Entertainment
Exclusive: Pendragon Cycle’s King Custennin On The Merlin Brotherhood And What's Next
By Jennifer Asencio
| Updated

The Pendragon Cycle on Daily Wire+ was widely enjoyed by viewers, as evidenced by an 86% fresh audience score on Rotten Tomatoes. The show follows Merlin, long before King Arthur’s rise, during the era of Uther Pendragon and the Saxon invasions that would shape Britain.
Steve Varnom plays King Custennin, Merlin’s father-in-law, in the series. I caught up with Steve, and he was kind enough to take some time out to answer some questions about the show for GIANT FREKAIN ROBOT. I’ve reviewed and commented a lot about the show previously, so it was interesting to talk with one of its stars, who also turns out to be a great storyteller.
The Man Behind King Custennin

I asked Steve Varnom what interested him in acting, and his answer was humanistically geeky! “I knew I wanted to be an actor very early in my life,” he explained. “I think it was seeing Star Wars for the first time that lit the fuse for me! I want to do THAT!” But it took time, he admitted. “I went to drama school in London (LAMDA) and was lucky enough to get a job with the RSC when I graduated. I’ve had a pretty varied career, a lot of ups and downs, like most actors. It can be a challenging career at times – a lot of disappointment and frustration, but when it’s going well, there’s nothing better in the world!”
Steve Varnom is an experienced stage actor who has toured the world. He was educated at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA) and went on to perform in two productions for the Royal Shakespeare Company, as well as numerous productions on London’s West End, the UK equivalent of Broadway. His stage credits are numerous.
Varnom has performed in A Clockwork Orange with music by Bono and The Edge. He was in Andrew Lloyd Webber’s The Woman in White as Count Fosco and understudied Michael Crawford, the legendary star of The Phantom of the Opera. His love of acting has long been about the camera, and he brought his stage success to roles on both Coronation Street and EastEnders, two long-standing British soap operas that have launched some of that nation’s biggest stars.

Custennin first appears in episode 5 of The Pendragon Cycle, when Merlin returns to his late wife’s home to apply to her father on Uther’s behalf. The tragic story of Ganieda and the bitterness between Custennin and Merlin are explored in episode 6, and in episode 7, as he rides in to help save the day as the Britons defend their island from invasion.
I asked Steve what interested him in the project and in the character Custennin, and what he liked about the character. “From the first audition scene I was sent, it was apparent this was a very well-written character,” he told me. “Custennin was complex and three-dimensional, with an interesting series arc. Believe me, this is something that you very rarely get. Before this, the screen roles I auditioned for were, for the most part, pretty dreadful – just cliched exposition devices, no real character, just there to make the series regulars look good! Usually, a meaty part like Custennin would be played by a “name,” so I was delighted when it was offered to me, and I decided to make the very most of it, to take chances with the character, to take a big swing!”
The Brotherhood Of The Cast

Talking a bit about the rest of the cast, Varnom was very excited by the production that was assembled. On social media, he and other members of the cast and crew have talked about how close everyone was on set.
“Jeremy Boreing and the team did an incredible job with the casting of the show – they gave amazing, ostensibly unknown actors who wouldn’t normally be cast in major roles the opportunity to show what they were capable of. It was a risk for them, but I think it paid off! They made some incredible discoveries with this show. I mean, Tom Sharp anyone?! What a find.”
One of the show’s biggest strengths is the performances of its actors, especially that of newcomers like Tom Sharp in the lead as Merlin, Alex Laurence-Phillips as Pelleas, and actors without a “name” like Steve in major roles. It gave them a chance to exhibit their talents, rather than headlining big names that overshadow the story.
Steve explains, “The cast became very close during the months we spent together in Budapest. I made some lifelong friends. Tom, Alex and I bonded on the very first day of principal photography. The first sequence we shot was the dock scene, the climax of episode 5. It was a BIG scene which demanded a lot of focus and emotional intensity – we were thrown in at the deep end, quite literally in Alex’s case. It became immediately apparent that I was working with actors of real quality – you never really know until you’re toe to toe in a scene!”

