WASHINGTON, February 27, 2026 — 10:15 P.M. ET
BY CUBUI
It wasn’t even about Jimmy Kimmel.
The question was about Trevor Noah hosting the Grammys. That’s it. A completely different comedian. A completely different stage. A completely different night.
Yet when President Donald Trump answered, somehow the name Jimmy Kimmel still slipped into his response.
“I’d say not as bad as Jimmy Kimmel, but pretty close.”
And just like that — the late-night war reignited.
A Question About the Grammys… Somehow About Kimmel
Trump was asked whether he thought Trevor Noah did a good job hosting the Grammy Awards. Instead of focusing solely on Noah, Trump criticized the show, called it “not watchable,” labeled Noah “a lousy host” — and then pivoted.
Not to policy.
Not to music.
To Jimmy Kimmel.
It was a moment that perfectly illustrated what many viewers have noticed for months: even when Kimmel isn’t involved, Trump still finds a way to mention him.
When Kimmel later played the clip on his show, his reaction was pure disbelief.
“How did I get in there? I was at home minding my own business!”
The audience exploded with laughter.
But behind the joke, there was something real.
The Epstein Backdrop

This tension isn’t happening in a vacuum.
Recently released Justice Department documents connected to Jeffrey Epstein have reignited national conversation. Searches of the files reportedly show Trump’s name appearing thousands of times — though supporters argue that frequency of mention alone does not prove wrongdoing.
Trump has strongly denied spending time on Epstein’s island and has dismissed allegations as politically motivated attacks.
Kimmel, however, has continued referencing the documents during his monologues, pressing the issue repeatedly on national television.
That persistence appears to be striking a nerve.
The Awards Speech That Set Him Off
At a recent ceremony, Kimmel mock-thanked the president during an acceptance speech.
“I want to thank our president, Donald Jennifer Trump…”
The line referenced one of Trump’s past public verbal mix-ups — and it landed hard.
Within hours, Trump posted angrily on Truth Social, attacking Kimmel’s ratings, talent, and credibility.
He claimed Kimmel was failing.
He claimed no one watches.
He claimed the network should have fired him.
Yet the irony was unavoidable: the speech happened because Kimmel had just won an award.
Flood the Zone?
Political observers note a pattern.
When headlines intensify around the Epstein documents, Trump often launches legal threats, announces lawsuits, or ignites new controversies. Recently, he filed a $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS over leaked tax records — a move critics say dominates the news cycle while pushing other stories aside.
Kimmel highlighted this dynamic directly on air.
“When something big drops,” he joked, “suddenly there are twelve new crazy things to talk about.”
The audience laughed.
But the implication was clear.
Power and Obsession
There is something unusual about this dynamic.
Trump commands the executive branch.
He controls vast resources.
He holds the nuclear codes.
Yet week after week, he continues targeting a late-night host.
He attacks Kimmel by name.
He celebrates rumors about ratings.
He tries to portray him as irrelevant.
But if Kimmel were truly irrelevant, why keep bringing him up — even while criticizing someone else?
Even while talking about Trevor Noah, Trump circled back to Kimmel.
That’s what made this Grammys moment so telling.
The Bigger Story
This is no longer just celebrity sniping.
It’s a sitting president repeatedly reacting to satire — while navigating serious legal and political scrutiny.
Kimmel represents something Trump cannot fully control: a cultural platform that turns controversy into punchlines. And ridicule, historically, is harder to counter than direct political opposition.
Trump can sue.
He can threaten.
He can post.
But he cannot stop the monologues.
So the cycle continues.
A question about Trevor Noah.
A dig at Jimmy Kimmel.
A monologue response.
Another social media eruption.
And somehow, no matter the event — Grammys, Oscars, lawsuits, IRS — Jimmy Kimmel still ends up living rent-free in the president’s script.