“DISNEY DOES NOT WANT TO BE THE ONES THAT BROKE AMERICA” — Mark Ruffalo & Marvel Stars Turn on the Mouse Over Jimmy Kimmel Show Ban 🔥

If you thought Marvel movies were dramatic, wait until you see the real-life Avengers assemble — not to fight Thanos, not to save New York, but to defend… Jimmy Kimmel.

Yes, you read that correctly.

Mark Ruffalo, the man whose eyebrows alone could power a solar farm, has officially joined Tatiana Maslany in going nuclear on Disney after the Mouse House dared to pull the plug on Jimmy Kimmel Live! under pressure from the FCC and nervous affiliate owners.

Forget “Endgame. ”

This is the franchise crossover no one saw coming: The Incredible Hulk versus The Happiest Place on Earth.

 

Mark Ruffalo Warns Disney's Stock Will Plummet If ABC Cancels 'Kimmel'

And trust me, Mickey is already sweating through his oversized gloves.

It all started when ABC’s parent company, Disney, decided that Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night antics were just too spicy for fragile FCC sensibilities and squeamish affiliate bosses.

The result? A decision to “preempt” his show, which is corporate-speak for “shove it in a drawer until America forgets. ”

But Hollywood doesn’t forget.

And certainly not Ruffalo, who apparently woke up, smashed his breakfast table in rage, and declared: “It’s going to go down a lot further if they cancel his show.

Disney does not want to be the ones that broke America. ”

BROKE AMERICA.

Let that sink in.

We’re no longer talking about ratings, comedy, or even late-night TV.

According to Ruffalo, Mickey Mouse is now one FCC meeting away from single-handedly dismantling the nation.

Cue the Twitter meltdown.

Fans didn’t know whether to laugh, cry, or Photoshop Hulk punching Mickey straight into bankruptcy.

One fan tweeted: “Disney canceling Jimmy Kimmel Live is literally how democracy dies. ”

Another wrote: “Forget civil war.

We’re about to have Civil Woke. ”

 

Mark Ruffalo Warns Disney's Stock Will Plummet If ABC Cancels 'Kimmel'

And somewhere in Florida, Ron DeSantis probably tried to claim he had something to do with it.

Of course, Ruffalo wasn’t alone.

Tatiana Maslany, who played She-Hulk and therefore is contractually obligated to defend fellow green icons, also condemned Disney’s move.

Together, the Hulks have officially launched what tabloids are calling “The Rage Initiative” — a crusade to save late-night snark from the cold, sanitized grip of the House of Mouse.

Fake experts have already jumped in.

Dr. Brenda Snarkwell, a cultural psychologist who allegedly has a PhD in Meme Studies, told us: “If Disney kills Jimmy Kimmel Live, it will create a ripple effect.

First late-night, then satire, then free speech itself.

Before you know it, America will only laugh at Frozen reboots.

That’s how civilizations collapse. ”

Sounds legit.

But let’s get real for a second: the irony here is so thick you could spread it on toast.

Mark Ruffalo, an actor famous for playing a character who gets angry and smashes things, is mad at Disney — the same company that paid him millions to smash CGI aliens while quipping about yoga.

Imagine biting the hand that not only feeds you but literally digitizes your muscles so you look like an angry green balloon animal.

Yet here we are.

Ruffalo vs. Disney.

Hulk vs. Mouse.

The crossover comic book writers didn’t dare to dream of.

Meanwhile, Disney’s response has been peak corporate gaslighting.

“We value Jimmy Kimmel’s contributions and are committed to exploring the best way forward,” a spokesperson droned in a statement that sounded like it was written by a sentient HR manual.

Translation: “We’re terrified of advertisers, the FCC, and anyone who might write us a mean email, so we’re benching Jimmy until further notice. ”

 

Charlie Kirk - News - IMDb

Experts believe this statement was printed directly from the same dusty printer used for every Disney apology since 1995.

But here’s the real kicker: Ruffalo’s line — “Disney does not want to be the ones that broke America” — has already taken on a life of its own.

TikTok teens are lip-syncing it in Hulk makeup.

Activists are slapping it on protest signs.

Conspiracy theorists are convinced it’s a coded warning about Disney’s secret plan to take over the government.

(Though, to be fair, the government is already run like a Disney sequel: unnecessary, bloated, and nobody asked for it. )

Even Jimmy Kimmel himself, the man at the center of this meltdown, couldn’t resist throwing shade.

In what may go down as the most passive-aggressive Instagram Story of 2025, he posted a picture of Mickey Mouse covering Donald Duck’s mouth with the caption: “Coming this fall on ABC. ”

Subtle, Jim.

Real subtle.

And let’s not ignore the drama brewing among Disney’s other Marvel stars.

Insiders claim Chris Evans is “quietly furious” but too wholesome to say it out loud.

Scarlett Johansson allegedly rolled her eyes so hard she sprained them.

And Robert Downey Jr.

texted Ruffalo one cryptic word: “Assemble.

” If this escalates into a full-blown Marvel mutiny, Disney may soon find itself in the biggest battle since Infinity War — only this time, the villain isn’t Thanos, it’s FCC paperwork and nervous advertisers.

 

Jimmy Kimmel Live! (TV Series 2003– ) - News - IMDb

Critics, of course, are having a field day.

“Imagine risking your empire over Jimmy Kimmel,” one columnist sneered.

“That’s like burning down Disneyland to get rid of one churro stand. ”

Others say the controversy proves Disney has grown too corporate, too sanitized, too unwilling to let anyone tell a joke that isn’t mouse-approved.

One late-night rival even joked, “If Disney kills Kimmel, the only safe comedy left will be Goofy tripping over a rake. ”

And honestly? They’re not wrong.

So where does this leave us? On one side, you’ve got Mark Ruffalo, Tatiana Maslany, and a growing mob of fans insisting that Jimmy Kimmel Live is the last line of defense between America and a cultural apocalypse.

On the other, you’ve got Disney, nervously clutching its $200 billion empire and praying that advertisers don’t flee faster than audiences did from Morbius.

And in the middle? Jimmy Kimmel, sipping tequila, watching the chaos unfold, and secretly loving every second of it.

The next few weeks could determine everything.

Will Disney cave and bring Kimmel back, hoping to avoid being branded as the studio that “broke America”?

Will Ruffalo channel his inner Hulk and storm the Magic Kingdom? Will Mickey Mouse lawyer up?

Anything is possible in this saga, which is already shaping up to be the messiest crossover event since Spider-Man showed up in Civil War.

For now, one thing is clear: Disney may own Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar, ESPN, Hulu, and half your childhood, but it doesn’t own Mark Ruffalo’s rage.

And if Mickey doesn’t watch out, that rage might just smash America into pieces — all over a late-night host with a desk, a sidekick, and a questionable obsession with Matt Damon.

Stay tuned.

Because if the Avengers really do assemble over Jimmy Kimmel, this might just be the only Disney project worth watching.