Of the star of Rise of the Merlin, he said, “Tom and I quickly established a great working relationship. He approaches the work the same way I do – he’s a hard worker, he takes it seriously, he turns up with ideas. Alex astonished me, too,” he added. “This was his first professional job, fresh from drama school! Incredible. Such composure and professionalism, he’s going to have a big career!”
The relationships didn’t end when the camera stopped rolling, either. “Tom, Alex and I speak very regularly, but I also got really close with Myles (Uther), Finney (Aurellius), and George Osborne (Lot) too. Great guys. My brothers from other mothers! I’ve never worked with a company of actors who bonded together like this one.” This chemistry was all over the screen in The Pendragon Cycle and made vivid the kinship amongst the Britons.
About his character, he told me, “One of the things I loved about Custennin’s character was his sense of humor. There was a hint of it in the script, but I decided to lean into it. A lot of the other characters are pretty serious, so I thought it was a great opportunity to make him more relatable, and, even though he’s Atlantean, more human!” Custennin is grieving when we first meet him, but Steve’s performance highlights the contrast between Custennin who is grieving and the genuine and powerful king.
Becoming King Custennin Means Sword-Fighting And Speaking Atlantean

Custennin lives in the 5th century, and as a king, is responsible for leading warriors into battle and fighting himself. I spoke with Steve about his sword-fighting experience and how it helped him play the character, especially since he loses an arm during the story.
While I’d bet this lifelong Star Wars fan probably got early practice pretending to wield a lightsaber as a kid (didn’t we all!), it turns out Steve is an experienced swashbuckler. “I’ve done quite a lot of sword-fighting for jobs in the past, mostly in the theatre, when I worked with the Royal Shakespeare Company, for example,” he said. “The challenge with Custennin was doing it with one arm! I’m a righty, so welding swords with my left felt so unnatural. We had an amazing stunt and fight team in Hungary, though, and they choreographed some really stunning sequences for us. Those guys made us look good!!”

Custennin’s appearance in the final battle, during which he smacks people around with a very unusual weapon, was priceless, and calls to mind what he said about “taking a big swing” with the character. For Steve, this was as literal as his portrayal of Custennin’s emotional range.
Custennin is one of the Fair Folk who hail from Atlantis, so his character needed to speak the Atlantean language like a native. Steve told me how he made it look easy: “I had fun with the Atlantean language! Rose, Tom, Emree and I worked with Spencer Klavan, who devised the entire language, and I think he did an amazing job. It adds a level of authenticity to the world-building – like Elvish in Lord of the Rings, or Dothraki in Game of Thrones. It was challenging to nail it, but very rewarding when it came together. I didn’t have as much as the other guys – they had pages and pages of it!”
That’s right, scholar Spencer Klavan invented an entire language for the show, just like Tolkien did for The Lord of the Rings.
Living the Medieval Life

I’ve praised the set in the past, and my favorites all revolved around Custennin. His stronghold of Goddeu was beautiful and realistic, and the war camp and final climactic battle against the Saxons all had an authentic feel that reminded me of the Society for Creative Anachronisms’ medieval-themed wars.
“The sets and locations were incredible,” Varnom told me. “They brought such a feeling of authenticity to the show – something you wouldn’t get if you were filming on a backlot or against green screen. Goddeu was a fabulous set – it’s basically an entire town that was originally built for another show, The Last Kingdom, I believe. Our design team repurposed it for Pendragon, and I think they did an amazing job. I particularly liked how they designed Custennin’s great hall, which was brought to life by Kris Kimlin’s extraordinary lighting design. So atmospheric. It certainly made my job easier, being in those surroundings. My abiding memory of those sets is how cold it was! You can see our breath steaming in those scenes – that’s not CGI! The war camp and the battle scenes were the same, up to our knees in freezing mud, huddling around portable heaters between takes!”

Also noteworthy were The Pendragon Cycle’s camp and battle scenes, and hearing Steve talk about working in them and the conditions during filming really brings home what we see on the screen. People like King Custennin and his allies historically made such encampments to fight real wars, just like the ones we see on the show. Steve’s experiences on set emphasize what we can’t feel when we see them huddling around campfires and in tents or grappling with enemies in a field of blood and mud.
I asked Steve what his favorite scene was to shoot. He replied, “I loved Custennin’s very first scene, when Merlin and Pelleas arrive in my hall. Tom and I were really looking forward to shooting it, as it was such a meaty, emotionally complex scene for both of us. We finally did it toward the end of the shoot, and it was a joy. Working opposite an actor of Tom’s caliber just makes it so easy. We fired off each other and discovered some really fun, interesting moments.”
Meanwhile, as a viewer, he admitted, “I have so many favorite scenes, but I think the dock scene stands up as one of the dramatic high points of the series.”
Life After The Pendragon Cycle For Steve Varnom

