In the modern American political circus, Donald Trump rarely misses a chance to flex his influence over both politics and entertainment. This week, the former president once again proved that he is as much a creature of show business as he is of politics—by celebrating the suspension of ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel Live!

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At 8:04 p.m., Trump tweeted with glee: “Great news for America. The ratings-challenged Jimmy Kimmel show is canceled. Congratulations to ABC for finally having the courage to do what had to be done.” For Trump, it was a victory lap, punctuated with familiar insults about television ratings and digs at Stephen Colbert and Seth Meyers, whom he branded “total losers.”

But as MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell reminded viewers, this wasn’t just another Trumpian jab at late-night comics. This was about power—corporate power, presidential power, and the chilling precedent of a leader strong-arming a media company into silencing a critic.

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A President Who Acts Like a Censor

O’Donnell was blunt: Nixon never tried this. Carter never tried this. Reagan never tried this. Even the most scandal-plagued of presidents didn’t attempt to dictate who should or shouldn’t be on late-night television. But Trump, O’Donnell said, became the first president in history to push corporate America into bending to his personal will—whether by taking a stake in a private company like Intel or pressuring networks through his FCC appointees.

For decades, comedians like Johnny Carson approached politics with light touches. Carson rarely told more than three political jokes in a single monologue, because, as he once said, “politics was boring.” That era is long gone. Now, the presidency itself is the joke—and Trump, O’Donnell argued, can’t stand being the punchline.

The Shadow of Epstein

Yet, for all Trump’s efforts to redirect attention toward Kimmel, another story lingers in the background: Jeffrey Epstein.

During Trump’s state visit to London, activists projected images of Trump alongside Epstein onto Windsor Castle. For the British monarchy, still reeling from Prince Andrew’s disastrous ties to Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, it was a haunting reminder of scandal that refuses to die.

Lawrence: Trump wants us to talk about Jimmy Kimmel. So we'll talk about  Trump & Jeffrey Epstein

Epstein himself once told journalist Michael Wolff, “I was Donald’s closest friend for ten years.” That quote now hovers like a ghost over Trump’s public life—an inescapable association that flatters no one.

The irony, O’Donnell suggested, is that the very family trying to distance itself from Epstein—King Charles and his disgraced younger brother Andrew—ended up welcoming Trump, another figure entangled in Epstein’s orbit, into the gilded halls of Windsor.

Comedy in the Crossfire

Silencing comedians has never ended well. From the Hollywood blacklist of the 1950s to today’s late-night controversies, corporate America has always feared political backlash more than it has championed free expression.

Lawrence: Trump wants us to talk about Jimmy Kimmel. So we'll talk about  Trump & Jeffrey Epstein - YouTube

But as O’Donnell concluded, if networks mute Kimmel, Colbert, or Meyers, others will take their place. Guerrilla comedians, street performers, and digital satirists will fill the void. Trump may silence one voice, but he can’t cancel the joke itself.

And that’s the paradox: the more he tries to erase the punchline, the darker—and more powerful—it becomes.