Kimmel’s On-Air Critique of FBI Director Triggers Broadcaster Pullbacks and a New Fight Over Speech
WASHINGTON — A late-night monologue that began as a jab at the leadership of the Federal Bureau of Investigation escalated, within days, into a national debate over political pressure, corporate caution and the boundaries of criticism in American broadcast media.

On Sept. 15, 2025, the host Jimmy Kimmel devoted part of his opening segment to the federal response to the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, whose killing had already shaken the country and intensified partisan mistrust.
In that monologue, Kimmel criticized the F.B.I. director, Kash Patel, describing the bureau’s public handling of the case as disorganized and evasive — a comparison meant to communicate incompetence without making a formal allegation. The line spread rapidly online, and by Sept. 17 ABC temporarily suspended “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” while executives reviewed the fallout.
The reaction did not stop with the network. Nexstar Media Group, the country’s largest owner of local television stations, announced it would pre-empt the program indefinitely on its ABC affiliates, citing the remarks and the broader climate of escalating threats and hostility surrounding political media. Soon after, Sinclair Broadcast Group also pre-empted the show in many markets, a move that ensured the dispute would not remain confined to Hollywood or the usual late-night audience.
Fueling the controversy was a parallel argument about government influence. FCC Chairman Brendan Carr publicly criticized Kimmel’s comments and warned that station owners “can find ways to take action” or face “additional work for the FCC,” language that free-speech advocates interpreted as a regulatory threat. Carr’s posture prompted pointed questions on Capitol Hill and drew criticism from Democrats and some Republicans, who said the commission should not be seen as leaning on broadcasters over content.
To supporters of Kimmel, the episode looked like a demonstration of how quickly corporate media can bend when a regulator signals displeasure. Senator Elizabeth Warren, among others, argued that broadcasters weighing major mergers or license renewals may feel special pressure to avoid provoking Washington.
To station groups, the episode was framed as a programming and community-safety decision — a reaction to audience backlash, advertiser concerns and a political environment in which media employees have increasingly become targets. Sinclair later pointed to a shooting incident at an ABC station in Sacramento during the broader controversy as part of its rationale for taking a harder line on “responsible broadcasting.”
ABC restored the show after its brief suspension, but the blackout persisted in several large markets, illustrating the fragmented reality of American television: even national programming can be reshaped by a handful of powerful local owners.
Patel, who was confirmed as FBI director in early 2025, has defended his stewardship — including travel-cost policies and operational changes — while facing sharp questioning in Congress about transparency and politicization.
What remained, after the jokes and the statements, was a simpler question that neither side could fully neutralize: when political figures and regulators condemn content, and companies react immediately, is that ordinary reputational risk management — or the soft edge of censorship?