Fans are desperately hoping for a second season, and I couldn’t help but wonder if Steve would return to fill Custennin’s throne. He admitted, “I’d love to play Custennin again. He’s such a gift for me, such a rich character. I’m so delighted he’s been received well by the viewers of the show, and I hope to strap on that metal arm again very soon!”
Talking about how many actors are getting their start from The Pendragon Cycle, I asked Steve how his appearance on the show has affected his own career. The transfer from stage to screen wasn’t easy for the actor: “It’s difficult for an “unknown” actor to score decent roles in movies and tv shows – producers always want actors with profiles, it maximizes their chances of success and viewing figures, so when I was offered Custennin it meant such a lot. My profile is rising, thanks to this show, and I’m beginning to be considered for the types of roles I’ve always wanted. I’ll always be grateful to Jeremy for believing in me and trusting me with such a great character!”
Other roles have also materialized for him. “Later this year, you’ll see me in a very unusual movie, a Western called Run Honey Run. I play the villain, Brigham Thorne, a demented, murderous Mormon banker, and I had such a blast with him. It’s written and directed by Baylee Toney, who I think is going to be a major player in the business, and it also stars a couple of my Pendragon cohorts – Myles and Alex! I think it’s destined for cult status. Can’t wait for people to see it!” Steve Varnom having fun led to an excellent performance in The Pendragon Cycle, so I’ll be looking for Run Honey Run to see what happens when he’s allowed to cut loose as a villain.
Given the trajectory of his career, I asked him what advice he had for other up-and-coming actors, but his advice is resonant wisdom for all creatives. “The best advice I can give to up-and-coming actors is to believe in yourself,” Steve told me. “It can be a hard slog, but keep working at your craft and hold onto that belief. Most importantly, when an opportunity comes along – and it might take years for that to happen – don’t waste it. Don’t play it safe, take a big swing!”
A big swing, indeed.
See Steve Varnom take his big swing as King Custennin in The Pendragon Cycle: Rise of the Merlin, streaming in its entirety on Daily Wire+.
Entertainment
I tested the best MacBook alternatives and found 7 worthy rivals
The 2025 Acer Aspire 16 AI is a stellar pick for casual users with limited budgets and simple workloads, particularly those who like a larger screen. (Younger students would make great use of it.) It’s portable for its size and long-lasting, so big ups if you frequently work on the go. We can’t say that it’s better than the Neo, but we can say it’s the best MacBook Neo alternative right now.
The Aspire 16 AI is my reigning favorite cheap Windows laptop. It offers great multi-core performance for the money, a healthy amount of RAM and storage, plus a smooth display and all the ports you could need. You mainly feel its “budget-ness” in its build quality.
Performance: The Aspire 16 AI’s Qualcomm Snapdragon X chip is about 40 percent slower than the Neo’s A18 Pro chip in single-core scenarios, so it doesn’t feel as responsive when you’re surfing the web or working in Word docs. That said, it’s just as good as running multi-core tasks like light video editing. (Our benchmarking showed that it’s 12 percent faster than the Neo in that regard. It’s a trivial bump, but it’s something.) At the time of writing, the Aspire 16 AI was the fastest sub-$900 laptop we’ve tested for multi-core workloads.
Note that the Snapdragon X CPU is a Windows on ARM chip, so it’s not compatible with as many games or specialty apps as Intel or AMD chips (which have x86 architecture — see above, in the Zenbook A14’s section). But a budget laptop isn’t really made for that kind of usage, anyway, so that’s not a huge concern here. I’d be more worried about it not working with an older scanner or printer.
Battery life: The Aspire 16 AI plowed past the Neo in our battery life benchmark, a video rundown test, lasting 17 hours and 22 minutes to Apple’s 14 hours and 50 minutes. Stamina-wise, it’s more on par with the M5 MacBook Air, which lasted 17 hours and 40 minutes. You can easily squeeze two full workdays out of this thing without needing to charge it in between.
Design: The Aspire 16 AI is pretty trim for a 16-incher. At 3.42 pounds, it’s only a little bit heavier than a 15-inch MacBook Air. (There are even slimmer, lighter 16-inch options — see the Asus Zenbook A16, below — but they’re way more expensive.) Its display is a bit dim and not as crisp as the Neo’s, but I appreciated its buttery 120Hz refresh rate and touchscreen capabilities. Its port setup is also great: While the Neo has just two USB-C ports and a headphone jack, this laptop tacks on two extra USB-A ports, an HDMI port, and a microSD card slot. That’s some MacBook Pro-level connectivity.
