You always got the impression there was something different and perhaps special about Carrie Underwood.

The "Jesus Take the Wheel" crooner recently posted a cartoon picture on her Twitter page for all of her more than four million followers to see where she gushed, "Awww...you made me a super hero! Guess my cover is blown."

A few days earlier, Underwood wrote directly to Brad Paisley, where she demanded to see her likeness in cartoon form.

"I just know you have a cartoon drawing of me for your "Crushin' It" video and I wanna see it...like, now."

Indeed, it seems good to be Carrie Underwood these days. The fourth season "American Idol" winner and her NHL husband Mike Fisher just celebrated the birth of their first child, and  Unreality TV reports she is currently in the studio working on new music, at least some of which is expected to be dedicated to baby boy Isaiah.

"I just kind of feel a little sad because all my songs are about having girls," Underwood recently joked with the website about such previous hits as "Mama's Song," "Forever Changed" and the platinum hit "All-American Girl."

According to Taste of Country, she later added, "Like, little boy baby Fisher's got nothing. 'Forever Changed,' which is one of my favorite songs, is definitely like a mother/daughter kind of a song, so ... I'm gonna have to get on that."

Since walking away with the "American Idol" title, Biography notes the 32-year-old has also won multiple Grammy and Country Music awards. In 2008, at just 26 years old, she became the youngest member of the Grand Ole Opry.

Underwood's biggest hit albums include "Carnival Tide," "Play On" and "Blown Away." Her 2005 debut album, "Some Hearts," went triple platinum and was declared the "fastest selling female country album since the introduction of the Nielsen SoundScan more than two decades ago.

In 2006, her critically acclaimed "Jesus Take the Wheel," won her several major awards, among them the Country Music Award for single of the year, the Country Music Association Award for single of the year and two Grammys for best female country vocal performance and best new artist.