The Kangaroo Story Behind Ella Langley’s Biggest Hit

Sometimes a song starts with a hook. Sometimes it starts with a feeling. And sometimes, in country music, it starts with a story so strange it sounds made up until the people in the room all laugh and nod at once.

A Retreat, a Traffic Stop, and a Kangaroo

In October 2024, during a writing retreat, Miranda Lambert told the room about a younger-day memory that was hard to forget: she had been pulled over while driving with Texas plates on her vehicle and a pet kangaroo riding along in the passenger seat. Ella Langley heard the story and answered with a line that landed immediately: “She’s from Texas, I can tell.” That moment became the spark for “Choosin’ Texas,” a song built from wit, memory, and a very Texas kind of chaos.

From there, the collaboration grew naturally. Ella Langley, Miranda Lambert, Luke Dick, and Joybeth Taylor wrote the song together. Miranda Lambert stayed close to the record from the start, co-producing it with Ella Langley and Ben West, then adding backing vocals to the final track. It was never a case of Miranda Lambert stepping in for someone else’s story. It was Miranda Lambert helping shape a story that already felt like it belonged to both artists.

From Inside Joke to National Smash

Released in October 2025, “Choosin’ Texas” slowly turned into a monster hit. By the time it reached the top of the Hot 100, it had spent 13 weeks at No. 1, joining a tiny group of songs by women without male-billed acts to do that. It also became the first non-holiday song to hit that milestone since Mariah Carey’s “We Belong Together” more than two decades ago. By mid-July 2026, Luminate’s midyear report named it America’s most-streamed song of the first half of the year, with 570.9 million streams.

That kind of success can make a song feel distant, almost polished beyond recognition. But “Choosin’ Texas” still carries the memory of its first telling: a strange roadside story, a quick-witted reply, and two artists who knew when a line had real electricity.

More Than a Single

Miranda Lambert never seemed to treat the track like a one-off favor. She remained part of the creative orbit around Ella Langley, and both artists have suggested their partnership was building toward something larger than a single song. In interviews, they hinted at doing “something really cool together” that would go beyond the usual album cycle or radio run. That makes sense. The best collaborations often begin with one song, then reveal a longer conversation underneath it.

By July 11, Miranda Lambert was even carrying the song onto major stages, headlining the Big Week Kick Off Concert in Salinas with Ashley Cooke and Dylan Scott opening the night. All year, she has kept “Choosin’ Texas” in her live shows, singing it like a personal chapter rather than a borrowed hit.

When Miranda Lambert sings “Choosin’ Texas,” it does not feel like she is visiting Ella Langley’s world. It feels like the two artists found the same story at the same time and decided to tell it together.

That may be the real reason the song connected so widely. Beneath the chart numbers and the headline-grabbing rise, it still sounds like a memory turned into music. Truck, Texas plates, a kangaroo, and a line that knew exactly what to do with all of it.

 

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COUNTRY MUSIC’S HIGHEST HONOR CAME THROUGH ON THE MORNING OF FEBRUARY 6, 2024. TOBY KEITH HAD DIED IN HIS SLEEP THE NIGHT BEFORE, AT 62. Hall of Fame voting had closed on February 2, three days before he went. Hours after the country woke to the news out of Oklahoma, the results landed at the CMA: elected, Modern Era, class of 2024. Sarah Trahern, the CMA’s chief executive, said her heart sank knowing they had missed their chance to tell him. That October his widow, Tricia, accepted the medallion and told the room she figured Toby would have said, “I should have been.” He came up out of the Oklahoma oil fields with a guitar his grandmother bought him, and he finished with twenty No. 1 country singles, more than 40 million albums and eleven USO tours behind him. That was the giant the world got. The version his mother got was smaller. On December 12, 2023, at the Park MGM in Las Vegas, he walked over and brought Carolyn Covel out into the light. “Eighty-two years old and she’s in Vegas tonight,” he told the crowd, and said she was the one who taught him to sing. Almost nobody out there knew she had been the singer first, that record men once came to her mother’s supper club in Fort Smith to look at her, that Toby thought her young pictures looked like Patsy Cline. Then he told her to tell everybody to go to hell, and she took the microphone and did it, laughing. Two nights later he played his last show. On February 5 she outlived her son. Nashville got the last word on his career. She got the night he handed her his microphone, and at eighty-two she brought the house down with it.

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COUNTRY MUSIC’S HIGHEST HONOR CAME THROUGH ON THE MORNING OF FEBRUARY 6, 2024. TOBY KEITH HAD DIED IN HIS SLEEP THE NIGHT BEFORE, AT 62. Hall of Fame voting had closed on February 2, three days before he went. Hours after the country woke to the news out of Oklahoma, the results landed at the CMA: elected, Modern Era, class of 2024. Sarah Trahern, the CMA’s chief executive, said her heart sank knowing they had missed their chance to tell him. That October his widow, Tricia, accepted the medallion and told the room she figured Toby would have said, “I should have been.” He came up out of the Oklahoma oil fields with a guitar his grandmother bought him, and he finished with twenty No. 1 country singles, more than 40 million albums and eleven USO tours behind him. That was the giant the world got. The version his mother got was smaller. On December 12, 2023, at the Park MGM in Las Vegas, he walked over and brought Carolyn Covel out into the light. “Eighty-two years old and she’s in Vegas tonight,” he told the crowd, and said she was the one who taught him to sing. Almost nobody out there knew she had been the singer first, that record men once came to her mother’s supper club in Fort Smith to look at her, that Toby thought her young pictures looked like Patsy Cline. Then he told her to tell everybody to go to hell, and she took the microphone and did it, laughing. Two nights later he played his last show. On February 5 she outlived her son. Nashville got the last word on his career. She got the night he handed her his microphone, and at eighty-two she brought the house down with it.