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Connecticut, like other states, launched an online health exchange -- Access Health CT -- where residents can shop for and purchase health insurance. There could be new opportunities for the unemployed or uninsured to receive health insurance. Here, we gather our coverage of changes under the new federal law.

Obama Goes Between The Ferns To Talk With Zach Galifianakis

"My mouse pad broke, and I had to get my great-aunt some diabetes shoes."

That's how comedian Zach Galifianakis begins his segment with President Obama in an episode of the online interview show Between Two Ferns that was posted Tuesday. It was an interview unlike any other for a sitting U.S. president, as Galifianakis probed the commander in chief's views with a range of oddball questions.

As The New York Times reports, Obama appeared on the comedy show in an attempt to get more young Americans to enroll in health insurance under the Affordable Care Act before the program's March 31 deadline.

"We have to find ways to break through," White House senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer tells the newspaper, which notes other turns in the not-so-serious media taken by presidents George W. Bush (Deal or No Deal), Bill Clinton (MTV's Enough is Enough forum) and Gerald Ford (Saturday Night Live).

Sitting across from Galifianakis on the spare set that establishes the tone for the show's awkwardly funny moments, Obama kept a straight face throughout — and seized a chance to talk about the federal health care law.

Here are some of the questions Obama fielded that no U.S. president has faced before:

"Why would you get the guy who created the Zune to make your website?"

"Is this what they mean by 'drones'?"

"I don't have a phone; I'm off the grid. I don't want you people looking at my texts ... know what I mean?"

We won't spoil all the jokes — the segment ends with an elaborate one that's best seen for yourself. The short video made a splash after it was posted Tuesday morning. Within two hours, it had been viewed more than 320,000 times, and the servers at Funny or Die, the comedy site behind the show, seemed to have trouble keeping up with demand.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Bill Chappell is a writer and editor on the News Desk in the heart of NPR's newsroom in Washington, D.C.

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