"He said, 'Donald, I called just to say hello and to tell you did you see Roseanne's ratings?' I said, 'Mark, how big were they'?" Trump recounted.
"And it was about us," the President continued. "They haven't figured it out, the fake news hasn't quite figured it out yet ... But they will and when they do they'll become much less fake."
The White House confirmed the Thursday phone call from Trump to Barr. They did not say if Trump had watched the show.
The updated sitcom starring Barr and her original co-stars returned more than two decades after the first one ended its hit run. The hour-long debut episode was watched by 10 per cent more viewers than saw the May 1997 finale of ABC's original Roseanne.
Barr said Trump was happy for her. She said, "I've known him for many years and he's done a lot of nice things for me over the years."
Conservatives cheered the show's ratings.
During a Q&A session with television critics this year, Barr said, "It was working-class people who elected Trump. So I felt that was very real, and something that needed to be discussed." She added that the same holds true for "people actually hating other people for the way they voted, which I feel is not American. And so I wanted to bring it [the series] right down the middle, and we did".
She added she doesn't agree with everything Trump says and does.
- AP