protesters have been demanding
police reforms for weeks, and "today the president himself carefully shuffled down the ramp into the fray,"
Trevor Noah said on Tuesday's Daily Show. It was all "a little confusing, because he signed an executive order that would make modest changes," but "he spent the whole time praising the police," he said. "The only paper Trump has signed with less enthusiasm were his first two marriage certificates."
Yes, "Trump signed an executive order on police reform,"
Stephen Colbert said at The
Late Show, but "before you get excited, don't — it doesn't do much," other than proposing "an Excel spreadsheet of all the worst cops in America," a chokehold "ban" with a huge loophole, and sundry other tweaks. "This event was supposedly about police reform, but Trump made it clear that he doesn't think it's that necessary," he said, and "he closed by making it creepy."Colbert turned to former National Security Adviser John Bolton's upcoming book, the latest "damning
White House tell-all written by a former White House staffer way too late for it to make any difference." Still, Bolton's book "must be extra spicy," because the
Justice Department just filed a breach-of-contract suit against him, he said, shrugging. The lawsuit bizarrely claims Bolton broke a nondisclosure agreement, but "Trump should just cut Bolton a check for $130,000," he joked, making a
Stormy Daniels reference.
Tooning Out the News thanked Trump for all the great free publicity on behalf of Bolton's mustache.
Bolton's "the guy who offered to testify during the impeachment trial, but the
Republicans said nah, no thanks, we're good,"
Jimmy Kimmel recalled. At this point, he added, impeachment "feels like a Hulu show I was really into and then hated the ending of. But Bolton is back," and Trump is warning he'll have "criminal problems" because every conversation Trump has is "highly classified." "Those are rules for a bachelor party, not the law," Kimmel said. "He just makes things up as he goes."Meanwhile, Johnson & Johnson is "literally putting a Band-Aid on the problem of
racism," and
Fox News appears to be "disappointed that there's no looting going on anymore," because they're now "manufacturing outrage in response to a nonexistent movement to cancel the show Paw Patrol," Kimmel sighed. "There's real stuff to be mad about, you know."
Late Night's
Seth Meyers told jokes about some of them. Watch below.