President Obama is definitely trying to get the word out to young people about the Affordable Care Act, appearing this week on the hip viral Funny or Die show Between Two Ferns with Zach Galifianakis. But the question is, with Latinos and youth as the two groups lagging behind in health insurance enrollment, will Obama's appearance make a difference?

If you're not aware, Between Two Ferns is a quirky, awkward interview show on the internet hosted by Zach Galifianakis and directed by Scott Aukerman -- both alternative comics from a much different generation than President Obama.

The show is in the style of a low-budget local cable program you might see on at 4 a.m., where Galifianakis plays a disaffected host character who can barely muster enough interest to ask his celebrity guests questions -- much less listen to the answers. The show is (intentionally) awkward, passive-aggressive, and very much outside of the mainstream. It's one of those things only "the kids" get.

And so President Obama appearing on it to plug the Affordable Care Act -- and fully going along with the show's style -- was quite a coup for Between Two Ferns, and a signal that Obama is serious about reaching out to the country's youth before the March 31 signup deadline.

Here's the video, if you haven't seen it yet.

Besides stoking the anger of conservatives like Bill O'Reilly, who complained that the President was doing a disservice to the dignity of the office by appearing on the show, Obama's goal was to get young people aware about Obamacare and headed to the healthcare.gov website to sign up.

It's a serious cause, since young people are still lagging behind in healthcare coverage, as other demographics that are covered are steadily rising; Young comedy-savvy Latinos doubly so, since Latinos are the other demographic that lag behind in coverage.

Obama's Work Yet to Be Done

According to the most recent Gallup poll on the uninsured in the U.S., the percentage of Americans without health insurance continues to fall, taking a precipitous dive of about 2 percent since healthcare.gov finally, successfully went live (a subject Galifianakis ungraciously brought up in the show).

But broken down into demographic groups, though, the numbers for young people aged 26 to 34 years old (26 is the cut-off age for being on parents' insurance plans) is still lagging behind. More than a quarter of U.S. adults in that age range still don't have coverage, compared to the 16 percent national average.

Latinos fare even worse, as nearly 38 percent of the Hispanic population still is uninsured as of the end of February this year, a number that has only fallen less than one percent since 2013. At the nexus of those two demographic statistics are young Latinos.

So the question is, did seeing Obama on a hip comedy show for young people work to get you to sign up for Obamacare? The Obama administration says it is working, since Funny or Die became the number one referral site to healthcare.gov in the hours after Obama's Between Two Ferns appearance hit the net.

Did it work for you? Did you enroll after seeing the video, or were you at least reminded of Obamacare, if you hadn't paid attention to it in recent months?

Let us know in the comments section below.