JUST IN: One-Third of ABC Stations Pull Jimmy Kimmel Live! Despite Disney’s Reinstatement

The turbulence surrounding Jimmy Kimmel Live! has taken yet another dramatic turn. Despite Disney’s decision to officially reinstate the late-night host following his controversial suspension, a wave of major broadcasters across the United States has chosen not to carry the program.

As of today, nearly one-third of ABC affiliates — representing millions of households — have confirmed that they will pull Jimmy Kimmel Live! from their schedules. For late-night fans accustomed to the familiar mix of comedy, interviews, and commentary, the sudden blackout has come as a shock.

At the forefront of this revolt are two powerful companies: the Nexstar Media Group and the Sinclair Broadcast Group. Combined, their ownership and operating agreements cover a vast swath of ABC stations nationwide. Both groups announced they will continue to preempt Kimmel’s show indefinitely, even after Disney declared the suspension over. The result: a patchwork of programming across the country where some viewers will see Kimmel return to the airwaves, while others will be left in the dark.

The move underscores a growing rift between network executives and local station operators, one rarely played out so openly. Affiliates traditionally honor network programming, only preempting broadcasts for local sports or emergencies. For so many stations to refuse carriage of a flagship late-night show on cultural and political grounds is virtually without precedent.

Industry observers say this dispute is about much more than one late-night host. “This is a test case for the future of broadcasting,” noted one veteran analyst. “If affiliates can block a network’s decision on this scale, it raises serious questions about who truly controls what Americans watch.”

The controversy began earlier this month when Jimmy Kimmel was suspended following remarks on-air that provoked sharp criticism from political leaders. Supporters rallied quickly, arguing the suspension reflected an alarming breach of free speech, with the ACLU organizing a letter signed by more than 400 prominent figures, including Tom Hanks, Jennifer Aniston, Meryl Streep, Jamie Lee Curtis, Robert De Niro, and Bryan Cranston. The letter declared: “We the people must never accept government threats to our freedom of speech.

Disney eventually bowed to pressure, lifting the suspension and announcing Kimmel’s return. But the relief proved short-lived. Nexstar and Sinclair, citing concerns for their audiences, announced they would not reinstate the show on their stations. In public statements, the companies framed the move as a business decision — but critics see it as political pressure seeping directly into the media marketplace.

Reaction from viewers has been polarizing. On social media, outraged fans blasted the blackout as “corporate censorship,” while others applauded the broadcasters for “standing up to Hollywood.” In living rooms across America, households are finding themselves divided not just by opinion, but by whether they can even access the same programming.

For Jimmy Kimmel, who has built his career on balancing humor with cultural critique, the uncertainty casts a long shadow. His show, once a reliable late-night fixture, has now become the center of a national debate over speech, power, and control of the airwaves.

The broader question remains unsettled: if local affiliates can override network decisions, does that fracture the very system that built American television? And if late-night comedy — once a unifying nightly ritual — becomes the latest casualty of the cultural divide, what comes next?

For now, one thing is certain: millions of viewers across the country will no longer see Jimmy Kimmel Live! on their local ABC station. The fallout from that absence is only beginning to unfold.

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