Late-night hosts Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Kimmel joined forces on Tuesday to jab President Donald Trump’s criticism of the two popular comedians.
Colbert and Kimmel appeared on each other’s late-night shows on Tuesday night, where they recounted each of their experiences of being taken off the air. During the “Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” Kimmel took multiple shots at Trump’s insults hurled at him and Colbert.
Kimmel kicked off his appearance on Colbert’s show by saying he was honored to be there alongside a “fellow low-talent, late-night loser.” Trump has repeatedly blasted Kimmel and Colbert for a lack of talent, claiming that bad ratings led to Kimmel being temporarily suspended from the air and to the cancellation of Colbert’s show.
At one point, Colbert asked whether Kimmel ever thought the president would be celebrating him losing his job.
“I mean, that son of a b—-, you know?” Kimmel responded.
“Mr. Son of a B—-,” Colbert added.
Kimmel said that he never thought a president would be taking glee in Americans losing their jobs.
“I never imagined that we’d ever have a president like this, and I hope we don’t ever have another president like this again,” Kimmel said.
“I never even imagined there would ever be a situation in which the president of our country was celebrating hundreds of Americans losing their jobs. Somebody who took pleasure in that That, to me, is the absolute opposite of what a leader of this country is supposed to be,” Kimmel said.
Colbert added: “Hear, hear!”
It has been a tumultuous few months for late-night TV.
CBS announced in July that it will cancel Colbert’s late-night show starting in May 2026. While the company claimed the move was a purely “financial decision,” speculation swirled over whether Colbert’s sharp criticism of Trump had anything to do with his ouster as Paramount looked to get its merger with SkyDance Media approved.
Then, ABC temporarily pulled Kimmel off the air in September following a threatening statement from the Federal Communications Commission chairman about the late-night host’s comments on the killing of right-wing activist Charlie Kirk. Many critics accused the federal government of pressuring ABC to take Kimmel off the air.
Kimmel returned last week following a six-day suspension from the network.
ABC’s decision to temporarily suspend the show came after Sinclair Broadcasting Group and Nexstar Media Group said they would not be airing it following Kimmel’s comments from his Sept. 15 show. The controversy centered on Kimmel’s comments from last week’s show, in which he suggested that Kirk’s alleged killer, 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, could have been a MAGA Republican.
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