An ABC interview was the first time Thomas Bossert, the homeland security adviser, was seeing the video. ABC News/Screenshot

President Donald Trump's homeland security adviser was asked on Sunday to respond to a tweet from the president earlier that morning featuring a video portraying Trump beating up a man with the CNN logo superimposed onto his face.

The video was an altered version of Trump's performance at WWE's WrestleMania event in 2007.

ABC's "This Week" host Martha Raddatz played the video for the homeland security adviser, Thomas Bossert, who had not yet seen the tweet, and asked him to respond.

"There's a lot of cable news shows that reach directly into hundreds of thousands of viewers, and they're really not always very fair to the president," Bossert said after he finished watching the video. "So I'm pretty proud of the president for developing a Twitter and a social-media platform where he can talk directly to the American people."

Bossert then praised Trump as "the most genuine president and most nonpolitician president that we've seen in my lifetime" and lauded his ability to communicate with voters.

"He certainly can communicate to the people, but I want to ask you: Is that the kind of communication you want, that he's beating up on somebody? That he's beating up on the media?" Raddatz asked. "You're in charge of homeland security there. That seems like a threat."

Bossert replied that it was "certainly not" a threat. "I think that no one would perceive that as a threat; I hope they don't," he added. Reiterating his previous statement, he said Trump "has a right" to respond to cable news platforms that he views as being unfair to him.

"You don't think that's a threat to anyone?" Raddatz asked. "You don't think that's sending a message: 'Do that to the media. Do that to CNN'?"

"No, I certainly don't," Bossert replied. He said Trump was expressing himself "genuinely" and had been elected because voters found him to be someone they could "understand and relate to."

Raddatz continued pressing Bossert and brought up a Thursday statement from the deputy press secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, in response to Trump's feud with MSNBC host Mika Brzezinski last week.

"The president in no way form or fashion has ever promoted or encouraged violence," Sanders said at the White House press briefing on Thursday. "If anything, quite the contrary. He's simply pushing back and defending himself."

Raddatz also touched on last month's tragic baseball shooting, during which a fervent Trump critic and Bernie Sanders supporter opened fire on congressional Republicans, critically wounding House Majority Whip Steve Scalise.

"You know what happened to Congressman Scalise, and you have these messages out there against the media, and the media has had — I hate this to be all about us, but he is making it about us, or particularly CNN — some people had to get private security guards," Raddatz said. "Is that really fair?"

When Bossert continued praising Trump for communicating directly with the people, Raddatz interrupted him. "I'm talking about the message," she said. "Not how he communicates — the message."

"But it's a good example of you or the media producers here deciding what it is that we talk about and what it is we don't talk about," Bossert said. "And so, with respect, I think that that's why he needs to go around you and the producers that control the message, and directly to the people ... and occasionally he likes to speak about those cable programs that are beating up on him unfairly."

Here's a clip of the interview: