🔥 BREAKING: Trump ERUPTS After Jimmy Kimmel & Arnold Schwarzenegger HUMILIATE Him LIVE On TV — The Roast That Left the Studio in SHOCK 💥
NEW YORK — It began, as so many modern political conflicts do, not with legislation or diplomacy, but with television ratings.
In January 2017, as Donald J. Trump prepared to be sworn in as president of the United States, he turned his attention to an old preoccupation: the audience numbers for The Celebrity Apprentice, the reality television franchise he had left behind. His successor as host was Arnold Schwarzenegger, the actor, bodybuilding icon and former Republican governor of California. Within days, Mr. Trump was publicly attacking the show’s performance, framing its ratings as a personal affront.

“Wow, the ratings are in,” Mr. Trump wrote on Twitter shortly before his inauguration. “Arnold Schwarzenegger got swamped… by comparison to the ratings machine, DJT.” It was a striking moment: the president-elect of the United States publicly measuring his relevance through Nielsen numbers.
That opening salvo set off a feud that would stretch across years, migrate from Twitter to late-night television, and ultimately find its most visible stage on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” — where Mr. Schwarzenegger became one of the former president’s most relentless and effective critics.
The rivalry escalated in February 2017 at the National Prayer Breakfast, a venue traditionally reserved for bipartisan civility. Mr. Trump used his remarks to mock Mr. Schwarzenegger’s performance on The Apprentice, telling the audience that the show’s ratings had “gone right down the tubes.” He went further, asking religious leaders to “pray for Arnold” because of the numbers — an unusual blending of personal grievance and presidential platform.
Mr. Schwarzenegger’s response was swift and viral. In a video posted hours later, he proposed a role reversal. “Why don’t we switch jobs?” he said. “You take over TV since you’re such an expert in ratings, and I’ll take over your job. Then people can finally sleep comfortably again.” The line spread rapidly across social media, drawing millions of views and cementing Mr. Schwarzenegger as a rare Republican willing to openly mock a sitting president from the same party.
The feud did not remain confined to social media. It soon became a recurring subject on late-night television, particularly on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” where Mr. Kimmel, a frequent critic of Mr. Trump, gave Mr. Schwarzenegger a national platform to sharpen his attacks. The pairing proved potent: Mr. Kimmel’s sardonic humor combined with Mr. Schwarzenegger’s blunt delivery produced moments that resonated far beyond entertainment.
In one appearance, Mr. Schwarzenegger joked about Mr. Trump’s fitness, suggesting that if the president wanted exercise advice, he should “run around himself three times.” In another, he held a sword on stage — a theatrical callback to his movie roles — and labeled Mr. Trump “the worst president in American history.” The audience laughed, but the ridicule carried an unmistakable political message.
Behind the humor lay a deeper critique. Mr. Schwarzenegger, who had governed California during a period of divided government, framed his opposition to Mr. Trump not as partisan betrayal but as a defense of democratic norms. On Mr. Kimmel’s show, he repeatedly accused the former president of inflaming division, undermining institutions and governing through grievance rather than policy.

Mr. Trump, for his part, appeared unable to disengage. He continued to attack Mr. Schwarzenegger long after the ratings dispute had lost any practical relevance. When Mr. Schwarzenegger announced in March 2017 that he was leaving The Celebrity Apprentice, citing the toxic political climate surrounding Mr. Trump, the president responded by claiming he had been “fired” because of “bad, pathetic ratings.”
Mr. Schwarzenegger’s reply was concise and devastating: “I’m still here. Want to compare tax returns?” At a time when Mr. Trump was refusing to release his financial records, the comment landed with force.
The feud resurfaced repeatedly in subsequent years, often triggered by moments that should have been politically innocuous. Even ceremonial events, such as the annual White House turkey pardon — a tradition usually marked by harmless jokes — became fodder for late-night satire, as Mr. Kimmel mocked Mr. Trump’s tendency to turn every appearance into a self-congratulatory monologue.
What distinguished this conflict from typical late-night mockery was its persistence and personal nature. Mr. Schwarzenegger was not merely a comedian or commentator; he was a fellow celebrity, a former Republican officeholder and, in Mr. Trump’s eyes, a rival who had dared to step into his television legacy.
For Mr. Trump, the attacks often provoked late-night social media responses, reinforcing an image of a leader unable to ignore criticism from entertainers. For Mr. Kimmel and Mr. Schwarzenegger, the exchanges offered a way to translate political critique into popular culture, reaching audiences that might otherwise disengage from conventional political debate.
Years later, the feud stands as more than a collection of viral clips. It illustrates how entertainment, celebrity and politics have become inseparable in the Trump era — and how a late-night host and a former action-movie star became unlikely yet enduring antagonists to a president who never stopped caring about the spotlight.