Shade for Jimmy Fallon.
The 50-year-old appeared on the 2024 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade on Thursday morning donning a pair of sun shades — regardless of the downpour and overcast skies, prompting jokes from NBC viewers.
“Rain or shine, you have to get out there,” the “Tonight Show” host mentioned on “Today” on the parade, per USA At the moment, saying that “everyone is still out here cheering” regardless of the drizzle. “It is the best holiday.”
But it surely was exactly the climate — and the late-night present host’s selection of equipment — that perplexed viewers.
“Sunglasses in the rain is the most Jimmy Fallon that Jimmy can Fallon,” one individual wrote on X, per the Every day Mail.
“Jimmy Fallon rocking sunglasses at the Macy’s Parade — in the rain — felt like comedy gold,” one other consumer wrote. “Who needs weather-appropriate choices when you have *vibes*?”
“It’s raining at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. Why is Jimmy Fallon wearing these sunglasses?” snarked another person.
Some customers even speculated that the actor is perhaps hungover, arguing that it’s the one logical motive somebody can be sporting shades on a cloudy, stormy day.
“Jimmy Fallon got an umbrella and wearing sunglasses in this wet weather,” wrote one X consumer. “He got a heavy hangover.”
Whereas the posts are merely allegations, Fallon did beforehand write on social media that “no one will know when you’re hungover” should you put on sun shades.
The “Saturday Night Live” alum carried out a tune with the Roots upon reaching the thirty fourth Avenue Macy’s flagship after final 12 months’s lip syncing snafu.
One other performer included “Vanderpump Rules” alum Ariana Madix as she joined the star-studded line-up of “Wicked” star Cynthia Erivo, Billy Porter, Kylie Minogue and extra throughout the procession, which kicked off at 8:30 a.m. ET.
Years in the past, after being known as out for not singing stay on the parade, John Legend revealed that a lot of the stars are compelled to lip sync “because the floats don’t have the capacity to handle the sound requirements for a live performance.”