Jimmy Kimmel Live’s presentation at the annual Disney upfronts event was supposed to reassure advertisers, celebrate upcoming programming, and convince brands that the company remains a stable entertainment powerhouse.
Instead, Kimmel took the stage and openly joked that he has cost Disney “billions” while mocking the event itself as “bulls**t” right to the faces of the very advertisers he was supposed to be reassuring.
During the Jimmy Kimmel Disney Upfronts presentation, the “comedian” delivered yet another politically charged monologue packed with grievance humor aimed at President Trump, self-congratulatory defiance as though he were some kind of freedom fighter, and jokes about the damage he believes (correctly) he has caused Disney and ABC over the last year.
“Have to admit, I’ve been through so much bulls**t this year, it actually made me appreciate this bulls**t,” Kimmel told the audience at New York’s Javits Center.
That line immediately set the tone.
Rather than focus on Disney programming, advertiser relationships, or the company’s future, Kimmel spent much of his time joking about controversy, political backlash, and his own role in turning ABC into a lightning rod.
Kimmel Admits He Cost Disney “Billions”
At one point, Kimmel openly referenced the financial fallout and reputational headaches surrounding his controversies.
“I cost our company a lot of money this year, billions,” Kimmel joked.
He followed that up with another line that likely sounded less like comedy and more like accidental honesty to some viewers.
“It is very possible that no employee in the history of any company has cost their employer more,” Kimmel added. “Hiring me 24 years ago, just from a purely mathematical standpoint, was the worst personnel decision that Disney Corporation has ever made.”
The audience inside the room laughed and applauded.

Jimmy Kimmel Crying – YouTube, Jimmy Kimmel Live!
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Outside that Hollywood bubble, however, the comments reinforced a growing criticism surrounding Disney and its late-night strategy: that the company continues to embrace personalities who increasingly generate political backlash instead of broad audience appeal.
The Disney Upfronts Became Another Kimmel Political Monologue
Disney upfronts exist for one primary reason: advertisers.
Networks spend millions producing these events because they want sponsors to feel confident investing money into their programming lineup. The presentations are designed to project optimism, stability, and mass-market appeal.
Kimmel instead delivered a routine centered around politics, FCC scrutiny, corporate controversy, and President Trump.

Jimmy Kimmel and Joe Biden – YouTube, Jimmy Kimmel Live!
“Yes, the President has tried to get me twice over the last six months,” Kimmel said during the presentation. He also mocked CBS, referenced Stephen Colbert’s struggles, and framed himself as a rebellious figure battling political pressure and corporate fallout.
The issue for Disney is that this has increasingly become the brand identity surrounding ABC late-night television.
What was once comedy programming aimed at broad audiences has transformed into heavily politicized commentary that often alienates large portions of the viewing public.
And the ratings across late-night television have reflected that broader decline.
ABC’s Late-Night Problem Keeps Getting Harder to Ignore
Kimmel’s appearance comes at an awkward time for Disney.
The company is already dealing with mounting financial pressure across several divisions, declining traditional television audiences, and growing frustration from viewers who feel Disney’s entertainment brands have become overly political.

Jimmy Kimmel crying in his return monologue on ABC – YouTube, Jimmy Kimmel Live
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ABC itself has faced additional scrutiny in recent months over Kimmel’s remarks and broader concerns involving media bias and equal-time complaints on shows like The View.
Rather than calming those concerns, Kimmel leaned directly into them during one of Disney’s most important corporate-facing presentations of the year. That decision stood out even more because Disney desperately needs advertiser confidence as linear television continues to weaken.
Late-night TV as a whole has struggled to maintain relevance in the streaming era, with shrinking audiences and diminishing cultural influence becoming impossible to ignore. Yet Disney continues treating Kimmel as one of the company’s marquee public-facing personalities.
The “Resistance” Routine Is Getting Old
One of the stranger aspects of Kimmel’s presentation was how openly self-congratulatory it became.
The comedian repeatedly framed himself as a victim of political attacks while simultaneously celebrating the controversy surrounding him.
That attitude increasingly mirrors much of modern late-night television, where hosts often seem more interested in political applause from industry insiders than entertaining broad audiences.

Jimmy Kimmel in a promo ad for Who Wants to Be a Millionaire
Kimmel even joked that ABC pulling him off the air would normally require “throw[ing] a chair at your Mormon boyfriend,” referencing reality television controversies while continuing to portray himself as a rebellious anti-establishment figure. Kimmel was, of course, removed from the air for a five day period following false comments delivered on his show about the alleged killer of Charlie Kirk.
He came under fire again recently when he claimed First Lady Melania Trump had “the glow of an expectant widow” just days before an attempt was made on President Trump’s life at the White House Correspondent’s Dinner. That marks the third high-profile assassination attempt against the President, and many believe comments like Kimmel’s only serve to fan the flames.
But there’s an irony to all of this.
Kimmel isn’t some outsider comic battling giant corporations. He is one of the highest-profile faces of Disney-owned ABC, smugly standing on stage at a multimillion-dollar corporate event for advertisers. That disconnect has become harder and harder for audiences to ignore.
Disney Keeps Platforming its Own Headache
Perhaps the most revealing part of the entire presentation was that Kimmel himself seemed fully aware of the burden he has become for Disney. That’s what made the “billions” joke land differently.
For years now, Disney has found itself pulled into controversies involving its talent, political messaging, and public image. Kimmel has repeatedly been at the center of those moments, generating headlines that have little to do with entertainment and everything to do with political outrage.

Jimmy Kimmel reading tweets from President Trump at The Oscars – YouTube, New York Post
And yet Disney continues embracing it.
At an event meant to sell advertisers on confidence and stability, one of Disney’s biggest stars essentially joked that he has become a corporate liability. The uncomfortable reality for Disney is that many viewers probably agreed with him.
How do you feel about Kimmel and his comments at the Disney upfronts advertising event? Sound off in the comments and let us know!
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