March 5, 2026 9:53 am EST

Candace Owens has never been subtle. The pundit and podcaster has spun dozens of unfounded conspiracy theories since her rise from communications director at Charlie Kirk’s conservative youth group, Turning Point USA, to become a far-right digital force with a podcast audience of some six million. But this week, with the launch of her multi-part video series Bride of Charlie, Owens has found what may be her most relentlessly destructive and, by the metrics, most popular campaign yet: a serialized takedown of Erika Kirk, the widow of the man who first gave her a national platform.

Briefly, here’s the backstory: On Sept. 10, 2025, Charlie Kirk, the 31-year-old founder of Turning Point USA and close ally of Donald Trump, was assassinated at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah. He was shot in the neck by a single bullet fired from a nearby rooftop while speaking at an outdoor campus debate. A 22-year-old Utah man, Tyler James Robinson, surrendered to police the following day; he has since been charged with aggravated murder, with prosecutors seeking the death penalty. The FBI says evidence indicates Robinson acted alone. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for May.

In the days after the assassination, TPUSA’s board appointed Erika Kirk — the now-widow, previously known more for her pageant background than any political leadership role — to take over as CEO, a move described as consistent with her late husband’s wishes. She quickly stepped into the spotlight: speaking at AmericaFest in December, appearing composed and camera-ready in a glittering sequined pantsuit before an elated AmericaFest crowd, posing in a replica of her late husband’s iconic “debate me” booth, and tossing memorial hats to adoring fans. In February, President Trump honored her at his State of the Union address, where she received a standing ovation from the assembled lawmakers. “Last year, Charlie was violently murdered by an assassin and martyred for his beliefs,” Trump told the chamber.

For Owens, all of it carried a particular sting. During the formative years of the first Trump administration, she was one of the most visible faces of Turning Point USA — traveling extensively with Charlie Kirk, helping build the TPUSA brand. Her public identity was tightly intertwined with the organization’s rise. She served as communications director from 2017 to 2019, until, according to multiple reports, she was asked to leave following positive remarks she made about Adolf Hitler. Watching the institution pivot swiftly and decisively to a new steward — and one receiving presidential embrace — underscored how completely Owens had been cast aside.

In the weeks after the succession, Owens began raising pointed questions on her podcast about Erika Kirk’s conduct: Why was she mic’d during her visit to her husband’s casket? Why did TPUSA’s public events resume so quickly? Why did she seem, in Owens’ framing, already at peace with the loss? “We know everybody grieves differently,” Owens told her audience. “In my imagination, I just thought she would be more upset.”

In December 2025, former Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly — who has since built her own conservative-leaning podcast audience and is friendly with both women — brokered a private in-person meeting in Nashville that lasted four and a half hours. Both women called it “productive.” The peace didn’t hold. Shortly after, Owens aired leaked audio she said had been recorded inside TPUSA roughly two weeks after Kirk’s death, capturing Erika Kirk congratulating her events team for pulling off the “event of the century” — AmericaFest, which drew 275,000 attendees — and cheering booming merchandise sales. Owens found the upbeat tone unconscionable. Erika Kirk had addressed the context directly in the recording itself: “My husband’s dead. Like, I’m not trying to be morbid, but he’s dead. And it puts life into perspective.” Kirk’s office did not respond to a request for comment on the leak. Her public response to Owens’ campaign had, up to that point, amounted to two words: “Just stop.”

Then came Bride of Charlie. The first hour-long episode dropped on Feb. 25, and what followed across subsequent installments is not a smoking gun, but an accumulating architecture of insinuation. Owens goes forensic on Erika Kirk’s biography, pointing to what she describes as inconsistencies: references to being raised by a single mother versus a clip of Erika on The Charlie Kirk Show saying her father “was a stay-at-home dad for a few years”; alleged discrepancies in her birthdate across legal documents; contested details about her pre-Charlie dating life. In episode two, Owens pivots into murkier territory, linking Erika’s childhood school to what she calls MK Ultra-adjacent figures, connecting her family peripherally to occult scholarship, and gesturing toward Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and a Romanian church accused in a child trafficking scandal. Owens has not accused Erika Kirk of any criminal conduct. But the series’ cadence and sequencing all point toward a larger mystery yet to be revealed.

