

On Twitter, the new remix was met with surprise and delight, with special praise going to Ramsey for killing it on his verse. RELATED: Ellie Goulding Surprises Lil Nas X After He Confessed His Love For Her On Twitter The video for the remix features all four artists singing and rapping through adorable Animoji avatars of themselves. “If you ain’t got no giddy up/Then giddy out my way,” the youngster sings. Then, in an even bigger surprise, 12-year-old “yodelling Walmart kid” Mason Ramsey joins in with new lyrics of his own. Things develop with the introduction of Young Thug, who supplies fresh lyrics playing off the original. This latest version of “Old Town Road” starts off in a familiar way, with Billy Ray Cyrus taking the lead, followed by Lil Nas himself. RELATED: Watch Gordon Ramsay Give Lil Nas X A Lesson In Panini-Making On Friday, the rapper released a new remix of his smash No. (The company has faced pressure from investors in recent years to cut back on its greenhouse emissions.Lil Nas X isn’t quite done with “Old Town Road”. Burger King enlisted Ramsey for its latest campaign, which promotes the fast-food chain’s new Whopper menu item made from lemongrass-fed cows, which, Burger King claims, results in a 33 percent reduction in methane emissions. The song is actually an advertisement from Burger King, a company that’s faced criticism from advocacy organizations for its abysmal record on environmental issues. “Reducing meth-aa-aa-aane, meth-aa-aa-aane,” Ramsey twangs in the “chorus.” Things get even weirder - and apocalyptic - when the 13-year-old dons a rhinestone-studded gas mask to envision a world uninhabitable by human beings. “When cows fart and burp and splatter/well it ain’t no laughing matter,” Ramsey sings, emerging from the rear-end of a cow, in an inexplicably clean and sparkling white suit.

Two years after going viral for yodeling Hank Williams’ “Lovesick Blues” in an Illinois Walmart, Mason Ramsey is now applying his uncanny vocal abilities to a stinky problem threatening to overheat the Earth: cow-based greenhouse-gas emissions.
