NEW YORK ā Late-night TV show hosts expressed anger and frustration at the violence at the U.S. Capitol, offering somber monologues that pleaded for unity even as some aimed pointed barbs at those they held responsible for the mobs' actions.
āIt was a terrible day in the history of this country,ā said Jimmy Kimmel on his ABC show Wednesday. Over on CBS, Stephen Colbert called it "a horrifying day that will go down in U.S. history, however much longer that is.ā
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They were reacting to footage several hours earlier of a violent mob loyal to President Donald Trump storming the Senate and forcing lawmakers into hiding. Tear gas was used in the Rotunda.
āIf my grandfather were alive today and saw what was happening in the country that he fought for, heād be disgusted," said Jimmy Fallon on NBC. "People walking around with the flag upside down thinking theyāre patriotic. Today was not patriotism. Today was terrorism.ā
James Corden, who grew up in England, used the perspective of an outsider to view the events, saying he always looked to the United States as a beacon of light and possibility.
āToday, people across the world would have looked at these pictures from Washington and they would have wondered what on earth has happened to this great country,ā Corden said on CBS. But he added āthe America that they admire still exists."
Kimmel ridiculed some members of the mob, including one dressed as a Viking. "It was like a psychotic āPrice is Rightā audience forcibly taking control of the Plinko wheel," Kimmel said. He condemned those who ālit these fires.ā
Colbert's 14-minute monologue was the most scathing, calling out Trumpās most outspoken GOP supporters in Congress and the Senate for what he alleged were years of sowing the seeds for violence.
"After five years of coddling this presidentās fascist rhetoric, guess whose followers want to burn down the Reichstag?ā he said. āWho could have seen this coming? Everyone. This is the most shocking, most tragic, least surprising thing Iāve ever seen.ā
āThe Daily Showā was on vacation Wednesday night but tweeted out a combo photo of the Capitol under siege and an image of dinosaurs running amok from āJurassic Park,ā with the caption: āSame energy.ā
Several hosts wryly noted the relatively restrained reaction from authorities and compared that to the way Black protesters have been treated.
"I wouldnāt even want to imagine his treatment or response to those people if they had been wearing Black Lives Matter hats instead of red MAGA ones,ā Corden said.
Many hosts noted with optimism that the nation is weeks away from a new administration and that the same steps where the mob battled police will welcome a new batch of lawmakers.
"Itās important to remember that this is not who we are. I assure you there are more good people than there are bad, and good will prevail,ā Fallon said.
Seth Meyers was live on NBC and didn't try to joke about the events, filling his monologue with terms like āarmed insurrectionā and āstunning scenes of violence and sedition.ā
āWe are going to try our best tonight to process what happened and I promise, I promise, if you come back tomorrow we will have jokes,ā he said.
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Mark Kennedy is at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits