Entertainment
The Pendragon Cycle Treats Christianity Like The Prophets On Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
By Jennifer Asencio
| Updated

Daily Wire’s King Arthur epic, The Pendragon Cycle: Rise of the Merlin, is about the lives of Merlin and his father Taliesin as their legendary lives affect Briton during the 4th through 6th centuries. One of the major events of this era was the introduction of Christianity to the British Isles; the story is contemporary to the real-life Saint Patrick of Ireland, who converted the island nation to worship Jesus. This is a major theme of the show as Taliesin becomes a convert and later, Merlin channels divine energies to help unite the Britons against the Saxons.
Since it was produced by Daily Wire, I was skeptical of a show that was branded by its creator, Jeremy Boreing, as “probably the most Christian piece of entertainment since Braveheart.” I’m very eclectic in my spiritual beliefs, and definitely not Christian. I was also a religion major at first, but I specialized in Buddhism and neopaganism. I am far from the target audience of a Christian show. Despite this, I genuinely enjoyed most of the Left Behind series, a heavily preachy book set about the Rapture and its aftermath, but I was expecting The Pendragon Cycle to be heavily preachy and evangelical in the same vein as Left Behind.
The Pendragon Preaches Knights And Swordfights, Not Jesus

So it was with pleasant surprise that I watched the series and didn’t feel proselytized to at all. Sure, there are characters who convert to Christianity through direct contact with the bright light that is the show’s “One True God,” called by his medieval name of Yesu. But there were no attempts to convert anybody else, and no attempts to convert the audience.
Taliesin says nice things about his God, and Merlin can’t understand why everyone doesn’t embrace Him, but a show that was preaching would expect its audience to accept the truths of the two bards as their own personal truths rather than merely those of characters on a show. The Pendragon Cycle never does that. The show no more evangelizes Christianity than Deep Space Nine evangelizes the Prophets and the Orbs.
Other Religions Clash With The One True God

The other thing I noticed about religion in the show was its treatment of other gods. Bel, the god of the Atlanteans, is a terrifying bull who blows up his people’s island with a volcano, but he at least has the courtesy to warn Charis beforehand so she has time to evacuate as many as she can, including her father, Avallach, and sister Morgain.
In Briton, the druids worship Cernunnos, who was a real deity honored all over western Europe in the pre-Christian era. He is portrayed as a terrifying skeleton, similar to the Grim Reaper, but with antlers like a deer’s; historical Cernunnos looked a lot like what we think of as a satyr or Pan from Greek mythology, but with antlers instead of goat horns. As a character, his glowing red eyes are very scary, but so are the primeval woodlands that are his domain. He is never portrayed as evil himself; characters do evil things to harness his power for their personal gain, but he is never accused of being demonic or Satanic.
The Pendragon Cycle Does Not Engage In Evangelism

Evangelists believe every other religion in the world is Satanic, especially other forms of Christianity that are different from theirs; they don’t consider Catholicism to be Christianity at all. They believe the various other religions and Christian sects are expressions of Satan trying to trick humans into turning away from God. Even the saints of Catholicism and Eastern Orthodox religions are viewed as “pagan” and therefore “Satanic,” and no mercy is shown to ancient religions like Druidism or those of the pre-Columbian Americas. This is why they have such urgency to convert people: they believe they are saving people from a terrible fate.
None of that is in this “Christian” show. Very few of the major characters actually convert to Christianity and never enter into conflict with their pagan kin and allies about it. No attempts are made to enforce the religion on the other Britons or even convince them that Yesu is anything but a deity more forgiving than the primordial gods of the natural world, the ones who reign over volcanoes and deep forests and hungry predators. No one is ever asked to hate the Old Gods, not even the Atlanteans, whose god destroyed their home.
Indiana Jones Is Preachier Than The Rise Of Merlin

