Jimmy Fallon is on the corner of Jimmy Kimmel.
In his monologue on Thursday’s episode of “The Tonight Show starring Jimmy Fallon,” Fallon began by reaching the point.
After joking, he showed his support for Kimmel after awakening to a text message from his father, who thought his show had been cancelled.
“To be honest with you guys, I don’t know what’s going on, and no one else will. But I know Jimmy Kimmel. “Many people are worried that we won’t keep saying what we want to say or that we’ll be censored, but I’m going to cover the president’s trip to the UK.
So he ranted a rumour about President Trump, but all the negative comments were replaced by narration that complemented the president. For example, when Fallon began talking about Trump’s hair, he heard the sound saying he looked better than Conrad in Summer’s ‘I’m Pretty’. However, after the sketch was finished, he went back to mocking Trump without narration.
The first guest of the evening was Jude Law. He was asked about how his role predicted the future in the past. The law “hopefully, if there is truth in it, we predict that tomorrow night, the evening after that, and all the other good people presenting these television shows will be broadcast.”
On Wednesday, ABC pulled “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” It aired indefinitely due to comments made by Kimmel about Charlie Kirk’s alleged murderer. After the decision was announced, Trump hinted that Fallon’s late-night show was also in danger.
“Great news for America: The rated Jimmy Kimmel Shaw has been cancelled,” Trump wrote on True Social Wednesday (despite the fact that the show has not been cancelled). “Congratulations to ABC for having the courage to do what they have to do in the end. Kimmel has zero talent and has a worse rating than Colbert if that’s possible.
This week wasn’t the first time Trump has called Fallon. In many true social posts in July, the president denied blaming the end of “The Late Show,” saying, “The Tonight Show” and “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” It is located in the chopping block.
“Next time will be the less talented Jimmy Kimmel, then the weaker, very unsettling Jimmy Fallon,” he wrote at the time. “The only real question is who will go first? Show biz and TV is a very simple business. If you can get a rating, you can say something. Otherwise you will always be a victim. Colbert will become his own victim and the other two will follow.”
Seth Myers, Stephen Colbert and John Stewart all took on Trump and the FCC on Thursday night.