Hillary Clinton didn't feel threatened by chants of 'Lock her up!' at the Republican National Convention last week, only saddened.

The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee said she seemed to be the only thing the GOP agreed on.

'I don't know what their convention was about, other than criticizing me,' she said during at appearance on CBS' 60 Minutes, her first televised interview with running mate Sen Tim Kaine.

'I seem to be the only unifying theme that they had. There was no positive agenda. It was a very dark, divisive campaign.'

Hillary Clinton said chants of 'Lock her up!' at the Republican National Convention didn't make her feel threatened - but did sadden her

Clinton said she didn’t recognize the America that the RNC speakers described, noting that they focused on ‘negative, scapegoating, fear, bigotry, and smears’ in their speeches.

But the former Secretary of State said she had no plans to give Donald Trump a nickname, much like the 'Crooked Hillary' moniker he has assigned to her.

'I don't call him anything,' she said. 'And I'm not going to engage in that kind of insult fest that he seems to thrive on.'

'So whatever he says about me, he's perfectly free to use up his own air time and his own space to do so.'

Instead, Clinton said, she was going to talk about Trump’s failed business ventures, his comments on women, immigrants and the disabled, and his ‘really inflammatory language’ about Muslims.

'I'm going to respond to what he has said that I think is so fundamentally at odds with who we are as a nation,where we need to be heading in the future, and the kind of dangerous, risky leadership that he's promising,' she said.

Clinton also talked of the 'Hillary Standard', and said she believed there was a concerted effort to launch 'unfounded, inaccurate, mean-spirited attacks' on her

Sunday was the first time Clinton and her running mate, Sen Tim Kaine, appeared in a televised interview together as they prepared for the Democratic National Convention next week

As anchor Scott Pelley turned the interview to emails and Benghazi, the two main lines of attacks that the Republicans have repeatedly launched against Clinton, the presidential hopeful revealed she believed there was a 'Hillary Standard'.

Pelley brought up a young man he had talked to, who said he would vote for Hillary except for that 'corruption problem'.

'As I talked to him further, he didn't quite know what he meant by that. But that was his impression and concern. Why do you think people say that about you?'

'I think that it's fair to say there's been a concerted effort to convince people like that young man of something, nobody's quite sure what, but of something,' Clinton replied.

'I often feel like there's the Hillary standard and then there's the standard for everybody else.

Clinton explained that the Hillary standard was ‘unfounded, inaccurate, mean-spirited attacks with no basis in truth’.

‘People are very willing to say things about me, to make accusations about me that are, I don’t get upset about them anymore, but they are regrettable,' she said.

But, Clinton added, she put herself through it all because of her faith in the country.

‘Boy, do I believe in it now more than ever after seeing what was presented last week,’ she said.

‘I believe that we are better than what we are hearing in the political discourse. I believe we can work together.’

CBS didn't air the moment in the interview when Pelley asked Clinton about the hacked DNC emails that appeared to show an effort to undermine Bernie Sanders' campaign.

Pelley specifically brought up one email from a DNC staffer that read: 'Does he believe in God? He has stated he has a jewish heritage, I think I read he’s an atheist. This could make several points difference with my peeps.'

Clinton said she didn't know anything about the emails and hadn't read any of them since they were released by WikiLeaks.

'I am adamantly opposed to anyone bringing religion to our political process,' she added. 'I mean the constitution says no religious tests so that is absolutely wrong and unacceptable’

Pelley then pointed out that it seemed there were people in the DNC who are 'supposed to be agnostic about whole the nominee is going to be' but seem to be working in favor of Clinton.

Clinton (pictured with Kaine in Miami on Saturday) praised her VP pick, saying she believed he has what it takes to take over as president if that day comes

‘I don’t know anything about these emails, I haven’t followed it,' Clinton repeated. 'But I’m very proud of the campaign that I ran and I’m very proud of the campaign that Senator Sanders ran.'

Pelley continued to press, asking ‘Would it have been improper for the DNC to favor one candidate over another?’

‘Again, I don’t have any information about this and so I can't answer specifically,' Clinton said. 'We ran our campaign, we ran hard, we worked to have as many successes as possible.'

'I’m very proud we got more votes than anyone running, including Donald Trump, and I am very grateful for the campaign that Senator Sanders ran because we ran a campaign based on issues, not insults.'

‘I cant speak to what people who were not working for me,' she added. 'Who were saying whatever they were saying, I can’t speak to that’

Kaine – ‘ I was a DNC chair, you’re not going to find anyone at the DNC or the RNC who is completely agnostic about any candidate, but there’s a difference between having an opinion about somebody, having a candidate you prefer over somebody else, there’s a difference between that and trying to alter the outcome.’

When she wasn't talking about Trump, Republicans or the DNC, Clinton made sure to praise her newly-announced running mate Kaine.

Clinton pointed out that Kaine has been a mayor, governor and senator who plays a 'mean harmonica', and said she believes the two will work well together

Clinton revealed the main reason why she picked the Virginia senator is because she believes he has what it takes to take over as president if that day comes.

And Kaine agreed.

‘You know, missionary, civil rights lawyer, local official, state official, federal official, I’ve climbed, and I haven’t missed a rung on the ladder,' he said. 'And if it were to come that way, I could do it.’

Clinton pointed out that Kaine has been a mayor, governor and senator who plays a 'mean harmonica', and said she believes the two will work well together.

The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee also hinted at what her presidency would look like, saying it would involve phone calls to Obama and reaching across the aisle to Republicans.

‘We know that there are Republicans who share our concerns and want to be part of the solution, not just peddling fear and bigotry,' she said.

Clinton said her main goals as president were to create an economy that works for everyone, give people the opportunity to get a college education without years of debt, defending and improving the affordable care act, implementing gun control, immigration reform, and working on issues of race.

And Clinton hopes she could also inspire little girls who are just finding out a woman has never been president of the united states.