The series has also, predictably, become a vector for uglier content, which Owens does not herself state. After Owens highlighted yearbook photos of a young Erika Kirk with short hair, some followers began “transvestigating” — speculating about her gender identity based on childhood appearance, a transphobic online practice that has become a recurring weapon on the far right. Owens did not make this claim explicitly, but her framing and fan base did the rest of the work.

The backlash from within conservative media has been unusually sharp. Ben Shapiro, Daily Wire co-founder and one of the right’s most prominent voices, did not mince words. “As a person who doesn’t often use the adjective ‘satanic,’” Shapiro told his audience, “what Candace is doing right now is absolutely satanic to Erika Kirk.” He went further on another episode, calling Owens “a true vampire” and suggesting Erika Kirk “sue the living hell out of Candace Owens.” It should be noted that Shapiro was among the people who hired Owens to work at the Daily Wire, where she hosted the political talk show Candace from 2021 to 2024. Owens was fired from Daily Wire after reportedly months of tensions with Shapiro and controversy over comments she made that were considered antisemitic.

Others in conservative media, including Dan Bongino and Dave Rubin, followed Shapiro with similar language in condeming Owens for Bride of Charlie. The reaction prompted Owens’ camp to allege a coordinated campaign and float the theory that influencers were being paid to speak against her. A supposed leaked TPUSA internal memo directing staff to call Owens “evil” and “demonic” circulated widely; multiple fact-checks concluded it was fabricated. Because nothing shuts down an accusation of conspiracy thinking quite like a new conspiracy theory. (Before Erika Kirk, Owens had previously focused her energies on French President Emmanuel Macron’wife, Brigitte, over false and outlandish claims that Brigitte Macron was born male. She is now being sued by France’s first family.)

It is worth adding that Owens’ allegations about Charlie Kirk’s death itself go well beyond the Erika Kirk feud. In December, she claimed the assassination was an inside job involving TPUSA employees who “betrayed” Kirk, possibly with foreign help, and urged donors to pull funding from the organization. She has repeatedly questioned whether Tyler Robinson acted alone, implying Israeli government involvement — a theory consistent with the antisemitic throughline that has marked her commentary for years. The FBI has presented no evidence of a broader conspiracy in the Kirk murder.

Notably, TPUSA itself has not publicly commented on the series — even as its own website continues to host dozens of Owens’ old posts.

What is striking, watching the episodes unspool, is the production rhythm Owens has perfected. Raw archives give way to insinuation; insinuation yields a rhetorical question; the question hands off, without pause or preamble, to a sponsored read for a health supplement or financial product, with Owens cheerfully claiming she uses the item at home. Additional ads slot into the YouTube runtime. The tonal whiplash is, at this point, entirely the point. Outrage and revenue ride together. This is the system Owens has mastered: controversy generates attention; attention generates monetization; monetization sustains independence from any institution that might constrain her. She does not need TPUSA, or the Daily Wire, or any other platform. She is the platform.

The clash between Owens and the TPUSA establishment is not merely personal. It reflects a broader fracture between institutional conservatism — the kind that produces 501(c)(3) nonprofits overseeing $250 million operations and wins invitations to the State of the Union — and the personality-driven, grievance-fueled digital media economy that Owens inhabits and dominates. For the latter, fanning the flames of conflict is not a liability. It is a growth strategy.

Whether Bride of Charlie ultimately reshapes Erika Kirk’s public standing is anyone’s guess. What is clear is that Owens has serialized an internal conservative succession dispute into a multi-episode spectacle, and that her six million subscribers — not only the committed conspiracy faithful but also status quo conservatives, the politically ambivalent, and the simply curious — keep showing up for the next installment. The emotions she trafficks in resonate precisely because they do not require critical thinking or factual verification. They require only a willingness to be outraged and a single voice willing to do the thinking for you.

Read the full article here

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version