During his Tuesday night monologue on Jimmy Kimmel Live!, the host turned his attention to a moment from President Donald Trump’s official welcome ceremony for King Charles III and Queen Camilla, who had arrived in Washington for a state visit alongside First Lady Melania Trump. What started as a fairly routine recap of royal pageantry quickly became something else entirely once a clip of the president’s own remarks began to circulate.
In the footage, Trump reflected on his parents’ long marriage and then pivoted to his wife with a light confession. He acknowledged that a 63-year marriage was a milestone he and Melania were unlikely to reach, citing the obvious reality of the years ahead. The crowd responded warmly. The president seemed pleased.
Kimmel was not.
Kimmel and the joke that came back around
The host made the connection immediately. Just one day earlier, Trump had publicly called for Kimmel to be fired over an age-related joke the host had made during a mock White House Correspondents’ Dinner. Kimmel had referred to Melania as an expectant widow, a line the president and first lady found deeply offensive. Both had demanded consequences. The Federal Communications Commission had even moved to fast-track license renewals for Disney’s ABC broadcast stations in the days following the controversy.
And then, almost as if on cue, the president made a joke about his own mortality on a world stage.
Kimmel pointed out the obvious contradiction with visible disbelief, noting that only Trump could demand someone else be fired for a joke about his age and then, the very next day, step in front of cameras and make the same kind of joke himself.
The Comey twist nobody expected
Kimmel did not stop there. He moved on to the newly announced charges against former FBI director James Comey, who faces allegations tied to a photograph he had posted on social media. The image showed seashells arranged on a beach that appeared to spell out a sequence of numbers. Federal officials characterized it as a potential threat against the president.
Kimmel found the characterization difficult to take seriously, describing the image as something closer to decorative coastal artwork than anything resembling an act of intimidation. He suggested it was the kind of thing you might find for sale on a craft marketplace, not a matter warranting federal charges.
He tied the two stories together with a wry observation, noting that the administration seemed to have developed a particular sensitivity toward men named Jim.
What started all of this
The week’s tensions trace back to Kimmel’s appearance at the spoof correspondents’ event, where his remarks about the age gap between the president and the first lady drew an immediate and sharp response from the White House. Kimmel maintained that the joke was a lighthearted observation about demographics and nothing more, pointing to his longstanding public record on issues of gun violence as evidence that no darker meaning was intended.
The Trumps disagreed, and what followed was a rapid escalation that brought in federal regulators, network executives, and late night monologues in equal measure.
Kimmel and the week that got away from everyone
What the week ultimately revealed is how quickly a single joke can ripple outward into something much larger, touching broadcast regulation, federal prosecution, and a royal visit all at once. For Kimmel, the silver lining may have been the president handing him his best material of the week without even realizing it.
The age joke landed. Just not the way anyone intended.

