Frank Turek opened the final Megyn Kelly Live stop in Glendale with the kind of plainspoken faith and courage that the left’s coastal elites can never understand. He didn’t read a script or grandstand; he told stories about Charlie Kirk like a father remembering a son, then bowed his head and led the room in prayer—exactly the sort of steady, God?first leadership our movement desperately needs.
Turek’s account of being mere feet from Charlie when the assassin struck cut through the media noise and reminded Americans what this fight is really about: lives, convictions, and the spiritual backbone that nourishes our freedom. He described rushing with the security team, trying to keep Charlie alive, and seeing in those last moments a man who was already looking past this life into eternity—a solemn testimony no cancel culture smear can erase.
Megyn Kelly used that final stage to call out the vicious infighting on the right and to tell anyone cheering Charlie’s death to “f off,” an oddly refreshing example of plain truth-telling in an age of manufactured outrage. The show’s last stop was not a surrender but a rallying cry: stop tearing each other down, face the left’s assaults, and do it with courage and faith.
Erika Kirk’s interview that night was powerful and raw, and it underscored the stakes: Charlie’s mission will not die with him. She spoke about stepping into leadership at Turning Point USA, about faith, family, and even the heartbreaking prayer that she might have been pregnant when her husband was killed—details that humanize this movement and shame the smug elites who mock our grief.
Frank Turek’s presence onstage wasn’t showboating; it was an act of pastoral solidarity and a rebuke to a media class that traffics in cynicism while profiting from our divisions. Conservatives don’t fetishize martyrdom, but we do honor sacrifice, defend truth, and refuse to let our leaders be erased by a hostile culture or a broken justice system.
If conservatives want to honor Charlie Kirk properly, we’ll do it the old-fashioned way: by turning grief into action, by supporting Erika as she carries forward the mission, and by refusing to be cowed by the mob. Tens of thousands showed up in Arizona to remember Charlie, and that turnout proves one thing clearly—this movement is alive, disciplined by faith, and ready to keep fighting for the country our children deserve.






