Even as Jimmy Kimmel Live! returned to the airwaves Tuesday night, station owner Nexstar said in a Wednesday statement they would continue to keep the show out of their programming.
“Nexstar is continuing to evaluate the status of Jimmy Kimmel Live! on our ABC-affiliated local television stations, and the show will be pre-empted while we do so,” the statement read.
“We are engaged in productive discussions with executives at The Walt Disney Company, with a focus on ensuring the program reflects and respects the diverse interests of the communities we serve.”
Both Nexstar, which owns and operates 32 ABC affiliate stations, and broadcast group Sinclair have pre-empted Jimmy Kimmel’s show since last week. The two station owners represent about 25 per cent of all affiliates, and had stopped airing Jimmy Kimmel Live! in reaction to Kimmel’s comments last week in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s death.
“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.
ABC issued a statement on Sept. 17, saying it would be indefinitely suspending Jimmy Kimmel Live! without providing any immediate reasons for doing so.
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.
After a series of discussions between Kimmel and Disney, the talk show was brought back on the air Tuesday night. Kimmel was emotional during his opening monologue, nearly breaking down at least twice when he told his audience “it was never my intention to make light of the murder of a young man.” He added that he also didn’t intend to “blame any specific group” for the actions of Kirk’s alleged killer — but understood that, to some, “that felt either ill-timed or unclear or maybe both.”
As of Wednesday afternoon, his opening monologue on YouTube had about 14 million views, inching closer to breaking his all-time viewership record on the video platform. While his account has multiple clips and gags with views in the tens of millions, his monologues tend to get more modest figures. Tuesday’s post was only behind a monologue detailing his son’s birth and heart disease. That video, posted in 2017, currently has roughly 14.7 million views.
How others responded to Kimmel’s suspension
Former U.S. President Barack Obama wrote on social media Thursday 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.” He said that media companies needed to stand up to the “government coercion” rather than capitulate to it.
Others also expressed shock and concern over what the move meant for free speech. Late-night hosts Jon Stewart, Jimmy Fallon, Seth Meyers and Stephen Colbert all expressed solidarity with Kimmel during their shows last week. And hundreds of Hollywood stars including Tom Hanks, Barbra Streisand and Jennifer Aniston signed a letter circulated by the American Civil Liberties Union that called ABC’s move “a dark moment for freedom of speech in our nation.”
In contrast, figures like former Fox News and NBC personality Megyn Kelly, who also guest hosted Kirk’s podcast last week, maintained that Kimmel’s suggestion that Kirk’s killer may have been a Trump supporter was a “vile, disgusting lie.”
And following the return of Kimmel’s show, Turning Point USA spokesperson Andrew Kolvet said that the late-night host’s monologue was “not good enough” and that he needed to apologize.
Meanwhile, consumers in support of Kimmel moved to punish ABC parent Disney with their wallets over the last week, cancelling subscriptions to its streaming services.
And in response to Nexstar and Sinclair continuing to pre-empt Jimmy Kimmel Live! from their ABC affiliate stations, a handful of protests have emerged across the U.S. — including demonstrators in front of Nexstar and Sinclair-owned stations in cities like Columbus, Ohio and Seattle on Tuesday, ahead of ABC returning Kimmel’s show to the airwaves. A protest also formed near Nexstar’s headquarters in Texas.