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Kimmel’s 2-Word Melania Text Sets Internet Ablaze

A late-night comedian group chat exploded into public view when John Oliver revealed Jimmy Kimmel’s understated response to First Lady Melania Trump’s public campaign to get him fired from ABC.

During a rare joint appearance on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” on May 11, 2026, Kimmel sat alongside Oliver, Seth Meyers, and Jimmy Fallon for a special late-night summit. Oliver disclosed that Kimmel had sent the late-night hosts a text containing just two words — “Oh boy” — along with a photo of the first lady angry at him.

“What a way to start the day,” Oliver recounted.

Fallon then confessed his reply wasn’t exactly supportive of his fellow comic. “And then I sent a text to you guys. I sent, ‘Don’t be mad at me but I liked it. I think she’s got a point,'” he joked, sending the studio audience into hysterics.

How the Melania Feud Began

The controversy began April 23 when Kimmel presented an alternative White House Correspondents’ Dinner segment on his ABC show. He joked that Melania Trump had “a glow like an expectant widow” — a line he later said was about the age difference between the first lady and her husband.

Two days later, on April 25, a gunman opened fire at the actual White House Correspondents’ Dinner venue, allegedly targeting the president and members of his administration. The shooting instantly transformed Kimmel’s joke from an edgy roast into a political firestorm.

Melania Trump publicly demanded action from the network on April 27, writing that “it is time for ABC to take a stand” and accusing the comedian of fueling “hateful and violent rhetoric.” President Trump went further on Truth Social, demanding ABC fire “seriously unfunny Jimmy Kimmel” and warning that “people are angry. It better be soon!!!”

Conservative supporters amplified the attacks across social media, with Turning Point USA-aligned influencers calling for boycotts of both ABC and parent company Disney.

Kimmel Fires Back at the First Lady

Kimmel refused to back down despite the pressure. He clarified that the line was “obviously a joke about their age difference and the look of joy we see on her face every time they’re together,” and stressed that “it was not by any stretch a call to assassination.”

He also turned the first lady’s own talking points back on her, suggesting that if she truly cared about toxic rhetoric, “a great place to start to dial that back would be to have a conversation with your husband about it.”

On April 28, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ordered Disney to file early license renewals for all eight of its ABC-owned stations by May 28, 2026, years ahead of their scheduled renewal dates. The FCC cited an investigation into Disney’s DEI practices, though the order came just one day after Trump’s firing demand, drawing accusations from legal experts and Democrats that it was politically motivated. FCC Commissioner Anna Gomez, the panel’s lone Democrat, called the move “unprecedented, unlawful, and going nowhere.”

The episode represented the latest chapter in Kimmel’s ongoing tensions with the White House. His show has previously faced pressure from conservative media groups and administration allies over his political commentary. ABC has so far maintained its support for the comedian despite the backlash.

On the Colbert Couch

The conversation on Colbert’s show quickly turned to President Trump’s long-running feud with late-night television. Colbert asked the group if they ever anticipated “doing a job that the president of the United States would have strong feelings about.” Kimmel didn’t miss a beat.

“You know what’s even weirder? Doing a job that his wife has strong feelings about. That’s where it crosses over,” he quipped, prompting Late Night host Seth Meyers to chime in that “most of us have avoided that part.”

The ‘Saddest Part’ of Going Viral

In a more reflective moment on Colbert’s couch, Kimmel admitted that the attention from the White House feels strangely isolating in his day-to-day life. The only people who immediately understand what he’s going through, he said, are the four comedians sitting next to him.

The candid moment capped what may go down as one of the more memorable late-night summits in recent years. For now, “Oh boy” may be the most efficient summary of late-night television in 2026. Disney has extended Kimmel’s contract through May 2027, setting its own two-word answer to the White House.

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