Three days before a gunman opened fire at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, Jimmy Kimmel called Melania Trump “an expectant widow.” Now the President wants him fired — and a federal regulator is circling Disney’s broadcast licenses.
The ABC late-night host made the remark on April 23 during a Jimmy Kimmel Live! segment billed as an “alternative” to the annual Washington gala. Kimmel stood behind a faux podium and delivered what he framed as a parody roast of the Trump administration. The line about the First Lady — that she had “a glow like an expectant widow” — drew laughs in the studio. It would not stay that simple for long. AOLWHBL
Then the Real Dinner Turned Into a Crime Scene
On April 25, a gunman opened fire at the actual White House Correspondents’ Dinner at the Washington Hilton. Security officials evacuated Speaker Mike Johnson and other attendees as shots rang out. President Trump, who was in attendance, later posted on social media that a shooter had been apprehended. The Trumps were escorted out safely. AOL
In the hours and days that followed, attention turned back to Kimmel’s joke — and the White House moved fast.
“Despicable Call to Violence”
Melania Trump posted on X saying Kimmel’s comments were “hateful and violent rhetoric” and “intended to divide our country,” urging ABC to “take a stand.” The President escalated further. Trump posted on Truth Social calling it a “despicable call to violence” and writing that “Jimmy Kimmel should be immediately fired by Disney and ABC.” The official White House account on X republished the post. CNBCWashington Times
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, at a Monday briefing, called Kimmel’s comments “completely deranged,” adding that such rhetoric “led crazy people to believe crazy things” and inspired violence. Washington Times
White House Communications Director Steven Cheung went further still. He said in a post on X that Kimmel should be “shunned” for “doubling down on that joke instead of doing the decent thing by apologizing.” CNBC
Kimmel Fires Back: “They Know That”
Kimmel did not apologize. During his Monday monologue, he said the joke was about the couple’s age difference — Trump will turn 80 in June; Melania turned 56 this month. “It was not by any stretch of the definition a call to assassination,” he said. “And they know that.” WHBLWashington Times
Free speech advocates backed him. MoveOn Civic Action’s Joel Payne said in a statement that “any attempt to censor Jimmy Kimmel is a clear violation of free speech and accelerates America’s dangerous slide into authoritarianism.” FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez said the shooting “must never become a justification for undermining” press freedoms, warning that the tragedy should not become “a pretext for silencing speech, even speech we find objectionable.” AOLAOL
What We Know
April 23, 2026: Kimmel airs parody Correspondents’ Dinner segment; calls Melania Trump “an expectant widow”
April 25, 2026: A gunman opens fire at the real WHCA Dinner; Trump and attendees are safely evacuated
April 28, 2026: Trump and Melania publicly demand ABC fire Kimmel; Kimmel defends the joke as an age-gap comment
Scheduled Kimmel guest Oz Pearlman canceled his appearance amid the controversy
Semafor reported the FCC is preparing a review of Disney’s broadcast licenses, though a source said the timing is unrelated to Kimmel’s monologue CNBC
In September 2025, ABC briefly suspended Jimmy Kimmel Live! after Kimmel made comments about the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, following pressure from FCC Chairman Brendan Carr and station groups Nexstar and Sinclair WHBL
In December 2024, ABC paid $15 million toward Trump’s presidential library to settle a defamation lawsuit brought by Trump against the network CNBC
Disney is now led by newly installed CEO Josh D’Amaro, who took the helm last month CNBC
Why This Goes Far Beyond One Joke
This story isn’t really about a punchline. It’s about who controls the airwaves — and whether a sitting president can use a national tragedy to silence a critic.
Paramount-owned CBS ended The Late Show with Stephen Colbert last year while the company awaited FCC approval for a merger — a decision widely seen as bowing to political pressure. Now the same pattern is emerging at Disney. With a new CEO, a pending federal broadcast license review, and a White House willing to weaponize a shooting for political ends, the stakes for late-night television — and for press freedom broadly — could not be higher. CNBC
“You know how sometimes you wake up in the morning and the first lady puts out a statement demanding you be fired from your job?” Kimmel said Monday. “We’ve all been there, right? What a day.” Washington Times
The laugh line landed. But the fight it represents is anything but funny.