NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Sunday, February 7, 2016, 12:09 AM
Bernie Sanders and Larry David were both feelin’ the Bern in hilarious cameos on “Saturday Night Live.”
Sanders first appeared alongside his comedic alter ego in a skit portraying a sinking ship.
David, dressed as a rich guy, was saying he deserved to be the first to safety because of his wealth. That’s when Sanders popped in.
“I’m so upset with the one percent getting this preferential treatment,” Sanders said. “Enough is enough. We need to unite and work together if we’re going to get through this.”
“Sounds like Socialism to me,” David said.

Comedian Larry David (l.) has nailed the voice and mannerisms of Democratic candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders.
‘Democratic socialism,” Sanders shot back.
“What’s the difference,” David asked.
“Yuuuuuge difference,” Sanders said, mimicking Donald Trump.
Earlier, David reprised his role as Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders in a skit that saw him turn off a host of voters in spectacular fashion.

Larry David played Bernie Sanders-as-Larry David in “Bern Your Enthusiasm,” a parody of Larry David’s famous show.
His first mishap came at a campaign event where he refused to shake a woman’s hand after she coughed into it.
When a voter chided the imitation Sanders for being rude, he refused to relent.
“She’s the one whose being rude by offering a germ-infested hand,” he said. “I’m running for president. I do not shake disgusting hands.”
He later refused to come to the aid of a supporter who had just dislocated her shoulder in a car accident.

Larry David, playing Bernie Sanders, ran into a series of mishaps, including when he refused to shake a fan’s hand because she sneezed into it.
“If you want my vote just pop it back in,” the woman said.
“I don’t want it that bad,” Sanders’ alter ego said. “I have no popping experience.”
Sanders’ cameo marked his first appearance on NBC’s skit comedy show, considered a rite of passage for serious presidential contenders.
His Democratic rival Hillary Clinton turned up on the show in October, appearing in a skit opposite her comedic doppelganger Kate McKinnon.

Ship passenger Bernie Sanders (l.) explains that his fellow passengers “need to unite and work together if we’re going to get through this.”
Clinton played the role of a plain-speaking bartender named Val who doled out advice to her down-and-out alter ego.
Donald Trump showed off his comedic chops last November.
It wasn’t David’s first time on SNL.
The Brooklyn-born comedian’s pitch-perfect impression of the Vermont senator last October drew resounding praise — even from Sanders himself.
“In terms of Larry David, I think we’re going to put him up on the stage at our next rally — let him do it rather than me,” Sanders said at an Iowa campaign stop after the show aired.
“He does it better than I do.”
Appearing on SNL is seen as a prime avenue to appeal to younger voters, a demographic that Sanders is owning three days ahead of the New Hampshire primary.