What to
Know About Jimmy Kimmel’s Show
The
late-night show will return to the air on Tuesday, nearly a week after ABC
suspended it in response to Mr. Kimmel’s remarks about the shooting of Charlie
Kirk.
Kailyn
Rhone
By Kailyn
Rhone
Published
Sept. 20, 2025
Updated
Sept. 22, 2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/20/business/jimmy-kimmel-show-abc-kirk-fcc.html
ABC said
on Monday that Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night talk show would return to television
on Tuesday night, nearly a week after the network suspended the show over Mr.
Kimmel’s comments about the fatal shooting of the conservative activist Charlie
Kirk.
The
decision to pull the program “indefinitely” last week, made under unusual
pressure from the Federal Communications Commission, had set off a political
firestorm over free speech and the government’s ability to silence commentary
it dislikes.
Here’s
everything that has happened so far.
What did
Kimmel say?
In his
monologue on Sept. 15, Mr. Kimmel discussed the politics of Tyler Robinson, the
man accused of fatally shooting Mr. 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 doing everything they can to score political points from it,” he
said.
He then
joked about Mr. Trump’s response to a reporter who asked about how he was
coping with Mr. Kirk’s death. Mr. Trump said he was doing “very good” and then
quickly shifted to discussing a new $200 million ballroom being added to the
White House.
“Yes,
he’s at the fourth stage of grief: construction,” Mr. Kimmel said. “Demolition,
construction. This is not how an adult grieves the murder of someone he called
a friend; this is how a 4-year-old mourns a goldfish.”
How it
became an issue
The
backlash against Mr. Kimmel started Tuesday morning on X after a user posted a
clip of the show’s opening remarks.
Conservative
influencers and media figures drew attention to the monologue throughout the
day, saying Mr. Kimmel mischaracterized the political beliefs of Mr. Robinson.
According to prosecutors, Mr. Robinson had written that he objected to Mr.
Kirk’s “hatred,” but authorities haven’t said which of Mr. Kirk’s views he was
referring to. His mother told prosecutors that he had recently become more
left-leaning and “pro-gay and trans-rights oriented.”
Fox News
hosts also discussed the clip on the same evening. Things escalated when Elon
Musk, the owner of the social media platform X and whose account has millions
of followers, called Mr. Kimmel “disgusting” for the comments.
On
Wednesday, Brendan Carr, the chairman of the F.C.C., publicly condemned Mr.
Kimmel’s remarks as “truly sick” and hinted at possible regulatory action
against ABC. Speaking on a right-wing podcast, he warned that the network could
“do this the easy or hard way,” signaling serious consequences if it didn’t
respond.
Later in
the day, pressure came from Nexstar, which owns 32 ABC affiliate stations. The
company announced it would pull “Jimmy Kimmel Live” from its stations
indefinitely. Nexstar said the offensive comment made airing the monologue no
longer in the “public interest.”
The mix
of forces made the issue impossible for ABC and Disney to ignore.
What did
ABC and Disney do?
For
Robert Iger, the chief executive of Disney, and Dana Walden, the company’s head
of television, the situation became a high-stakes balancing act. Mr. Kimmel had
planned to address the growing furor in Wednesday night’s monologue, but
Disney’s leadership feared it would inflame tensions amid escalating regulatory
threats and affiliate boycotts.
Advertisers
were also growing wary, and employees were receiving threatening messages.
Facing these risks, as the audience was about to start filing into Mr. Kimmel’s
Hollywood studio to tape Wednesday’s program, Disney chose to suspend the show
indefinitely.
On
Monday, Disney said in a statement that Mr. Kimmel’s show would return to
airwaves on Tuesday after having “thoughtful” discussions with Mr. Kimmel for
the last few days.
“Last
Wednesday, we made the decision to suspend production on the show to avoid
further inflaming a tense situation at an emotional moment for our country,”
Disney said in the statement.
“It is a
decision we made because we felt some of the comments were ill-timed and thus
insensitive,” the statement continued. “We have spent the last days having
thoughtful conversations with Jimmy, and after those conversations, we reached
the decision to return the show on Tuesday.”
Has Mr.
Kimmel responded?
Mr.
Kimmel has still not commented on the suspension.
What did
other late-night hosts say?
Mr.
Kimmel’s suspension had sparked a wave of support and outrage among his
late-night peers. Stephen Colbert, the host of “The Late Show," which CBS
announced it was canceling in July, said ABC’s decision was “blatant
censorship.” Jon Stewart, on his show, mocked the censorship, and lampooned
government control of media.
David
Letterman spoke out at The Atlantic Festival last week, criticizing the
network's move as an attempt to appease an “authoritarian” administration.
Other hosts like Seth Meyers and Jimmy Fallon echoed concerns about freedom of
speech and the dangers of political influence.
More than
400 Hollywood celebrities signed a letter, which was released by the American
Civil Liberties Union on Monday, criticizing the suspension.
Kailyn
Rhone is a Times business reporter and the 2025 David Carr fellow.



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