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Bethan Moore Talks 'The Widow Making Syndicate'
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Bethan Moore Talks ‘The Widow Making Syndicate’

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Deadline has partnered with The Brit List to profile some of the emerging writers who have made this year’s ranking of the best unproduced UK film and TV projects. Launched in 2007, The Brit List has previously featured projects including The King’s Speech and Paddington. In this piece, we talk to Bethan Moore about her Brit List 2025 script The Widow Making Syndicate.

While British writer Bethan Moore spent much of her childhood abroad in places such as Uganda and Brunei, it’s the six years she spent growing up in Hungary that inspired her second feature script The Widow Making Syndicate. 

The Brit List script, which treads the line between black comedy and drama, is set in the early 20th Century Hungary where a village knitting club takes it upon themselves to poison their abusive husbands with arsenic. More than 130 men are murdered and the club’s ringleader, the young, beautiful and crazy Zsofi Kovacs is put on trial, facing the death penalty. But has she actually done anything wrong? 

“It was a story that I had always heard growing up, which I initially thought was a rumor, where this entire village of women in the 1920s just poisoned all of their husbands,” Moore tells Deadline. “And this is the second or third time that it actually happened in Hungarian history. There’s been quite a lot of mass poisonings of women killing men in their lives and it just fascinated me.”

The Widow Making Syndicate, which is still looking for producers, was Moore’s graduation project at the UK’s prestigious National Film and Television School and writing it, she says, “really connected me to this Hungarian female spirit that I’ve always loved.”  

She adds: “I lived most of my childhood abroad and then came back to the UK in my early twenties, so a lot of my writing draws on the different places I’ve lived. “

At the time of writing, Moore admits she was “quite angry” about a lot of things she was seeing about women in the news, admitting she started the script after seeing the high-profile UK story of Sarah Everard, a 33-year-old woman who was kidnapped and murdered by an off-duty police officer as she walked home one evening in 2021. “I wanted to write about these women who are facing this violence and respond to it in a way which gets increasingly out of hand.” 

Moore says the film is in a similar vein to Yorgos Lanthimos’ The Favourite, stating that it’s a parody of the time but based on a true, historical incident. “It plays pretty fast and loose with the accuracy of it all.” 

For her research, Moore leaned heavily into books from Hungarian academics and was able to access original court transcripts of the murders at the time. Her main character, she says, is an amalgamation of the women in these transcripts and the script even features a few lines that were taken verbatim from them. 

“The courts were making these ridiculous aspersions about these women,” Moore says. “There was one point where they brought in a sexologist who said that they were all suffering from sexual hysteria because the men had been at war and that was used as evidence in this case.”

Moore was also drawn to the fact that these crimes were only ultimately discovered at the time when a local census was conducted and it became apparent that these men were dying. “They weren’t even investigating them as crimes, because it was a completely isolated village,” she says.

“There was no police presence or anywhere these women could go for help. So, when you’re left completely to your own devices, and you’re completely desperate, what are you driven to? Can you murder with good intentions? The main character has a real saviour complex, and she really believes in what she is doing until it gets completely out of hand and everyone starts dying. It’s definitely not a script that condones murder – it’s more of a script that questions where this violence comes from and what people are driven to.” 

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Charlie Kirk's Widow Says She Forgives His Alleged Assassin
TV & Streaming

Charlie Kirk’s Widow Says She Forgives His Alleged Assassin

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

UPDATE: In the most moving moment of Charlie Kirk‘s memorial service, his widow, Erika Kirk, said that she forgives his alleged killer.

Fighting back tears, Kirk said, “My husband Charlie, he wanted to save young men, just like the one who took his life.”

“That young man. That young man. On the cross, our savior said, ‘Father, forgive them, for they not know what they do.” He voice then went into a whisper. “That man, that young man. I forgive him.”

“I forgive him because it was what Christ did, and it is what Charlie would. do. The answer to hate is not hate. The answer, we know ffrom the gospel, is love, and always love. Love for our enemies and love for those who persecute us.”

