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Jimmy Kimmel Got Paid $16 MILLION Yearly for NOTHING | The Gateway Pundit

Credit: Jimmy Kimmel Live Youtube Screenshot

Jimmy Kimmel’s downfall was not sudden, nor was it really about one offensive remark regarding Charlie Kirk’s assassination. 

The truth is, ABC had been looking for a reason to push him out. Kimmel’s contract, set to expire next year, gave the network an easy out: if he became a liability to the company’s image, he could be suspended. 

That is precisely what happened. The Charlie Kirk controversy was only the excuse.

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For years, Kimmel collected a staggering $16 million annually, while his ratings were collapsing. 

“Jimmy Kimmel Live!” fell from nearly two million viewers in January 2025 to just 1.1 million by August, trailing his late-night competitors.

Those numbers told ABC all it needed to know. Why keep paying one of television’s most enormous salaries when the show could no longer justify the cost?

Kimmel’s political imbalance only exacerbated the situation. 

According to NewsBusters, he hosted just one Republican guest in three years—Mike Lindell, who was mocked by being forced into a claw machine. 

By contrast, Kimmel welcomed 13 left-leaning guests this year alone. His monologues became partisan screeds: 1,128 jokes about Donald Trump in 2025, compared to just 26 about Joe Biden. 

Nearly 97% of his political jokes targeted conservatives. Kimmel wasn’t a comedian anymore. He was a political activist with a studio audience.

The network could tolerate this bias when ratings were high. 

But once his audience shrank and his public reputation soured, Kimmel no longer looked like an asset. 

His comments about Charlie Kirk’s death—claiming the “MAGA gang” tried to spin the murder—only accelerated the inevitable. 

ABC didn’t suspend him because of “free speech” or political pressure. They suspended him because his contract allowed them to whenever he embarrassed the company.

The hypocrisy is hard to ignore. 

Kimmel mocked conservatives endlessly, misled viewers about one of the most shocking assassinations in modern American history, and still got paid millions for it. 

Meanwhile, his audience dwindled, his jokes lost relevance, and his public image grew toxic.

Even within liberal circles, Kimmel had become hard to defend. 

As Roger Stone bluntly put it, “Kimmel’s greatest crime was that he wasn’t funny, and that his rhetoric often veered into the hateful. He won’t be missed.” 

That sentiment resonates across the spectrum: Kimmel was expensive, polarizing, and ultimately replaceable.

ABC framed his suspension as indefinite, but the writing is on the wall. 

His contract was nearly up anyway, and the network was already preparing for life after Kimmel. The Charlie Kirk controversy was simply the final straw.

Jimmy Kimmel didn’t lose his show because of one comment. He lost it because his time was already up.

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