💥 The Donut Shop Disaster: How Jimmy Kimmel Made JD Vance the Most Awkward Meme in Politics
The political world watched as JD Vance—the Vice Presidential candidate who marketed himself as a serious, intellectual figure—was systematically dismantled on live television, not by a political rival, but by late-night host Jimmy Kimmel.
The core of Vance’s meltdown wasn’t a policy debate; it was the realization that Kimmel had successfully exposed him as the most awkward, phony politician in modern history, transforming his entire persona into a viral, unavoidable meme.
The conflict wasn’t just entertaining; it became a symbol of the war between authentic political narrative and polished political performance.
🍩 The Cringe Moment That Went Viral
The attack began with the infamous Doughnut Shop Disaster from August 2024. Vance walked into a Georgia doughnut shop and immediately proved he had zero idea how normal humans interact.
The Robotic Response: He awkwardly asked the cashier, “How long you worked here?” and, regardless of the answer, responded with a flat, “Good.” When asked what donuts he wanted, he replied with the most robotic, inhuman response possible: “Whatever makes sense.”
Kimmel took this single moment of cringey authenticity and amplified it into a catastrophic national punchline. He brought the legendary actor Haley Joel Osment onto his show to recreate the incident in a full parody political ad.
Osment’s portrayal, complete with beard and heavy eyeliner (a running joke about Vance’s alleged makeup use), was devastating because it barely had to exaggerate the real footage.
🎭 The Parody That Shattered the Image

Kimmel’s sketch, which garnered tens of millions of views, didn’t just mock the donut order; it weaponized the public’s perception of Vance as “weird” and “creepy.”
Osment’s Vance begins the sketch by saying: “The mainstream media, they want you to think that I’m weird. They call me creepy, cringy, awkward, that I give people something called the ick.”
The sketch spiraled into absurdity, amplifying every perceived flaw:
Vance punches through the glass display case.
He asks a Black construction worker, “How long you been Black?”
He asks a pregnant woman, “When do you spawn?”
The sketch ends with Vance giving advice on how to have sex with a couch, referencing a viral, unverified rumor about a passage in his memoir.
The attack wasn’t based on political lies; it was based on awkward truth. The devastation of the sketch stemmed from the fact that Osment “barely had to change anything from the real footage.”
💄 The Eyeliner, The Lies, and The Meltdown
The Doughnut Shop Disaster was just one line of attack. Throughout the 2024 campaign, Kimmel relentlessly mocked Vance’s entire appearance, specifically questioning whether he wore eyeliner—a perfect visual counterpoint to Vance’s hyper-masculine political performance.
When Trump’s administration tried to pressure TV stations to pull Kimmel’s show, Vance had the nerve to claim the entire controversy was “just a joke.”
On live TV, Vance tried to defend the administration’s action, stating Kimmel’s absence from certain stations was simply “because he’s not funny and because his ratings aren’t very good.”
Kimmel immediately responded with a devastating reality check: “My ratings aren’t very good? Last time I checked, your ratings were somewhere between a hair in your salad and chlamydia in 3 and a half years. I’m not the one who’s going to be doing mascara tutorials on YouTube.“
🤯 Vance’s Fatal Flaw: The Loss of Control
What drives Vance absolutely insane is not the policy disagreement; it’s the fact that he cannot control his own public perception. Vance’s political success is based on performing a character—the serious, intellectual Midwestern populist. Kimmel stripped that character bare, replacing it with the image of a robotic, socially inept, makeup-wearing politician.
When confronted, Vance melts down, unable to deploy his intellectual arguments against simple, brutal mockery. His attempts to fight back only made things worse: he proved he was willing to lie about ratings and engage in schoolyard insults, confirming the very lack of “stable genius” he tries so hard to project.
The ultimate destruction delivered by Kimmel wasn’t political; it was existential. He showed the country that the man asking for their vote is not the authentic voice of the working class, but a political operative so awkward that his attempts at appearing normal only make him an object of national ridicule.