KIMMEL & COLBERT’S STEREO ROAST EXPLOSION: TRUMP MELTDOWN OVER ‘BORING’ JABS & OSCARS FIASCO – CROWNED KING OR CANCELLED CLOWN? LATE-NIGHT WARS BACKFIRE ON PREZ!
In a late-night coup that’s left the comedy world cackling and the White House fuming, Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert pulled off the ultimate crossover event: a simultaneous roast of President Donald Trump across rival networks, dubbed “Brooklyn Week.” On September 30, 2025, Kimmel sauntered onto *The Late Show* in New York, while Colbert strutted into Kimmel’s Hollywood studio—coordinated chaos that had Trump rage-posting at 3 a.m. like a toddler denied his nap. From Oscars grudge marathons to bleeped-out mic drops, the duo flipped the script on Trump’s censorship threats, turning his “low IQ” jabs into comedy gold. Is this heroic pushback or just bait for the baiter-in-chief? As viewership spiked 35%, one thing’s clear: The prez got played, and the punchlines are still landing.

The beef traces back to Trump’s vendettas against the funnymen who’ve skewered him since 2016. Colbert’s *The Late Show* got the axe from CBS in July 2025, officially for “financial restructuring” amid Paramount’s $16M settlement with Trump over a doctored *60 Minutes* clip. But insiders whispered payback for Colbert dubbing it a “big fat bribe” to grease the Skydance sale. “Complicated financial settlement with a sitting official? That’s bribery in legalese,” Colbert quipped days prior, his satirical sting landing like a subpoena. Kimmel fared no better: ABC suspended him in September after FCC chair Brendan Carr menaced the network’s license over “indecent” Trump roasts. Trump’s Truth Social victory lap? “I absolutely love that Colbert got fired. His talent was even less than his ratings. Kimmel’s next!” Cue the cross-network rebellion: Two hosts, one grudge, zero fear.
Brooklyn Week kicked off with Kimmel on Colbert’s stage, reading Trump’s Oscar meltdown verbatim: “Has there ever been a worse host than Jimmy Kimmel? His opening was that of a less than average person trying too hard…” The crowd howled as Kimmel deadpanned, “Thank you for watching, President Trump. Isn’t it past your jail time?” Jodie Foster doubled over; Robert Downey Jr. fist-pumped. Cut to Colbert on Kimmel’s set, reenacting Trump’s Asia tour gift haul—a gold crown from South Korea’s Yoon Suk Yeol, symbolizing “the golden age of the Korea-US alliance.” “They’re buttering him up like a Thanksgiving turkey,” Colbert smirked. “Gold burger? Gold TV? Next: Spray-paint Melania gold—she died in *Goldfinger* for less.” The sync? Perfect—both screens split for a stereo “Go f*** yourself, Donald!” from Colbert, bleeped but beaming nationwide.

Trump’s obsession? Pathological. Seven months post-2024 Oscars, he reposted Kimmel clips with “What a dope!”—confusing Jimmy with Al Pacino’s envelope flub. “He thinks this is his house,” Kimmel fired back. “You’re not OJ; you’re Kato Kaelin.” Colbert piled on Trump’s “low IQ” challenge to AOC and Jasmine Crockett: “Pattern? Women of color. But hey, Trump’s brain is bigly—holds all five of his rally jokes: Crooked Hillary, Sleepy Joe, fake news…” The duo dusted off classics: Kimmel’s Biff Tannen parallel (“Rooting for the bully? I’m Team Marty”), Colbert’s 2017 Nambia-murderers skit (“Muterers from Nambia stealing our hamburgers!”). Even David Letterman emerged from retirement: “You can’t fire comics for sucking up to an authoritarian.”
Backlash? Trump’s FCC threats boomeranged—Nielsen clocked 12.7M combined viewers, up 40% from averages. AOC retweeted: “Late-night heroes exposing the clown car.” MAGA howled “censorship!” but tuned in anyway. Colbert’s finale? “I’m the martyr—view’s fantastic. I can see Mar-a-Lago.” Kimmel capped: “Trump’s boring. We? We’re just getting started.”
This stereo smackdown isn’t laughs—it’s lightning in a bottle, comedy as coup. Crowned king of grudges or cancelled clown?