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Jimmy Kimmel Roasts His Employer and Boosts ‘60 Minutes' at Disney Upfront

Jimmy Kimmel Roasts His Employer and Boosts ‘60 Minutes' at Disney Upfront

Yahoo14-05-2025

Jimmy Kimmel typically doesn't pull many punches in his annual appearance/roast at Disney's upfront, but his monologue Tuesday carried something of an existential edge.
'I might not see you again. This could be it,' the Jimmy Kimmel Live host told the audience of ad buyers in New York. '… I've had the pleasure of getting to know a lot of you over the last 23 years — and I also know that many of you are worried that AI might take your jobs. But I don't think it will. I don't believe a computer — even the most powerful computer — will ever be able to do what you do. And you know why? Because no computer wants to do what you do. Your jobs suck. Every year, our audience gets smaller, and we tell you it's bigger, and we want more for less. It's exhausting, I know. We are annoying and unreasonable, and you have shitty jobs because of it.
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'But at least you have the shitty jobs! All those kids we saw graduating this weekend, who knows? They might not be able to get shitty jobs. Some of them might have to date Bill Belichick.'
After a pre-taped sketch (watch it below) where he offered to sell naming rights to his soon-to-be-born grandchild, Kimmel appeared on stage and took shots at rivals CBS ('led by their hit comedy Ghosts, which is also what most of their viewers will be soon') and NBCUniversal ('Versant is a perfect name. It already sounds like something you subscribed to by accident'), as he usually does. He reserved his harshest jokes, though, for his own employer. Some of his best from the upfront are below.
On the state of network TV: 'Usually I come out here to distract you from the fact that we're dying. But somehow network television — like Jesus! — has risen again. Of the four major networks — NBC, ABC, CBS and Fox — only one of us did not see viewership go up year to year [ABC was flat this season]. I'm not going to tell you which one of us it is, because it doesn't matter and please don't ask. Just be happy for us.'
On NBC: NBC's chairman of global advertising, Mark Marshall, claims his network has amassed 'the greatest collection of content that has ever been assembled by one media company.' I guess Mark has never heard of PornHub.'
And: 'At the end of the day, this is all just a dick-measuring contest, and NBC still has the biggest one: Dick Wolf, the Michael Jordan of character actors getting murdered in the park.'
On ABC's this fall: At least CBS and Fox are making shows. ABC, we ordered one new show, and it's a spinoff of an old show. Which begs the question: What are we doing here? We risked our lives flying into Newark for this? I mean, if you went to a restaurant and the waiter said 'Our special tonight is last year's fish,' would you eat it?'
On younger viewers' TV habits: Deloitte just did a survey that showed that Gen Z and millennial viewers are spending more time on social media than watching television. Yeah, no shit. You think we needed a survey to know that? Fuck you, Deloiite! And you know what? Fuck those ungrateful Gen Z d-bags too! Oh, you're too cool for Match Game? Well guess what? When you have kids and you need that hit of Moana to keep the little bastards quiet for two hours? You'll come crawling back to Disney like dogs.'
On the forthcoming ESPN streaming platform: 'They had a conclave, and a little puff of white smoke came out of Jimmy Pitaro's ass. And the new service, bringing live content to millions of fans around the world will go by the name — are you ready? 'ESPN.' And that's why they call us Imagineers.'
Kimmel closed by making a rather unusual appeal to advertisers to buy time on a show on another network — CBS' 60 Minutes. 'I know it's not part of our multi-platform, but support 60 Minutes — they deserve it. You have the power, because you have the money. Support journalism. It's important, and it doesn't work without you.'
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CNN will broadcast a Broadway performance of George Clooney in ‘Good Night, and Good Luck.' Don't miss it
CNN will broadcast a Broadway performance of George Clooney in ‘Good Night, and Good Luck.' Don't miss it

Los Angeles Times

timean hour ago

  • Los Angeles Times

CNN will broadcast a Broadway performance of George Clooney in ‘Good Night, and Good Luck.' Don't miss it

When 'Good Night, and Good Luck' arrived on Broadway this spring, it initially provoked a surprising amount of cynicism. There were complaints that the adaptation by George Clooney and Grant Heslov was basically a reproduction of the 2005 film, which chronicled CBS newsman Edward R. Murrow's heroic crusade against Sen. Joseph McCarthy's communist witch hunts. The sky-high cost of tickets was another source of criticism. Was Broadway pricing itself beyond the reach of its core audience? Reports of 'Good Night, and Good Luck' shattering box office records served to remind those who couldn't afford a ticket that they were being left behind by a theater culture that was siding with the haves over the have-nots. In a Broadway season that featured Denzel Washington and Jake Gyllenhaal in a rudderless 'Othello' and Kieran Culkin in a 'Glengarry Glen Ross' revival that might have been stronger without him, 'Good Night, and Good Luck' was a convenient target for anti-Hollywood sentiment. When I arrived at the Winter Garden for a Saturday matinee in April, I can't say my expectations were especially high. I admired the film but hadn't seen it in nearly 20 years. The broodingly elegant production, sharply directed by David Cromer and starring a quietly committed Clooney in the role of Murrow (played in the film by David Strathairn), was not only one of the most stirring offerings of the Broadway season but also one of the most necessary. I left the theater wishing I could buy tickets for my friends and family. That won't be necessary — thankfully for my credit cards — because CNN will be broadcasting a live performance of 'Good Night, and Good Luck' from the Winter Garden on Saturday. It's apparently the first time a Broadway play will be shown live on television, and the timing could not be better. As media companies face a campaign of intimidation from the Trump administration, the figure of Murrow, standing tall in the face of demagogic adversity, is the courageous example we need right now. I don't know how different the experience will be watching at home, but 'Good Night, and Good Luck' made me reflect on what theatergoing might have been like in ancient Greece. Athenian citizens would gather at an open-air theater as a democratic privilege and responsibility. Playwrights addressed the polis not by dramatizing current events but by recasting tales from the mythological and historic past to sharpen critical thinking on contemporary concerns. Clooney and Heslov aren't writing dramatic poetry. Their more straightforward approach is closer to documentary drama, but the effect is not so disparate. We are affirmed in the knowledge that we are the body politic. CNN will broadcast the penultimate performance of 'Good Night, and Good Luck' on the eve of the Tony Awards. The production is up for five Tonys, including one for Clooney in the lead performance by an actor in a play category. But however the awards shake out, Clooney is already a winner. Like Murrow, he reminds us that conscience can still be a defining feature of the American character.

Schedule set for bowl games, College Football Playoff
Schedule set for bowl games, College Football Playoff

Miami Herald

time3 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Schedule set for bowl games, College Football Playoff

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Family Guy's Seth MacFarlane turns to alcohol to deal with stage fright: 'I definitely get nervous'
Family Guy's Seth MacFarlane turns to alcohol to deal with stage fright: 'I definitely get nervous'

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Family Guy's Seth MacFarlane turns to alcohol to deal with stage fright: 'I definitely get nervous'

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