Taylor Swift has gone from the hottest woman in music to the sexiest man alive.

The “Bad Blood” singer unlocked her inner dude for her new music video, using makeup to transform into characters that are dead ringers for famous hunks like Jake Gyllenhaal and Leonardo DiCaprio.

In the danceable mix of pop and politics, titled “The Man,” Swift appears unrecognizable as a series of bawdy and boorish male figures doing thing like sleeping around and acting rude, which she argues women could never get away with.

The most eye-catching moments come as Swift sends up DiCaprio and his penchant for running around with younger women in a scene mimicking a model-packed yacht party from his film “The Wolf of Wall Street.”

Wearing a beard and quaffing champagne, Swift name-checks the 45-year-old Oscar winner — who has been dating model Camila Morrone, 22, since late 2017 — singing, “They would toast to me, oh, let the players play / I’d be just like Leo in St.-Tropez.”

She is also seen dressing up in a character that looks suspiciously like Gyllenhaal, whom she once dated.

In the video, Swift’s male character also enjoys man-spreading while smoking a cigar on the subway and later appears as an elderly man marrying a much-younger woman at a Vegas chapel.

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Swift slams sexism in the tennis world by showing “The Man” ranting at an umpire. He is allowed to continue playing unchecked — a possible nod to an incident at the 2018 US Open in which Serena Williams took a lot of heat for yelling at an official.

Also in the video — the first Swift has ever directed — she takes a shot at Scooter Braun, the music manager who bought up her back catalog — by including a “No Scooter” sign.

She also trolls old foe Kanye West by including a scene showing a man leaving a nude Kim Kardashian lookalike in bed, then running down a hallway similar to one in West’s Calabasas, California, home.

Swift, who frequently slams media coverage about her as sexist, has said she often thinks about how her career would have played out if she had been a male artist.

“If I had made all the same choices, all the same mistakes, all the same accomplishments, how would it read?” she said.

She released the video on a significant anniversary: On Feb. 27, 1922, the Supreme Court upheld the 19th Amendment, which guarantees women’s right to vote.