Bernie Sanders may hail from Brooklyn, but it's clearly been a while since the 74-year-old presidential candidate took the F train to Coney Island. In an interview with the Daily News, the transcript of which was released Monday, Sanders was asked whether he was going to campaign in the subway, as well as whether he knew how to ride it.

"I know how to ride the subways. I've been on them once or twice," Sanders, who is no stranger to traveling with the public , told the Daily News. "Do you really?" the interviewer asked. "How do you get on the subway today?" "You get a token and you get in," Sanders replied. "Wrong," the interviewer responded.

And Sanders is, indeed, wrong: In fact, he will have been wrong about that for a little over 13 years now. According to the New York Times, the New York City subway token was phased out in March 2003. Though it took a while for the city to fully transition over to the new system, the MetroCard – the only currency now accepted on the subways and buses of New York – was introduced in 1994.

Sanders, not to be deterred, took another shot at the answer. His second try was technically correct, albeit illegal: "You jump over the turnstile."

In response, the interviewer quipped: "We would like our photographer to be there when you jump over the turnstile."

