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'Jimmy Kimmel Live' Hollywood Rally Urges Disney Don't Bow to Trump
TV & Streaming

‘Jimmy Kimmel Live’ Hollywood Rally Urges Disney Don’t Bow to Trump

by jummy84 September 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Just an hour before ABC made the announcement that “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” would return to the airwaves on Tuesday, a group of politicians and Hollywood guild leaders held a press conference and rally in front of the show’s Hollywood studio to urge Disney to bring the show back.

“Trump’s allies think the First Amendment comes with an asterisk,” said Rep. Laura Friedman (D-Calif. District 30). “They think that it means it gets free speech as long as Donald Trump likes it. But he does not get to silence dissent. He does not get to tell the American people what to say or what they can and cannot listen to… This is not just about a late night show. It’s about jobs and it’s about our rights as Americans. How the FCC’s job is to protect Americans, not the President’s ego. And I would remind every corporation in America and that many of their business models cannot survive in a world where the government gets to tell them what to say.”

Friedman pulled out a large copy of the First Amendment while adding, “You do not get to cancel the United States Constitution, not today, not tomorrow, not on our watch.”

The press conference did not go off without a hitch; a Trump supporter with a microphone loudspeaker attempted to drown out the event; that’s when attendees shouted back “Free speech!” Later, a low flying Fox 11/KTTV helicopter, which was getting video of the event, also drowned out some of the speakers.

Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Calif. District 32) attempted to point out that the far-right Charlie Kirk has now been lauded as a free speech absolutist — which is why, in his mind, muzzling Kimmel was hypocritical.

“This mafia administration is so bold that they do the language of the mafia in plain sight,” he said. “What this administration is doing, what Brendan Carr is to undermine the words of Charlie Kirk. Charlie Kirk said you should be allowed to say outrageous things. There is rogue speech, there is evil speech, and it is all protected by the First Amendment. Jimmy Kimmel did not contradict the words of Charlie Kirk. Donald Trump did. His FCC.”

Sherman than said that he personally, as a citizen, planned to boycott and businesses that advertised on ABC at 11:35 p.m. if Kimmel was not brought back. He also said if Kimmel returned, he would support those advertisers — which is presumably what he will now do.

“The First Amendment deals with what we do as a government, and the government should be concerned, but we are also private citizens,” he said. “And I, for one, will be looking at who’s advertising on ABC from 11:30 p.m. to 12:30 p.m. And speaking just for my own family, if we see Jimmy Kimmel, we’re going to watch those advertisers. And if we see alternative programming, we will be boycotting those who buy the time.”

Rep. Judy Chu (D-Calif. District 32), co-chairs the Congressional Creative Rights Caucus, warned that President Trump has been demanding Kimmel’s scalp for some time. “First, Trump wrote, more than two months ago that Jimmy Kimmel’s show should be canceled. Then last week, Trump’s FCC chair said that companies should take action on Kimmel, even saying that they can ‘either do it the easy way or the hard way.’ And the companies got the message.”

She then criticized Nexstar: “ABC’s largest distributor, which needs the FCC’s approval for a $6.2 billion merger, immediately followed his orders and preempted the show, and ABC took it off the air indefinitely. So this was not about comments that a comedian made about Charlie Kirk. This is about a president leveraging the power of the federal government to silence his critics, a plan he’s been open about four months. Now he’s saying that the FCC should go further and cancel the broadcasting licenses of networks that criticize him. Well, are we going to be bullied like that? Are we going to be silenced? Every single one of us has a responsibility to stand up for our constitutional rights that are under attack. And this doesn’t just fall on the shoulders of workers. We need corporations and their executives to start standing up to this coercion.”

Rep. Ted Lieu added that this is not just about Kimmel. “Last year, the Supreme Court ruled a unanimous decision that government officials cannot force third parties to punish or suppress the views that government officials is fake, and my message to ABC is very simple: You do not kneel,” he said. “What happens when you kneel? The bully comes after you again, and now the FCC chair Brendan Carr is threatening ABC because he doesn’t like the statements made by ‘The View.’ When is this going to stop? ABC, you have a choice. You can continue to be bowing or you can stand up for yourself, stand up for the First Amendment and invoke the protection of the First Amendment, an amendment that generations of Americans have given their blood, sweat and tears to defend. We will not kneel. We will continue to be true.”

And to prove his point, Lieu said: “I get to say things like Donald Trump is partly on Epstein files because he is all over the Epstein files.”

Other speakers at the event included Writers Guild of America-West president Meredith Stiehm, in addition to members of SAG-AFTRA, Teamsters, IATSE and other unions.

September 22, 2025 0 comments
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Stephen A. Smith Criticizes Jimmy Kimmel Over Charlie Kirk Joke
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Stephen A. Smith Criticizes Jimmy Kimmel Over Charlie Kirk Joke

by jummy84 September 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Stephen A. Smith had smoke for Jimmy Kimmel on Thursday’s (Sept. 18) episode of his SiriusXM show Straight Shooter. The ESPN commentator weighed in on Kimmel’s recent remarks about conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s assassination, and he wasn’t impressed.

“The only thing that I would say as it pertains to Jimmy Kimmel is, where was the joke?” Smith said with a straight face. “Because you’re a late night host, and obviously that has a comedic attachment to it. Where was the joke? Obviously, it wasn’t anything funny about that.”

