Jimmy Kimmel will return to his late-night TV show on ABC tonight, nearly a week after it was suspended amid criticism of his remarks about the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.
"We have spent the last days having thoughtful conversations with Jimmy, and after those conversations, we reached the decision to return the show on Tuesday," Disney, which owns ABC, said in a statement yesterday.
But some households still may not see the show. Sinclair, a company that operates more than 35 ABC affiliates, said it would replace Kimmel with news programming.
The suspension drew national attention and placed Disney at the center of a political debate over free speech and "cancel culture." ABC pulled the show after Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr threatened to revoke affiliate stations' licenses over Kimmel's comments, which he described in a podcast interview as "the sickest conduct possible."
Disney's decision to pull Kimmel's show had stoked intense uproar. The media giant was condemned by some unions, liberal lawmakers and prominent Hollywood figures.
Carr insisted that Disney, "on its own," made a "business decision" to preempt the late-night host's show. He then accused Democratic lawmakers of "distorting what happened here" with accusations of government coercion and censorship.
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