Study exposes heavy liberal slant in Kimmel's late-night show
A staggering 92% of Jimmy Kimmel's political humor on "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" targets conservatives, according to a revealing study that pulls back the curtain on late-night television's ideological slant.
As reported by Fox News, the Media Research Center’s NewsBusters analyzed 7,797 political jokes across 369 episodes, finding that Republicans and Trump allies bore the brunt of 7,189 quips, while left-leaning figures got off easy with just 565 mentions. Nonpartisan targets? A mere 43 jabs.
President Donald Trump topped Kimmel’s hit list with 3,584 jokes, while only one Democrat, former President Joe Biden, cracked the top ten with 336 mentions. It’s hardly a surprise that the deck seems stacked when you consider the cultural echo chamber late-night TV often inhabits.
Guest List Leans Hard Left
NewsBusters also uncovered that 97% of Kimmel’s guests since September 2022—61 out of 63—leaned liberal. That’s not just a trend; it’s a near-total blackout of dissenting voices.
This kind of selective booking raises questions about whether Kimmel’s platform is a comedy show or a soapbox. If you’re only inviting one side to the table, the punchlines are bound to hit the other side harder.
Contrast that with the expectation of balance in entertainment that claims to speak for a broad audience. When the guest list looks like a progressive rolodex, it’s no wonder the humor tilts so heavily in one direction.
Conservatives as Constant Punchlines
Beyond Trump, Kimmel’s favorite targets included figures like former Rep. George Santos, first lady Melania Trump, Elon Musk, and MAGA supporters at large. That’s a wide net cast over anyone remotely tied to the right, while liberal icons and networks rarely felt the sting.
The disparity isn’t just numerical; it’s a reflection of a broader trend in entertainment where mocking one side is safe, even celebrated. Meanwhile, challenging the progressive narrative seems to be a risk few hosts are willing to take.
Only 565 jokes aimed at left-leaning figures over hundreds of episodes suggest more than just preference—it hints at protection. If comedy is supposed to afflict the comfortable, why does half the political spectrum get a hall pass?
Suspension Sparks Free Speech Debate
Kimmel’s show faced indefinite suspension after controversial remarks about the assassination of Turning Point USA co-founder Charlie Kirk, accusing conservatives of spinning the narrative around the alleged assassin, 22-year-old Tyler Robinson. “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,” Kimmel said on air.
Disney confirmed the suspension to Fox News Digital amid pressure from the Federal Communications Commission, while Nexstar Media Group preempted the show on its ABC affiliates starting last Wednesday night. Nexstar’s broadcasting chief, Andrew Alford, called Kimmel’s comments “offensive and insensitive at a critical time in our national political discourse,” emphasizing the need for cooler heads.
The fallout has ignited a firestorm, with late-night hosts, celebrities, and some lawmakers rallying behind Kimmel, claiming his free speech rights are under attack. Even Republicans like Sens. Rand Paul and Ted Cruz have voiced First Amendment concerns, showing this issue cuts deeper than partisan lines.
Balancing Comedy with Accountability
Kimmel’s suspension and the NewsBusters study together paint a picture of a host whose humor leans so far one way it risks alienating a huge swath of viewers. Comedy should sting, sure, but when the barbs are this lopsided, it stops being satire and starts feeling like propaganda.
The broader lesson here is about accountability in spaces that shape public opinion, especially when data shows such a clear slant in guests and jokes. Late-night TV still holds sway, and with that power comes a duty to at least pretend to play fair.
As the debate over Kimmel’s words and suspension unfolds, it’s worth asking if entertainment can ever truly bridge divides when it so often picks a side. Perhaps it’s time for hosts to remember that laughter, like critique, works best when it’s aimed at everyone in the room.





