Keeping a holiday tradition alive, Bunnie Xo has once again delivered her annual Christmas chaos — and fans couldn’t be happier.
In recent years, her festive videos have become must-watch moments for her followers, whether it was her naughty remix of Mariah Carey’s classic “All I Want for Christmas Is To Be Screwed” or 2023’s outrageous “12 Days of Rizzmas.” And for 2024, she stuck with a timeless holiday staple… just with the Bunnie twist, of course — and a little help from her husband, Jelly Roll.
Bunnie dropped her brand-new Christmas video yesterday: a “slightly mischievous” reimagining of “Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer,” this time starring comedian and TikTok sensation Matt Mathews.

The video leans fully into dysfunctional-family humor — grandma casually popping Percocet at the dinner table, kids flipping each other off while passing dessert, and more chaotic holiday moments. But the highlight arrives during the infamous “incident,” when Jelly Roll appears as an irritable, fed-up Rudolph steering the sleigh that accidentally (or not) sends grandma flying.
From there, the video cuts to a hilariously inappropriate funeral scene: grandpa making out with his cousin, grandkids swiping money from grandma’s purse inside the casket, and Rudolph sitting in the back looking extremely pleased with himself.
To top it off, Bunnie shared behind-the-scenes clips of Jelly filming his Rudolph scenes in front of a green screen — red nose, antlers, attitude and all — laughing that her Grammy-nominated husband looked like the grumpiest reindeer ever created.
And honestly? It proves that fame doesn’t change everything. When your wife asks you to dress like Rudolph for her Christmas video… you do it, because you love her. Even if you look hilariously miserable while doing it.
But while Jelly Roll played the world’s grumpiest reindeer on-screen, both he and Bunnie spent the real holiday season spreading kindness throughout their community.
Before Thanksgiving, Jelly Roll returned to a place from his past: the correctional facility where he once served time. He spent the day speaking with inmates about hope and second chances — and provided meals for more than 300 inmates and staff.
Nashville Sheriff Daron Hall shared a heartfelt message afterward:
“Moments like this show the impact one person can make when they choose to lift others up. Thank you Jelly Roll for turning your past into purpose.”
Meanwhile, Bunnie was also giving back in a deeply personal way.
She partnered with The Mary Parish Center, a Nashville organization supporting survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault, to provide Thanksgiving meals and care packages for women in transitional housing.
For Bunnie, the mission hits close to home. As a survivor of domestic violence herself, she said:
“Going through a relationship from 2013 to 2016 with domestic violence made me want to help the women and children going through this. I know how hard it is to get out.”
She hopes to be a source of comfort and connection for women who feel alone:
“I shared that photo so women can see, ‘She’s been where I am.’ I want them to know I’ve lived it too — and that better days are coming.”
In addition to meals and care packages, Bunnie surprised the center’s executive director with a $25,000 donation to support their mission.
And that, truly, is enough to warm even the crankiest reindeer’s heart.