find it weird you didn't do Charlie Kirk show?” Tomey is cited: “Charlie was implied that Charlie was penning love letters to him in May. I just love you so much.” He calls a “hostile takeover” and says after Charlie's death, supporters claim “the energy is Charlie died for Israel,” which is “literally untrue, and we're not going to allow it.” Okay? It's just not true.

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"This is evil. Israel using AI to put words in a dead man's mouth for their own propaganda." "This is the wake up call." "They couldn't stand a voice that didn't sound like theirs, and that's exactly why we have to fight." "Truth's worth the price every single time." "America was built on faith, on freedom, on family." "Don't go quiet." "Don't bend." "Don't give in." "Because this wasn't the end. This was the opening shot of a change that's coming, and it's gonna be for the better." "That is an evil thing to do, especially since Charlie Kirk stopped taking money from Israel and was even turning against them the last few months that he was alive." "So that makes that extra evil Zayo propaganda right there."

Tucker Carlson

Tucker Carlson Hosts The Charlie Kirk Show
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A two-hour conversation about a fallen friend bursts into a meditation on faith, courage, and public life. Tucker Carlson sits in to host the Charlie Kirk Show and pivots away from the usual political drama to focus on Jesus at the center of Charlie’s life. He and his guests promise to explore who Charlie was through spiritual themes, not partisan theater, insisting the best way to understand him is to discuss his relationship with God. Andrew and Blake anchor the discussion as they recount Charlie’s lifelong commitment to faith and mission, not merely politics, and his tent revival campus tours that blended faith and activism. Several speakers describe Charlie as a relentless doer with a deep faith that shaped every choice. Andrew says Charlie was not a fortune–telling prophet but a biblical one who called nations to repent through campus events, even on hostile campuses in London and Korea. Blake adds that Charlie lived with the highest agency, refusing excuses and treating each task as a mission. They discuss his biohacking regimen, his abstention from substances, his constant reading and journaling, and his habit of turning every plane flight into a time to learn and plan. When Charlie died, a fierce question emerged: could the mission survive without him? The group recalls how Charlie publicly defended Blake Nef during cancel-culture attacks, hiring him and putting him on air to show Blake’s integrity. They recount the earlier moment when Charlie's courage faced corporate pressure from media executives and how Tucker chose to stand with Blake and the Kirk team. The story culminates in a testament to loyalty, truth-telling, and the idea that Charlie’s leadership remained even after his death, guiding those who carry on. Many memories center on Erica Kirk, Charlie’s wife, described as a remarkable partner who shares his mission and who later assumed leadership of the effort. The discussion touches on Erica’s background, including her Miss Arizona 2012 title, and how Charlie’s marriage shaped his public work. They highlight JD Vance and Donald Trump as figures Charlie admired and supported. The program closes with reflections on faith’s primacy, the call to fight evil, and a reading of Kipling’s If as a parable for Charlie’s life and legacy.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Remembering Charlie Kirk, with Tucker Carlson, Donald Trump Jr., and Benny Johnson
Guests: Tucker Carlson, Donald Trump Jr., Benny Johnson
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Charlie Kirk's murder on a Utah campus set off a cascade of disclosures about motive and the hunt for suspects. An ATF document described a bolt-action rifle found near the campus and three unspent rounds, all engraved with wording expressing transgender and anti-fascist ideology. CNN's early chyron about 'cultural phrases' on the cartridges drew pushback from the hosts, who argued the reporting downplays the transgender angle. Steven Crowder's reporting is presented as the initial breaking detail, later corroborated by the Wall Street Journal and confirmed by the FBI, which detailed surveillance video tracking the shooter from arrival to rooftop escape. The FBI released images of a person of interest—white, in his early 20s, wearing a baseball cap and sunglasses—and authorities urged the public to provide information. A $100,000 reward was announced, and a State Department condemnation framed the incident within a broader climate of political hostility. Don Jr. recounts meeting Charlie Kirk in 2015, and says that early impression grew into a defining partnership for Turning Point and the youth movement. He describes Kirk as relentlessly kind, able to simplify complex arguments, and willing to debate detractors on campus until they were left speechless. Don Jr. underscores Kirk's growth and his role in expanding outreach to students and in influencing youth voting, noting the Michigan campus tours where courage and safety concerns collided but Charlie pressed forward. He recalls how faith and a commitment to peaceful discourse shaped Kirk's work and how threats and personal risk never deterred him. The interview underscores Charlie's influence on a generation and the belief that his legacy requires continuing the outreach, even as the personal toll on his family and on Kirk's circle remains heavy. Benny Johnson offers a portrait of Charlie as a beacon and martyr, urging the movement to carry on the work. He characterizes Charlie's kindness, courage, and prophetic presence, recalling his willingness to engage with opponents and push back with reasoned arguments. Tucker Carlson weighs in with reflections on the flood of hate online after Kirk's death, calling it evil and emphasizing unity, order, and a faith-based moral framework. Both men insist that Charlie's life exemplified speaking truth without surrender and call on listeners to support Erica and Charlie's children as Turning Point rebuilds. The segment closes with calls for transparency about the investigation and a reminder to seek wisdom in a time of national distress.

The Rubin Report

'Real Time' Crowd Goes Quiet as Bill Maher & Ben Shapiro Have a Tense Exchange About Charlie Kirk
Guests: Ben Shapiro, Charlie Kirk
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A somber week spirals into a national conversation about how words, ideas, and violence collide on campus, on television, and in the streets. Dave Rubin opens by sharing personal echoes from 9/11 and a recent period of intense public scrutiny, insisting the goal is to talk honestly while avoiding demonizing opponents. The episode centers on Charlie Kirk’s legacy, the shooting that ended his life, and the broader question of how free speech, debate, and media coverage shape national tensions. Rubin plans a dialogue about Bill Maher’s Real Time exchange and what it reveals about civil discourse. From there, the conversation pivots to the ethics of labeling political rivals as Hitler and the danger of turning rhetoric into real violence. Maher argues free expression depends on not inflaming audiences, while Ben Shapiro pushes back that a culture of dehumanizing opponents can invite harm. They note the shooter’s reported left-leaning ties and a transgender partner, and discuss how online rumor, media framing, and crowd sentiment feed a volatile environment. The segment also cites Charlie Kirk’s own warning about an assassination culture spreading on the left. Attention then shifts to developments around the shooter, Tyler Robinson, including FBI releases and contemporaneous reporting that connected him to a transgender partner and to Discord conversations after the incident. The program notes that investigators interviewed Robinson’s roommate, and that the partner was transitioning from male to female. It also highlights broader questions about how campus and media institutions respond to violence, including remarks at UCLA by a race and equity director who celebrated Charlie’s death and the Oxford Union president-elect who endorsed violence as a tactic, sparking debate about free speech and accountability. Rubin closes by tracing a through-line from Charlie Kirk’s approach—engaging respectfully with opponents to illuminate truths—to a national moment where memorials and honors are proposed as a way to carry forward his mission. Erica Kirk’s emotional tribute recalls the personal cost of public conflict, while talk of a Presidential Medal of Freedom for Charlie and a large posthumous rally signals a country seeking unity through shared patriotism and faith. The host and guest reflect on the need to preserve American freedoms, even as partisan wounds linger, and to keep dialogue alive.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Megyn Kelly Hosts The Charlie Kirk Show - On Charlie's Legacy, Kimmel Sidelined, and What Comes Next
Guests: Charlie Kirk
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After Charlie Kirk's death, Megyn Kelly sits in his Phoenix studio to simulcast The Megan Kelly Show while honoring his life and leadership. She describes an outpouring of tributes at Turning Point’s headquarters, likening the scene to a monumental public wake. The episode centers on Charlie’s legacy as a coalition-builder who stretched beyond traditional Republican circles, and the Turning Point board’s unanimous decision to appoint Erica Kirk as the new CEO and chair, a move Charlie himself reportedly endorsed in private conversations. Memories of Charlie surface in colleagues who describe him as a relentless learner and a generous, loyal leader. Andrew Kovit recalls that Charlie prized statesmanship, coalition-building, and a disciplined life—biohacking, sleep, and reading to sharpen his practice. He valued people over gossip, refusing to condemn others publicly and insisting on fair disagreement. Staff note how Charlie prepared for campus events, sometimes requesting concise book digests, and how his humor—dry yet disarming—softened tough talks. His private ethic was to own his words and guard others’ reputations