Kimmel, who usually mixes political jabs into his monologues, addressed Kirk’s Sept. 10 killing during Monday’s (Sept. 15) episode of Jimmy Kimmel Live!. The activist was fatally shot while speaking with students at Utah Valley University. Authorities later arrested 22-year-old Tyler Robinson in connection to the shooting.

On air, Kimmel suggested that Trump supporters were trying to twist the tragedy for political gain. “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.

In consequence, ABC announced Wednesday (Sept. 17) that it would indefinitely suspend Jimmy Kimmel Live! following the backlash, and Nexstar confirmed it would be pulling the show from its ABC affiliates. Kimmel himself has yet to publicly comment on his suspension.

Smith, who actually guest-hosted Kimmel’s show in 2021, took a stern approach reminding media figures that words can carry weight. “In the times we’re living in, you have to be very, very careful about what you say when you open your mouth,” he warned. “And you can’t associate a political group of people with a murderer.”

He also called out former President Donald Trump, who celebrated Kimmel’s suspension on Truth Social. “That goes for both sides,” Smith stressed. “President Trump shouldn’t be coming out of his mouth talking about how … ‘this was instigated and stirred on by the Left.’”

Take a look below at Straight Shooter, where Stephen A. Smith goes off about Jimmy Kimmel’s remarks.

September 22, 2025 0 comments
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John Oliver Defends Jimmy Kimmel in Wake of Suspension
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John Oliver Defends Jimmy Kimmel in Wake of Suspension

by jummy84 September 22, 2025
written by jummy84

John Oliver used the main segment of his HBO show Sunday night addressing the suspension of Jimmy Kimmel.

Last week, Disney suspended the host of Jimmy Kimmel Live! following the ABC late-night host’s remarks about the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

The dramatic move followed Federal Communications Commission chair Brendan Carr threatening to take action against ABC affiliates in the wake of a Kimmel comment that many took as suggesting the shooting suspect, Tyler Robinson, was a MAGA Republican during his Monday monologue.

“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,” Kimmel said.

After station owners Nexstar and Sinclair said they would not be airing Jimmy Kimmel Live! in the wake of those comments, Disney made the decision to suspend Kimmel indefinitely. The company has faced backlash from Hollywood A-listers, current and veteran late-night hosts, politicians and the public for its decision, with many accusing Disney of bowing to pressure from the Trump administration.

On Sunday’s Last Week Tonight, Oliver started off his main segment by noting Kirk’s tragic death.

“A person getting shot is tragic and a person getting shot for their ideas is horrifying,” he said. “That is true no matter what those ideas are, and I also recognize that for many, especially those who are the targets of some of Kirk’s ideas, it has been hard to stay quiet as they see flags lowered to half staff, and claims that he debated things the right way. But setting all of that aside, it does seem like some are now willing to weaponize Kirk’s death to do things they’ve been wanting to do for years, whether it’s going after liberal groups, trans people, or their remaining critics in the media, and under some shamelessly flimsy pretext, all of which brings us back to Jimmy Kimmel.”

Oliver noted he appeared on Kimmel’s show the very night Kimmel made this comments. He defended Kimmel and said he was unclear about what was offensive about Kimmel’s remarks.

“While you may have seen headlines saying he got in trouble for remarks about Charlie Kirk himself, or even remarks about his death, that’s not strictly accurate,” Oliver noted. “The comments that got him in trouble weren’t about Kirk. In fact, Kimmel’s first comments after his murder were a post reading, ‘Can we just for one day agree that it is horrible and monstrous to shoot another human? On behalf of my family, we send love to the Kirks and to all the children, parents, and innocents who fall victim to senseless gun violence,’ ” Oliver added, quoting a social media post by Kimmel.

“What got Kimmel in trouble was a passing reference on Monday night. Now at the time there were still rumors flying around regarding the killer’s motivations, including that he was on the far right, something that Kimmel alluded to like this,” he said, showing a clip of Kimmel’s aforementioned remark.

“Yeah, that was it,” Oliver said. “Weirdly, I was actually a guest on his show that night and I didn’t even register that comment and that’s only partly because I wasn’t really paying attention,” he quipped. “And I’m not alone in that. After Kimmel’s suspension, many struggle to pick the offensive line out of his monologue, as YouTube is filled with comments under the video like, ‘I’m still waiting for the offensive part.’ And, ‘What did he say that got him fired? I’m rewatching the last week of episodes and have’et heard it yet.””

Oliver continued: “The point is, Kimmel didn’t denigrate Charlie Kirk or make light of his killing. The worst thing you could say is that he appears to have been wrong about the shooter’s ideology, which, OK. But he was also pointing out that many on the right seem desperate to weaponize Kirk’s death, an argument that’s aged pretty well, given, you know, everything that’s happened to Kimmel since. Because that one line set off a firestorm in some corners of conservative media.”

Oliver also noted that Nexstar has a motivation to keep the Trump administration happy, since it’s currently in the process of acquiring competitor Tegna and needs regulatory changes for that deal to be completed.

