Emotional Jimmy Kimmel says in late-night return he never intended to make light of Kirk’s killing

Emotional Jimmy Kimmel says in late-night return he never intended to make light of Kirk’s killing
People gather after "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" show was recorded for broadcast, the day after Disney announced that the show would return to its ABC network lineup following Kimmel's temporary suspension for his remarks about Charlie Kirk, in Los Angeles, California, U.S. September 23, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 24 September 2025
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Emotional Jimmy Kimmel says in late-night return he never intended to make light of Kirk’s killing

Emotional Jimmy Kimmel says in late-night return he never intended to make light of Kirk’s killing
  • Kimmel criticized the ABC affiliates who took his show off the air
  • He thanked the people who supported him, and even people who doesn’t like him who stood up for his right to speak

NEW YORK : Jimmy Kimmel returned to late-night television Tuesday after a nearly weeklong suspension and nearly broke down in tears, saying he wasn’t trying joke about the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.
“I have no illusions about changing anyone’s mind, but I do want to make something clear, because it’s important to me as a human and that is, you understand that it was never my intention to make light of the murder of a young man,” Kimmel said, his voice breaking. “I don’t think there’s anything funny about it.”
Kimmel added: “Nor was it my intention to blame any specific group for the actions of what it was obviously a deeply disturbed individual. That was really the opposite of the point I was trying to make.” He said he understood his remarks last week to some “felt either ill-timed or unclear or maybe both.”
Kimmel criticized the ABC affiliates who took his show off the air. “That’s not legal. That’s not American. It’s unAmerican.”
He thanked the people who supported him, and even people who doesn’t like him who stood up for his right to speak, including Texas Sen. Ted Cruz. “It takes courage for them to speak out against this administration. They did and they deserve credit for it.”
ABC, which suspended Kimmel’s show last Wednesday following criticism of his comments about the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, announced Monday that “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” would return after the network had “thoughtful conversations” with the host.
Kimmel’s viewership was more limited than usual. Two companies that owned ABC affiliates said they would not put Kimmel’s show on, leaving audiences in such cities as St. Louis, Nashville, Tennessee, and Richmond, Virginia to watch something else. The Sinclair and Nexstar corporations collectively control about a quarter of ABC affiliates.
“Our long national late nightmare is over,” Stephen Colbert joked on his CBS show in response to Kimmel’s reinstatement.
Kimmel, who has been publicly silent since his suspension, posted Tuesday on his Instagram account a picture of himself with the late television producer and free speech advocate Norman Lear. “Missing this guy today,” he wrote.
ABC suspended Kimmel “indefinitely” after comments he made in a monologue last week. Kimmel, who has been a relentless Trump critic in his comedy, suggested that many Trump supporters were trying to capitalize on Kirk’s death and were “desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them.”
FCC chair accuses host of misleading the public
Trump-appointed Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr last week said it appeared that Kimmel was trying to “directly mislead the American public” with his remarks about Tyler Robinson, the 22-year-old Utah man charged with Kirk’s killing, and his motives. Those motives remain unclear. Authorities say Robinson grew up in a conservative family, but his mother told investigators his son had turned left politically in the last year.
“We can do this the easy way or the hard way,” Carr said before ABC announced the suspension. “These companies can find ways to change conduct, to take action, frankly, on Kimmel, or there is going to be additional work for the FCC ahead.”
Those remarks set a backlash in motion, with Republican Sen. Ted Cruz saying that Carr acted like “a mafioso.” Hundreds of entertainment luminaries, 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.”
Podcaster Joe Rogan weighed in Tuesday on Kimmel’s side. “I definitely don’t think that the government should be involved — ever — in dictating what a comedian can or can’t say in a monologue,” Rogan said. “You are crazy for supporting this because this will be used on you.”
Some consumers punished ABC parent Disney by canceling subscriptions to its streaming services.
Trump had hailed Kimmel’s suspension and criticized his return, writing on his Truth Social platform: “I can’t believe ABC Fake News gave Jimmy Kimmel his job back ... Why would they want someone back who does so poorly, who’s not funny, and who puts the Network in jeopardy by playing 99 percent positive Democrat GARBAGE.”
Trump’s administration has used threats, lawsuits and federal government pressure to try to exert more control over the media industry. Trump sued ABC and CBS over news coverage, which the companies settled. Trump has also filed defamation lawsuits against The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, and successfully urged Congress to strip federal funding from NPR and PBS.
Show lineup will include at least one friendly guest
He will have at least one friendly guest. After pulling out of her planned performance at the premiere of Hulu’s Lilith Fair documentary in protest over Kimmel’s suspension, singer-songwriter Sarah McLachlan will appear on Kimmel’s show as the musical guest. McLachlan had been booked on the show prior to the preemption, a representative told The Associated Press.
The other guest, according to an ABC lineup released Tuesday afternoon, will be actor Glen Powell, who was listed as a guest for this week on the “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” ticket site even before Kimmel’s suspension. Like McLachlan, he’s promoting a Hulu release, “Chad Powers,” as is former NFL star Peyton Manning, a Thursday guest.
Disney and ABC executives reportedly negotiated Kimmel’s return for several days before announcing the resolution. The ABC statement said the suspension happened because some of Kimmel’s comments were “ill-timed and thus insensitive,” but it did not call them misleading.
Andrew Kolvet, a spokesperson for Turning Point USA, the organization founded by Kirk and now headed by his widow, posted on X that “Disney and ABC caving and allowing Kimmel back on the air is not surprising, but it’s their mistake to make.”
The suspension happened at a time when the late-night landscape is shifting. Shows are losing viewers, in part because many watch highlights the next day online. CBS announced the cancelation of Colbert’s show over the summer. Kimmel’s contract with ABC reportedly lasts through May.
Colbert, in his opening monologue Monday, grabbed his recently won Emmy Award for outstanding talk series, saying, “Once more, I am the only martyr on late night!”
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Former UK minister in U-turn over Israel’s killing of Palestinian nurse