Erika Kirk is taking over Turning Point USA, the organization that her husband co-founded and built into a conservative group with a focus on college-age Americans.

Erika Kirk: “My husband Charlie he wanted to save young men, just like the one who took his life…On the cross, our savior said, ‘Father, forgive them, for they not know what they do.’ That young man. I forgive him.” pic.twitter.com/jy8W7YrmVs

— CSPAN (@cspan) September 21, 2025

In her remarks, Erika Kirk said that her husband “Passionately wanted to reach and save the lost boys of the West, the young men who feel like they have no direction, no purpose, no faith and no reason to live; the men wasting their lives on distraction, and the men consumed with resentment, anger and hate. Charlie wanted to help them. He wanted them to have a home with Turning Point USA, and when he went onto campus, he was looking to show them a better path and a better life that was right there for the taking.”

PREVIOUSLY: Elon Musk joined President Donald Trump to watch Charlie Kirk’s memorial service, with the White House posting a shot of the two shaking hands.

Musk and Trump had a very public falling out in June, shortly after Musk officially departed his role as an adviser to the president and leader of the Department of Government Efficiency. Musk had blasted the signature piece of Trump’s legislative agenda, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. After Trump criticized Musk, Musk said that he would have lost the election without him. “Such ingratitude,” he wrote on X. He later posted that Trump “was in the Epstein files.” “That is the real reason they have not been made public.”

Trump later threatened Musk’s government contracts.

Musk has tamped down his criticism, and while he’s continued to be outspoken on X, he no longer draws headlines liked he once did. He had vowed to start a new political party, the America Party, but it has yet to get off the ground.

PREVIOUSLY: Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert Kennedy Jr. recalled Charlie Kirk as a champion for free speech.

“He understood that the free flow of information was the soil, the water, the sunlight for democracy,” Kennedy said. “He understood democracy’s great advantage was that our policies were former by ideas that had triumphed in a marketplace of debate and conversation.”

“He thought that conversation was the only way to heal our country, and this was important, particularly important during the technological age when we are all hooked into social algorithms that are hacked into the reptilian cores of our brain and amplify our impulses for tribalism and for division,” Kennedy said. “He felt the only way to overcome that biological impulse was with a spiritual fire and with developing community, and the only way to develop community was through conversation. And so he always gave the biggest microphone to the people who were most passionately aligned against him, because he believed that we need to talk to each other and that we needed to be able to say what we mean, without saying it mean.”

Earlier this week, Kennedy said that Kirk was the “primary architect” of his joining Donald Trump’s presidential campaign last fall. Kennedy abandoned his presidential bid and endorsed Trump.

In the aftermath of Kirk’s death, Trump and members of his administration have sought to crack down on critics. Trump filed a $15 billion lawsuit against The New York Times, while his FCC chairman, Brendan Carr, threatened ABC stations because of a remark that Jimmy Kimmel made on his show about the suspect in Kirk’s killing. ABC has pulled Kimmel’s show off the air indefinitely.

When he was killed, Kirk had been appearing on a college tour at Utah Valley University, and was shot as he was in the midst of a debate exchange over the issue of transgender individuals involved in mass shootings.

PREVIOUSLY: Stephen Miller, the top adviser to President Donald Trump, gave a fiery speech in which he cast those carrying on Charlie Kirk’s legacy as warriors fighting evil.

“The day that Charlie died, the angels wept, but those tears had been turned into fire in our hearts, and that fire burns with a righteous fury that our enemies cannot comprehend or understand.”

He said that when he sees Erika Kirk, Charlie Kirk’s widow, “I am reminded of a famous expression. ‘The storm whispers to the warrior that you cannot withstand my strength, and the warrior whispers back, ‘I am the storm.’ Erika is the storm. We are the storm. And our enemies cannot comprehend our strength, our determination, our resolve, our passion.”

He added, “The cannot conceive of the army that they have arisen in all of us because we stand for what is good, what is virtuous, what is novle. And to those trying to incite violence against us, those trying to foment hatred against us, what do you have? You have nothing. You are nothing. You have wickeness. You are jealousy. You are envy. You are hatred.”

Miller, like some of the other speakers, also seemed to blame Kirk’s assassination on something amorphous, although Trump has cast blame on the “radical left.”

“You thought you could kill Charlie Kirk. You have made him a mortal. You have immortalized Charlie Kirk, and now millions will carry on his legacy,” Miller said.

Kirk, 31, was assassinated on Sept. 10 as he spoke at an outdoor event on the campus of Utah Valley University. Tyler Robinson, 22, has been charged with aggravated murder, and prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. Authorities pointed to evidence that Robinson got more political to the left fairly recently, but they have so far not announced any evidence of involvement by other individuals or outside groups.

PREVIOUSLY: Speakers at Charlie Kirk’s memorial service have shared a similar theme to the tens of thousands in the crowd at State Farm Stadium: Carry on Charlie Kirk’s legacy.

“You cannot be the land of the free if you are not the home of the brave,” said Ben Carson, the 2016 presidential candidate and former secretary of Housing and Urban Development.

Jack Posobiec, the right wing political activist and friend of Kirk’s, held up a rosary and said to the crowd, “No more. We are done with all of it and we will fight.”

At points, the memorial took on the tone of a religious revival, with speakers pointing out that Kirk was more than a political influencer but a figure who was trying to counter a secularism.

Posobiec said, “We will find that western civilization was changed by Charlie’s sacrifice, by returning people to an almighty God.”

Benny Johnson, the podcaster, called Kirk a “martyr” in the “true Christian tradition.”

 “If you take down a tyrant, his power goes away. If you cut down a martyr, his power grows,” Johnson said. Johnson said that the apostle Paul said that “rulers wield the sword for the protection of good men and for the terror of evil men. May we pray that our rulers here … wield the sword for the terror of evil men in our nation, in Charlie’s memory.”

PREVIOUSLY: President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance and a host of administration figures were due to speak at a memorial to Charlie Kirk, the conservative influencer whose assassination been met with condemnation of political violence but a new debate over freedom of speech.

Tens of thousands were gathered at State Farm Stadium, which can seat more than 63,000 people.

In additional to members of the Trump administration, among those spotted was Elon Musk, who had a very public falling out with the president in May. Also scheduled to speak was Erika Kirk, Charlie Kirk’s widow, who will now lead the group that he co-founded, Turning Point USA.

The memorial stands to be a mixture of a somber and religious gathering, with moments of prayer, and a rally to continue his legacy, as those in the crowd had signs that read, “This is our Turning Point.”

As bagpipers opened the service to Amazing Grace, Fox News has been providing the most comprehensive coverage among the major news networks, while CNN has had an extensive focus on the event, while MSNBC has been providing reports from Arizona. Newsmax also has been carrying the memorial with correspondents and anchors inside and outside the stadium.

Attendees hold up Turning Point USA signs at the memorial service for political activist Charlie Kirk at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, AZ. (Photo by Eric Thayer/Getty Images)

Photo by Eric Thayer/Getty Images

Interestingly, for all the FCC talk of late about probes over broadcast network content, ABC, NBC, CBS and, most surprisingly, Fox were not covering the Kirk memorial Sunday – at least on the West Coast. Close to the same time zone of the Glendale, AZ-held event, CBS had informericals on Golf Resorts and Personal Data, and NBC had the 2025 World Athletics Championships from Tokyo. Leading into the WNBA playoffs and the Indiana Fever playing the Las Vegas Aces, ABC had “Paid Programming at 11 am PT,” while Fox went for the big NFL numbers with the LA Rams clashing with current Super Bowl champs the Philadelphia Eagles in the City of Brotherly Love.  

The broadcast networks have been carrying the memorial service on their streaming channels, as have other outlets like C-SPAN.

Kirk, 31, was assassinated on Sept. 10 as he spoke at an outdoor event on the campus of Utah Valley University. Tyler Robinson, 22, has been charged with aggravated murder, and prosecutors are seeking the death penalty.

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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