Fox News host Kimberly Guilfoyle has landed in hot water for making some offensive remarks about how young, single, and attractive women should not be allowed to vote and be excused from jury service to devote their time to online dating.

Guilfoyle was a co-host on Tuesday's edition of "The Five" on Fox News when the topic of conversation turned towards the upcoming mid-term elections and how young, single female voters choose so often to support Democrats instead of the GOP, CBS News reported.

"It's the same reason why young women on juries are not a good idea. They don't get it!' said the co-host on the right-leaning news channel, suggesting that the main issue was young women's wisdom, which according to her tends to get more conservative only with age.

As one-time first lady of San Francisco, the 45-year-old is known to have paid her way through law school by modeling for a variety of retailers, including Victoria's Secret. So it comes as more of a surprise for Guilfoyle to offer such controversial remarks stating that attractive women don't have the proper "life experiences" to have a say in who holds elected office, USA Today reported.

"They're like, healthy and hot, and running around without a care in the world," she said, adding that's the reason "why young women on juries are not a good idea. They don't get it. They're not in that same, like, life experience of paying the bills, doing the mortgage, kids, community, crime, education, health care."

So in other words, Guilfoyle believes that women should only be granted these two privileges after they have dealt with real-world issues.

However when co-host Bob Beckel pointed out that young women have "every right in the world" to sit on a jury, the former San Francisco and Los Angeles prosecutor clarified that even though they should be called for jury service, the court should "excuse them, so they can go back on Tinder or Match.com"

Reacting to backlash and criticism on social media, the co-host attributed her comments to have been a joke on Thursday's show.

"I made a joke," the former prosecutor said. "If I wanted to excuse someone from jury service that is the language you use in the courtroom. I take the right to vote very seriously. I take the right to serve on a jury very seriously and I think you should be informed when you do both things."

Meanwhile, "her colleagues said that her comments had been taken out of context by the 'liberal media' - who look for any excuse to bash Fox News Channel," according to New York Daily News.