Kamala Harris and Maya Rudolph Recreate Viral 'We Are Not The Same Person' Trend — Watch
The vice president joined Rudolph on the Nov. 2 episode of 'Saturday Night Live' and filmed the social media clip backstage
Kamala Harris and Maya Rudolph are reminding everyone that they are, indeed, not the same person.
After their joint appearance on Saturday Night Live on Saturday, Nov. 2, the vice president joined the comedian — who has played Harris on the NBC sketch comedy show — for a behind-the-scenes video in which they recreated a viral TikTok audio and poked some fun at their on-screen similarities.
On Sunday, Nov. 3, Harris' Instagram and the official SNL Instagram shared a clip in which both women lip-synced to "We Are Not The Same Person," a song by influencers Danny Gonzalez and Drew Gooden.
Dressed in matching suits, the two each sang Gonzalez and Gooden's respective parts of the viral 2019 track, before joining in for a TikTok dance that's since been associated with the song. "I am Drew," Rudolph, 52, lip-synced, before Harris, 60, did the same for the line, "I am Danny."
"And we are not the same person," they both lip-synced in unison, laughing at the end of the clip.
Gonzalez and Gooden first released "We Are Not the Same Person" in May 2019 to prove that the often-compared YouTubers had their differences. The song has since seen a recent resurgence on TikTok where users lip-sync to it alongside their doppelgängers.
Gooden himself reacted to the Harris-Rudolph clip on his Instagram Story on Sunday. "When we recorded this song in 2019, I always knew it would be lip-synced by the vice president one day," he jokingly wrote.
Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
As for Harris and Rudolph, the pair both appeared on SNL's cold open this weekend. In the skit, Rudolph — playing Harris — said she wanted to "talk to someone who's been in my shoes... a Black, south Asian woman running for president, preferably from the Bay Area." The real Harris then appeared on screen.
"You and me both, sister. It is nice to see you, Kamala. I'm just here to remind you: You've got this. Because you can do something your opponent cannot do. You can open doors," Harris said, alluding to rival presidential candidate Donald Trump apparently missing a garbage truck door as he attempted to open it on Oct. 30.
The duo then discussed Harris' laugh, the election itself, and delivered the show's signature cold-open sign-off together: "Live from New York, it's Saturday night!"
Harris' appearance on SNL comes just days before Election Day on Tuesday, Nov. 5. In recent days, she has seen endorsements from Arnold Schwarzenegger, LeBron James and Harrison Ford — in what marked the Indiana Jones actor's first official political endorsement.