Hillary Clinton tackled her "likability problem" head on when she spoke at a campaign event in Omaha, Neb. Speaking to a crowd of approximately 800 people at the Sokol Auditorium, Clinton said, "You might run into some of your friends and colleagues who'll ask, 'Where have you been, what have you done today?' And if you tell them you came for a rally to me — to see me — yes, thank you. You know, some of them who may be up for the Republican persuasion — although we are not going to give up on them, aren't we. We are going to keep trying to reach out to them. First thing you can tell them, the best you can tell them looking under the lights is, I don't have horns," reported Breitbart.

At the event, Clinton also talked about the U.S. economy and said that it did well under the care of Democrats. "And the second thing that you can tell them is that, you know, our economy does better when we have a Democrat in the White House," she added, according to ABC News.

Clinton said she did not like the fact that, in America, the wealthy are getting wealthier at the expense of hard-working people. She further added that she supported Warren Buffet's proposal that individuals earning $1 million per year should pay an effective tax rate of at least 30 percent.

Clinton kept talking about her horns, or the lack of them, throughout the day. At an event at a town hall in Mason City, Clinton taped a message for the father of 22-year old Kayla Helmers, a volunteer. Helmers' father, Shawn Starry, supports Donald Trump. "Hi Shawn, I am here with your daughter. I hope you can see I don't have horns. And I really do hope that, as this election goes on, you will listen to your daughter. Thanks. Bye," said Clinton in the taped message, reported CNN.