Jimmy Kimmel’s Return Monologue on Way to Breaking Host’s YouTube Views Record

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Jimmy Kimmel’s Return Monologue on Way to Breaking Host’s YouTube Views Record

Nexstar and Sinclair really missed out.

The affiliate groups boycotting Jimmy Kimmel Live! missed airing — and selling ads — on what could become Jimmy Kimmel’s most-watched monologue in many years, if not ever.

Kimmel’s return to ABC on Tuesday night (watch the video, below) featured a nearly 30-minute show opening that included the host’s emotional monologue where he thanked those who supported him during his suspension, attempted to clarify his controversial comments about Charlie Kirk and, most of all, passionately defended free speech.

So far, the show’s official YouTube account has clocked the monologue video at 13 million views in just 14 hours. Kimmel has many short clips from his show of sketches and guest interview segments that have racked up tens of millions of clicks over the years, but Tuesday night’s monologue is looking like it might set a record in terms of opening monologue videos.

Kimmel’s current most-watched opening monologue is from another sober occasion — Kimmel discussing the details of his son’s birth and heart disease from eight years ago. That has 14 million views. In second place currently is Kimmel’s break down of the Will Smith Oscars slap from three years ago. Other popular monologues include Kimmel discussing the 2017 mass shooting at the Route 91 Harvest music festival in Las Vegas (10 million views), and Kimmel reacting to President Trump’s election last November (9 million views).

Given that Kimmel’s latest is averaging about 1 million views an hour, it certainly seems likely that last night’s opening will soon break the host’s monologue record.

On ABC, Kimmel typically draws about 1.6 million viewers, but according to The New York Times, the network is expecting to generate far more than that in the official ratings— even with the Nexstar and Sinclair boycotts, which account for roughly 20 percent of the network’s stations.

Kimmel’s monologue is largely being hailed as meeting the moment. While he stopped just short of apologizing for his comments about Kirk — something many on the right were demanding — he attempted to reach out to his detractors by thanking the many conservatives who criticized the Trump administration’s efforts to push him off the air, as well as gave very sincere-sounding praise to Kirk’s widow Erika Kirk, and expressed some hope for some measure of increased bipartisan unity in the wake of recent events.

“Look, I never imagined I would be in a situation like this,” Kimmel said. “I barely paid attention in school. One thing I did learn from from Lenny Bruce and George Carlin and Howard Stern, is that a government threat to silence a comedian the President doesn’t like is anti American. So I’m glad we have some solidarity on that from the right and left and from those in the middle — like Joe Rogan. Maybe the silver lining from this is we found one thing we can agree on … Let’s stop letting these politicians tell us what they want and tell them what we want.”

For more, here’s a recap of Kimmel’s comments and a Hollywood Reporter‘s critic’s take on the monologue.

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