The Rogue Report

BREAKING: Jimmy Kimmel & Stephen Colbert GO ROGUE – Ditch ABC & CBS to Launch Uncensored News Channel! Execs in Meltdown, Media World Shaken to Core

By Jax Harlan, Media Insider Los Angeles, CA – January 16, 2026

In a bombshell move that’s rocking Hollywood and the media landscape, late-night titans Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert have officially severed ties with their networks to launch an independent, fully uncensored news channel. No more corporate scripts, no sponsor interference, no editorial filters—just raw, unfiltered truth delivered by two of television’s most trusted voices. The announcement dropped like a grenade, leaving ABC and CBS executives “furious beyond belief” and industry critics warning this could “destroy mainstream media as we know it.”

Jimmy Kimmel Will Host the Oscars 2023
variety.com

Jimmy Kimmel Will Host the Oscars 2023

Sources close to the duo confirm the split was brewing for months. Frustrated by increasing network pressure to soften segments, tone down political jabs, and avoid “controversial” topics, Kimmel and Colbert decided enough was enough. “We’re done being muzzled,” one insider leaked. “They want safe, sanitized late-night. We want real conversation.” The new venture, tentatively called “Unfiltered Now,” promises nightly broadcasts with zero censorship—tackling everything from politics and scandals to culture wars and corporate corruption.

The backlash was instant. ABC execs reportedly scrambled emergency meetings after Kimmel’s departure from Jimmy Kimmel Live!, while CBS brass fumed over Colbert’s exit from The Late Show. Contract disputes are exploding—legal teams on both sides are already in war rooms, with claims of breach and non-compete violations flying. “This is betrayal on a massive scale,” one network source raged anonymously. “They built their brands on our platforms, and now they’re torching the bridge.”

But the public? They’re eating it up. Social media erupted within minutes of the leak, with #KimmelColbertRogue trending worldwide. Fans hail it as the dawn of “real journalism,” while detractors fear a flood of unchecked opinion disguised as news. “This isn’t comedy anymore—it’s dangerous,” one critic tweeted. Others counter: “Finally, someone brave enough to say what the networks won’t.”

2,878 Stephen Colbert Portrait Stock Photos, High-Res Pictures ...
gettyimages.com

2,878 Stephen Colbert Portrait Stock Photos, High-Res Pictures …

Kimmel, 58, known for his sharp wit and everyman charm, has long pushed boundaries on his show. Colbert, 61, the satirical mastermind who turned late-night into sharp political commentary, brings intellectual firepower. Together, they’re an unstoppable force—comedy roots fused with serious gravitas. Their first joint appearance teased explosive content: no guests screened, no topics off-limits, live audience interaction, and viewer-submitted questions.

Insiders say the channel launches streaming-first on a dedicated app and website, with potential cable pickup later. Production is already underway in a sleek, modern studio setup designed for maximum transparency—cameras everywhere, no green rooms for hiding. “Viewers will see everything,” a production source promised. “No edits, no cuts for time.”

Jimmy Kimmel says he's voting for Stephen Colbert at the 2025 Emmys
ew.com

Jimmy Kimmel says he’s voting for Stephen Colbert at the 2025 Emmys

The duo’s friendship—forged through years of award-show banter and mutual respect—fuels the project. Photos from past events show them side-by-side, laughing and plotting. Now that camaraderie turns revolutionary. “Jimmy and Stephen have always had each other’s backs,” a longtime colleague said. “This is them saying, ‘We’re doing it our way.’”

Critics warn of chaos: misinformation risks, advertiser boycotts, regulatory scrutiny. Supporters see liberation: a platform where truth isn’t diluted by ratings fears or corporate overlords. Media analysts predict massive audience migration—late-night loyalists following their heroes, plus new viewers hungry for unvarnished takes.

As networks lick their wounds and scramble damage control, one thing is clear: Kimmel and Colbert aren’t backing down. This isn’t a stunt—it’s a declaration of independence. The old guard is furious, the new era is here, and media as we know it may never recover.

The first broadcast? Imminent. Buckle up—the revolution is live.

Why every cable news set uses the same two colors
avclub.com

Why every cable news set uses the same two colors

(Photo: Modern news broadcast studio setup, ready for uncensored delivery.)