'Not how you want it to go': Jimmy Kimmel reveals how he wants to end his late-night show

Jimmy Kimmel has revealed what ending his long-running, late-night show 'on his terms' would look like
PUBLISHED NOV 8, 2025
Jimmy Kimmel and wife Molly McNearney reveal how he wants to end his show (We Can Do Hard Things/YouTube)
Jimmy Kimmel and wife Molly McNearney reveal how he wants to end his show (We Can Do Hard Things/YouTube)

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA: Jimmy Kimmel has revealed how he wants to bring his long-running late-night show to a close, describing a vision that emphasizes gratitude, closure, and control over the moment.

He explained that he hopes to conclude his show on his own terms, with enough time to properly thank his team and audience for their years of support, rather than having it end suddenly. 

Jimmy Kimmel reflects on suspension of his show

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 12: Jimmy Kimmel attends the 74th Primetime Emmys at Microsoft T
 Jimmy Kimmel attends the 74th Primetime Emmys at Microsoft Theater on September 12, 2022 in Los Angeles, California (Momodu Mansaray/Getty Images)

During his appearance alongside his wife and Jimmy Kimmel Live executive producer, Molly McNearney, on the ‘We Can Do Hard Things' podcast, Kimmel described what ending the show “on his terms” would look like. 

“If I’d not been allowed back on the air, I’d be a martyr. It’s not a terrible position to be in as a comedian,” but “it’s not the position I wanted to be in. And it’s also not the way I wanted the show,” Kimmel said, reflecting on their brief suspension from ABC over FCC threats following his comments about MAGA’s reaction to Charlie Kirk.

When ABC cancelled his show following threats from President Donald Trump’s FCC Chair, Brendan Carr, the network did not clarify when or if the show would return. Kimmel noted that this uncertainty made him and McNearney think about all the things they might miss doing if the show ended “abruptly.” 

Kimmel on wanting a proper goodbye

LOS ANGELES, CA - JUNE 05: Jimmy Kimmel is seen on June 05, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by PG/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images)
Jimmy Kimmel is seen on June 5, 2025 in Los Angeles, California (PG/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images)

“I’ve been doing this show for almost 23 years, it’ll be 23 years in January. And I want to end the show on my terms,” he explained. 

“I want to end it in a graceful way,” Kimmel continued. “I want to have a farewell party with our staff. I want to do all those things. I want to say the things that I want to say to people, and to just have it happen abruptly, and unjustly would have been awful. It’s just not how you want it to go.”

McNearney added, “An interesting wave, I think we both felt was mourning, right after” ABC suspended the show. “Because we felt we weren’t coming back and we didn’t have a shot to write our ending the way we wanted to…When we left here, we didn’t know if we were going to see people again,” She went on. “It was a very strange feeling.”

Kimmel agreed, “And to say goodbye, really,” to “the audience too, not just our staff, but also like the people who watch the show. It’s just, one day you’re on and the next day you’re not, and that’s not what I imagined or wanted. So, I was hoping that we would come back.”

He said he wasn’t certain that the suspension was temporary, however, he thinks it was “probably the intention the whole time” for ABC to bring the show back. “We weren’t fired, we were suspended, and I think suspended means come back, but it just didn’t feel like that to me at the time.”

Jimmy Kimmel on annoying Trump

U.S. President Donald Trump takes a question from a reporter in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on March 3, 2025 in Washington, DC. Trump announced that Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, one of the largest manufacturers of semiconductor chips, plans to invest $100 billion in new manufacturing facilities in the United States. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
President Donald Trump takes a question from a reporter in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on March 3, 2025 in Washington, DC. Trump announced that Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, one of the largest manufacturers of semiconductor chips, plans to invest $100 billion in new manufacturing facilities in the United States (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

McNearney said that despite the “danger” of being on Trump’s bad side, “I really love getting under his skin.” She told Kimmel, “I know you agree, in that taking a little bit of pleasure in it when we see that it’s bothering” Trump. 

“It brings us a little bit of joy, because it feels like we’re one of the only ones who are getting in there, and he hates it so much that he has to respond, and I love that.” Kimmel added, “It’s so childish, the response.” 

She continued, “It’s like, just complain privately. We don’t need to know every thought you have about us. It’s kind of wonderful that he shares it. I mean, it’s dangerous for us, but it also, to me, means we’re doing the job well.”

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