Last week, celebrities, including Gal Gadot, Zöe Kravitz, Will Ferrell, Sarah Silverman, Natalie Portman and Amy Adams, performed a cover of John Lennon's "Imagine" in an effort to bring relief during the coronavirus crisis. However, their attempt to bring joy was met with criticism from some people who wanted to see real actions from the celebrities instead of singing.

A day later, comedian Zack Fox partnered with some of his friends to also perform a cover, but he added a comedic twist.

“I know during all this quarantine stuff some of you might feel lonely and scared and confused, and I wanna let you know that that’s perfectly OK. I do too, we all do, it’s perfectly normal,” Fox said in the Instagram video.

The comedian then revealed that he would be performing one of his favorite songs from his childhood.

“For me there’s a song from my childhood that would always help me out when I would feel that way, and I wanna share it with y’all and hopefully just help out a little bit,” he said.

The serious tone changed to comedy as Fox started to rap lyrics from the popular 1999 song, “Slob On My Knob," by Three 6 Mafia.

"Slob On My Knob, like corn on the cob," the comedian said as he started the cover.

The rest of the video features comedians and artists Eric Andre, Thundercat, Quinta Brunson, Guapdad 4000, Chuck Inglish, Langston Kerman, Jak Knight, Sam Jay, 6LACK, Teddy Ray and TisaKorean. Each one of the participants contributed to the hilarious cover by iterating a verse from the Three 6 Mafia song. 

Many fans expressed their gratitude after Fox and his partners provided comedic relief.

"I literally just farted right now holy f**k," one Instagram user wrote.

"Tears. Thank you for being the light at the end of the tunnel, Mr. Fox," wrote Reezy on Instagram.

Another person said "this getting me through these tough and turbulent times right now. Thank you."

The fans' gratitude was a drastic change from some of the comments that followed the "Imagine" cover.

"This is truly awful," one person wrote on Instagram. "While you're all sitting around in your mansions bored while your staff tend to your every need, the rest of us are wondering how we're going to pay the rent this month and how much debt we're going to be at the end of it all and how we're going to rebuild our lives again."

Another person replying to the Instagram video said, "Oh cool, rich famous people singing badly. Awesome."

"Imagine the people in top .0000001% of the world just came out with this video during a time of crisis," another person added.

The peaceful undertone of Lennon's classic song offers quite the contrast with his non-public persona. According to Mirror, Lennon has a past that includes violence against women and an incident where he almost killed a man. Additionally, in 2015, an old video of him mocking disabled people surfaced on TV.