Jimmy Kimmel Says Heâs Been Thinking About Leaving Late Night
Jimmy Kimmel is opening up about his future in late-night television, and it sounds like the longtime host has been seriously thinking about what comes next.
In a new interview with Vulture, the âJimmy Kimmel Live!â host reflected on the state of late-night TV and revealed that the recent end of Stephen Colbertâs âThe Late Showâ has made him think more deeply about his own career.
Kimmel, 58, said he originally expected to step away from his ABC show years ago.
âSix years ago, I told them I thought I was done when Biden was president,â Kimmel said, per People.
While that timeline came and went, Kimmel admitted Colbertâs departure has left him feeling uncertain about the future of the genre.
âI feel a little bit defeated by it,â he said. âIn a lot of ways, I feel like Iâm looking at my own future.â
The comedian also pushed back on the idea that audiences have simply stopped watching late-night television. Kimmel argued that hosts are reaching millions of viewers online across social media and streaming platforms.
âThere are far more people watching late-night TV than there ever were,â he said before adding, âWeâre not just dying of natural causes. Weâre being poisoned.â
Despite the uncertainty, âJimmy Kimmel Live!â is expected to remain on the air through 2027.
Jimmy Kimmel Says Heâs âTiredâ but Doesnât Know Whatâs Next
Kimmelâs longtime producer, Erin Irwin, told Vulture that conversations about leaving have been happening behind the scenes for quite some time.
âHeâs been talking about leaving for a while,â Irwin said.
While she hopes Kimmel stays through the 2028 presidential election cycle, she admitted sheâs not sure heâll want to continue that long.
âI donât know if Jimmy can do it for that long,â she said. âHeâs tired.â
For his part, Kimmel said he doesnât have a clear plan for retirement but knows heâs craving something many people spend years working toward.
âProfessionally, I have no idea what Iâm going to do after this,â he said. âFreedom is what I want more than anything. I want to be able to go fishing because the fishingâs good.â
Per Forbes, Kimmel also revealed that he signed only a one-year extension with ABC in December instead of his typical three-year deal. He said the future of late-night television feels uncertain because âeverything is so tumultuous.â
The host additionally questioned CBSâ explanation for canceling Colbertâs show. According to Forbes, Kimmel accused the network of using âmade-up numbersâ and challenged claims that âThe Late Showâ was losing $40 million annually. He also said he has been told âquite specificallyâ that âJimmy Kimmel Live!â remains profitable for ABC.
Kimmel Reflects on a Controversy He Still Thinks About
Elsewhere in the interview, Kimmel revisited one of the most controversial moments of his career.
According to Entertainment Weekly, the late-night host said the one apology he regrets making involved a 2013 âKidsâ Tableâ segment in which a child jokingly suggested âkilling everyone in Chinaâ as a solution to the national debt. The joke sparked backlash at the time and led Kimmel to issue a public apology.
Looking back, Kimmel said he only apologized because of concerns surrounding Disney and ABC.
âFor the good of the Disney company, I took that bullet,â he said.
The comedian added that while he generally believes in apologizing when necessary, he still values creative independence and does not want network executives dictating what he can or cannot say.
âOne of the things we talked about when I first got suspended was that I canât do this show if Iâm going to be micromanaged,â Kimmel said.