“Nexstar badly needs FCC approval, so it is hardly surprising that when Carr specifically said companies should pull Kimmel off the air or face consequences, it quickly complies,” Oliver said. “Basically, Brendon Carr said jump, and Nexstar took his dick out of their mouth for just long enough to say how high exactly.”

Oliver also called out Sinclair as another “major owner of TV stations who were also apparently exploring merger options that would require FCC approval [that] announced that they too would not air Kimmel’s show, and Sinclair even cited Carr’s remarks in their statement, saying, ‘We appreciate FCC Chairman Carr’s remarks today,’ and come on, Sinclair. As I believe Olandria once said to Huda on Love Island, ‘Don’t embarrass yourself going too hard for a man.’ Just solid advice for the islands of love and for business.”

Oliver went on to note that Carr wasn’t “trying to dissuade people from connecting the dots here as when one media reporter asked him for a comment, he sent back a smiley emoji” and sent a gif of The Office to CNN in response.

“It’s from The Office, and that’s, that was the actual response by the chairman of the FCC,” Oliver said, adding: “Look, I like The Office. Who doesn’t like The Office? Sure, I could have done without seasons 8 and 9, but if it’s on at a hotel, I’m not kicking it out of bed. That said, I want you to run through your friend list in your head right now and pick out the person most likely to text you a gif from The Office. Do you have them in your mind? They’re your least favorite friend, right? Just be honest. They’re the one you invite to stuff just because you’re afraid no one else will show up. They’re a third-string friend, they’re your backup’s backup, and if you’re thinking, ‘There’s nothing wrong with sending Office gifs,’ I’m afraid that person might be you.”

Oliver again emphasized that what went down was very easy to see.

“Look, the sequence of events here could not be clearer because it was all done in plain view,” he said. “Carr leaned on broadcasters to take down Kimmel. They did that, sometimes even directly citing Carr while doing so, and then Carr celebrated with a fun gif. That sure seems like a pretty clear case of the government pressuring companies to censor speech.”

Oliver went on to say that Kimmel’s suspension feels like a “turning point.”

“Not because comedians are important, but because we are not,” he said. “If the government can force a network to pull a late night show off the air and do so in plain view, it can do a fuck of a lot worse.”

He quipped that he and his show are in a “different situation” because he isn’t on broadcast TV and HBO parent company  Warner Bros. Discovery doesn’t own broadcast networks, meaning that it’s less susceptible to pressure from the FCC  than Disney, which owns ABC. Oliver then showed a news clip of Paramount Skydance reportedly prepping a bid to buy Warner Bros. Discovery.

Cut to Oliver shouting expletives. “It was fun while it lasted, guys. Whatever happens next, let me say now, it has been the honor of my life to age like a haunted painting before your very eyes,” he joked.

Oliver then noted the importance of free speech and the First Amending. 

“It should be clear to everyone that the First Amendment is absolutely critical in this country,” he said. ” That is something even Brendan Carr knows, given that he once tweeted, ‘Free speech is the counterweight. It is the check on government control. That is why censorship is the authoritarian’s dream.’ And I’m guessing that Trump is currently enjoying that dream so much he could break his bed sheets in half.”

Oliver then urged Disney to stand by Kimmel and his staff and shared ways in which viewers could “encourage” them to do that, including by canceling their subscriptions to Disney+ or Hulu. 

He then wrapped up his segment by addressing Disney CEO Bob Iger directly.

“Hi there, Bob, we haven’t met, but you probably know me as America’s third favorite Zazu,” the character Oliver voiced in The Lion King. “Congratulations on recasting that role, by the way, it was a fun thing to learn about after the fact,” he joked. 

“Anyway, one day, the history of the time we’re living through is going to be written, and when it is, I’m not sure it’s those in this administration who are even gonna come off the worst,” he continued. “Now don’t get me wrong, they’re going to come off terribly. But history’s also gonna remember the cowards who definitely knew better, but still let things happen, whether it was for money, convenience or just comfort. And I know, this is something of a tough sell, and it can be a bit of anathema to risk averse business leaders, but I will say this: If we’ve learned nothing else from this administration’s second term so far, and I don’t think we have, is that giving the bully your lunch money doesn’t make him go away, it just makes him come back hungrier each time. They are never going to stop.”

He continued: “At some point, you’re going to have to draw a line, so I’d argue why not draw it right here. And when they come to you with stupid, ridiculous demands, picking fights that you know you could win in court, Instead of rolling over, why not stand up and use four key words that they don’t tend to teach you in business school. Not ‘OK, you’re the boss.’ Not ‘whatever you say goes.’ But instead, the only phrase that can genuinely make a weak bully go away, and that is, ‘Fuck you, make me.’”

September 22, 2025 0 comments
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'Last Week Tonight's John Oliver Calls Out FCC Over Kimmel
TV & Streaming

‘Last Week Tonight’s John Oliver Calls Out FCC Over Kimmel

by jummy84 September 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Following his big night at last weekend’s 77th Primetime Emmy Awards, where he won Outstanding Scripted Variety Series and Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series, John Oliver had his work cut out for him on Sunday’s Last Week Tonight.

The comedian pulled no punches as he called out Nexstar and Sinclair, claiming they had to get Brendan Carr‘s “dick out of their mouth” to carry out the apparent FCC-sanctioned campaign against Jimmy Kimmel.

