As details of the attempted attack at the Washington Hilton emerged, Kimmel’s joke about Melania Trump “glowing like an expectant widow” was replayed with chilling new weight. What had aired as pointed political satire days earlier was now being framed by critics as a grotesque symbol of a media ecosystem they claim has normalized fantasies of political violence. Conservative commentators called Kimmel “broken” and even “evil,” accusing him and others in late-night TV of stoking division for applause.
In the aftermath, images of a shaken ballroom, a wounded officer saved by his vest, and the Trumps being rushed to safety collided with that resurfaced clip. Trump’s defiant statement—“When you’re impactful, they go after you”—only sharpened the sense of siege. The Correspondents’ Dinner will be rescheduled, “bigger and better,” officials promise. But the question now lingers over Hollywood and Washington alike: when does a joke stop being just a jok
