The cover image of next month's Rolling Stone magazine featuring the "Veep" star depicts a nude Louis-Dreyfus with a tattoo of the U.S. Constitution signed by John Hancock across her back, but the problem is Hancock signed the Declaration of Independence, not the Constitution, according to CNN.
Louis-Dreyfus' blamed the blunder on the fictional "Veep" character who serves as communications director to Louis-Dreyfus' Vice President Selina Meyer on the HBO comedy series in a Twitter post on Wednesday, CNN reported.
Rolling Stone spokeswoman Melissa Bruno said the Declaration of Independence is on the other side of her body, but the signatures wouldn't fit, according to CNN.
Inside the magazine, another image shows a man in a colonial wig tattooing Hancock's signature above the bare bottom of the "Seinfeld" actress, CNN reported.
Louis-Dreyfus did the eye-catching pose for a reason: she's in the middle of promoting the newest round of "Veep," which returned for its third season on April 6, according to CNN.
The HBO comedy just won Louis-Dreyfus another Emmy last year, but Louis-Dreyfus seems to enjoy her non-stop cursing on the show more than the awards, CNN reported.
"Once, when we were trying to come up with the particular perfect, horrible, swear-y thing to say in 'Veep,' I said, 'You do realize that if we were 12, we would get in big trouble for this conversation,'" she tells Rolling Stone, according to CNN. "That was not part of the curriculum in high school, and the fact that it is now a part of the curriculum of my life is a pleasure, which is the understatement of the universe."