Former UK minister in U-turn over Israel’s killing of Palestinian nurse
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Former UK minister in U-turn over Israel’s killing of Palestinian nurse

Former UK minister in U-turn over Israel’s killing of Palestinian nurse
  • Alistair Burt says govt was wrong to trust Israeli probe over 2018 killing of Razan Al-Najjar
  • Popular 20-year-old nurse was shot dead amid protests on the Gaza border, prompting global outrage

LONDON: A former Conservative minister in the UK has admitted a change of heart over the killing of a prominent young Palestinian nurse and accused the Israeli government of murdering her, The Independent reported.

The government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was also accused by Alistair Burt of carrying out fake inquiries into the death of Razan Al-Najjar in 2018.

The young nurse, who was killed aged 20, was popularly dubbed the “Angel of Mercy.”

She was shot dead by Israeli forces while coming to the aid of a wounded demonstrator on Gaza’s border with Israel in 2018, prompting international condemnation.

Burt, who at the time served as Middle East minister in the Conservative government led by Theresa May, said the UK was wrong not to “call out” Israel after Al-Najjar’s killing.

After the killing, Burt refused to criticize Israel and urged the Israel Defense Forces to investigate the death.

Yet a UN probe found “reasonable grounds” to believe that Al-Najjar had been deliberately targeted by Israeli security forces responding to the demonstrations, despite posing no threat.

The UK minister had also blamed Palestinians for the violence and argued that “extremist elements exploited the protests for their own violent purposes.”

However, Burt now regrets his “grim” reaction to the killing, and says he is now certain Al-Najjar was “clearly targeted and murdered” by Israel.

The UK had been wrong to trust Israeli government denials and promises to investigate the killing, he added, describing the internal probes as bogus.

“I know exactly what I did. I know why I did it. And it’s grim. I have thought about this a lot. The strongest memory I have was the shooting of the young paramedic Razan Al-Najjar. She was clearly targeted and murdered by the Israelis,” he said.

“We relied on the Israeli response that they know all about every shot that was fired by the IDF. My suspicion then — since confirmed — is that these investigations were effectively useless and used as a cover by the Israelis for the killing and covering up such as this.

“I and the UK should have been more bold in calling this out.”

The former minister’s U-turn is described in a new book on Britain’s ties to the war in Gaza, “Complicit, Britain’s Role In The Destruction of Gaza,” by journalist Peter Oborne.

Burt’s change of heart is emblematic of a wider shift in Western attitudes toward Israel in the wake of the Gaza war.

The IDF cleared itself of wrongdoing after Al-Najjar’s death, but was accused of conducting a smear campaign against the young nurse after releasing a film in which she appeared to describe herself as a “human shield.”

But it later emerged that the video had been manipulated, and the nurse had instead called herself a “human shield to save the injured.”

Before her death, Al-Najjar had become an icon among Palestinians in the occupied territories and beyond. Thousands of Gazans attended her funeral.