Value: For the same price as a 512GB Neo, the Aspire 16 AI offers double the RAM, better multi-core performance, more ports, a 120Hz touchscreen, and a backlit keyboard. But it’s not as well-made as the MacBook Neo; it lacks a fingerprint login feature, and it doesn’t feel as fast in everyday productivity scenarios. It also comes in one boring color. Still, it feels very fairly priced in an era when decent, cheap Windows laptops are getting scarce.
FYI: Acer also makes a 14-inch version of this laptop (the Aspire 14 AI), which comes with an Intel processor that alleviates the Windows on ARM compatibility issues. It offers double the storage, slightly better battery life, and slightly better single-core performance for only $500 to $700, depending on the retailer. I haven’t tried it, so I can’t speak for it personally, but our friends at CNET really liked it. You probably can’t go wrong with either size.
Entertainment
Tech keeps getting more expensive. Thats why these 4 cheap laptops are so special.
The elegant and long-lasting Asus Zenbook A14 from 2025 is my favorite laptop for most people with a budget cap of $1,000. Its ultralight yet rigid build makes it especially great for frequent travelers and remote workers. I’ll also note that it’s the only laptop on this list with an OLED display, if that’s a spec high on your wishlist.
Look for the ZenBook A14 on sale at Best Buy, where it’s dipped down to as low as $550 before (a steal). It starts with 512GB of storage and 16GB of RAM.
I’ve been hyping this 14-inch laptop since I first saw it at CES 2025. It’s an amazing Windows ultraportable and an awesome value.
Performance: The Zenbook A14 is a solid performer for the money. The MacBook Neo still beats it in single-core workloads (by about 31 percent), but it’s 28 percent faster in multi-core scenarios. In fact, it doesn’t have any multi-core competition among other laptops under $1,000. Compared to the $699.99 Acer Aspire 16 AI (above), which has a lesser Snapdragon X chip, this one’s Snapdragon X Plus chip offers 14 percent better single-core performance and 15 percent better multi-core performance. If you need a cheap-ish laptop that can do some heavier lifting, this one’s up to the task.
As with the Aspire 16 AI, be mindful of ARM-related software compatibility issues here if you’re buying a laptop for college or gaming.
Battery life: The Zenbook A14 ran for 21 hours and 47 minutes in our video rundown test before dying, making it the eighth-longest-lasting laptop we’ve ever reviewed. Our longest-lasting MacBook died exactly 30 minutes sooner.
Design: Picking up the Zenbook A14 for the first time usually elicits a gasp from people. Asus built its chassis out of a lightweight magnesium-aluminum alloy called “Ceraluminum” that’s scratch-, smudge- and shock-resistant. The base configuration is only 2.4 pounds, or 0.3 pounds less than the MacBook Neo, yet it doesn’t feel frail. The Ceraluminum makes it super durable without weighing it down. It’s slightly thicker than the Neo, but that’s so it can squeeze in an HDMI port and a USB-A port.
In a market saturated with boring silver laptops, I think the Zenbook A14’s modern-organic look is refreshing. It has a tan “Zabrinskie Beige” finish with a matte, almost ceramic-like texture, and it’s accented with gold reflective logos. It’s different without being too obnoxious for an office. Top that off with a bright, vivid OLED display, and this laptop is quite the looker.
Value: I’d have no qualms about paying full price for the Zenbook A14 — it’s a really solid value (but all the better if you can find it on sale). Raising your budget to the upper end of the “cheap” spectrum eliminates any build quality concerns and nets you a great blend of power and stamina for everyday productivity, even some light creative work. Plus: OLED!
Note that Asus released an updated Zenbook A14 with the Snapdragon X2 Elite chip for 2026. It has much better performance and an even longer battery life than the original model, but it starts at $1,349.99. It might go on sale for under $1,000 eventually, though it only just launched in April, so don’t hold your breath.
Entertainment
How to watch Gauff vs. Potapova online for free
TL;DR: Live stream Gauff vs. Potapova in the 2026 French Open for free on France TV. Access this free streaming platform from anywhere in the world with ExpressVPN.
The 2026 French Open has served up major surprises, particularly in the men’s singles. Both No. 1 seed Jannik Sinner and No. 3 Novak Djokovic were stunned by unseeded players, which led them to leave Roland-Garros unexpectedly early.
The women’s field isn’t quite as open, as world No. 4 Coco Gauff will be keenly aware, though No. 2 Elena Rybakina has already been eliminated, so Gauff — the defending women’s French Open champion — may feel confident about claiming the title for a second consecutive year.
Before she gets to the title she’ll have to get past a third-round match against No. 28 seed Anastasia Potapova. Can the 25-year-old Austrian knock out Gauff and cause yet another upset?
If you want to watch Gauff vs. Potapova in the 2026 French Open for free from anywhere in the world, we have all the information you need.
How to watch Gauff vs. Potapova for free
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