Public Opinion Backed Kimmel’s Return
A Yahoo/YouGov survey found that Americans approved of Jimmy Kimmel’s return to television by a wide margin. According to the poll, 58% of Americans approved of ABC allowing Kimmel back on the air, while 28% disapproved. That means support for his return was more than twice as high as opposition.
The result does not mean Americans fully agreed with what Kimmel said. Instead, it shows that many people separated two questions: whether his remarks were appropriate, and whether a television host should be removed from the air because of them.
The Controversy Was About More Than One Late-Night Host
Kimmel’s suspension followed backlash over comments he made after the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. ABC temporarily pulled “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” before reinstating him several days later. The dispute quickly became larger than one comedian or one monologue. It turned into a national argument about media pressure, political speech, corporate decision-making, and the role of government officials in broadcast controversies.
That broader context helps explain why the poll numbers mattered. For supporters, Kimmel’s return represented a defense of free expression. For critics, the original remarks remained offensive and inappropriate. The poll showed that Americans were not necessarily united on Kimmel’s comments, but a larger share opposed keeping him off the air.
Ratings Showed the Public Was Paying Attention
Kimmel’s return was not only a political and cultural moment. It was also a major television event. Reuters reported that his first episode back drew 6.26 million viewers, the show’s highest-rated regularly scheduled episode in a decade. ABC also said the return monologue generated major social media attention, with millions of views online.
Those numbers suggest that the controversy expanded Kimmel’s audience beyond regular late-night viewers. People tuned in not just for comedy, but to see how he would address the suspension and the public backlash.
What the Poll Really Shows
The Yahoo/YouGov result should not be read as a simple popularity contest. It reflects a more complicated public mood. Many Americans may dislike offensive political jokes, but they may also be uncomfortable with broadcasters removing a host under political pressure.
In that sense, Kimmel’s return became a test case for how Americans think about speech, accountability, and entertainment in a polarized media environment. The poll’s central message was clear: when forced to choose, more Americans supported letting him return to TV than keeping him off the air.