Hardee’s seizes on Mike Lindell’s FBI drama to sell ‘pillowy biscuits’

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Hardee-har-har.

Fast-food chain Hardee’s seized on being included in headlines about the alleged confiscation of MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell’s cell phone with an ad promoting something the bombastic businessman might enjoy.

“Now that you know we exist... you should really try our pillowy biscuits,” the chicken and burger joint tweeted Wednesday.

Lindell — a spirited conspiracy theorist who has worked tirelessly to prove the 2020 election lost by his pal Donald Trump was a hoax — claimed Tuesday night that feds took his cell phone outside a Minnesota Hardee’s.

“Cars pulled up in front of us, to the side of us, and behind us and I said those are either bad guys or the FBI,” the 61-year-old former crack-addict said on his “Lindell Report” internet program Tuesday night.

According to Lindell, it was the latter.

The Guardian reports that FBI agents executed a search warrant at the location where Lindell said he had his encounter with the law.

According to the beddings executive, feds were interested in his communications with fellow election-deniers. Lindell has still not come to grips with the fact President Biden defeated Trump by 7 million votes in the 2020 election and that dozens of courts, as well as former Trump administration officials, found no evidence of significant malfeasance.

Numerous liberal activists applauded Hardee’s for being opportunistic Wednesday.

“Well played, Hardee’s,” tweeted Twitter user who goes by JoJoFromJerz. “Well played.”

The Lincoln Project also posted a congratulatory message for the savvy social media posting.

Another online joker took a picture of a Hardee’s bag and joked that unlike Lindell, she pulled away from the eatery’s drive-thru with her meal and her cell phone.

Former FBI assistant director Frank Figluzzi wondered, “What if someone wants to call-in an order but seems to have ‘misplaced’ their cellphone?”

One person who wasn’t amused by the situation is fast-food enthusiast and former president Trump, who complained on his own social media platform that “THE Pillow Guy was just raided by the FBI.”

While in office, the 45th president tapped former Hardee’s CEO Andrew Puzder to be his Secretary of Labor, though the 72-year-old businessman withdrew his name from consideration amid reports of domestic violence made, then withdrawn, by his ex-wife.

Lindell’s estimated worth is $50 million. Two voting technologies companies filed defamation suits against him due to his claims of voting irregularities allegedly involving their services.