GRANBY -- Cindy's Drive-in, best known for its foot-long hot dogs and thick shakes, is getting what owners consider unwelcome attention following a raunchy music video shot there.

The music video, "Ice Cream" by rapper Troy Ave, features several twerking bikini clad women on the counters at Cindy's, who are eating ice cream in a highly suggestive manner. The rapper, who is awaiting trial on a charge of attempted murder, released his new album More Money More Problems on Friday.

With its picnic tables and children's playground amusements, Cindy's has been a family favorite along Route 202 for five decades. It was chosen one of the 10 best places in Massachusetts to get ice cream by MassLive this past summer.

Owners Anthony and Cynthia Maloni told The Republican the family rented out the 1950s style drive-in on East State Street for a few hundred dollars during the off-season for a music video shoot, which they mistakenly thought was for a local band.

"We strive to be wholesome and we do things for the community," Cynthia Maloni said. "I am 70 years old. I don't know rap music. If I had known what it was, we never would have allowed it."

Anthony Maloni said he was in church when someone told him about the raunchy video shot in the restaurant he has owned for nearly 25 years.

"This is horrible," he said. "You couldn't pay me enough money to allow this to happen ... not $100,000."

On social media, there had been some criticism of Cindy's Drive-in because of the video shoot.

After Troy Ave tweeted the video, a Chicopee resident asked the rapper, "How on earth did you come across Cindy's Drive In?? I need to know the story behind this."

So far, Troy Ave has remained mum.

The Brooklyn based rapper has released his first album since he was involved in a May 25, 2016 shooting at Irving Plaza's VIP section, where he took a bullet to a leg and bodyguard, Ronald "Banga" McPhatter, was killed.

Security camera footage shows Troy Ave firing a gun during the incident, according to The New York Times.