Netflix’s latest season of Drive to Survive has pulled back the curtain on one of the most intimate — and devastating — moments in modern Formula One history.
For the first time, cameras capture the exact moment former Red Bull team principal Christian Horner breaks the news of his shock sacking to his wife, Geri Halliwell, inside their Oxfordshire home.
Not in a boardroom.
Not on the phone.
But at the kitchen table.
“Hey Darling… It’s All Done”
The scene unfolds quietly in the conservatory kitchen of their countryside mansion. Horner, 52, walks in, visibly heavy, and opens with a subdued:
“Hey darling…”
Moments later, the words land:
“All… all done and dusted.”
He kisses Geri on the forehead and sits down, accepting a latte already waiting for him — a small, domestic detail that makes the moment hit harder.
Halliwell’s face crumples almost instantly.
“How do you feel?” she asks, holding back tears.
“I Never Imagined Being in This Position”
Horner struggles to articulate the shock.
“Your immediate reaction when you get delivered a s** sandwich like that is, ‘f*** them,’”* he admits.
“I’ve had something taken away from me that wasn’t my choice — something very precious.”
But then comes the line that stuns viewers:
“But you thought it was going to happen.”
He recalls a moment weeks earlier, after the Austrian Grand Prix, when Geri sat up in bed and told him:
“Something really bad’s going to happen.”
Geri quietly confirms it on camera.
“I said they were going to fire you.”
From Paddock Power to Watching at Home
Later scenes show the couple doing something almost unthinkable for them — watching a Formula One race on television.
No headsets.
No data feeds.
No team radio.
“You haven’t got any of the data here,” Horner mutters.
“Normally I’d have noise in my ears. Now it’s like you’re blind.”
Geri’s voice breaks as she watches.
“It’s just… a bit sad,” she admits, tears welling.
For two decades, she had been a familiar presence in the paddock — especially at the British Grand Prix. Now, the sport that defined their life together feels suddenly distant.
“You’re Such a T**t” — The Moment That Broke the Internet
In a later scene, the tension finally lifts.
By their swimming pool, Horner jokingly pretends to push Geri into the water. She swats him away, half-laughing, half-exasperated, and snaps:
“You’re such a t**t.”
The exchange — raw, unscripted, and oddly tender — has already become one of the most replayed moments of the season.
The Fallout Behind the Scenes
Horner’s sacking came midway through the 2025 season, one year after his infamous texting scandal rocked Formula One. Though two KC-led investigations cleared him of wrongdoing, insiders say a power struggle inside Red Bull proved decisive.
In the documentary, Horner finally addresses speculation that Max Verstappen or his father Jos were behind the axe.
“His father has never been my biggest fan,” Horner admits.
“But I don’t believe the Verstappens were responsible.”
Instead, he points to Red Bull executive Oliver Mintzlaff, with advice from Helmut Marko.
“After Dietrich Mateschitz’s death, I was probably deemed to have too much control.”
Horner eventually left Red Bull in July with an £80 million exit package, ending a reign that began in 2005.
Unfinished Business
Months on, Horner admits the sport still pulls at him.
“I have unfinished business,” he said recently.
“But I won’t come back for just anything. It has to be something that can win.”
Links to rival teams continue to swirl.
But for Netflix viewers, it’s not the politics or money that linger most.
It’s the image of a man at his kitchen table.
A wife holding back tears.
And a life — once lived at 200mph — suddenly forced to stop.
🎥 Not a scandal. Not a rumour.
Just the moment everything changed.


