So, what do you get when Jimmy Kimmel’s fiery return to late-night TV aligns with a cosmic Uranus-Pluto square shaking up our collective sense of rebellion and transformation? A ratings explosion that’s part meteoric, part meteoric with a side of pure, unfiltered sass. Tuesday night, after a suspension that had tongues wagging and eyebrows raised across the nation, Jimmy Kimmel Live! not only bounced back but smashed its own records — pulling in a jaw-dropping 6.26 million viewers, despite being blacked out in nearly a quarter of American homes. It’s as if the stars themselves were cheering on Jimmy’s comeback, echoing his monologue’s fiery call for free speech, political thunderbolts directed squarely at Trump, and a rallying cry against “un-American” threats. With YouTube numbers soaring past 15 million views and a social media storm brewing, this isn’t just a comeback — it’s a cosmic event with ratings that dare you to look away. Ready to dive deeper into the celestial drama and the terrestrial uproar? LEARN MORE
The return of Jimmy Kimmel Live! from an ABC-imposed suspension drew a big audience Tuesday night — the show’s largest ever for a regular episode.
Despite not airing in about 23 percent of the country’s TV homes — due to blackouts at 66 ABC affiliates owned by Nexstar and Sinclair — Tuesday’s episode drew 6.26 million viewers, based on preliminary Nielsen figures. That’s the largest tune-in (save for a couple of special episodes) in Jimmy Kimmel Live!’s 22-year history and more than three times higher than the show’s average for the second quarter of 2025, before Kimmel’s annual summer break when guest hosts fill in for him.
Tuesday’s installment also drew a 0.87 rating among adults 18-49 (equivalent to about 1.18 million viewers in that age group), its best mark for a regularly scheduled episode in more than a decade (since March 2015). The Nielsen numbers do not include the “big data” component of the ratings service’s measurement that went into effect this month; those figures will be available in a couple of days.
From April to June, which included the first week of Kimmel’s summer break, Jimmy Kimmel Live! averaged 1.77 million viewers over seven days of viewing (not including streaming), including the Nexstar and Sinclair stations that are now holding back the show.
ABC also posted the first 28 minutes of Tuesday’s show to YouTube shortly after they aired; as of publication time, the video had surpassed 15 million views (YouTube counts 30 seconds of or more of a video playing as a view), a record for a Kimmel monologue. Including other social media platforms, ABC says the monologue has gathered 26 million views so far.
In an 18-minute monologue that opened Tuesday’s show, Kimmel was contrite about the remarks about conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s killer that got him suspended — “it was never my intention to make light of the murder of a young man. I don’t think there’s anything funny about it,” he said in part — and expressed gratitude for the groundswell of support from across the political spectrum for his right to speak on the show without the threat of government interference. He also called threats from Federal Communications Commission head Brendan Carr to investigate stations airing the show “un-American” and had harsh words for President Donald Trump, who has frequently said he would like to see Kimmel’s show off the air.
“The president made it very clear he wants to see me and the hundreds of people who work here get fired. Our leader celebrates Americans losing their livelihoods because he can’t take a joke,” Kimmel said. “He was somehow able to squeeze [Stephen] Colbert out of CBS, then he turned his sights on me, and now he’s openly rooting for NBC to fire Jimmy Fallon and Seth Meyers and the hundreds of Americans who work for their shows who don’t make millions of dollars. I hope that if that happens, or if there’s even a hint of it happening, you’ll be 10 times as loud as you were this week.”
The ratings surge for Kimmel mirrors that of The Late Show With Stephen Colbert following CBS’ announcement that it would end the show in 2026. Colbert’s first week of new shows after the July announcement averaged 3.06 million viewers over three days (again, not including streaming), 27 percent higher than the prior week.
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