
BREAKING: Kimmel & Colbert Launch “Truth News” — Late-Night Giants Walk Away from Networks to Build Uncensored Media Revolution

In a seismic shift that has left the television industry reeling, Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert—longtime late-night rivals whose shows once competed head-to-head—have stunned the world by joining forces to create “Truth News,” a completely independent, ad-free digital platform dedicated to unfiltered storytelling and accountability.
The announcement came less than 48 hours after Kimmel’s tearful on-air tribute to Charlie Kirk, the conservative activist tragically killed in 2025, sparked a firestorm of backlash, counter-accusations, and viral clips. What began as personal grief quickly morphed into a broader demand for truth-telling across ideological lines. Colbert, already at the center of national conversation for his raw defenses of Virginia Giuffre’s memoir Nobody’s Girl, reached out to Kimmel privately. Within days, the two men—once separated by network loyalties and political tones—decided the current media landscape could no longer contain what they wanted to say.
They walked away from ABC and CBS respectively, forfeiting remaining contracts worth hundreds of millions. In a joint live stream that launched “Truth News” at midnight Eastern Time, Kimmel and Colbert appeared side by side—no desk, no band, no cue cards—just two men who had spent decades in the spotlight now refusing to play by its rules.
“Truth isn’t red or blue,” Kimmel said, voice steady. “It’s just truth. And if saying it costs us everything we built, then so be it.”
Colbert followed: “We’ve spent years making people laugh at power. Now we’re done laughing. We’re going to speak plainly—about Epstein, about silence, about the names that keep getting protected, about grief that crosses every divide. No sponsors. No censors. No apologies.”
The platform, already live, has no advertising, no paywall for core content, and no editorial board beyond the two hosts and a small team of journalists and survivors’ advocates. Its mission statement is blunt: “Expose what they tried to bury. Honor the voices they tried to silence. Let the public decide what matters.”
Within the first 24 hours, “Truth News” shattered records: over 1 billion global views across live streams, clips, and shares. The debut episode—nearly 90 minutes long—featured no guests, no comedy bits. Instead, Kimmel read from Giuffre’s memoir while Colbert displayed redacted court documents side-by-side with newly released pages. They spoke openly about Charlie Kirk’s death, Giuffre’s suicide, the “million-dollar tear” moment with Erika Kirk, Elon Musk’s $100 million pledge, and Pam Bondi’s repeated deflections.
Viewers watched in stunned silence as two of late-night’s biggest names abandoned the format that made them famous to build something rawer, riskier, and—by all early metrics—massively resonant.
Industry insiders are calling it the biggest defection since Oprah left network television. Media analysts predict it could accelerate the collapse of traditional late-night as advertisers and networks scramble to respond. Already, hashtags #TruthNews, #KimmelColbert, and #NoMoreSilence dominate global trends.
Critics accuse the move of being opportunistic or performative. Supporters see it as the moment legacy media finally cracked open. Either way, Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert have done what no one thought possible: they turned rivalry into alliance, walked off the stage they helped build, and started building something new.
The late-night era as we knew it is over. “Truth News” is just beginning.


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