In a late-night segment that felt more like a comedy supernova than a talk show monologue, Jimmy Kimmel and 50 Cent teamed up for a scripted roast skit targeting Donald Trump — and the crowd absolutely lost their minds.
The bit, which was intentionally over-the-top and written like a political cartoon brought to life, featured the duo firing off joke after joke about Trump’s ego, scandals, lawsuits, and legendary meltdowns. The audience roared so loud the floor vibrated, with some viewers calling it:
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“The funniest takedown in late-night TV history”
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“Pure gold — savage but hilarious”
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“Peak Kimmel chaos”
Even the band couldn’t keep a straight face.

😂 50 Cent’s Entrance — A Full-Blown Sitcom Moment
The sketch opened with 50 Cent marching out holding a stack of bright orange “lawsuit folders,” tossing them into the air like confetti while announcing:
“We brought receipts… AND toner.”
The studio erupted.
Kimmel then stepped in like a mock attorney, dramatically slapping the table as he declared:
“Court is now in session — The People vs. The Tantrum!”
It was pure scripted satirical madness, the kind late-night fans live for.
🤣 The “Lost Line” That Never Made It to Air
According to the show’s writers (who joked about it afterward), one line was so savage that Standards & Practices said:
“Absolutely not, unless you want 12 lawyers sleeping in the studio tonight.”
The joke reportedly involved Trump’s gold toilet, a spray tan budget, and a reference to “executive privilege” that sent rehearsals into chaos.
Kimmel teased fans later in the show:
“Trust me… the deleted line broke two cameras and one producer.”
50 Cent added:
“They told me I need a permission slip before I say that one again.”
😂 A Running Gag About Trump “Watching Live”
As part of the parody, the writers staged a running joke claiming that Trump was “watching from Mar-a-Lago,” throwing papers, shouting at the TV, and coloring outside the lines of his fake coloring book titled Executive Time.
Every time 50 Cent delivered a punchline, the screen cut to a mock clip of an actor playing Trump dramatically collapsing over a buffet table.
Pure satire.
Pure chaos.
The audience couldn’t breathe.
⭐ A Comedy Segment People Will Be Talking About All Year
This wasn’t a political attack.
It wasn’t a real meltdown.
It wasn’t a breaking-news moment.
It was a scripted, exaggerated, cartoonish roast sketch — the kind late-night TV is famous for — and fans are calling it:
“The strongest comedy crossover in years.”
And the “missing line”?
It’ll probably become late-night legend.