Trump Lashes Out as Jimmy Kimmel and Jim Carrey Revive Brutal On-Air Takedown

LOS ANGELES â President Donald Trump unleashed a furious response on Truth Social after late-night host Jimmy Kimmel and actor Jim Carrey revisited their sharpest critiques of his presidency during a segment on Jimmy Kimmel Live. The exchange, which blended archival footage, Carreyâs provocative political artwork and Kimmelâs pointed monologues, reignited a long-simmering feud and drew fresh accusations of partisan bias from the White House.
The segment opened with Kimmel replaying clips of Carreyâs paintings from Trumpâs first term â vivid, symbolic works that depicted the former president as an authoritarian figure, drowning in a âswampâ of corruption or entangled in immigration controversies. Carrey, who had stepped back from daily political art, explained his motivation: âWe in America are misinformed. Reality shows have warped our idea of what a hero is or what the truth is.â He framed the paintings as civic commentary rather than personal attacks, a stance he reiterated during past appearances on Kimmelâs show.
Kimmel then turned to Trumpâs repeated attacks on his ratings and credibility. âTake a look at this guy, his ratings,â Kimmel said, echoing Trumpâs own past insults. âThatâs what got Jimmy Kimmel out. He was terrible.â The host countered by welcoming Trump to the âcrappy ratings club,â a jab that drew sustained applause from the studio audience. The monologue also revisited Melania Trumpâs 2016 Republican National Convention speech, which drew plagiarism accusations after viewers noted similarities to Michelle Obamaâs 2008 Democratic address. While the Trump campaign attributed the overlap to a speechwriting error, Kimmel used the moment to highlight ongoing scrutiny of the first family.

Trump fired back hours later on Truth Social, calling Kimmel a âlow-rated has-beenâ and accusing him of âspreading fake news and Democrat propaganda.â He repeated familiar complaints about late-night television bias and suggested networks should review Kimmelâs contract â language that critics interpreted as veiled pressure on broadcasters. The White House dismissed the segment as âmore Hollywood noise,â insisting no formal action had been taken against ABC or its affiliates.
The clash reflects a broader pattern. Throughout Trumpâs political career, late-night hosts have been among his most consistent cultural critics. Kimmel has frequently addressed immigration policy, healthcare promises and executive rhetoric, often blending satire with calls for accountability. Carreyâs artwork, shared widely on social media, amplified those critiques visually, portraying Trump in exaggerated forms that sparked both praise and outrage.
The segment arrived amid heightened political tension, with Trumpâs approval ratings under strain from ongoing controversies. Public reaction split along familiar lines: supporters viewed the takedown as further evidence of media hostility, while critics saw it as legitimate satire holding power to account. Kimmel defended comedy as protected speech, arguing it has long challenged authority in democratic societies.
Carrey, who largely stepped away from daily political painting, maintained that artists bear a responsibility to document perceived threats to democratic norms. Kimmel, returning from a brief earlier suspension, has kept political commentary central to his format, framing it as part of a free press.
As clips of the segment went viral, the exchange underscored the enduring intersection of entertainment and politics in the Trump era. Speeches are dissected in real time, artwork becomes viral commentary, and late-night monologues fuel national debate. Trumpâs responses â swift, personal and amplified on social media â keep the cycle spinning.
Whether the latest round marks a renewed escalation or simply another chapter in a long-running feud remains unclear. But one thing is evident: when Jimmy Kimmel and Jim Carrey turn their sights on Donald Trump, the president still answers â loudly.