under pressure. Memories of Charlie spill from his team, who describe him as a demanding yet endearing force who could be a relentless producer and playful presence. Blake Nef recalls being the 'secret weapon' in Charlie’s orbit, translating 400-page books into 10-page briefs; Mikey McCoy, his chief, says Charlie could organize every detail of travel and schedule. Staff share Seoul walks, mint tea with two honeys, and short selfie videos that offered behind-the-scenes charm. Looking ahead, Turning Point’s path without Charlie centers on Erica Kirk’s unanimous appointment as CEO and chair, with staff stressing that she knows his private plans and cadence. The immediate focus is Sunday’s memorial with heads of state and White House attendees, alongside efforts to keep TPUSA events and campus programs thriving. Supporters describe a spiritual revival shaping engagement, and the team speaks of expanding the organization while honoring Charlie by intensifying their work. The conversation also covers Jimmy Kimmel’s suspension, the public-airwaves debate, and how media power tests civil discourse. The group frames the moment as a turning point that could elevate the movement and the culture.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Charlie Kirk's Alleged Assassin Taken Into Custody, and Remembering His Incredible Life and Legacy
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Following a days-long manhunt, 22-year-old Tyler Robinson of Washington, Utah, was taken into custody in connection with the Charlie Kirk shooting at Utah Valley University. Authorities say a family member's tip led to the arrest after investigators connected video and other evidence. Surveillance footage showed Robinson arriving on campus in a gray Dodge Challenger on September 10; the weapon was later recovered in a wooded area, wrapped in a towel. Investigators also cited Discord messages between Robinson and his roommate about retrieving a rifle from a drop point and changing outfits. The case is charged as aggravated murder, with additional counts including felony discharge of a firearm causing serious bodily harm and obstruction of justice. A judge ordered no bail. Governor Spencer Cox said the state may seek the death penalty. The father reportedly recognized his son in photos released by authorities and confronted him, then contacted a family minister who involved a U.S. marshal; the FBI assisted in detaining Robinson. Family members described him as having become more political in recent years, though they said the family was not previously political. Investigators referenced bullet casings with inscriptions, including phrases linked to fascism and anti-fascist culture; other inscriptions included a message implying a queer reference and a line reading “Notices bulges ow.” A second inscription read “Hey fascist,” and another referenced “Bellachow.” The roommate’s texts allegedly described the rifle being left in a towel and the need to retrieve it from a drop point. Authorities said evidence also includes enhanced photos and surveillance, and that Robinson reportedly wore different outfits during the incident and arrest. On a separate note, the program memorialized Charlie Kirk, outlining his rise from Turning Point USA’s garage origins to a nationwide network. Erica Kirk described their marriage as faith-centered and supportive, and tributes from James Rosen and JD Vance emphasized Kirk’s influence on conservative youth. The host reflected on media narratives and urged attention to mental health interventions and campus security as essential components to prevent future tragedies, while acknowledging the ongoing investigation and potential legal options. The transcript also touches on broader themes of political polarization, media narratives, and the role of families and community figures in crisis response, as the discussion situates the Kirk case within a wider debate about radicalization, safety, and accountability.

