It sent shockwaves through Hollywood when Jimmy Kimmelâs late-night show, âJimmy Kimmel Live!,â was taken off the air following controversy over comments made by the host about the killing of right-wing commentator Charlie Kirk. Many in the industry, citing alleged pressure by the Trump administrationâs FCC, called for the showâs network, ABC, to reverse its decision. But Kimmel is just the latest in a long line of television pundits and cable hosts (including Stephen Colbert this summer) who have faced criticism.
Jimmy Kimmel
The comments âled a group of ABC-affiliated stations to say it would not air the show and provoked some ominous comments from a top federal regulator,â said the AP. The decision, made by TV station conglomerate Nexstar, came hours after FCC Chair Brendan Carr âsuggested Jimmy Kimmel should be suspended and said, âWe can do this the easy way or the hard wayââ during an interview, said CNN. The decision to ax Kimmelâs show âraised serious First Amendment concernsâ among free speech watchdog groups.
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Brian Kilmeade
Brian Kilmeade, a morning host on the Fox News show âFox & Friends,â garnered a barrage of criticism after asserting on-air this month that mentally ill homeless people should be executed. Homeless people should either accept help or âdecide that [they] are going to be locked up in jail. Thatâs the way it has to be now,â said co-host Lawrence Jones during a discussion about a North Carolina woman allegedly murdered by a mentally ill homeless man. âOr involuntary lethal injection or something. Just kill âem,â Kilmeade replied.
Anger toward Kilmeade didnât occur âuntil a few days later, when clips of the comments spread quickly on social media,â The New York Times said. Once the video made the rounds, though, âheavy criticism followedâ and âsome called for his dismissal.â Amid the uproar, Kilmeade offered an apology days later. He âwrongly saidâ homeless people should get lethal injections, and apologized for the âextremely callous remark,â Kilmeade said. However, some thought the apology didnât go far enough and urged Fox to fire him regardless.
Jimmy Fallon
While Jimmy Fallon may be known for his consistently laughing and bubbly personality on âThe Tonight Show,â the host came under fire in 2023 after a report from Rolling Stone seemingly documented the showâs problematic workplace. The show has been a âtoxic workplace for years â far outside the boundaries of whatâs considered normal in the high-pressure world of late-night TV,â said Rolling Stoneâs report.
This was due to Fallonâs âerratic behavior, and has trickled down to its ever-changing leadership teams â nine showrunners in the past nine years â who seemingly donât know how to say no to Jimmy,â said Rolling Stone. The showâs employees claimed they were âbelittled and intimidated by their bosses, including Fallon himself.â After Rolling Stone published its story, Fallon reportedly âapologized to his colleaguesâ during a Zoom call and said he âdid not intend to âcreate that type of atmosphere for the show,ââ said CNN.
Chris Cuomo
CNN anchor Chris Cuomo was a mainstay on the network for years. But his career with the channel came to an end in 2021 after Cuomo allegedly âaided his brother, former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, when the then-governor was accused of sexual harassment,â said CNN. The network fired Cuomo over conflict-of-interest concerns because there was ânew information that came to light about his involvement with his brotherâs defense.â
After being fired, Cuomo claimed CNN used him as a scapegoat and sued the network because it ârepeatedly breached its agreement,â lawyers for the anchor said in a lawsuit. Cuomo became âuntouchable in the world of broadcast journalismâ because of CNNâs âefforts to tar and feather him.â But Cuomo eventually landed another job and currently hosts âCuomoâ on NewsNation.
Ellen DeGeneres
âThe Ellen DeGeneres Showâ became a daytime television staple during its 19-season run, with the eponymous host always signing off by urging her viewers to âbe kind to one another.â But in 2020, this came crashing down as âDeGeneres and several senior staffers have been accused by current and former employees of fostering a toxic work environment,â said Entertainment Weekly.
The allegations of workplace misconduct and bullying arose at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, and crew members were âdistressed and outraged over their treatment from top producers amid the coronavirus pandemic,â said Variety. The crew members claimed they âreceived no written communication about the status of their working hours, pay, or inquiries about their mental and physical health from producers for over a month.â Several years after the controversy arose, in 2024, DeGeneres claimed she âgot kicked out of show business for being mean.â
Matt Lauer
Matt Lauer was one of the most recognizable names on television for years as a co-host of NBCâs âToday.â But his career seemed to be irreparably damaged in 2017 after numerous women âidentified themselves as victims of sexual harassment by Lauer, and their stories have been corroborated by friends or colleagues that they told at the time,â said Variety. This conduct allegedly ranged from gifting a âcolleague a sex toy as a presentâ to a time when he summoned a âfemale employee to his office, and then dropped his pants.â
NBC fired the host after the allegations came to light. A later investigation found that the âallegations were credible, but that the conduct in question was never specifically reported to human resources or to senior NBC News executives,â said NPR. But at least one other media individual, former CNN anchor Don Lemon, thinks Lauer could make a comeback despite his conduct. Lauer âcan set his own courseâ in digital news media, Lemon said.
Billy Bush
As a nephew of former President George H.W. Bush and cousin of former President George W. Bush, Billy Bushâs last name already made him famous, and he gained further notoriety as a correspondent for âAccess Hollywoodâ and âToday.â But Bush found himself in the middle of a significant controversy in 2016, when a resurfaced 2005 clip from âAccess Hollywoodâ showed him having a lewd conversation with Donald Trump.
The infamous tape, in which Trump boasts that he can grab women âby the pussyâ because âwhen youâre a star, they let you do it,â also damaged Bushâs image. Bush was suspended by âTodayâ and soon afterwards fired. But had that tape âleaked out when it actually occurred in 2005, I wouldâve been fired for an entirely different reason â killing their cash cow,â Bush said on Rob Loweâs podcast in July 2025.â Trump âwas a protected, revered source. He was a hundred million dollars in profit for NBC.â