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'Between Two Ferns' and the 8 wackiest Obamacare ads targeting Millennials

Though young adults have previously supported President Obama, they don鈥檛 necessarily love Obamacare. With the March 31st health insurance exchange deadline looming, this has proved to be a problem.Young adults ages 18 to 34 are the least likely to be insured (nearly 30 percent in 2012) and the most likely to pay premiums without costing the system much. Despite low insured numbers, healthcare has been a tough sell. A Harvard Institute of Politics poll from December 2013 found that 57 percent disapprove of Obamacare.

The program is complex and its benefits are difficult to reduce to a sound bite. So several advocacy groups ditched traditional messaging and created attention-getting, even wacky marketing campaigns in the hopes of generating social media buzz and getting more young adults to sign up for insurance. Here are some of the stranger pro- and anti-Obamacare ads targeting Millennials:

Funny Or Die/AP
This image from video shows President Obama with actor-comedian Zach Galifianakis during an appearance on the satirical 'Between Two Ferns' talk show on the Funny or Die website.

'Between Two Ferns' with President Obama

In early March, President Barack Obama was a guest on comedian Zach Galifianakis鈥 parody talk show 鈥Between Two Ferns鈥 on comedy website Funny or Die. Mr. Galifianakis鈥 embodies the awkward community television show host, often acting hostile towards his guests or asking strange and uncomfortable questions, usually with celebrities.

The interview with President Obama easily became the show鈥檚 most notorious. Obama stays in character with the show鈥檚 theme, trading insults and shifty glances with Galifianakis, like this response when he asks whether Obama is frustrated that he can鈥檛 run for a third term.

"If I ran a third time it would sort of be like doing a third 鈥楬angover鈥 movie,鈥 said the President to the star of the popular 鈥淗angover鈥 movie franchise. 鈥淒idn't really work out very well, did it?鈥

Later the interview switched to the health insurance exchange, with Obama pushing the importance of signing up and plugging both Healthcare.gov and the phone number people could call to find out more information.

Galifianakis responded with equal gibes (鈥淲hy did you get the guy who created the Zune to create [the healthcare] website?鈥) and by showing the President a wound from spider bites. Obama says 鈥淵ou gotta get that checked out.鈥

The video was a hit, both for 鈥淏etween Two Ferns鈥 and Healthcare.gov. 鈥淏etween Two Ferns鈥 videos usually average 2 million views; by the next afternoon the Obama episode had over 13 million views. FunnyorDie.com was the number one referral website to Healthcare.gov, and traffic to the health care website was up 40 percent over the previous day.

That same day, however, February enrollment numbers came out and things hadn鈥檛 improved for young people and health insurance: as of the end of February people ages 18 to 34 only made up 25 percent of enrollees overall with a month to go.

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