If John King’s career as a journalist doesn’t work out, maybe he can try his hand at fortune telling.

King hosted a segment on CNN earlier this week where the guests discussed Hillary Clinton’s fall strategy, which includes a swing through several southern Super Tuesday states.

“I would expect a lot of grits and barbecue in Hillary Clinton’s future,” the guest said, to which King responded, “And the accent comes back.”

How correct he was as Hillary laid it on thick during a Saturday speech to the Alabama Democratic Conference in Hoover, Ala.

(Huma must have forgotten to pack the G’s for Hillary’s speech.)

“You know, when my husband became president thanks to a lot of you in this room, I remember after that election in ’92, him sayin’ to me, ‘It’s so much worse than they told us,'” she said to the group.

“The debt in our country has been quadrupled in the prior 12 years, the deficits had exploded. And so he had to roll up his sleeves and work hard.”

She added during Bill’s time in office, incomes were rising for “workin’ people.”

“President Obama doesn’t get the credit he deserves for savin’ the American economy from fallin’ into a great depression!” she said to cheers.

Her twang wasn’t just present for her remarks on the economy. It made a reappearance when she talked about voting rights, too.

“Now we may be up against Super PACs and billionaires, but when the election comes around, Donald Trump and the Koch brothers for all their money, they only get one vote each, just like everybody else!” she said, as the twang came and went.

This, of course, is not the first time Hillary has deployed a southern accent to try to appear more like the local voters.

In August, she sat down sat down for a “Chair Chat” with Jaime Harrison, chairman of the South Carolina Democratic party.

The Weekly Standard pointed out some of her most “painfully pandering moments,” complete with a mashup video.