Clinton ally David Brock is seeking damaging video and audio clips of Donald Trump that haven't yet been unearthed – and he's willing to pay for them.

The Brock-funded Correct the Record has launched the site Trump Leaks, a group who's name plays on WikiLeaks, which has roiled the campaign with embarrassing information about the Democrats.

"We're chasing everything,' Brock told NBC News. "We're going to extraordinary lengths because this is an extraordinary situation," Brock said.

Trump has already been confronted with a litany of dusty clips during the campaign, including musing about the Iraq war before the U.S. invasion on the Howard Stern show, and rating women on a scale of one-to-ten.

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The group Correct the Record, backed by David Brock, wants 'usable, un-doctored video or audio that has been legally obtained or is legally accessible' that it can post about Donald Trump

'One of the most important things for voters to evaluate in any election is the full measure of a candidate’s views, ideas and temperament over time,' says the Trump Leaks site.

'In making a choice for president, voters must also consider how various candidates present themselves to the public and to the world. There are few things more important in that regard than access to video or audio in the form of prior television or radio interviews or more candid video from events a candidate may have attended.'

The plea for leaks includes links to illustrate the type of information the group is looking for: explosive or embarrassing information that has the potential to drive the news cycle, in a campaign where video of Hillary Clinton's collapse and Colin Powell's leaked emails have shaped the narrative.

'When it comes to Donald Trump, we already have video of interviews where he discussed his preferred sexual positions, said “I would love to be a well-educated black, because I really believe they do have an actual advantage today” and declared “putting a wife to work is a very dangerous thing,” says the site.

Brock was a nemesis of Bill and Hillary Clinton while they were in the White House but has since become one of their and the Democrats' primary boosters

Donald Trump continues to make headlines with his off-the-cuff remarks, but Correct the Record wants videos from the past that might not be in keeping with his campaign's more scripted message

BLAST FROM THE PAST: The group cited as an example Trump's recorded comments that 'a well-educated black has a tremendous advantage' over whites

'Given Trump’s long career as a celebrity and provocateur, there’s certainly more where that came from,' it ads.

The site calls itself 'an effort to uncover unreported video or audio of Donald Trump so voters can have access to the Donald Trump who existed before running for president and before his recent affinity for teleprompters. TrumpLeaks can provide some compensation to those who have usable, un-doctored video or audio that has been legally obtained or is legally accessible.'

The group is separate from the Clinton campaign and is prohibited from coordinating with it.

One of the links cited as an example of what it wants is Trump's interview with NBC from 1989.

'A well-educated black has a tremendous advantage over a well-educated white in terms of the job market and I think sometimes a black may think that they don’t really have the advantage or this or that,' Trump says on camera. 'But in actuality, today, currently … If I were starting off today I would love to be a well educated black because I really believe they do have an actual advantage today.'

Brock was a nemesis of Bill and Hillary Clinton while they were in the White House but has since become one of their and the Democrats' primary boosters, funding TV ads and online missives to buttress her campaign.