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Disney Extends Jimmy Kimmel Through 2027 Following Suspension and Controversy

MarketDash Editorial Team
22 hours ago
Walt Disney Co. has locked in late-night host Jimmy Kimmel with a new one-year extension keeping his ABC show on air through May 2027, following a brief suspension that ironically delivered his biggest audience yet.

Disney (DIS) announced Monday that Jimmy Kimmel will stick around ABC for another year, extending his late-night run through May 2027. It's a straightforward deal with a messy backstory involving strategic timing, a controversial suspension, and the complicated economics of keeping late-night television alive.

The Timing Game

Here's the thing: Kimmel actually signed this extension months ago. According to Bloomberg, Disney and Kimmel kept quiet about it as a courtesy to Stephen Colbert, whose CBS show The Late Show with Stephen Colbert announced its May 2026 finale in July. Nobody wants to announce they're staying right when someone else is leaving the party.

Then the timeline shifted again after Kimmel's September suspension following backlash over remarks about GOP activist Charlie Kirk. President Donald Trump weighed in with criticism, ABC pulled the show briefly, and suddenly the whole thing became much more complicated.

What Actually Happened

During his September 15 monologue, Kimmel suggested the "MAGA gang" was exploiting Kirk's death for political gain. The comments drew immediate fire from viewers, and Disney suspended the program for several days.

When Kimmel returned on September 23, he addressed the controversy directly: "it was never my intention to make light of the murder of a young man."

Here's the ironic twist: that return monologue, posted to YouTube as "Jimmy Kimmel is Back," racked up 23 million views and became his most-watched monologue ever on the platform. His post-suspension audience was the largest regular late-night viewership he'd attracted. Sometimes controversy sells.

The Late-Night Math Problem

Kimmel's extension comes at a tricky moment for late-night television. Younger audiences have largely migrated to digital platforms, and while hosts like Kimmel and Jimmy Fallon generate millions of YouTube views, those digital clips don't produce enough revenue to support expensive, labor-intensive productions. Kimmel has been hosting since 2003 and has emceed the Oscars multiple times, but the business model underneath him keeps getting shakier.

The question isn't whether Kimmel can still draw viewers—clearly he can. It's whether the traditional late-night format can survive the shift to social media and real-time comedy competing for the same attention.

Disney Extends Jimmy Kimmel Through 2027 Following Suspension and Controversy

MarketDash Editorial Team
22 hours ago
Walt Disney Co. has locked in late-night host Jimmy Kimmel with a new one-year extension keeping his ABC show on air through May 2027, following a brief suspension that ironically delivered his biggest audience yet.

Disney (DIS) announced Monday that Jimmy Kimmel will stick around ABC for another year, extending his late-night run through May 2027. It's a straightforward deal with a messy backstory involving strategic timing, a controversial suspension, and the complicated economics of keeping late-night television alive.

The Timing Game

Here's the thing: Kimmel actually signed this extension months ago. According to Bloomberg, Disney and Kimmel kept quiet about it as a courtesy to Stephen Colbert, whose CBS show The Late Show with Stephen Colbert announced its May 2026 finale in July. Nobody wants to announce they're staying right when someone else is leaving the party.

Then the timeline shifted again after Kimmel's September suspension following backlash over remarks about GOP activist Charlie Kirk. President Donald Trump weighed in with criticism, ABC pulled the show briefly, and suddenly the whole thing became much more complicated.

What Actually Happened

During his September 15 monologue, Kimmel suggested the "MAGA gang" was exploiting Kirk's death for political gain. The comments drew immediate fire from viewers, and Disney suspended the program for several days.

When Kimmel returned on September 23, he addressed the controversy directly: "it was never my intention to make light of the murder of a young man."

Here's the ironic twist: that return monologue, posted to YouTube as "Jimmy Kimmel is Back," racked up 23 million views and became his most-watched monologue ever on the platform. His post-suspension audience was the largest regular late-night viewership he'd attracted. Sometimes controversy sells.

The Late-Night Math Problem

Kimmel's extension comes at a tricky moment for late-night television. Younger audiences have largely migrated to digital platforms, and while hosts like Kimmel and Jimmy Fallon generate millions of YouTube views, those digital clips don't produce enough revenue to support expensive, labor-intensive productions. Kimmel has been hosting since 2003 and has emceed the Oscars multiple times, but the business model underneath him keeps getting shakier.

The question isn't whether Kimmel can still draw viewers—clearly he can. It's whether the traditional late-night format can survive the shift to social media and real-time comedy competing for the same attention.