Using a private email server and 33,000 messages being deleted is still a joke to Hillary Clinton.

The failed presidential candidate is making an appearance on the failing reboot of “Murphy Brown,” according to a clip published by DC Tribune Publishing.

The scene shows Clinton arriving in an elevator and carefully stepping off as the audience applauds.

The unemployed “Hilary Clendon” — with one “L” — is applying for a secretarial position.

“I guess you heard this is a pretty demanding job,” Brown says as the two sit on the couch.

“I want you to know I’m not afraid of hard work. I’m qualified and ready on day one,” Clinton says, echoing her campaign mantra.

When asked if she had any experience, Clinton answers, “For four years, I was secretary—” triggering laughs from the audience.

“I was secretary of a very large organization,” she says.

“And you have all the requisite skills — computer, email…” Brown says.

“Emails. Yeah, I do have some experience with emails,” “Clendon” answers.

After Brown tells Clinton she’ll get back to her, “Clendon” hands Brown her business card.

Brown reads the card, “hilary at youcouldahadme.com.”

Deadline panned the reboot.

Shined up with tweets about dating Donald Trump, fourth-wall-cracking quips and Roseanne implosion asides, the revival of Murphy Brown is very meta. Yet despite those lofty lunges, the CBS sitcom still led by Candice Bergen just can’t grasp the big-picture reality of 2018.

To put it another way, FYI, if you really don’t want to “tarnish” your legacy, to quote Bergen’s now-unretired TV journalist Brown in the first episode of this de facto 11th season, then hit the reset button on this revival ASAP before irrelevance comes knocking.

Even with a sideswipe of Charlie Rose that would have never shown up on a network show just a year ago, the revival of the Diane English-created series (returning more than two decades after its last season ended) has pretty much reduced itself to a one-note Don Quixote from what I’ve seen. With surprisingly tone-deaf digs at the likes of Sarah Huckabee Sanders and Steve Bannon misfires, it is a pursuit in which the Trump White House is the constantly charged windmill to the deafening exclusion of all else.

Ouch.