It’s Bold of Jimmy Fallon to Bring on a Guest That’s Much Better at His Job
Hello everyone. Let’s get straight to the point before the coffee cools: Jimmy Fallon, the eternally smiling, giggle-churning puppy dog of late-night TV, thought it was a good idea to bring Greg Gutfeld on The Tonight Show. Yes, the Fox News late-night host who, like it or not, has been stomping the competition in ratings as if the Nielsen scoreboard were his personal Call of Duty kill count. And the result? Fallon managed to showcase, in glorious high definition, exactly why he’s losing that late-night war. Bravo, Jimmy. Truly inspired self-sabotage.
The Desperation is Palpable
Fallon’s career at this stage feels like watching a speed-run attempt where the player picked the wrong character build, ran into a dead end, and is now desperately bunny-hopping to find some hidden route. The article’s description puts it perfectly – every day must feel like Groundhog Day meets Uncut Gems, except the life-or-death bet is whether NBC keeps him on the payroll.
“Trying new things,” they said. Sometimes grandstanding against Trump for points with the Twitter crowd, sometimes rolling out the welcome mat for a right-wing powerhouse who just might siphon off a few viewers. The strategy, if you can call it that, is less ‘carefully crafted PR campaign’ and more ‘button-mashing in the dark hoping something crits.’
Greg Gutfeld: Villain or Victory Lap?
Here’s the really awkward part: Gutfeld didn’t just show up – he dominated. According to ratings data from the second quarter of 2025, Gutfeld’s show pulled in 3.289 million viewers. Fallon? 1.188 million. That’s not a small gap; that’s an entire civilization collapse. You could build a thriving in-game economy in that difference.
On set, Gutfeld effectively ran his own interview. Fallon faded into the background like a low-level NPC during a boss fight. The conversation control? All Gutfeld. The comedic rhythm? All Gutfeld. The presence? You guessed it – all Gutfeld. Whether you agree with his comedy or his politics is irrelevant. The man came in swinging, and Fallon looked like he’d rather be anywhere else, probably strumming a guitar in that awkward celebrity sing-along way that makes your soul cringe.
The Interview That Backfired
The worst part? Fallon barely even acknowledged the right-wing engine that fuels Gutfeld!. He gave his guest plenty of softballs to look relatable – sharing stories about being fired or losing his mother – and essentially built a highlight reel for NBC’s rival in the process. It’s as if he invited a pro gamer to his stream, handed them the controller, and walked off to get snacks. When he came back, the guest was speed-running the game, breaking records, and mop-dropping the host’s ‘brand’ into irrelevance.
A Strategy of Self-Inflicted Wounds
Look, inviting a divisive but top-performing figure like Gutfeld makes strategic sense – if you have the confidence to hold your own. Fallon doesn’t. The whole episode reads like an ill-advised corporate crossover where one franchise clearly outshines the other, leaving fans wondering why the weaker one is still on the roster. It’s basically a marketing class case study in “how not to co-brand.”
In the quest for ratings, Fallon didn’t just lose the battle – he handed over the keys to the castle and asked if his guest wanted a beverage.
Yes, it’s television, not morality theatre. But when your biggest takeaway is that the guest was “much better at his job,” you’re not exactly inspiring confidence in network execs about keeping you around.
Final Diagnosis
As a doctor, I’d prescribe Fallon a spine transplant, three doses of killer instinct, and a ban on giggling at his own jokes. As a gamer, I’d tell him to stop playing on Easy Mode with guests who won’t challenge him – because the moment a power player sat across from him, he dropped the controller and pretended he was still in the tutorial. And as a conspiracy theorist? Well, one might suspect NBC is testing out a potential replacement under the guise of a “guest segment.” But who am I to speculate? Oh right, I’m the guy pointing out the obvious.
Overall impression? Bad. Bruised ego, wasted airtime, and the unintended promotion of a competitor. If this was intended as a strategic play, it was the equivalent of shooting a blue shell at yourself.
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is entirely my opinion.


Source: It’s Bold of Jimmy Fallon to Bring on a Guest That’s Much Better at His Job, https://www.cracked.com/article_47785_its-bold-of-jimmy-fallon-to-bring-on-a-guest-thats-much-better-at-his-job.html