đ„ HOT NEWS: Trump reignites his feud with Jimmy Kimmel onstage â and Kimmelâs response flips the spotlight back on Trump âĄ.CT

Jimmy Kimmel opened his show with jokes about warm Los Angeles weather and kids obsessing over the number â67ââthen slammed the brakes into something darker: a Trump rally speech in Pennsylvania that, in Kimmelâs words, barely resembled an economic message at all.
Kimmel described the event as long, rambling, and stuffed with familiar rally catchphrases â the kind of speech where the topic is âthe economyâ in name only, while the energy is pure grievance.

Late-night recaps noted the Pennsylvania appearance stretched close to three hours, and Kimmel zeroed in on what landed as the most tone-deaf line of all: Trump advising struggling families that their kids donât need so many things â âa couple dollsâ and âone or two pencils.â
To Kimmel, it sounded like a billionaire in a gold-plated room lecturing working parents about school supplies.
But the monologue wasnât mainly about awkward budgeting advice. It was about how quickly the speech slid into offensiveness.

Kimmel highlighted Trumpâs repeated claims about support from Black voters, mocking the way Trump framed it and calling it insulting. Then he moved to the moment that triggered an international backlash: Trumpâs derogatory comments about Somalis and Somalia.
This wasnât just late-night exaggeration. Reuters reported that Somaliaâs defence minister publicly condemned Trumpâs remarks after Trump insulted Somali migrants at the Pennsylvania rally, describing Somalia in demeaning terms and leaning into stereotypes around crime and piracy.

The blowback wasnât subtle â it was government-level pushback, with Somalia rejecting what it viewed as sweeping, racist generalizations.
And just when the rally couldnât get more volatile, Kimmel said Trump pivoted to one of his favorite hobbies: picking fights with comedians.
Onstage, Trump reportedly took a jab at late-night hosts and singled out Kimmel again â treating the host like a recurring villain in his political storyline.
Kimmelâs response was basically: âYouâve mentioned me multiple times in a few days⊠Iâm thinking about you too.â The subtext was obvious: Trump canât stop watching, canât stop reacting, and canât stop feeding the machine that mocks him.

Then came the part that made Kimmel drop the jokes and raise his voice: Trumpâs health.
According to reporting summarized by The Daily Beast, Kimmel went ânuclearâ over Trumpâs condition and mocked a lengthy Truth Social post where Trump insisted heâs doing great, works harder than any president, and even bragged about taking multiple cognitive tests â as if taking three of them is a flex instead of a red flag.
Kimmel compared the postâs length to famous historic text, and ridiculed the idea that repeated testing signals strength rather than concern.

Kimmel also referenced the recurring public speculation about Trumpâs visible hand bruising and bandaging â something that has drawn attention in photos and entertainment coverage throughout 2025.
Whether itâs serious or benign, the political problem is perception: when a leader is defensive about health while visibly âcovering something up,â people donât relax â they speculate harder.

By the end of Kimmelâs segment, the message was clear: Trump didnât deliver a normal campaign-style address. He delivered a swirling cocktail of grievance, provocation, and self-mythology â with real-world fallout attached. The economy didnât dominate the story. The insults did. The controversy did. The health brag did.
And in late-night terms, thatâs the worst kind of âdominanceâ: not controlling the narrative â becoming it.