After Hillary Clinton became the first woman to accept a U.S. presidential nomination, "Broad City" stars Abbi Jacobson and Ilana Glazer celebrated the milestone for women in a humorous way.In a skit on "The Late Show With Stephen Colbert," Jacobson, a Maryland Institute College of Art alumna, and Glazer play Josephine Hindley and Abitha Whitmore, colonial women from Philadelphia on July 4, 1776 — a.k.a. the very first Independence Day.Their characters reacted with glee when Colbert shared the news."That is incredible! I am going to celebrate by making a meal for my husband and then cleaning it up immediately," Jacobson said in the skit.But Jacobson and Glazer's excitement soon came to a halt once Colbert clarified that Clinton was announced as a nominee — not as president — and that it was 2016, not 1816."Get the butter out of the barn. Are you telling me it takes us 240 years to get a female president?" Glazer asked."Why did it take so long?" Jacobson shouts. "It's right there in the Declaration of Independence — 'All men were created…' Oh.""You knew that was supposed to mean all people, right?" Glazer said."Well, we figured it out eventually," Colbert said.You can watch the video above.