A Valencia McDonald’s is streaming a live performance of “The McRib Song” by Santa Clarita’s Xanthe Pajarillo, also known as “the McRib Girl” on Thursday.

Pajarillo ‘s “The McRib Song (McRib Blues)” has garnered thousands of views since its release, which followed Parajillo’s oft-discussed City Council comments last November.

Pajarillo gained internet notoriety last November, when a video of her pleading with Santa Clarita City Council members to use their powers to help bring back the McRib sandwich from McDonalds, a seasonal boneless pork sandwich, went viral.

The video, the city’s feed for City Council meetings from Council Chambers in City Hall, was seen more than 7 million times after it was shared on Facebook.

Her plight and accompanying song apparently struck a chord with the internet, as well as with the fast food giant.

“We thought it would be a fun and quirky way to celebrate one of McDonald’s most loyal McRib fans,” according to Jacara Jenkins, who’s assisting in promoting the virtual performance Thursday, at the McDonald’s on 27103 McBean Parkway in Santa Clarita

In Pajarillo’s 3-minute council plea (which can be seen here, at the 34:30 mark), she talks about how she was speaking to the council to represent Santa Clarita’s “foodie community.” Since 1982, the McRib (which she pronounces MUH-crib) has been offered in the fall at McDonalds across the country, and in that time, became part of her family’s Thanksgiving tradition.

Her family would share a super-sized feast for the holiday. However last year, McDonald’s gave its franchisees the option of not offering the McRib. As a result, about 55 percent of the restaurants stopped carrying the sandwich, Pajarillo said, including all of the ones she could find in the SCV.

“Every Thanksgiving, my family would order the 50-piece McNuggets and like 10 McRibs — it was like a tradition,” she told the council Nov. 24, 2015. “(Without the McRib), my family’s holiday spirit is kind of messed up and broken.”

She wraps up by calling on City Council members to use their sway with local McDonald’s managers to make them offer the McRib. Pajarillo said none of the 10 MickeyD’s in the SCV carried the McRib, and she didn’t have any luck finding one close — even when she tried to use a locator app.

She asked the City Council to take her seriously because the corporate numbers she tried did not, she added.

Since the performance, and then the McRib song, most believe the comment and song were part of a carefully crafted piece by an artist, and while Pajarillo is an art student, she’s claimed repeatedly her McRib love is very real.

A recent story in food blog Food52, Pajarillo professes a sincere love for the McRib, telling her story of a nomadic “Army brat,” who possessed few constant comforts save the savory fastfood sandwich.

Her love will once again be on display on Thursday, when she will be joined by the Pork & Pepper Comeback Tour Bus in Valencia for the live show.