President Trump's ally Anthony Scaramucci said during an interview on Sunday that he thinks Wall Street is "fairer" than Washington.

"It's a very, very tough town ... There's a politics of personal destruction here. There's manufactured scandals," he said during an interview on Fox News, when asked what he's learned so far about the Beltway culture.

"I think that Wall Street is a little bit fairer than Washington, and I'll tell you why. I think we're front-stabbers on Wall Street," he continued.

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"If we don't like each other, we come right at each other and we tell each other how we feel."

In Washington, however, Scaramucci said, people have mixed incentives and there is a lot of "back-stabbing."

"Don't like it at all, to be candid," he said.

Scaramucci also said during the interview he thinks the media is having an "existential crisis" because Trump is president.

The media didn't expect Trump to become president, Scaramucci said, adding that the president is "outside of the mainstream of Washington."

He also predicted the next six months are going to be "phenomenal" for Trump.

"I think that the media probably needed to make an adjustment to the fact that they had high expectations that Secretary Clinton was going to be the president," he said, referring to former Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton Hillary Diane Rodham ClintonWhat Senate Republicans have said about election-year Supreme Court vacancies Bipartisan praise pours in after Ginsburg's death Trump carries on with rally, unaware of Ginsburg's death MORE.

Scaramucci's comments come after CNN last month retracted a story connecting him to a Russian investment fund run by a bank controlled by the Kremlin.

Three CNN staffers later resigned.

An internal CNN investigation found normal editorial processes weren't followed in the story's editing and publication.

Trump has since chided CNN, most recently sharing a modified video on Twitter showing him body-slamming someone with a CNN logo superimposed on their face at a wrestling match.

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Scaramucci said during the Fox News interview he thought CNN "moved pretty quickly" after he explained his side of the story.

"I thought they've always been fair to me and so I wanted to give them some due process to make that correction," he said.

"And since they did pretty quickly, I sent out a tweet immediately that I accepted their apology."