Merlin channels the power of God frequently, but he never expects anyone to convert to his way of thinking, except in one instance that really proves the point. In a flashback to his childhood in the cold open for Episode 5, he stands before the druids and proclaims the power of God to them; they protest that other Christians have destroyed their holy groves. Merlin decries this act as “the act of ignorant men,” then proceeds to destroy their meeting place. I remember being annoyed by his hypocrisy, but later on, he sobs to Charis that he doesn’t understand why the druids weren’t convinced by his power. Charis’s response really sums up how religion in the show is treated overall: “Not every man will choose to believe… and nothing you or anyone else can do will change that.”
The Pendragon Cycle isn’t trying to change anyone’s belief and isn’t even trying to tell as Christian a story as old 1950s blockbusters like The Ten Commandments or Dimitrius and the Gladiators. Even Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade gets preachier and talks about Christianity far more than Jeremy Boreing’s masterpiece. Maybe a better comparison for the level of religious discussion in The Pendragon Cycle would be Raiders of the Lost Ark, which invokes the powers of the same God Merlin follows, but to everyone’s delight rather than the derision the King Arthur series has received.
King Arthur Was Always A Christian Legend

Finally, as I have mentioned before, the entire mythos of King Arthur is steeped in Christianity. He is ordained by God to be the Once and Future King, and famously quests for and achieves the Holy Grail, something even Indiana Jones didn’t get to keep. The original folk tales King Arthur was based on came from around the time The Pendragon Cycle takes place and were further solidified and Christianized in the 1300s by Thomas Mallory.
The Arthur we know from classics like Excalibur and even shows like Netflix’s Cursed was always Christian. Anyone who enjoyed King Arthur content before can easily appreciate the Daily Wire show because it has all the same themes they’ve been savoring all along. Avoiding this show over perceived religious proselytizing and the expectation of overbearing religious messaging is, as another Jeremy B once said, “nonsense on stilts.”
The Daily Wire Factor

Daily Wire does have a lot of conservative Christian content, but most of it is Catholic or archaeological. They’re not talking to Evangelicals or trying to convert the masses. None of their fictional content has overly religious overtones, and all are merely projects that mainstream Hollywood won’t touch because they can’t warp them to reflect their own values and politics.
The Pendragon Cycle is only as religious as it needs to be and is only a story that happens to include Christianity rather than being a Christian show. Its mild religious overtones shouldn’t be an excuse to miss out on this incredible production; it’s definitely a weak excuse, and I say that as one of Charis’s “not every [wo]man.”
The Pendragon Cycle: Rise of the Merlin is now streaming in its entirety on Daily Wire+.
Entertainment
The DJI Mini 5 Pro drone is down to its record-low price at Amazon — save over $500 this weekend
SAVE $500: As of April 11, the DJI Mini 5 Pro Fly More Combo is on sale for $1,089 at Amazon. That’s over $500 off the list price and the best-ever price at Amazon.
$1,099
at Amazon
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Save $500
The 2026 drone market is currently in a weird state of flux. Legislative pressure is mounting on DJI imports. We’ve moved past the phase of uncertainty into genuine panic buying before stock disappears for good.
Any sort of deal during this frantic period is very much welcome. Any sort of deal down to a record-low price cannot be ignored.
As of April 11, the DJI Mini 5 Pro Fly More Combo is down to $1,089 at Amazon — its all-time low and over $500 off the list price for a limited time.
Mashable Deals
The Mini 5 Pro remains the champion of the lightweight category. For creators, the one-inch CMOS sensor is the star of the show, delivering 4K HDR at 60fps that looks like it belongs on a cinema screen. The 360-degree Nightscape sensing maps obstacles in low light while the specialized Nighttime Return-to-Home ensures your investment doesn’t end up as a permanent resident of a neighbor’s tree.
Mashable Deals
We’ve monitored this price point across several sale cycles, and this looks like the floor. If you’re a content creator looking to future-proof your kit with a drone that doesn’t require a commercial pilot’s license, this is the deal to snipe before stock drops.
We’re not encouraging panic buying, but we do believe in tactical shopping — and there’s never been a better time to invest in this versatile drone.
Entertainment
T-Mobile is giving away the Apple iPhone 17 for free — how to claim
TL;DR: Score a free iPhone 17e when signing up for a T-Mobile plan with no trade-in required. Alternatively, you can get the iPhone 17 for free from T-Mobile when signing up for an Experience More plan and trading in an eligible device.
In the mobile world, the word “free” is usually followed by a list of caveats that make you wish you never started looking for a deal. You usually need to sign up for the most expensive plan or trade-in a premium phone to get your hands on what you really want. But that’s not the case with the latest T-Mobile offer.
T-Mobile is offering a rare deal on the newly-released Apple iPhone 17e. For a limited time, you can pick up this A19-powered device for free by simply opening a new line.
You’ll need to activate a new line on T-Mobile’s Experience Beyond or Experience More plans to get the iPhone 17e. The phone’s full retail price is covered via 24 monthly bill credits, and since you aren’t trading in your old phone, you can keep it as a backup, give it to a kid, or sell it on a third-party site to actually make money on this deal. We did say this was a rare opportunity to save.
Mashable’s Stan Shroeder got his hands on the iPhone 17e and said “The combination of having Apple’s latest chip and a decent amount of storage means this phone will be relevant for at least four to five years.” That’s an impressive lifespan for a budget-friendly phone, particularly when it’s free.
If you need something a little more powerful, you can also pick up the iPhone 17 for free from T-Mobile when signing on for 24 months of an Experience More plan and trading in an eligible phone. That gets you unthrottled 5G data, 4K streaming, and enough international roaming for even the most adventurous of travellers.
Mashable Deals
It’s important to note that T-Mobile will charge taxes on these free deals and a $35 device connection fee. Is this really “free” when you need to sign up to something or pay an upfront fee? It’s a gray area, OK? We’re doing our best.
Score an iPhone 17 for free this weekend with T-Mobile.
Entertainment
3 AdultFriendFinder security improvements made after the 2016 data breach
Every major online dating service has been the target of malicious hackers attempting to gain access to private information, but few attacks have been as severe, as pervasive or as publicly damaging as the data breach attack on AdultFriendFinder in October 2016.
The attack exposed the records of more than 360 million users, not just of AdultFriendFinder but of sites across the popular FriendFinder network. To this day, it is still one of the largest database breaches ever recorded, leaking the email addresses, usernames, passwords, sexual orientations, and even spoken languages of millions of people across more than two decades of AFF’s history.
Worse still, it exposed the downright shoddy security practices of the company, which included using SHA-1 cryptographic hashing, already more than a decade out of date by the time of the breach, and storing account passwords in plain text.
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Thankfully, parent company FriendFinder Networks took this breach seriously, and dramatically stepped up their security practices. Here are three major changes they made to help protect future users:
Credit: AdultFriendFinder
AFF overhauled their database security
Think of a website’s database as a kind of bank vault; it’s where all the valuable stuff that thieves are after is stored. In 2016, prior to the attack, AdultFriendFinder had the equivalent of a single-lock safe: it looked secure and intimidating, but malicious actors had long ago figured out how to crack the code.
Mashable Trend Report
Now, they use the latest encryption technologies to bolster security, including a technique called “salted hashing” that involves combining each password with a unique, random string of characters (known as the salt) and then passing them through a one-way hash function. It’s a sophisticated way of ensuring that even accounts using identical passwords (looking at you, people who use “password” for your password) don’t all share the same vulnerability during a breach.
AFF hired outside security experts
The ugly truth is that companies are no longer self-sufficient when it comes to cybersecurity. Your in-house security team, as smart and hardworking as they may be, are not going to stand a chance against the wide variety of hackers and other malicious actors working 24/7 to access your data.
The 2016 data breach humbled AFF enough to recognize this fact, and they’ve been contracting outside cybersecurity help ever since, including with Google subsidiary Mandiant. These cybersecurity firms don’t just examine the potential vulnerabilities in your coding; they also look at your corporate structure and employee practices to evaluate them for potential vulnerabilities.
Forced password resets
Not all cybersecurity vulnerabilities are the fault (or exclusive fault) of the website. Sometimes, your own laziness is your biggest vulnerability. Part of beefing up AFF’s security involved forcing password resets, so you can’t use the same password year after year.
This is now basically standard operating procedure across the internet: once every six months or once a year, you’re probably going to be asked to choose a new password. AFF has formalized this approach to help secure against password vulnerabilities that it can’t control, such as leaks on other dating sites (be honest: how many of you use the same password across multiple sites?) or hardware malware like keyloggers.
Later this year, exactly one decade will have elapsed since AdultFriendFinder’s last security breach. Say what you will about their past mistakes — a full decade of cybersecurity success is an achievement, and modern users of the site should be grateful that AFF has stepped up their game in such a big way.
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Apps & Software
Cybersecurity
