Late-Night Hosts Deliver Coordinated Barrage Against Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Igniting Online Fury
In a rare display of synchronicity that has fueled speculation of behind-the-scenes coordination, Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Fallon turned their platforms into a one-two punch against Pete Hegseth, the embattled Defense Secretary, on a recent evening broadcast. What began as seemingly routine monologues quickly escalated into pointed, layered critiques, leaving audiences gasping and social media ablaze with clips that amassed millions of views overnight.
Reactions to ABC’s Pulling of ‘Colbert’ Reflect America’s Broad Divisions – The New York Times
Mr. Colbert, broadcasting from Los Angeles, opened his monologue with a measured tone that belied the sharpness to come. He began by recounting Mr. Hegseth’s recent controversies — the unauthorized sharing of sensitive military details in private chats, the accusations of workplace misconduct during his Fox News tenure, and the persistent questions about his qualifications for the Pentagon’s top civilian role.
“Pete Hegseth isn’t just leaking information,” Mr. Colbert said, pausing for effect as the studio audience leaned in. “He’s leaking so much, he should be wearing Depends to the Situation Room.”
The line drew a ripple of nervous laughter, but Mr. Colbert pressed on, stacking contradictions with precision: old clips of Mr. Hegseth decrying “leakers” during the Clinton email saga juxtaposed against his own Signal app misadventures.
Pete Hegseth: five things to know about the new US secretary of defense | Pete Hegseth | The Guardian
The room fell briefly silent when Mr. Colbert delivered his closer:
“We trusted him with the nuclear codes, but he can’t even keep a group text private. Folks, this isn’t defense — it’s defenseless.”
The audience erupted, a mix of applause and stunned chuckles echoing through the theater. Viewers at home described the moment as electric; one clip alone garnered over 5 million views on YouTube within hours.
Barely an hour later, on the East Coast, Mr. Fallon took the stage in New York with his signature affable grin. His segment started innocently enough — a light-hearted Thanksgiving riff, complete with musical cues and audience participation. But midway through, he pivoted smoothly to current events.
“Guys, I have to talk about this Pete Hegseth thing,” Mr. Fallon said, feigning wide-eyed surprise. “The guy gathers all the generals — pulls them from active zones, mind you — to lecture them on fitness and grooming. And then… crickets when he tries to land the tough-guy line.”
Tonight Show on NBC Cuts Back to Four Days Per Week, Drops Friday Show
Mr. Fallon replayed the now-infamous clip of Mr. Hegseth addressing the brass, his voice booming about “no more fat soldiers.” The audience groaned in recognition.

“Come on, Pete,” Mr. Fallon quipped, smiling through the bite, “if you’re gonna call out the troops, at least make sure the punchline doesn’t fall flat.”
He followed with a savage teardown: impressions of flustered admirals, mock texts from the infamous Signal chats popping on screen.
“Imagine being a four-star general, summoned across the world, just to hear, ‘Do some crunches!’ I’d be like, ‘Sir, yes sir… and pass the resignation letter.’”
Gasps mingled with roaring laughter as the bit built, the studio feeding off Mr. Fallon’s energy. It wasn’t overt rage — it was the smiling assassin approach, skewering Mr. Hegseth’s grievances about late-night comedy itself, noting how the secretary had once complained that hosts like them were too soft on national security.
Insiders familiar with the productions, speaking on condition of anonymity, described a palpable tension behind the scenes at the Pentagon. Mr. Hegseth, known for his combative Fox News persona, was reportedly watching both shows live from his residence.
“He was pacing furiously,” one source said. “Phone calls flew — angry demands to networks, aides scrambling to draft responses.”
Clips spread like wildfire on social media, amplified by partisan accounts on both sides. Conservative commentators decried a “coordinated hit job,” while liberal users hailed it as overdue accountability.

Jimmy Fallon Reacts to Stephen Colbert’s Suspension: “WTF?”
The timing raised eyebrows: Colbert and Fallon, back-to-back takedowns, echoing similar themes of hypocrisy and incompetence. Was it coincidence, or a subtle nod among late-night writers weary of threats to their industry?
Neither host acknowledged the other explicitly, but the effect was undeniable — a viral overdrive that dominated headlines the next morning.
In an era when late-night television has become a cultural battleground, this double-barreled assault underscored its enduring power. Mr. Hegseth, already under scrutiny for a series of scandals, now faces not just policy backlash but the merciless glare of comedy.
As one viewer posted online:
“They didn’t just roast him — they exposed him.”
The firestorm shows no signs of abating. For Mr. Hegseth, the night may have been a meltdown; for the hosts, it was a master class in timing.