Essayer OR - Gratuit
Comedy writers on edge as fear of censorship grows
Los Angeles Times
|September 29, 2025
As Trump continues to target TV hosts, some creators of satire see a chill taking hold.
ROBERT GAUTHIER Los Angeles Times PROTESTERS outside the Hollywood site where "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" is taped.
In Hollywood, something shifted in the six days between the time that Walt Disney Co. dropped "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" "indefinitely," following Kimmel's comments about the suspect in the shooting death of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, and the late-night comedian's return.
For many, Kimmel's rebound appears to be a win for free speech and a testament to the power of boycotts against powerful corporate interests. However, for other writers, particularly comedy scribes, who view the events that transpired in the darkest, most McCarthy-esque terms, the fight over comedy may have just begun.
"There's fear and outrage at the same time," said Emmy-winning comedy writer Bruce Vilanch, who for years was the head writer for the Oscars and "Hollywood Squares" and has writ-
ten jokes for comics including Billy Crystal and Bette Midler.
"Ever since 'woke' started before COVID and George Floyd, comedy became a minefield. And then, last week, it became a nuclear garden," he said.
Indeed, the day after Disney announced Kimmel's return, President Trump told reporters that TV networks critical of him are an "arm of the Democrat Party," and said, "I would think maybe their license should be taken away." Angered that Kimmel was returning to the airwaves, he took to social media to threaten ABC and called for the late-night scalps of NBC's Seth Meyers and Jimmy Fallon.
Such ominous threats have cast a pall in writers rooms across the industry.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition September 29, 2025 de Los Angeles Times.
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