We're sure Hillary Clinton had enough politically incorrect idiots to be getting on with already, but she found time to squeeze in one more.
The presidential nominee settled down in the hot seat for Funny or Die web series Between Two Ferns on Thursday (September 22), to take on Zach Galifianakis's dim-witted presenter alter ego - and handled it like a total pro.
What to Read Next
It was probably good practice for her, seeing as she's coming up against Donald Trump in the first of the presidential debates in just a few days' time.
The start of the video shows Galifianakis getting tackled to the ground by the Secret Service for trying to creep up on Hillary in a Halloween mask... and things only get more awkward from there.
He kicks off his questions by asking Hillary how she feels about potentially being the first "girl president", and for "younger, younger generations", the first white president too.
Bringing in her fellow Democrat, he says: "How does President Obama like his coffee? Like himself? Weak?"
Moving on to the topic of Donald Trump, the comic then asks whether Hillary ever considers taking a leaf out of his book when it comes to campaigning.
"When you see how well it works for Donald Trump, do you ever think to yourself, 'Maybe I should be more racist?'" he says.
"When he's elected president and Kid Rock's elected secretary of state, are you moving to Canada?"
The interview then cuts to a commercial, which is actually just a campaign video for Hillary's presidential opponent Donald Trump - and when the camera cuts back to her, she plays it totally unamused.
"Why would you play a commercial from my opponent in the middle of our interview?" she says.
"He paid me in steaks," Galifianakis replies.
It was a tough interview for Hillary no doubt, but at least she got some solid training in before she comes face to face with Trump on a debate stage for the first time on Monday (September 26).
And while Clinton's Funny or Die video has earned 1.5 million views so far, Monday's debate is set to draw a much larger crowd, with an audience that could exceed 100 million.
Yikes.













