SNL’s Jost Jabs Trump with Epstein “Mansion” Quip – President Demands NBC Shutdown in Midnight Meltdown
The studio went silent when Saturday Night Live co-anchor Colin Jost fearlessly called out President Donald Trump in front of 11.8 million viewers, revealing a dark punchline that left even producers stunned and the White House in full panic mode. During the November 8 “Weekend Update,” Jost skewered Trump’s Halloween trick-or-treat event—where the president and Melania distributed candy to children on the South Lawn to a remixed cover of Michael Jackson’s “Thriller”—with a razor-sharp zinger: “Just the perfect soundtrack to lure kids to a famous mansion.” The line, tying Jackson’s child abuse allegations to Trump’s documented ties with Jeffrey Epstein, drew an audible groan from the Studio 8H crowd, followed by nervous laughter and a quick cut to co-host Michael Che’s deadpan recovery: “If even the SNL audience groans, that joke might’ve landed in the wrong zip code.”
Within hours, Trump erupted on Truth Social at 1:12 a.m., posting a furious all-caps rant: “DISGUSTING PEDO JOKE by low-talent Colin Jost—SNL is DEAD! NBC must SHUT IT DOWN IMMEDIATELY or lose license! #MAGA.” The post, accompanied by a 2017 photo of Jost with Scarlett Johansson, racked up 42 million views in six hours, igniting protests outside 30 Rockefeller Plaza and a nationwide media firestorm. Insiders at Mar-a-Lago described Trump pacing the residence in a bathrobe, shouting at aides to “call the FCC now” and demanding NBCUniversal CEO Donna Langley be “fired by morning.” One source: “He was livid—kept replaying the clip, screaming ‘treasonous TV!’ This is bigger than 2019.”

The segment didn’t stop at the Epstein jab. Jost revived the “fake Melania” conspiracy—replaying side-by-side clips of Melania’s 2016 RNC speech mirroring Michelle Obama’s 2008 DNC address, then flashing the infamous 2018 “I really don’t care. Do you?” jacket worn en route to a migrant child detention center. “The only thing more staged than that speech was the First Lady’s smile,” Jost quipped, before dropping the hammer: “Trump says he aced a cognitive test. Great—now take one on honesty.” The audience roared, but the real explosion came online: #CancelJost trended with 18 million posts—MAGA users flooding NBC’s inbox with death threats—while #ProtectSNL countered with 35 million, led by Johansson tweeting: “My husband told a joke. The president threatened a network. Who’s the real snowflake?”
FCC Chair Brendan Carr, a Trump appointee, issued a cryptic statement at 4:07 a.m.: “Monitoring content that may violate decency standards.” NBCUniversal stock dipped 3.2% pre-market. Lorne Michaels, in a rare public comment, told Variety: “We’ve survived Nixon, Reagan, and two Bush administrations. We’ll survive this.” But the pressure is mounting—advertisers like Geico and Progressive pulled spots from the next episode, citing “brand safety concerns.”

Jost, 43, known for his dry, cerebral humor since joining SNL in 2014, doubled down on Instagram Live from his Manhattan apartment: “If joking about a president who partied with Epstein is ‘illegal,’ lock me up. I’ll bring the catapults—Trump’s favorite topic.” He then replayed Trump’s 2017 USS Gerald R. Ford speech obsessing over steam vs. electromagnetic catapults, adding, “He spent more time on naval engineering than border security.” The stream hit 2.1 million concurrent viewers.
The controversy revives Trump’s long war on SNL—dating to Alec Baldwin’s 2016–2020 impersonations, which prompted 2018 FCC complaints and 2019 license threats. But this time, the Epstein angle cuts deeper. Jost’s line referenced Trump’s 2002 New York magazine quote calling Epstein a “terrific guy” who “likes beautiful women… on the younger side,” plus flight logs showing Trump on the Lolita Express seven times pre-2006. Though no charges were filed against Trump, the association—amplified by 2025 declassified FBI files on Epstein’s plea deal—remains radioactive.
Protests swelled Sunday: 800 demonstrators outside NBC chanted “Free speech, not fear!” while 300 Trump supporters waved “Lock Up Jost” signs. AOC tweeted: “Trump threatens a comedian for a joke but pardons Binance fraudsters. Priorities.” Elon Musk chimed in: “Jost’s joke = bad taste. Trump’s reaction = worse optics. Both lose.”
As SNL preps its November 15 episode—rumored to feature a Jost-written sketch titled “Catapult Court”—the stakes are sky-high. Will NBC cave? Will the FCC act? Or will Jost’s mic drop become the defining First Amendment fight of Trump’s second term? One thing’s clear: What was meant to be comedy has become a political earthquake—and the aftershocks are just beginning.