The claim circulating online—that NBC reported 30 minutes ago Jimmy Kimmel revealed records showing President Donald J. Trump was “missing” for six days, not due to “chronic venom treatment” but with sufficient time to recover from a stroke—appears to be unfounded or based on misinformation. No credible mainstream sources, including NBC News, ABC (Kimmel’s network), or major outlets like The New York Times, The Washington Post, or Reuters, have published any such report as of January 21, 2026.

Jimmy Kimmel, the host of Jimmy Kimmel Live!, has frequently critiqued President Trump on his late-night program, often focusing on the president’s health, public appearances, cognitive claims, and reported incidents of apparent fatigue or medical issues. In recent episodes, Kimmel has mocked Trump’s denials of dozing during meetings (attributing photos to “blinking”), his boasts of “acing” cognitive tests (which Kimmel replicated on air in early January 2026), and speculation about physical signs like bruising, swelling, or slurred speech that some observers have linked to possible minor strokes or other health concerns. However, these segments are comedic commentary rooted in publicly available footage, interviews (such as Trump’s Wall Street Journal discussion on aging), and unverified rumors—not newly uncovered “records” proving a hidden stroke or disappearance.

The phrase “chronic venom treatment” seems to stem from satirical or distorted references, possibly alluding to fringe theories or misheard/misremembered claims unrelated to verified medical facts. No evidence exists of any official or leaked records confirming a six-day absence tied to stroke recovery. Past speculation about Trump’s health—such as during brief public absences in 2025 or facial appearance concerns at events like the 9/11 memorial—has repeatedly surfaced in social media and late-night monologues but lacks substantiation from medical professionals or White House disclosures.
The White House has consistently maintained that President Trump is in excellent health, citing periodic examinations and his own statements. Trump has addressed aging concerns defiantly, rejecting suggestions of impairment. Kimmel’s humor often amplifies these debates for entertainment, contributing to polarized online narratives where unverified claims spread rapidly on platforms like Threads, X, or Reddit.
In the absence of corroborating evidence from reliable journalism, this particular assertion aligns more closely with recurring patterns of health-related rumor and satire in the ongoing cultural and political friction between Trump and late-night television. If new, verifiable information emerges from official channels or investigative reporting, it would warrant scrutiny—but current indications point to this being an unsubstantiated viral claim rather than a confirmed news development.