“We were off last week, and a lot happened since our last show,” said Oliver in his monologue before launching into the recap, including Trump’s royal visit to the U.K., where protesters projected a photo of the POTUS with Jeffrey Epstein on the side of Windsor Castle.

“That does make me genuinely proud of the country I’m worried I’m gonna be deported to after this show airs,” he continued. “because we’re gonna dive straight in with our main story tonight.”

Catching his audience up on Disney‘s announcement that Jimmy Kimmel Live! will be “preempted indefinitely.” The suspension has been criticized by many as an attack on free speech, following the FCC’s warning about his Charlie Kirk comments.

As Nexstar attempts to double its size by acquiring competitor Tegna, Oliver explained, “The point is, Nexstar badly needs FCC approval, so it is hardly surprising that when Carr specifically said companies should pull Kimmel off the air or face consequences, it quickly complied.

“Basically, Brendan Carr said ‘jump,’ and Nexstar took his dick out of their mouth for just long enough to say, ‘How high, exactly?’” added Oliver, noting that Sinclair then followed suit, while also pursuing merger options that require FCC approval.

“The sequence of events here could not be clearer, because it was all done in plain view,” Oliver explained. “Carr leaned on broadcasters to take down Kimmel. They did that, sometimes even directly citing Carr while doing so, and then Carr celebrated with a fun GIF. That sure seems like a pretty clear case of the government pressuring companies to censor speech. And it’s not like Trump is even trying to hide it.”

Oliver then pointed out that he should be safe at HBO as it isn’t on broadcast and therefore, “much less susceptible to pressure from the FCC,” adding: “That is obviously very good new for us, and I really don’t see why that situation should change anytime soon.”

The comedian then played clips of news coverage about Paramount‘s potential bid for Warner Bros., launching into an expletive-laden rant.

Known for his ‘Prove Me Wrong’ debates and MAGA POV, activist Kirk was shot dead at Utah Valley University on Sept. 10 in a tragedy that has sent shock through the political and media worlds.

Having previously mocked Trump over POTUS’ take on the NFL and TikTok, Kimmel offered his blunt assessment of the aftermath of Kirk’s death in his opening monologue on his Sept. 15 show: “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.”

September 22, 2025 0 comments
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Mark Ruffalo Says Disney Stock Will Drop if Jimmy Kimmel Live! Cancels
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Mark Ruffalo Says Disney Stock Will Drop if Jimmy Kimmel Live! Cancels

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Mark Ruffalo is speaking out again on Jimmy Kimmel‘s suspension by ABC.

Ruffalo took to Threads on Saturday to re-share a post that alleged Disney‘s stock price has dropped seven percent following the late night talk show being suspended earlier this week.

“It’s going to go down a lot further if they cancel his show,” Ruffalo wrote. “Disney does not want to be the ones that broke America.”

On Wednesday, ABC announced that Jimmy Kimmel Live! was preempted indefinitely following the host’s comments about Charlie Kirk’s murder and the shooting suspect. “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,” Kimmel said during his opening monologue on Monday night.

Following the suspension, Ruffalo previously spoke out about Kimmel in a No Kings online event. “My industry doesn’t really understand what’s happening right now, but what they do understand is our freedom of speech is being attacked,” he said. Several other Marvel stars like Pedro Pascal, Marisa Tomei, and Tatiana Maslany also spoke out after the news broke.

The four-time Oscar-nominated actor has famously appeared as Bruce Banner/the Hulk in many of Disney’s MCU projects, such as The Avengers films, Thor: Ragnarok, She Hulk and more. Next up, he’s set to be in Spider-Man: Brand New Day, which will hit theaters July 31, 2026. 

Earlier this month, Ruffalo spoke to The Hollywood Reporter about reprising his role and how he’s looking forward to working with Jon Bernthal, who plays the Punisher. “If I’m doing that — which the rumors are that I am, once I get a script, I’ll know it’s real — but I love him and we have a common friend in Lena Dunham, believe it or not, (laughs) who just adores him,” Ruffalo said. “I can’t wait to work with him, he’s so funny and he’s such a great actor. He plays that character like nobody else. I’m really excited to meet him, I’ve never met him!”

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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Lilith Fair stage at The Gorge Amphitheatre at Grant County, Washington
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Lilith Fair Doc Red Carpet Canceled Amid Kimmel Controversy

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

As Disney contends with a major controversy involving its suspension of Jimmy Kimmel, its ABC News Studios division has canceled a red carpet for today’s premiere of its documentary Lilith Fair: Building a Mystery – The Untold Story.

ABC News Studios informed the press of the red carpet cancellation via email on Saturday night, a day before the event. “Please note this event will no longer be hosting a red carpet,” the email reads, per Variety. “We appreciate your willingness to attend and apologize for any inconvenience this may cause.”

That message also came just 24 hours after a confirmation email told reporters and photographers that Sarah McLachlan, Jewel, and Mýa would be walking the red carpet. The Ford in Hollywood will still host a premiere screening and surprise performances, according to the report.

ABC News Studios didn’t explain the red carpet cancellation, Variety adds, but the switch-up comes after days of outcry over ABC taking Jimmy Kimmel Live! off air over Kimmel’s comments about Charlie Kirk.