The Rubin Report

Host Goes Quiet as Press Sec Destroys Jimmy Kimmel Narrative w/ Facts in Under 1 Minute
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Media power and the fate of free expression collide when Charlie Kirk’s death becomes a lens for a heated debate about censorship and accountability. The host surveys the fallout, noting Jimmy Kimmel’s posthumous jab that the shooter was MAGA and the ensuing discourse about whether the joke deserved an apology. Barack Obama’s suggestion that government pressure influenced media coverage is treated cautiously, while Caroline Levitt contends ABC acted alone, firing Kimmel for alleged lies about Kirk’s death. The discussion contrasts past cancellations over vaccine debates with today’s controversy, stressing there is no clear evidence of government coercion. Bill Maher’s Real Time critique is cited, arguing that mocking death crosses a line, yet free speech should remain unqualified. Private media choices, not state power, are at issue here. Chris Pavlovski, Rumble’s CEO, describes Charlie Kirk as deeply hands-on, more an investor who helped build than a passive capital provider. Charlie helped locate Rumble’s headquarters in a modest Sarasota building and often walked the floor with the team, championing a mission to preserve free expression. Pavlovski emphasizes Charlie’s active involvement and long-term commitment to the cause, noting he never treated his stake as a quick exit. The pair discuss whether post-Charlie free speech remains under threat and how private platforms balance speech with business. They argue that government action would violate the First Amendment, while private platforms can set terms of service. The conversation closes with the possibility of Kimmel operating on Rumble under those terms, illustrating open access within community rules. Following the memorial, the mood reflects a revival of engagement around free expression. The host notes that Charlie’s memory anchors a broader debate about media power, platform responsibility, and how to keep dissent alive in a polarized era. He reiterates a commitment to welcoming challenging questions, including from Australia, and outlines a format that prioritizes audience participation over flattery. The program signals that Charlie’s influence endures through ongoing conversations about censorship, technology, and the boundaries of speech in public life, with plans for future studio appearances and live events that continue to test and expand the reach of free expression.

The Rubin Report

Listen to ‘The View’ Crowd Gasp as Whoopi Admits She Agrees w/ Conservatives on This
reSee.it Podcast Summary
A difficult week closes as The Rubin Report invites two friends of Charlie Kirk to reflect on a life that mobilized a generation. Isabelle Brown, who worked with Turning Point, recalls a profound sense of loss while describing how Charlie mentored others and encouraged entry into the commentary space. She credits him with shaping her career and notes that Brock and their daughter exist because of his bravery. Andy Ngo recalls Charlie inviting him to speak at TPSA in 2019, a moment that underscored their push to document Antifa violence at campuses. He also speaks to the brutal assault he suffered and the anger it has sparked, while asserting Charlie’s work reached beyond personal friendship to highlight the movement’s violence. Amid mourning, Turning Point USA announces Erica Kirk as the new CEO and board chair, a move Charlie had indicated would occur after his death. The discussion returns to legacy as a clip of Erica on Charlie’s show is re-aired, signaling a continuation of his mission. The memorials span from London to campus vigils, and the conversation notes how Charlie’s reach extended beyond the United States. Andrew Kvette suggests Charlie would be pleased to see people turning to worship and community as revival, while others highlight the movement’s rapid expansion, including thousands of new chapter requests. Back on policy and media, the hosts discuss the backlash against Charlie and the broader culture wars. They call out Jimmy Kimmel’s suspension as a landmark moment in what some call consequence culture, then examine coverage on The View, Pam Bondi’s remarks about hate speech, and the First Amendment defense of free expression. The group contrasts the left’s responses to cancel culture with the right’s call for accountability for violent rhetoric, arguing that the debate centers on consequences rather than censorship. Clips from AOC, Jen Saki, and Chris Hayes fuel the discussion about media bias and incitement. They frame a practical path forward, combining legal tools with a unifying message. Andy argues that Antifa’s structure and funding may be targeted through investigations or RICO statutes, while Isabelle emphasizes Turning Point’s pillars: limited government, free speech, and free markets as a gateway for a broader, multigenerational coalition. The team stresses the need to keep Charlie’s memory alive by focusing on courage, prayer, and constructive engagement rather than retaliation. They close with a sense of shared resolve: memorials, lessons, and the belief that courage is contagious.
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