Jimmy Kimmel is America’s longest-running late-night talk show host,
serving as host and executive producer of the Emmy® Award-winning
“Jimmy Kimmel Live!” Now in its 20th season, the show produces
some of the most popular comedy bits and features a diverse lineup of
guests including actors, musicians, athletes, comedians, authors,
politicians and newsmakers. “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” airs weeknights
at 11:35|10:35c, broadcasting from Disney’s El Capitan Entertainment
Center in Hollywood.

In 2009, Kimmel was the first late-night host to create a channel on
YouTube for his show’s content. Since then, the Jimmy Kimmel Live
YouTube Channel has garnered over 14 billion views.

Kimmel is also the host and executive producer of ABC’s multiple
Emmy® Award-winning “Live in Front of a Studio Audience” specials
with Norman Lear, star-studded reenactments of the iconic sitcoms
“All in the Family,” “The Jeffersons,” “Good Times,”
“The Facts of Life” and “Diff’rent Strokes.” Kimmel is also
host and executive producer of ABC’s “Who Wants To Be A
Millionaire.”

In 2019, Kimmel wrote and illustrated a children’s book titled
“The Serious Goose.” Published by Random House Children’s Books,
“The Serious Goose” spent several weeks atop the New York Times
bestseller list. All the profits were donated to Children’s Hospital
Los Angeles (CHLA) and children’s hospitals across the United
States.

Outside of “Jimmy Kimmel Live!,” Kimmel hosted “The Oscars®”
two years in a row, for which he received widespread critical acclaim.
The move marked the first time the Academy Awards® telecast had the
same host in consecutive years since the 1990s. Previously, Kimmel
hosted the American Music Awards five times, co-hosted the ESPY Awards
with LeBron James, hosted the 2012 White House Correspondents’
Association Dinner with President Obama, and hosted the Primetime
Emmy® Awards three times.

Kimmel also voiced characters in “Paw Patrol the Movie,” the
Oscar-nominated film “The Boss Baby” and “The Boss Baby: Family
Business.”

After 12 years in local morning radio with stops in Las Vegas,
Phoenix, Seattle, Tampa, Palm Springs, Tucson and Los Angeles, Kimmel
got his start in television as co-host of “Win Ben Stein’s
Money” on Comedy Central, for which he won an Emmy for Best Game
Show Host in 1999. He co-hosted, co-created and executive produced 100
episodes of “The Man Show” for Comedy Central, served as on-air
prognosticator for Fox NFL Sunday for four seasons, and co-created and
executive produced “The Andy Milonakis Show” for MTV and MTV2.

Along with his company Kimmelot, Kimmel is the co-creator, executive
producer and co-star of “Crank Yankers,” now in its seventh season
on Comedy Central; executive producer of the game show “Generation
Gap” on ABC; executive producer of “Mark Rober’s Revengineers”
on Discovery; and executive producer of “Once Upon a Time in
Queens,” a four-part 30 for 30 documentary about the world champion
1986 New York Mets for ESPN.
