During a broadcast interview on the Ellen DeGeneres Show on Thursday, President Barack Obama proved that he is indeed the coolest president ever in the world history.

Obama revealed to the talk show host that he and his wife made a pact to get matching tattoos with their daughters in the same place and then take a family photo, hoping it would prevent them from following the trend.

"We will reduce the cool factor of any tattoo," he said. "Michelle and I will be right there and we'll post it so that everybody will be able to see it and we'll say we all got matching tattoos."

"I suspect that would be pretty good deterrent for both Malia and Sasha," he added.

When DeGeneres humorously said she actually hopes the girls would get tattoos, the POTUS insisted her to join them in the pact: "Ellen, you should be a part of this. You should pledge to also get a tattoo with us." Although she made it clear that she is not a fan of body art, the host hesitantly agreed.

President Obama then brought up the topic of how Ellen DeGeneres broke his record number of retweets on Twitter. The comedian host tried to apologize to him for stealing the spotlight, which came after she posted the viral snapshot of herself surrounded by celebrities at this year's Oscars. However, the Commander-in-Chief was not buying it. "I heard about that," he said. "I thought it was a pretty cheap stunt myself. Getting a bunch of celebrities in the background."

In addition, Obama admitted he is a fan of political drama series, House of Cards. "You know, I watch 'House of Cards,' I haven't seen 'Scandal' yet, but Michelle has watched 'Scandal.' I have to tell ya, life in Washington is a little more boring than displayed on the screen," he said. "You know the truth of the matter is, if you followed me, most of my day is sitting in a room listening to a bunch of folks in grey suits talking about a whole bunch of stuff that wouldn't make very good television."

"I have to tell you though Ellen, theres not much dancing in the situation room, as a general rule," he added.