Amid mass outrage over the network’s silencing of Kimmel, social media users — including celebrities — are urging others to boycott Disney by canceling their Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN subscriptions. Tatiana Maslany, Misha Collins, and Wil Wheaton all promoted the subscription boycott, USA Today reports.

In unlucky timing for the Lilith Fair team, the documentary, directed by Ally Pankiw, premieres in the United States today on Hulu. The documentary draws from new interviews and 600 hours of footage to “[tell] the history of the groundbreaking music festival featuring only women artists, started by iconic Canadian singer-songwriter Sarah McLachlan and her team in the late 1990s, in opposition to systematic industry barriers that limited women from playing together on a concert bill and getting back-to-back airplay on the radio.”

Aside from McLachlan, Jewel, and Mýa, original Lilith Fair artists Bonnie Raitt, Sheryl Crow, Erykah Badu, Paula Cole, Natalie Merchant, Emmylou Harris, and the Indigo Girls are interviewed in the documentary, as well as Brandi Carlile and Olivia Rodrigo.

Lilith Fair: Building a Mystery – The Untold Story, Now Streaming, Hulu

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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Jon Stewart on Jimmy Kimmel Suspension: 'Information Armageddon'
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Jon Stewart on Jimmy Kimmel Suspension: ‘Information Armageddon’

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

As a response to Jimmy Kimmel’s suspension from ABC, Jon Stewart‘s special appearance on “The Daily Show” was more inferred than explicit. The celebrated host typically only sits behind the desk on Mondays, but made an exception Thursday night to lead the full team in a mock capitulation to Donald Trump.

On a set freshly adorned in the commander-in-chief’s favorite color and sporting a MAGA red tie, the “patriotically appropriate host” welcomed viewers with (what I imagine is only) slightly exaggerated anxiety. “Welcome to ‘The Daily Show’ on — I’m going to guess — Monday,” Stewart said. “We have another fun, hilarious… administration-compliant show.”

Jason Clarke and Patricia Arquette in 'Murdaugh: Death in the Family'

From there, Stewart moved forward with a standard lead story about the president’s visit to the U.K. that was framed by constant kowtowing to the “perfectly-tinted Trump.” Pausing from time to time to scold his audience for laughing at the wrong time and even slapping himself in the head for mistakenly pronouncing Armenia as Albania, Stewart’s extreme submissiveness worked well to highlight how he really felt about recent events and to acknowledge the very real fears of his audience.

If Trump wants to be a dictator, then Stewart will treat him like one — now, before it’s too late.

But for those who wanted the long-heralded satirist to speak more directly about Kimmel’s forced removal from late-night, Stewart got into it around the 10-minute mark via a clip of a British reporter asking Trump if free speech is “more under attack in Britain or America.” In mock fury, Stewart than recapped what the reporter was referring to — from the FCC “threatening” affiliates to those affiliates threatening Disney with an “ultimatum” of their own — all while “defending” Trump’s interpretation of the First Amendment.

 “I don’” know who this Johnny Drimmel Live ABC character is,” Stewart said. “But the point is: Our great administration has laid out very clear rules about free speech. Now, some naysayers may argue that this administration’s speech concerns are merely a cynical ploy, a thin gruel of a ruse, a smokescreen to obscure an unprecedented consolidation of power and unitarian intimidation — principle-less and coldly antithetical to any experiment in a constitutional republic governance.”

“Not me, though,” he joked. “I think it’s great.”

After bringing on “The Daily Show’s” full team of correspondents for a literal song-and-dance (kudos to Jordan Klepper for hitting those high notes), Stewart then spent the bulk of the episode interviewing Maria Ressa, the Nobel Peace Prize-winning journalist and author of the book “How to Stand Up to a Dictator.” Ressa was adamant in citing the similarities between the fall of democracy under Rodrigo Duterte in the Philippines, her home country, and what she sees happening here in America. Both she and Stewart marveled at the speed at which each of their recent leaders collapsed the institutions meant to maintain a balance of power, including a legislative body that bent the knee and a judiciary that was under attack.

Notably, Ressa issued the same call to action twice, almost unprompted. “This is happening,” she said early in the interview. “If you do not reclaim your rights, if you don’t stand up, it’s going to be significantly harder to claw them back.”

Later, she described Americans as acting like “deer in headlights,” adding, “If you don’t move and protect the rights you have, you lose them. And it’s so much harder to reclaim them.”

While he didn’t say so himself, this was Stewart’s central message: Now is the time to act. Now is the time to speak up. Now is the time to establish what free speech really means, before it’s decided for us.

With Kimmel’s fate still hanging in the balance, it’s hard to think of a better stance to take. Despite what Trump has said, Kimmel has not been fired, and as of publishing this story, ABC has not provided an update on his suspension. Many late-night comedians have come to his defense, as they should, in addition to politicians and other prominent figures in entertainment. (Shout-out to Damon Lindelof for being among the first to commit to a Disney boycott if Kimmel’s suspension isn’t lifted, as well as all the protesters marching outside the Burbank lot.)

Ressa also said there were two ways she would describe our current moment: an information apocalypse or an information armageddon. And, as Stewart stressed she’s usually an optimistic person, she said she prefers the term armageddon “because I’m optimistic. Apocalypse is done, but armageddon is the battle. This is the battle.”

