In a stunning display of tone-deaf self-pity, Jimmy Kimmel Live producer and Kimmel’s wife, Molly McNearney, took to a podcast this week to recount her family’s “suffering” after her husband’s ABC show was temporarily suspended — fallout from the late-night host’s on-air fabrication about the assassination of Charlie Kirk.
Rather than acknowledging the obvious — that spreading false claims about an assassination was wildly reckless — McNearney painted herself, her husband, and even their children as victims of President Donald Trump.
“Jimmy and I both believed that night that the show was never coming back,” McNearney said on the We Can Do Hard Things podcast, adding that their 11-year-old daughter burst into tears upon hearing the show had been suspended.
“Our son asked if the president had done this,” she continued. “And we said, ‘Yes.’”
It’s hard to imagine a more revealing window into the self-absorption of the Hollywood elite — a household where a multimillionaire late-night comedian lies on national television about a political assassination, faces temporary consequences, and then assures his children that Donald Trump personally shut down his show.
From Reckless Lies to Manufactured Martyrdom
Despite claims by his contemporaries and fan base, Kimmel wasn’t suspended for his “courage,” “truth-telling,” or “standing up to power.” He was suspended because he broadcast a dangerous, baseless claim that any reasonable journalist or entertainer should know is beyond the pale.
But rather than grappling with that ethical collapse, McNearney’s retelling transforms her husband into the protagonist of a political tragedy — a brave comic silenced by a vengeful president, complete with hovering helicopters and tearful children clutching stuffed animals.
It’s Hollywood’s favorite script: the liberal martyr under siege. And McNearney delivers it with stunning sincerity, as if the Kimmels are the Kennedy family in exile rather than two media moguls whose network took them off-air to mitigate the fallout from their own carelessness.
It’s the same performative outrage that has defined much of Hollywood’s relationship with Donald Trump — moral panic as branding, victimhood as virtue. But in this case, it’s more than performative. It’s emotionally irresponsible.
Parenting Through Paranoia
Even more troubling than the self-pity is what this episode reveals about McNearney’s parenting. Rather than reassuring her children about their father’s suspension, she and Kimmel confirmed their son’s fear that “the president had done this.” In doing so, they handed down their own paranoia to their kids, teaching them to view politics as a source of personal threat.
A child who believes the President of the United States is personally out to get their parents isn’t just being misled — they’re being frightened in a way that could linger for years. It’s the emotional equivalent of creating a boogeyman under the bed instead of turning on the light and proving there’s nothing there. In any other family, such behavior would be considered deeply irresponsible. In Hollywood, it’s apparently a podcast anecdote.
The Bigger Picture: When Media Privilege Meets Delusion
McNearney’s comments also highlight how insulated the entertainment class has become from accountability. When a steelworker loses his job, it’s not “Trump’s fault.” When a comedian faces suspension for false statements on national television, it’s not censorship — it’s consequence.
But in Hollywood, consequence is treated as persecution. The Kimmels seem unable to imagine a world in which their own actions might have brought trouble upon them. In their worldview, there are only heroes and villains — and the villain is always the same: Donald Trump.
Meanwhile, McNearney laments that her relationships with Trump-supporting family members have “strained,” as if sending them late-night political essays begging them not to vote for a Republican were an act of humility rather than condescension.
“I’ve sent many emails to my family, like right before the election, saying, ‘I’m begging you. Here’s the 10 reasons not to vote for this guy. Please don’t.’ And I either got ignored by 90% of them or got truly insane response from a few,” she said.
Perhaps it never occurred to her that what’s “insane” to a Hollywood millionaire might simply be another American’s point of view.
Final Thought: Victimhood Is the New Celebrity Currency
What this episode ultimately reveals is the moral economy of celebrity politics. In an industry built on attention, victimhood is now a form of capital.
It’s the perfect story for their audience: comforting, dramatic, self-flattering, and detached from reality.
And in that sense, perhaps they’ve finally told the truest story of all — not about politics, but about Hollywood itself.
The opinions expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the positions of American Liberty News.
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Typical Libs. Always the victim.
I have lived through 14 presidents and nothing has changed regarding people’s opinions. One party in and the other is angry. It is more obvious now that we have social media. There are people who love and hate the president no matter who is in. There are those who believe we should have open borders, that it is ok that the government manages what we eat, where we travel, where we work, how much money we make, where we live, how we worship, cost of living, what we drive, what vaccines we take including what we give our kids, what is taught in school, shared bathrooms and whatever else we do. I worry about what is public for people to hear. Some comedians have crossed the line with their freedom of speech and when it includes negative lies about any person, the line needs to be drawn. Stay out of politics and religion. There is plenty of funny stuff that adults and kids can enjoy if you want to be a comedian.How about some positive things and encouragement for this country?