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oo. 📢 BREAKING NEWS: Joy Behar Suggests Trump Should “Go to Norway and Stay There,” Sending The View Audience Wild🔥

Donald Trump didn’t just have a bad week on television—he had the kind of week that follows a man into the middle of the night, onto social media, and straight into a public spiral.

Because right now, two names keep showing up in Trump’s orbit like clockwork: Jimmy Kimmel and Joy Behar.

According to the story laid out in the segment you shared, Trump has become so fixated on them that he can’t even make it 24 hours without firing off another furious post. And the receipts are hard to ignore: Trump’s late-night Truth Social blast targeting Kimmel reportedly hit at 12:49 a.m., barely 11 minutes after the show ended on the East Coast—prompting Kimmel to wave directly at him on-air like a man greeting a regular customer. “Hi, Mr. President,” Kimmel joked, essentially confirming what everyone suspects: Trump isn’t just criticizing late night—he’s watching it live.

But that’s only the surface-level chaos.

The rally rant that detonated everything

The real spark, per the transcript, came after a December 10 rally in Pennsylvania, where Trump veered into ugly territory—complaining about immigrants and singling out “countries like Somalia” before pivoting into the familiar “why can’t we get people from Norway, Sweden, Denmark” style grievance.

And the next morning, The View lit the fuse.

Joy Behar framed it as something bigger than a petty feud: she argued that it’s not a coincidence that strongman-style leaders fixate on comedians—because humor lands where propaganda can’t. She invoked the idea that autocrats don’t fear journalists nearly as much as they fear ridicule, because jokes spread fast, stick longer, and make people feel brave enough to say out loud what they’re already thinking.

Then she went for the throat: if Trump wants Norway so badly, she joked, why doesn’t he go there and stay there?

Whoopi Goldberg followed with the line that, in a viral moment, sounded less like comedy and more like a verdict: people from the places Trump romanticizes don’t want to come—because they don’t want to live under what she called a dictatorship.

That’s the kind of clip that doesn’t fade. It multiplies.

Trump’s obsession becomes the story

The transcript paints Trump’s reaction as immediate and predictable: the usual “no talent,” “bad ratings,” “biased,” “get him off the air” style attack aimed at Kimmel—except now it lands differently, because it doesn’t look like a leader fighting back. It looks like a man losing control of the narrative.

And the timing makes it worse. Kimmel doesn’t even have to accuse him of being obsessed anymore—the timestamps do it for him.

Even stranger: while Trump was bragging publicly about his cultural clout, he was also stepping into a spotlight he didn’t fully control. Multiple outlets reported that Trump hosted the Kennedy Center Honors—a first for a sitting U.S. president. The Washington Post+1

But instead of basking in the moment, the transcript says he still veered toward—of all things—complaining about Kimmel’s talent. That’s the tell: even at a major national arts event, Trump’s brain keeps circling back to the same two targets.

The part that will drive him absolutely insane

Then came the twist that turns a feud into a long-term nightmare for Trump:

Kimmel locked in his future.

On December 8, Reuters, AP, and other outlets reported that Kimmel signed a one-year extension with ABC, keeping Jimmy Kimmel Live! on the air through May 2027. Reuters+1

That isn’t just a contract detail—it’s a psychological trap.

Because the segment’s underlying point is brutal: Trump has been demanding Kimmel get pulled off air “every few weeks,” but instead of disappearing, Kimmel just got guaranteed runway for two more years of monologues.

And if Trump can’t stop watching now?

What happens when he’s locked into the idea that the roast won’t end until 2027?

Why Joy Behar matters in this fight

What makes this story sharper than a standard late-night feud is that Joy Behar isn’t just laughing—she’s framing the stakes. The transcript highlights her argument that when politicians go after comedians, it’s not about hurt feelings. It’s about control. And once a leader starts pushing networks, pressuring platforms, or hinting at punishment, the “joke” becomes a free speech test.

That theme isn’t hypothetical. Coverage around FCC Chairman Brendan Carr and the 2025 controversy involving Kimmel has already sparked major First Amendment backlash. arstechnica.com+1

So here’s the punchline Trump can’t escape:

Every time he attacks them, they trend harder.
Every time he rage-posts at 1 a.m., they open the next show with it.
And now Kimmel isn’t going anywhere until May 2027. AP News+1

👉 𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝒏𝒆𝒙𝒕 1 𝒂.𝒎. 𝒓𝒂𝒈𝒆-𝒑𝒐𝒔𝒕 𝒄𝒐𝒖𝒍𝒅 𝒃𝒆 𝒕𝒉𝒆 𝒐𝒏𝒆 𝒕𝒉𝒂𝒕 𝒃𝒂𝒄𝒌𝒇𝒊𝒓𝒆𝒔 𝒉𝒂𝒓𝒅𝒆𝒔𝒕 — 𝒅𝒓𝒐𝒑 𝒚𝒐𝒖𝒓 𝒕𝒂𝒌𝒆 𝒊𝒏 𝒕𝒉𝒆 𝒄𝒐𝒎𝒎𝒆𝒏𝒕𝒔. 🔥

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