Anthony Scaramucci’s stint at the White House was short and sweet.

“Whatever happened happened. But it was the best 11 days in my life experience as it related to employment in public service,” the former White House communications director told John Catsimatidis on the “Cats Roundtable” radio show on 970 AM on Sunday.

Scaramucci, known as “The Mooch,” was fired in July after he gave a vulgarity-filled interview to The New Yorker magazine and attacked several previous members of the administration – including former White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus and former top strategist Steve Bannon.

He blasted Priebus as a “f- -king paranoiac” and criticized Bannon for advancing his own agenda.

“I’m not Steve Bannon, I’m not trying to suck my own c- -k,” Scaramucci told the magazine. “I’m not trying to build my own brand off the f- -king strength of the president.”

Scaramucci, a Long Island native, told Catsimatidis that he had a “very normal conversation” with The New Yorker’s Ryan Lizza that contained some “locker-room talk.”

But Lizza “tried to make me look unhinged” in the story he wrote based on the interview.

“I am not shirking responsibility for the conversation. I own every word of the conversation,” Scaramucci said on Sunday.

“The only thing I would say is that he wrote the story in a very bombastic way and tried to make me look unhinged. But, in fact, when you listen to the recording, it is a very normal conversation. But it is still with a little bit of neighborhood conversation or, as the president would say, ‘locker-room talk.'”

President Trump dismissed his remarks on an “Access Hollywood” tape that surfaced in October 2016 – in which he talked about how because he was a star, he can “grab ’em by the p—y” and how “they let you do it” – as “locker room banter.”