In the days after the shooting attempt, two dramas collided: a late-night monologue and a real-life brush with political violence. Jimmy Kimmel stood by his “light roast” of Melania Trump, insisting it was about age and a miserable marriage, not a call to kill the former president. Melania and Donald Trump, facing a credible threat in a Washington ballroom, saw nothing light about it and publicly demanded Kimmel be fired.
Meanwhile, prosecutors painted a chilling picture of suspect Cole Allen, who allegedly arrived at the Hilton armed, focused, and fueled by a manifesto raging against Trump and his Cabinet. Kimmel apologized only to journalists and attendees traumatized by the attack, rejecting any link between his joke and the gunman’s actions. What remains is an uneasy question hanging over American politics: where is the line between sharp satire and a culture already on the edge?