Even if he didn’t make a candid plea or straightforward statement, Stewart used his platform to defend Kimmel while urging everyone to keep fighting (“peacefully,” as he made sure to add). For “The Daily Show,” the timing, the presentation, and the format all stood out. Now, we all need to stand up.

Watch the first half of Thursday’s “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart” below.

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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John Cleese and Piers Morgan clash over Jimmy Kimmel cancellation: "You flaming old hypocrite"
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John Cleese and Piers Morgan clash over Jimmy Kimmel cancellation: “You flaming old hypocrite”

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

John Cleese and Piers Morgan have clashed on social media over the cancellation of Jimmy Kimmel Live.

Earlier this week, it was announced that the late night talk show had been pulled from the ABC Network, which is owned by Disney, over Kimmel’s comments following the murder of Charlie Kirk.

Right-wing activist Kirk was shot in the neck and killed at Utah Valley University campus on September 10, and, following the incident, Kimmel said that all signs pointed to Kirk’s shooter being a Trump supporter.

“We hit some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang trying to characterise this kid who killed Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them, and doing everything they can to score political points from it,” he said in his Monday night monologue.

The subsequent fallout saw the show taken off-air indefinitely, a move that sparked a strong response from either side of the political spectrum.

Jimmy Kimmel lied about Charlie Kirk’s assassin being MAGA, this caused understandable outrage all over America, prompted TV station owners to say they wouldn’t air him, and he’s now been suspended by his employers. Why is he being heralded as some kind of free speech martyr?

— Piers Morgan (@piersmorgan) September 18, 2025

Morgan reacted to the news by posting on X on Tuesday (September 16): “Jimmy Kimmel lied about Charlie Kirk’s assassin being MAGA, this caused understandable outrage all over America, prompted TV station owners to say they wouldn’t air him, and he’s now been suspended by his employers. Why is he being heralded as some kind of free speech martyr?”

US politician Joe Walsh replied to the post, arguing that Morgan had “missed the point”, prompting Monty Python and Fawlty Towers legend Cleese to write: “This from Piers Morgan. Who has made a fortune working for Rupert Murdoch.”

This from Piers Morgan. who has made a fortune working for Rupert Murdoch https://t.co/TNd4geJkDm

— John Cleese (@JohnCleese) September 18, 2025

Morgan responded to Cleese by posting: “You took Rupert’s money too, you flaming old hypocrite. I’m just proud of it.”

You took Rupert’s money too, you flaming old hypocrite.
I’m just proud of it. https://t.co/2XiuqpE3mY

— Piers Morgan (@piersmorgan) September 18, 2025

Hostilities continued on Wednesday, with Cleese writing: “I see Piers Morgan says he’s proud to have worked with Rupert Murdoch, the man who had done more to contaminate Britain’s journalism than anyone else. Tells us all we need to know about Piers, whose only talent is associating himself with people much better known than himself.”

I see Piers Morgan says he’s proud to have worked with Rupert Murdoch, the man who had done more to contaminate Britain’s journalism than anyone else

Tells us all we need to know about Piers, whose only talent is associating himself with people much better known than himself

— John Cleese (@JohnCleese) September 19, 2025

Morgan replied with three laughing emojis, writing: “a) Rupert’s much nicer than you.. even your fellow Pythons loathe you. b) I’m way more famous than you, which is why I have nearly twice as many followers.”

🤣🤣🤣a) Rupert’s much nicer than you.. even your fellow Pythons loathe you. b) I’m way more famous than you, which is why I have nearly twice as many followers. https://t.co/a9CzB4PQZK

— Piers Morgan (@piersmorgan) September 20, 2025

It is now believed that Kimmel’s business and legal representatives are in discussions with Disney and ABC executives in the hope of reaching a compromise that would allow for the return of Jimmy Kimmel Live.

While the move to cancel the show has been celebrated by President Trump, with whom the host has had a long-running feud, many in the entertainment industry have spoken out against the suspension. Almost all of Hollywood’s prominent creative guilds have condemned the decision, while fellow late-night legends Stephen Colbert and David Letterman have also spoken out, voicing concerns over free speech.

Comedian and podcaster Marc Maron also criticised the suspension, saying on Instagram: “This is government censorship. This is the Trump administration coming after people who speak out against him.”

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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A split image of Bill Maher and Jimmy Kimmel
TV & Streaming

Bill Maher Defends Kimmel While Reflecting on His 9/11 ABC Controversy

by jummy84 September 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Bill Maher is sharing his opinion on ABC’s decision to indefinitely preempt Jimmy Kimmel Live!, with his perspective as a fellow late night host who endured his own share of controversy while on air with the same network.

The Real Time host wasted no time addressing the suspension of Jimmy Kimmel’s show at the top of his monologue, where he started, “Well, I guess you all heard Jimmy Kimmel, my friend, my compatriot, he’s canned by ABC for comments he made about Charlie Kirk’s assassin.”

“The day right after [he made the comments], the head of the FCC said he’s gonna revoke ABC’s license,” Maher added. “Let me just tell you something: I am not intimidated by the FCC. And if President Trump is watching, I have one thing to say to you — have you lost weight?”

He then addressed his own controversy that arose in 2001 while hosting ABC’s Politically Incorrect.

