SATIRE SHOCKER: ABC Axes The View and Replaces It with The Charlie Kirk Show — America Can’t Decide Whether to Laugh or Salute

The unthinkable has finally happened—at least in satire form. ABC, tired of sighs, squabbles, and ratings slumps, has allegedly pulled the plug on The View, daytime’s most divisive talk show. And in its place? None other than The Charlie Kirk Show, hosted by Kirk’s widow Erika Kirk and media firebrand Megyn Kelly.

It’s bold. It’s bizarre. And it’s the kind of move that could only make sense in 2025.

Charlie Kirk Death News: "Charlie Is Dead": American Journalist Megyn Kelly Breaks Down On Air

Farewell to the Henhouse

For 27 years, The View functioned as America’s loudest coffee klatch. Five co-hosts sat around a table, crosstalking over each other about everything from presidential elections to pineapple on pizza.

The show had its fans—millions of them. But it also had detractors, who described it as less “daytime news analysis” and more “audible chaos.”

The alleged breaking point? Whoopi Goldberg’s “Angel-gate” remark about the late Charlie Kirk, followed by an on-air meltdown that producers reportedly couldn’t spin into ratings gold.

“It wasn’t even the remark itself,” one fictional ABC exec sighed in this satirical universe. “It was the sighing. Whoopi’s sighs were louder than the microphones. The nation deserves relief.”

Thus, in one swift press release—just three words, “It’s done. Finally.”—the network declared the hens were gone.

Enter The Charlie Kirk Show

What to put in the empty slot? Reruns of Judge Judy? Infomercials for nonstick pans? Even static snow was considered.

But ultimately, ABC leaned into its boldest satirical option yet: a patriotic powerhouse hosted by Erika Kirk and Megyn Kelly.

The show’s mission statement: “Less squawking. More saluting.”

On premiere day, Erika stood beside a six-foot portrait of her late husband while Megyn strutted onstage in a fire-engine red suit. The tone was set: no cackling, no interruptions, no kale.

“Charlie dreamed of a show where people could finish a sentence without Joy Behar cutting them off,” Erika told the audience. “Today, that dream lives.”

Megyn added, “Daytime TV has been too soft, too liberal, and too screechy. Think of this as The View, but with better lighting—and fewer sighs.”

Erika Kirk steps up as CEO of Turning Point USA

The Format: God, Guns, and Gossip

Each episode follows a rigidly patriotic structure, with segments designed to keep middle America engaged (and liberals fuming). Among them:

The Kirk Commandments: Erika reads Charlie’s old tweets as though they were scripture. The audience responds with a chorus of “Amen” or “Build the Wall.”
Megyn vs. America’s Enemies: Kelly debates prerecorded clips of Democrats, Starbucks baristas, and the occasional French mayor who mispronounced “MAGA.”
Freedom Kitchen: Erika teaches casseroles “the way the Founding Fathers intended”—with extra Velveeta and zero kale.
Red State Renovations: Living rooms are re-upholstered in flag fabric while decorative Buddha statues are ceremoniously burned.
Patriot Karaoke: Jason Aldean, Kid Rock, or Lee Greenwood belt anthems as CGI eagles explode across the screen.

ABC even teased holiday specials: A Very Kirkmas, where Santa is rebranded as a small-business owner punished by inflation.

Set Design: Less Sofa, More Glory

Out with the pastels of Manhattan, in with a backdrop that screams Americana.

Mount Rushmore. NASCAR highlights. Apple pies cooling on digital windowsills.

The hosts sit at a desk shaped like the U.S. Constitution, engraved with the Pledge of Allegiance. Teleprompters are allegedly mounted inside hollowed-out AR-15s.

Commercial breaks end with an eagle shriek louder than Joy Behar’s laugh.

The Audience: Confused but Patriotic

“The Kirk Crowd,” as live attendees are now called, begins each taping by reciting the Pledge while waving Chick-fil-A sandwiches.

Some admit they only came for the free mini flags. Others confess they miss the gossip but enjoy the casseroles.

“I used to watch The View for Meghan McCain fights,” one audience member said. “Now I stay for Megyn Kelly yelling about pronouns. It’s cathartic.”

Reactions Pour In

Conservatives celebrated. Donald Trump posted on Truth Social:

“The View is FINISHED!!! Erika is WONDERFUL. Megyn is TOUGH. MUCH better than Whoopi & Joy—both terrible, WORST RATINGS EVER. Big WIN!!!”

Fox News looped coverage under the chyron: FROM HENS TO HEROES.

Liberals groaned. Senator Elizabeth Warren tweeted:

“Replacing The View with The Charlie Kirk Show is like replacing a library with a gun range.”

Comedian Trevor Noah quipped:

“So ABC went from Whoopi sighing at Meghan McCain to Megyn Kelly screaming at a cardboard Joe Biden. Not sure this is progress.”

The Old Hosts Plot Revenge

Displaced hosts aren’t going quietly. Rumors swirl that Whoopi and Joy Behar are launching a podcast titled The Screech Continues, promising 45 minutes of unfiltered screaming.

Ana Navarro was reportedly in tears: “Without The View, how will America know what I think about TikTok bans?”

Sunny Hostin, meanwhile, teased a lawsuit: “I had at least three more years of interrupting Megyn Kelly left in me.”

Megyn Kelly turns on Fox News over Charlie Kirk

Bigger Than One Show

Behind the laughter, the satire lands with bite. The View always represented a noisy, imperfect reflection of America’s culture wars. To “replace” it with a patriotic reboot led by Megyn Kelly and Erika Kirk lampoons not just daytime television but the fractured state of political discourse itself.

Would audiences really tune in daily for casserole recipes, patriotic karaoke, and debates with Starbucks baristas? Probably. Because America has shown again and again that it thrives on outrage, spectacle, and the occasional casserole.

Outrage with a Side of Velveeta

So here we are: no more hens, just patriotism.

In this satirical reboot, Erika Kirk salutes her husband’s memory, Megyn Kelly scolds holographic Democrats, and the audience chants “USA” while balancing Chick-fil-A nuggets.

Is it better television? Worse television? Or just America turned up to 1776?

Whatever the verdict, one thing is certain: ABC’s fictional tagline says it all—

“No more hens. Just patriotism. It’s done.”