¿Qué Bolá? Obama Jokes With Cuban Humorist In Video

The president is due to arrive in Cuba on Sunday.

HAVANA (Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama tried out his comedic chops with some Spanish in a video he made with Cuban humorist Pánfilo ahead of a historic visit to Havana.

Obama, who has won praise from professional comedians for his comic timing, is due to arrive in Cuba on Sunday.

He shot a segment from the Oval Office in which he pretends to have a conversation with Pánfilo in Cuba. The two sides of the call were edited together in a video playing on the Havana U.S. embassy's social media feeds and the YouTube channel of an official Cuban media outlet on Saturday.

Pánfilo calls Washington looking for a weather forecast for Tuesday's exhibition game between Cuba's national baseball team and the Tampa Bay Rays, a game Obama will attend.

Instead of getting the weather service he ends up on the phone with Obama, asking if he is really speaking with the president.

"Yes, the real Obama. Who's this?" the president says.

"I'm Pánfilo from Cuba."

"The real Pánfilo? From the TV show?" Obama asks.

Pánfilo is shocked the president knows him, and Obama pretends to be equally star struck.

"No me digas. ¿Qué bolá?" Obama says in Cuban slang. ("You don't say. What's up?")

Pánfilo then engages the U.S. president in his trademark gentle social satire of Cuban life, joking about old cars and cramped living quarters.

(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Bernard Orr)

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