Eliza Collins

USA TODAY

There’s an uneven distribution of ads between the two presumptive presidential nominees — a really uneven distribution.

An analysis by Center for Public Integrity provided by ad monitoring group Kantar Media/CMAG found that since June, Hillary Clinton’s campaign had aired around 20,000 TV ads, while Donald Trump’s campaign had launched a big, fat zero.

The majority of the ads have been aired after Clinton became the presumptive Democratic nominee on June 7, signaling the likely general election matchup between the two.

The last ads Trump’s campaign aired were in early May. Between May 1 and May 7, they aired 880 ads.

If you include PACs supporting the candidates, Clinton adds at least 13,000 more since the beginning of June. Trump gains about 600, including 400+ ads from the National Rifle Association, which has endorsed Trump.

While Clinton’s ad buys dwarf Trump’s over the last month, the New York real estate mogul’s campaign has purchased some ads over the course of the campaign, almost 33,000 of them. But that’s just a fraction of the number Clinton’s campaign has aired in all — she’s just under 130,000.

But there is one candidate who is close — Bernie Sanders. The Vermont senator, who has not conceded the race or endorsed Clinton but said he would vote for her, aired more than 128,000 spots in total. However, Sanders stopped airing ads in early June.