Jimmy Kimmel airs photo of Melania and Epstein after First Lady’s shock White House denial
Melania’s surprise address was meant to draw a hard line: she insisted she was never Epstein’s friend, never his victim, never on his plane or island, and never named in any legal documents. She framed their encounters as incidental, the inevitable overlap of New York and Palm Beach high society. Fake images, she warned, had polluted the internet for years, and she vowed to keep fighting “mean‑spirited and politically motivated” attacks on her reputation with her lawyers at her side.
But Kimmel’s monologue turned that careful distancing into a late‑night spectacle. By flashing the old photo of Melania and Donald posing with Epstein — reportedly displayed in Epstein’s own home — he invited viewers to question her version of distance and innocence. Then came the twist: Trump himself admitted he hadn’t known about her statement beforehand. For Kimmel, that disconnect was the punchline and the gut punch, hinting at a marriage under strain and a political dynasty scrambling to outrun a ghost that refuses to stay buried.