“It was 24 years to the day that I made comments on ABC that got me canceled from that network, and Jimmy Kimmel took my slot at Politically Incorrect. Oh yes, I got canceled before cancel even had a culture,” he said. “This s*** ain’t new. It’s worse, we’ll get to that, but you know, ABC, they are steady. ABC stands for ‘Always Be Caving.’”

Maher defended Kimmel, noting, “Jimmy, pal, I am with you, I support you, and on the bright side, you don’t have to pretend anymore that you like Disneyland.” Later in his monologue, he showed him even more support, further referencing the end of his tenure with ABC.

“Jimmy, let me just say, you did a great, funny show for two decades,” Maher said. “You should be proud of that. If this firing goes for you the way it did for me, you’ll get 23 years on a better network.”

Maher faced a wave of backlash 24 years ago when he made remarks about the 9/11 hijackers under a week after the attacks occurred on an episode of ABC’s Politically Incorrect. The series was one of the first late now shows to return to air following the terrorist attacks, as the episode arrived on Sept. 17, 2001.

There, conservative commentator Dinesh D’Souza argued against the notion that the hijackers were “cowards,” stating, “Not true. Look at what they did. First of all, you have a whole bunch of guys who are willing to give their life. None of them backed out. All of them slammed themselves into pieces of concrete. These are warriors. And we have to realize that the principles of our way of life are in conflict with people in the world. And so — I mean, I’m all for understanding the sociological causes of this but we should not blame the victim. Americans shouldn’t blame themselves because other people want to bomb them.”

Maher responded, “But also, we should — we have been the cowards, lobbing cruise missiles from 2,000 miles away. That’s cowardly. Staying in the airplane when it hits the building, say what you want about it, it’s not cowardly.” Following his remarks, he issued an apology and ABC released a statement in support of Politically Incorrect.

The series was not pulled from air, though the show was canceled after the 01-02 season. A few months after the end of Politically Incorrect, ABC notably announced a new late night show with Kimmel.

Maher sat down with Joe Manchin and Alex Wagner during the panel segment of the Friday episode of Real Time, where he noted a past X post made my Charlie Kirk discussing free speech in the United States.

“Here’s the ultimate irony, though. Charlie Kirk said, ‘Hate speech does not exist legally in America.’ By the way, I’ve always been on the same page,” he started, before continuing to read Kirk’s post. “‘Hate speech does not exist legally in America,’ says Charlie Kirk. ‘There’s ugly speech. There’s gross speech. There’s evil speech. And all of it is protected by the First Amendment. Keep America free.’ Could you guys at least honor the person you’re insisting that we honor by honoring his words?”

Earlier in his monologue, Maher noted that he didn’t agree with Kimmel’s comments, but noted “he shouldn’t lose his job for it.” He also addressed the silence from The View panel on the matter.

“I gotta say, and I’m friendly with the ladies on The View, but they didn’t say anything about [Kimmel’s suspension] this week. Nothing,” he said. “You know, ’cause it’s never been their thing to weigh in on the issues. It’s just an upbeat party show, that’s why they hired people named Joy and Sunny and Whoopi.”

Maher continued, “Girls, go out strong, OK? It won’t kill you. I promise it’s happened to me, and I may go out after this show. We don’t know.” In tune with the heavy news cycle, he, too, tackled Trump’s lawsuit against The New York Times that was dismissed on Friday.

“Now, Trump is going after The New York Times. He sued them for $15 billion. He said they’re a ‘mouthpiece of the Democratic Party.’ You know what, Don? They are. You’re right, and that’s their right to be that,” he said. “Like there’s not a thousand people on the right who are your mouthpiece. Okay, that’s how we work in this country.”

Maher’s take on the preemption of Jimmy Kimmel Live! comes a day after many late night TV hosts — including Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Fallon and Seth Meyers — voiced their disapproval on the indefinite suspension. On Thursday night, most of the late night shows aired their first taped episode since ABC revealed their decision, where Colbert defended Kimmel.

Jimmy Kimmel Live! was “pre-empted indefinitely” by ABC on Wednesday shortly after Nexstar released a statement noting they would not air the planned episode and would preempt the long-running talk show for the foreseeable future. 

The backlash stemmed from Kimmel’s remarks about Tyler Robinson, the alleged shooter of 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 doing everything they can to score political points from it,” Kimmel said.

Following Kimmel’s comments during his monologue, Federal Communications Commission chair Brendan Carr went on a podcast on Wednesday where he publicly spoke out against Kimmel and urged affiliates to “push back” on ABC. Later in the day, it was announced that Kimmel was suspended.

A source told The Hollywood Reporter Kimmel was planning to address the backlash on Wednesday night’s show, which was canceled. He prepared to explain what he said and how it was taken out of context. The source added that Kimmel did not intend to apologize.

David Letterman voiced his opinion on the suspension on Thursday during a panel at the Atlantic Festival. “I feel bad about this because we all see where this is going, correct? It’s managed media. And it’s no good. It’s silly. It’s ridiculous,” he said. “You can’t go around firing somebody because you’re fearful or trying to suck up to an authoritarian criminal administration in the Oval Office. That’s just not how this works.”

September 20, 2025 0 comments
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Bill Maher Voices Support For Jimmy Kimmel, Takes Shots At ABC
TV & Streaming

Bill Maher Voices Support For Jimmy Kimmel, Takes Shots At ABC

by jummy84 September 20, 2025
written by jummy84

This week, Bill Maher walked out in front of his live audience to a standing ovation, as the Real Time with Bill Maher host addressed ABC‘s suspension of Jimmy Kimmel Live!, comparing it to his own cancellation over two decades ago by the same network.

“I know why you’re happy tonight: I’m still on,” the late-night host said before beginning his monologue.

Maher continued, “Talk show hosts are going down like Blockbusters in the ’90s … Let me just tell you something, I am not intimidated by the FCC, and if President Trump is watching, I have one thing to say to you: Have you lost weight? You look terrific,” to audience cheers and laughs.

“No, that’s not me, and never will be,” Maher added, “but life is f—ing weird. It was 24 years to the day that I made comments on ABC that got me canceled from that network, and Jimmy Kimmel took my slot at Politically Incorrect. I got canceled before cancel even had a culture.” (In the aftermath of 9/11, Maher disagreed with the suggestion that the perpetrators were “cowards,” arguing instead that the U.S. was cowardly for “lobbing cruise missiles from 2,000 miles away.” The comments caused an uproar, leading to major sponsors pulling their ads and local affiliates yanking the program. Afterward, as Maher mentioned, Kimmel was brought in to fill ABC’s late-night role.)

Maher’s support for his colleague comes after multiple late-night hosts — from David Letterman to Seth Meyers to Jay Leno — decried ABC’s preemption of Jimmy Kimmel Live! as an infringement on free speech following host Jimmy Kimmel’s joke about Donald Trump‘s seeming lack of grief over the killing of ultra right-wing spokesman Charlie Kirk: “We had 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,” he had said, in part.

ABC’s indefinite suspension of the program came after FCC chair Brendan Carr threatened action over the joke — which poked fun at Trump being in the “construction” stage of grief for his segueing from a reporter’s question about how he is “holding up” into the remodeling being done on the White House ballroom — and following Nexstar, the largest TV station group in the country, pulling the show for the “foreseeable future.” The company later clarified it did so “unilaterally” sans FCC pressure. Meanwhile, Sinclair Broadcast Group, the second largest national station operator and largest owner of ABC affiliate stations, said it would not lift the suspension until Kimmel had apologized to Kirk’s family and made a “meaningful donation” to his conservative nonprofit organization Turning Point USA. As such, the company replaced its Kimmel slot with a tribute to Kirk.

Meanwhile, as Trump celebrated the news, implying that Meyers and Jimmy Fallon are next up for removal, Democratic leaders penned a joint statement over the matter, as the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee vowed he would launch a formal investigation. In Hollywood, guilds have reacted with fervor, with writers and actors protesting at the Disney lot in Burbank, and top talent — from Damon Lindelof to She-Hulk star Tatiana Maslany — either announcing they will not work with Disney in the aftermath or calling for consumer boycotts of properties like Hulu and Disney+. Andor writer and recently minted Emmy winner Dan Gilroy penned a guest column in Deadline denouncing the “venomous evil” and governmental “siege.”

The move by ABC was also blasted by leading conservatives like Ted Cruz and former Disney CEO Michael Eisner. In the latest development today, an ABC Sacramento affiliate, the site of a protest the day prior, was hit with gunfire; no one was injured.

“This sh– ain’t new; it’s worse, we’ll get to that, but ABC, they are steady,” Maher said. “ABC stands for Always Be Caving. So, Jimmy, pal, I am with you, I support you, and on the bright side, you don’t have to pretend anymore that you like Disneyland.”

Maher continued in his monologue, calling the “intimidation on the right” “so hypocritical.” He made several jokes about corporate kowtowing, including how Good Morning America has changed its name to add the postscript “even the scum who didn’t vote for Trump” and that next year’s Golden Bachelor will be Rudy Giuliani. He added that even Wolf Blitzer would be reporting from “The Capitulation Room” (CNN’s program, with Blizter and Pamela Brown, is called The Situation Room).

During the show, Maher called out the hosts of The View for ignoring Kimmel’s sidelining for the second day in a row “you know, ’cause it’s never been their thing to weigh in on the issues … it’s just an upbeat party show — that’s why they hired people named Joy [Behar] and Sunny [Hostin] and Whoopi [Goldberg].” (Yesterday, Carr threatened regulatory scrutiny on the talk show, citing the FCC’s equal time rule as his reason for considering such action.)

Maher noted that he didn’t think what Kimmel said “was exactly right,” but maintained he “doesn’t deserve to lose his job over it.”

He added, “It is a fool’s errand to try to say that these nuts who do these things are any ‘team’ … This kid [alleged Kirk shooter Tyler Robinson] is in his basement with VR goggles on, getting virtually ass-f—ed by a cartoon wombat [via the game Furry Shades of Gay 3: Still Gayer], and you’re gonna put politics into this? This kid doesn’t belong in either party, he belongs in a straitjacket.”

Concluding, Maher addressed Kimmel directly: “Pal, you did a great, funny show for two decades; you should be proud of that. If this firing goes for you the way it did for me, you’ll get 23 years on a better network.”

September 20, 2025 0 comments
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