
By AUDREY McAVOY and HALLIE GOLDEN
Associated Press
Jon Stewart, Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Fallon opened their late-night shows Thursday using a mix of humor and solidarity with suspended ABC host Jimmy Kimmel.
Stewart opted for satire to critique ABC suspending âJimmy Kimmel Live!â indefinitely following comments he made about the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. Colbert took a more serious approach, calling his suspension âblatant censorship.â Fallon praised Kimmel and vowed to keep doing his show as usual. Then an announcer spoke over him and replaced most of his critiques about President Donald Trump with flattery.
Their guests the day after Kimmelâs suspension â which also came two months after CBS said it would cancel Colbertâs show â varied widely. Fallonâs guests were actor Jude Law, journalist Tom Llamas and actor and singer Jonathan Groff â none of whom addressed Kimmelâs situation.
Stewart and Colbert interviewed guests who could address censorship concerns raised by Kimmelâs suspension. Journalist and Nobel Peace Prize recipient Maria Ressa spoke to Stewart.
When Stewart asked Ressa, the author of âHow to Stand Up to a Dictator,â tips on coping with the current moment, Ressa recounted how she and her colleagues at the news site Rappler âjust kept goingâ when she was faced with 11 arrest warrants in one year under Philippine then-President Rodrigo Duterte.
âWe just kept doing our jobs. We just kept putting one foot in front of the other,â Ressa said.
Stewart makes special appearance to skewer Kimmel suspension
âWe have another fun, hilarious administration-compliant show,â it said.
He lavished praise on the president and satirized his criticism of large cities and his deployment of the National Guard to fight their crime.
âComing to you tonight from the real (expletive), the crime-ridden cesspool that is New York City. It is a tremendous disaster like no oneâs ever seen before. Someoneâs National Guard should invade this place, am I right?â Stewart said.
âThe Daily Showâ set was refashioned with decorative gold engravings, in a parody of gold accents Trump has added to the fireplace, doorway arches, walls and other areas of the Oval Office.
Stewart fidgeted nervously as though he was worried about speaking the correct talking points. When the audience members reacted with an âawwwâ he whispered: âWhat are you doing? Shut up. Youâre going to (expletive) blow this for us.â
He took on a more stilted tone when he started describing Trumpâs visit to the United Kingdom, calling the president âour great father.â
âGaze upon him. With a gait even more majestic than that of the royal horses that prance before him,â he said.
Stewart normally hosts only on Mondays. The Emmy winner helmed âThe Daily Showâ from 1999 through 2015, delivering sharp, satirical takes on politics and current events and interviews with newsmakers. He returned to host once a week during the run-up to the 2024 U.S. presidential election.
Fallon opened his âTonight Showâ monologue addressing Kimmelâs suspension. âTo be honest with you all, I donât know whatâs going on. And no one does. But I do know Jimmy Kimmel, and heâs a decent, funny and loving guy, and I hope he comes back.â
Swift suspension after remarks on Kirkâs assassination
Kimmel made several remarks about the reaction to Kirkâs killing on âJimmy Kimmel Live!â Monday and Tuesday nights, including that âmany in MAGA land are working very hard to capitalize on the murder of Charlie Kirk.â
ABC suspended Kimmelâs show after a group of ABC-affiliated stations said it would not air the show, and Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr said his agency had a strong case for holding Kimmel, ABC and network parent Walt Disney Co. accountable for spreading misinformation.
Kimmel has not commented. His supporters say Carr misread what the comic said and that nowhere did he specifically suggest that Tyler Robinson â the man Utah authorities allege fatally shot Kirk â was conservative.
In July, CBS said it would cancel âThe Late Show With Stephen Colbertâ next May. The network said it shut down the decades-old TV institution for financial reasons. But the announcement came three days after Colbert criticized the settlement between President Donald Trump and Paramount Global, parent company of CBS, over a â60 Minutesâ story.
âThe Late Showâ hosts past and present address suspension
Colbert started his monologue on Thursday with the animated song âBe Our Guestâ from Disneyâs âBeauty and the Beast,â but replaced the lyrics with âShut your trap. Shut your trap.â
He later addressed Kimmel directly, saying that he stands with him and his staff.
âIf ABC thinks that this is going to satisfy the regime, they are woefully naive,â he said.
He also responded to remarks Carr made that it is important for broadcasters to push back on Disney programming âthey determine falls short of community values.â
âWell, you know what my community values are, buster? Freedom of speech,â Colbert said to loud applause from his audience.
When Colbert talked with New Yorker editor David Remnick about Kimmelâs suspension, he said: âWhat we are seeing now is the government acting at the direction of the president of the United States to put pressure on, to manipulate, to silence and even to shut down institutions of the free word.â
David Letterman, Colbertâs predecessor on âThe Late Show,â lamented the networksâ moves.
âI feel bad about this, because we all see where see this is going, correct? Itâs managed media,â Letterman said during an appearance Thursday at The Atlantic Festival 2025 in New York. âItâs no good. Itâs silly. Itâs ridiculous.â
He added that people shouldnât be fired just because they donât âsuck upâ to what Letterman called âan authoritarianâ president.



