Kellyanne Conway is speaking out after Saturday Night Live aired a sketch that some felt portrayed the mother in an unfair manner.

The show came under fire over the weekend for its satirical skewering of Conway in a skit that many some deemed 'sexist.'

In a statement to Good Morning America, Conway brushed aside the backlash, saying: 'I appreciate the "not funny, not fair" outrage from all political and apolitical corners. Things that aren't true don't bother.'

In the skit, the president's counselor is depicted as bunny-boiling film villain Alex Forrest, the character played by Glenn Close in the 1987 film Fatal Attraction who tries to murder her married lover after an affair gone bad.

Michael Douglas played the philandering spouse in the film, while on SNL it was CNN anchor Jake Taper who was targeted by Conway in attempt to get back on the news.

Conway first commented on the sketch Sunday, writing on Twitter: Inquiring minds re: #SNL: @jaketapper & I spoke this morning just before brunch time. No boiling bunnies on the menu.'

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Saturday Night Live aired a pre-recorded sketch on Saturday parodying the 1987 film Fatal Attraction - with Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway (played by Kate McKinnon on the right) attempting to seduce CNN's Jake Tapper (played by Beck Bennett on the left)

Conway first commented on the sketch Sunday, writing on Twitter: Inquiring minds re: #SNL: @jaketapper & I spoke this morning just before brunch time. No boiling bunnies on the menu.'

Conway has been parodied on SNL by Kate McKinnon, while Tapper has been played by Beck Bennett.

In the sketch, Conway tries to seduce Tapper before threatening to kill him a knife.

A horrified Tapper than surrenders to Conway’s demand that she be permitted on his CNN show, State of the Union.

Conway than stumbles out the window of Tapper’s high-rise apartment and falls to her death – only to pull herself together again.

‘I’m fine, but I do only have three lives left,’ Conway says in the sketch. ‘See you on the news!’

The sketch begins with Bennett's Tapper (left) wrapping up an episode of CNN's State of the Union, the show hosted by the real Tapper (right)

When Bennett's character comes home, he is horrified to discover that Kellyanne Conway (played by McKinnon on the left) has been waiting for him. The real Conway is seen on the right

In the sketch, Conway tries to seduce Tapper before threatening to kill him a knife

A horrified Tapper than surrenders to Conway’s demand that she be permitted on his CNN show, State of the Union

The portrayal of Conway as femme fatale has riled up feminists who say the sketch was sexist

Olivia Nuzzi, the Washington correspondent for New York Magazine, tweeted that the skit 'will be interpreted as unfair and mean to a wife and mother'

'SNL just gave a gift to the White House with this sexist, unfunny Kellyanne Conway skit,' Nuzzi tweeted

Nuzzi predicted that the White House would point to the skit 'to dismiss all criticism of Conway and lying more broadly'

Andrea Mitchell of NBC News agreed that the portrayal of Conway was 'not right'

But critics of Trump say that Conway lacks credibility due to her boss's past behavior with women

Another Twitter user noted that Conway has made controversial statements about women and rape victims in the past

In real life, Tapper and Conway engaged in a lengthy, tense interview on CNN last week over the Trump adviser’s propensity to make claims that are demonstrably false, like the existence of the fictitious ‘Bowling Green massacre’ that was supposedly the motivation for Trump’s travel ban.

But Saturday’s sketch went too far, according to those who have criticized Conway in the past.

Olivia Nuzzi, the Washington correspondent for New York Magazine, denounced SNL’s skit.

The sketch is a parody of the 1987 psychological thriller Fatal Attraction, which stars Michael Douglas (left) and Glenn Close (right). Close plays a deranged mistress who tries to kill her married lover (Douglas) after he ends their tryst

'Casting Kellyanne Conway (left) as Glenn Close (right) was a miscalculation on SNL's part,' tweeted journalist Olivia Nuzzi

‘SNL just gave a gift to the White House with this sexist, unfunny Kellyanne Conway skit,’ Nuzzi tweeted on Saturday.

‘Prediction: the White House will use that sexist skit to dismiss all criticisms of Conway and lying more broadly,’ she wrote.

‘Casting Kellyanne Conway as Glenn Close was a miscalculation on SNL's part. Will be interpreted as unfair and mean to a wife and mother.’

Andrea Mitchell of NBC News also thought the skit was ‘not right.’

Jonathan Capehart, a critic of Conway’s at The Washington Post, tweeted: ‘Not sure about that Kellyanne skit.’

Other Trump critics, however, say that Conway has long ago forfeited any claim to victimhood given her boss’s history with women.

Trump has been accused by at least 10 women of fondling and groping them against their will.

During the campaign, a video surfaced in which Trump is heard saying that he grabs women by their genitalia.

In real life, Tapper and Conway engaged in a lengthy, tense interview on CNN last week over the Trump adviser’s propensity to make claims that are demonstrably false

‘I suspect cries of sexism from the blood from her wherever/p***ygrabbing administration will lack a certain cred,’ commented Charles Pierce, a journalist with Esquire.

Another Twitter user pointed out that Conway once remarked that if women were stronger, there would be no rape.

The comments were reported in Vanity Fair.

Conway appeared to take the episode in stride.

She tweeted on Sunday: ‘Inquiring minds re:SNL: Jake Tapper and I spoke this morning just before brunch time. No boiling bunnies on the menu.’

The boiling bunnies reference is a nod to Fatal Attraction, in which Glenn Close’s character puts a pet bunny in a boiling pot of water to scare her lover.

Saturday's episode of SNL, which was hosted by Alec Baldwin, generated its highest television ratings in six years, according to Variety.

The show has created major buzz in the Trump era, with Baldwin's impersonation of the president becoming a weekly must-see.

SNL has also won widespread praise for its casting of Melissa McCarthy as White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer.