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Trump says ABC should fire Jimmy Kimmel over his ‘expectant widow’ joke

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Monday that Jimmy Kimmel should be immediately fired by ABC and its parent company ‌Walt Disney, joining his wife Melania Trump in calling out the late-night talk show host for a monologue he delivered prior to a shooting that took place over the weekend near a gathering of journalists and politicians.

Last Thursday, in a segment that parodied the upcoming White House correspondents’ dinner, Kimmel said that Melania Trump “had a glow like an expectant widow.”

Trump and his wife were rushed ​out of the dinner on Saturday after a shooting in the ⁠lobby of the ⁠Washington Hilton where the event was taking place.

A suspect identified as Cole ‌Allen charged through a checkpoint and fired at Secret Service agents, wounding one, before he was subdued and arrested.

Hours after the Trumps expressed their displeasure, Kimmel described the joke during his Monday night monologue as a light roast about the couple’s age difference and “not, by any stretch of the definition, a call to assassination.”

He said he was sorry that the president and everyone at the event went through that traumatic and scary experience.

“I agree that hateful and violent rhetoric is something we should reject,” Kimmel said. “I do, and I think a great place to start to dial that back would be to have a conversation with your husband about it.”

WATCH | Trump on Kimmel and free speech in 2025:

Trump asked about free speech, Jimmy Kimmel

U.S. President Donald Trump, when asked during a news conference with U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer about a move by ABC to remove Jimmy Kimmel from the air, said the talk show host said ‘a horrible thing’ about Charlie Kirk — but attributed the decision to Kimmel’s ‘bad ratings’ and ‘lack of talent.’

‘Enough is enough’

Melania Trump had called Kimmel’s remarks “corrosive.”

“Enough is ​enough. It is time for ABC to take a stand. How many times will ABC’s leadership enable ⁠Kimmel’s atrocious behaviour at the expense of our community,” she said in a ⁠post on X. “People like Kimmel shouldn’t have the opportunity to enter our homes ⁠each ⁠evening to spread hate.”

“Kimmel’s ​hateful and violent rhetoric is intended to divide our country,” she said. “His monologue ​about my family isn’t ⁠comedy — his words are corrosive and deepens the political sickness within America.”

The president, meanwhile, said the comedian’s joke was “something far beyond the pale. Jimmy Kimmel should be immediately fired by Disney and ABC.”

Kimmel said he doubted that “a joke I made three days before this dinner had any effect on anything that happened.”

It’s not clear if Allen, the suspect, saw the broadcast. According to the Justice Department, he made a reservation at the Washington Hilton on April 6. He took a train to the city, leaving California on April 21, three days before Kimmel’s parody, according to court documents obtained by multiple U.S. news organizations.

Kirk controversy led to suspension

Trump has repeatedly urged broadcasters to remove comedy or news programs he dislikes or that have been critical of ⁠him, and has pressed regulators to take action to revoke the licences of broadcasters he says treat him unfairly.

Broadcasters have broad First Amendment rights to make jokes — even ones ‌that are distasteful, experts note. But late last year, Trump and Kimmel seemed similarly in opposition after the former publicly celebrated when Kimmel’s show was temporarily removed from the air after the host joked about the alleged shooter of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

“We hit some new lows over the weekend, with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them, and with everything they can, to score political points from it,” Kimmel said in his Sept. 15 monologue.

The next day, FCC chair Brendan Carr decried Kimmel’s words as “appearing to directly mislead the American public” about the alleged shooter’s political affiliations.

While warning that local broadcasters who aired Kimmel could face fines or loss of licences, he stated they “can do this the easy way or the hard way” hinting that the FCC had “remedies that [they] can look at” in dealing with Kimmel.

After the regulator’s comments, Nexstar Media Group and Sinclair Broadcast group — which collectively owned about a quarter of ABC affiliates — ceased broadcasting Kimmel’s show, with the latter issuing a statement thanking Carr.

WATCH | Kimmel jokes about Trump administration:

Kimmel pokes fun at Trump administration in late-night return

Jimmy Kimmel aimed his barbs at U.S. President Donald Trump and members of his administration in his return to late-night television after being suspended. He also paid tribute to the widow of slain conservative commentator Charlie Kirk.

Carr approved ​Nexstar’s $3.5 billion US acquisition of Tegna, but a U.S. judge has put the merger on hold.

Soon after, ABC issued a statement of its own saying it would indefinitely pre-empt Jimmy Kimmel Live! — a decision that was reversed about a week later after a series of discussions between Kimmel and Disney.

In the interim, stars including Tom Hanks, Barbra Streisand, Jennifer Aniston, Billie Eilish and Ben Stiller signed a letter circulated by the American Civil Liberties Union that called ABC’s removal of Kimmel’s show a “dark moment for freedom of speech in our nation.”

Former U.S. president Barack Obama wrote on social media that the current administration had reached a “new and dangerous level by routinely threatening regulatory action against media companies unless they muzzle or fire reporters and commentators it doesn’t like.”

There were protests outside of ABC and Disney studios, while U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren characterized Carr’s statements as a form of federal interference.

She also compared Disney’s decision to pull Kimmel with Paramount cancelling Stephen Colbert’s CBS late-night show — a decision that came shortly after Colbert criticized Paramount for settling a defamation case with Trump. Paramount said it made the move for purely financial reasons.

Kimmel’s return episode garnered 6.26 million broadcast viewers, according to a news release from Disney and ABC Entertainment, despite not airing in 23 per cent of U.S. TV households. And his opening monologue from the night pulled in over 20 million views on YouTube, breaking the host’s all-time viewership record on the platform.

In that monologue, Kimmel apologized for his prior words, which he said, to some, “felt either ill-timed or unclear or maybe both.”

Shortly before that episode aired, Trump mused on his Truth Social platform that he might sue ABC over Kimmel’s reinstatement.

“Last time I went after them, they gave me $16 million,” he wrote, citing a settlement the studio payed toward Trump’s presidential library over a defamation case. “This one sounds even more lucrative.”

Weeks after that controversy, ABC and Kimmel agreed to a one-year contract extension, set to run through May 2027.

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