Origin of phrase "Get your ____ on"

Is it just me, or has this phrase become the new “don’t go there” or something similar?

As mentioned in the thread title - the phrase is “get your ___ on”. I have been hearing it more lately

  • in a spoof of an airline ad, the announcer says “you can get your drink on, and you can get your snack on”

  • I wish I could point to other specific cites, but I swear I have heard it a few times on TV

I know that phrases like “get your groove on” date back at least to the 60’s, but this usage seems new in that people are expanding how they use it and it seems recent.

Any ideas where it started getting used in this new way?