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oo 📢 LATEST UPDATE: Viral roast turns real as Jimmy Kimmel’s jokes and Rosie O’Donnell’s brutal truth push Trump into a sudden on-air no-show🔥

What started as a routine late-night monologue turned into a full-blown cultural earthquake.
Within hours of Jimmy Kimmel’s show ending on the East Coast, Donald Trump was on his phone, rage-posting in the dark — and by sunrise, he’d quietly canceled a major media appearance.

At the center of it all?
A brutal, tag-team takedown by Jimmy Kimmel and Rosie O’Donnell that ripped straight through Trump’s ego and exposed the cracks in his carefully staged strongman image.


“You Should Be Fired Again”

Jimmy Kimmel opened up about how he found out he was trending in Trump’s crosshairs — again.

He wasn’t in a crisis meeting, he wasn’t on a PR call.
He was in bed.

His wife walked out of the bathroom with her phone in her hand and said:

“Um… Trump tweeted you should be fired again.”

Kimmel’s reaction? Not panic. Not outrage.
He shrugged, went downstairs, and made bagels for the kids.

Then he sat down and fired back with a sharp, mocking reply.

Trump’s original post — accusing ABC of keeping “a man with no talent and very poor television ratings” — was standard Trump insult mode. But this time, the backlash didn’t stay inside the late-night bubble. The exchange detonated across social media, pulling someone else into the blast radius:

Rosie O’Donnell.


Rosie Steps In — and Turns Up the Heat

If there’s one person Trump has attacked relentlessly for years, it’s Rosie O’Donnell.
Old clips resurfaced — Trump calling her “a slob,” “disgusting,” “a mess,” mocking her appearance and voice on national television.

But this time, Rosie wasn’t just a punchline.
She was a witness.

She went on the record, again, calling Trump what she’s long believed him to be: a fraud, a liar, a manufactured TV myth. She reminded viewers that The Apprentice was sold as reality but built as fiction — a Hollywood mirage of a “brilliant billionaire businessman” who, in real life, had gone bankrupt multiple times and faced allegations of corruption and misconduct.

Rosie listed his scandals like a receipts thread:

  • Multiple bankruptcies
  • Sexual misconduct allegations
  • A family charity barred from operating in New York after misusing funds, including money meant for sick children

“These are facts,” she reminded people. “All you need is a computer.”

Her tone was raw, unfiltered, and furious. Where Kimmel sliced with jokes, Rosie swung with blunt-force truth.

The combination was lethal.


The Roast That Hit Deeper Than Usual

Kimmel did what he does best: broke the absurdity down piece by piece.

He rolled old clips of Trump at public events doing what no normal president would do — using official moments to insult people, brag, exaggerate, and attack.

Like the Thanksgiving turkey pardon.

Most presidents make corny jokes, smile, and walk off.
Trump? He used it to brag about imaginary wins and then tore into the mayor of Chicago and the governor of Illinois — calling one “incompetent” and the other “a big fat slob.”

“Happy Thanksgiving, everybody,” Kimmel deadpanned.

He highlighted how Trump once claimed there were “no murders in Washington, DC in six months because of him,” when in reality there had been dozens. The crowd laughed, but the point was sharp: Trump doesn’t just spin — he invents.

Kimmel even joked about Trump’s obsession with other people’s weight while refusing to address the obvious about his own:

“I’d never call him a fat slob. I refuse to mention that. I don’t talk about that.”

The laughs were big. But underneath the jokes was a constant, uncomfortable question:

Why does this guy get away with behavior that would get anyone else fired?


When the Internet Turned the Volume to 100

As the monologue and Rosie’s comments spread, the internet did what it always does — amplified everything.

Clips of Trump insulting Rosie.
Rosie calling him dangerous and delusional.
Kimmel calling out his lies, his fiction, his fantasy version of success.

The timeline turned into a nonstop highlight reel of Trump’s worst moments:
Shouting at reporters, especially women.
Contradicting himself within hours.
Bragging about deals, peace, or “record lows” that evaporated under basic fact-checking.

Kimmel framed it as something bigger than a feud: this wasn’t just about hurt feelings. It was about a man who uses power like a weapon — and a media ecosystem that, for years, let him.

Rosie took it further, accusing parts of the press of “walking away from their responsibility” and giving him a free pass because he was good for ratings. She described being harassed in public after Trump attacked her, including people in MAGA gear confronting her in front of her children.

Suddenly, this wasn’t just comedy.
It was a collision: entertainment, politics, and personal safety all crashing into each other.


The Cancellation Heard Around the Internet

Then came the twist.

Behind the scenes, Trump was scheduled to appear on a show — a chance to push his own narrative, attack his critics, and reclaim control of the spotlight.

Instead, word broke that he’d quietly canceled.

Officially? “Unforeseen changes,” “scheduling issues,” the usual vague language.
Unofficially? Insiders pointed straight at the storm Kimmel and Rosie had kicked up.

The timing was impossible to ignore:

  • Late-night: Trump attacked Kimmel.
  • Overnight and early morning: Kimmel’s response goes viral; Rosie piles on.
  • Social media: old clips and new commentary flood every feed.
  • Next turn of the wheel: Trump pulls out of an appearance he’d normally run toward.

Critics called it what it looked like: not strategy — retreat.


Supporters insisted it was tactical restraint.

But one thing was undeniable: for once, Trump’s usual “double down and dominate” playbook ended with him stepping off the stage instead of storming onto it.

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