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Bachelor alum Madison “Maddie” Prewett believe Charlie Kirk After being assassinated at the age of 31, he received “many rewards.”
“We live for an audience. We live to please one person. We’re going to be face to face with one person,” Prewett, 30, preached on the Monday, April 27, episode of her Keeping It Real . podcast. “We have to give an account to the King of Kings, and one day we will all come face to face with Him. Is this a good wake-up call for you as to how your life is going?”
She continued, “Too often we get caught up in everything and a lot of things that don’t really matter. I guarantee you, if Charlie could come back, one of the most important messages he would say is, ‘Wake up. A lot of us are living our lives with worthless things.'”
right-wing media figure kirk shot during a speech September 2025. His wife died, Ericaand their two children.
“Now that he’s in heaven, I can’t even imagine all the rewards he’s getting in heaven, just for truth and, um, and loving people,” Prewett speculated. “This is what we were put on this earth to do.”
Prewett further told her podcast guest, Kirk’s former Turning Point USA staffer isabel brownshe fulfills the same mission “so beautifully.”
“Christ gave us a very, very specific command to be salt and to be light,” said Brown, 28 on podcast. “Ultimately, both salt and light have one thing in common: they dramatically transform their surroundings… Our obligation, not just as opportunities as Christians, is to strive for what is good, true and beautiful to the best of our ability.”

Charlie Kirk.
Andrew Harnick/Getty ImagesBrown called Kirk her mentor during her “Keeping It Real” appearance and noted that she had difficulty processing her grief.
“Those of us who have worked for him and known him for so many years have been talking about how we now have to do this in two tiers,” she explained. “You’re mourning the loss of this person who meant so much to you, who you relied on for your career, who you relied on for your family. I can’t tell you how many families like mine met at TPUSA meetings and worked for Charlie, and we all have kids now.”
Brown continued, “Certainly the personal aspect of this takes many years to get through, and that’s the grief when you lose anyone in your life, especially in a traumatic way. And then there’s an additional social redefinition of grief that I think we in the culture, honestly, probably experience with the death of a loved one.” princess diana“.
Princess Diana died in a car accident in Paris in 1997 at the age of 36. The sons of the People’s Princess, prince william and prince harryreceived huge support and good wishes from all over the world.
“Since then, I haven’t seen massive prayer vigils around the world or people leaving teddy bears on sidewalks and lighting candles in neighborhoods and so on,” Brown said. “It’s a cultural change that’s completely changing the world and I don’t know how to deal with it yet because to me it’s just my friend Charlie. I think it’s going to take a lot of time to get through. I think our country has definitely lost a generation of moral leaders.”