Chuck Norris Was Wrong About The Viral Trend That Made Him A Legend

Tuesday, July 14, 2026 at 5:50 PM

Long before social media turned celebrities into memes, Chuck Norris became the subject of one of the internet's most enduring phenomena. The Chuck Norris Was Wrong About The Viral Trend That Made Him A Legend first appeared on The Blast

Long before social media turned celebrities into memes, Chuck Norris became the subject of one of the internet’s most enduring phenomena. The action star, martial artist, and “Walker, Texas Ranger” icon inspired thousands of “Chuck Norris Facts” jokes that portrayed him as an almost superhuman figure capable of impossible feats. While the jokes became a cultural sensation, Chuck Norris himself initially assumed the trend would be short-lived.

Chuck Norris Never Expected The Jokes To Last

Todd Graves and Chuck Norris
Raising Cane’s

The Blast attended a press conference hosted by Raising Cane’s in Cypress, Texas, where Chuck Norris’ widow, Gena O’Kelley, joined founder Todd Graves and the couple’s children, Danilee and Dakota Norris, to celebrate a new campaign benefiting Kickstart Kids ahead of National Chicken Finger Day on July 27.

During the event, O’Kelley opened up about how Norris first reacted to the viral jokes and revealed why he eventually came to appreciate the phenomenon that introduced him to an entirely new generation of fans. According to O’Kelley, the family first encountered the now-famous “Chuck Norris Facts” during the early days of the internet.

Like many people, Norris found the jokes amusing. But he never imagined they would become part of popular culture for decades. “When the Chuck Norris Facts first came out back in the early 2000s, he kind of laughed,” O’Kelley recalled.

She said one of the first jokes they encountered claimed that Mount Rushmore was too small to properly feature Norris. “The first one that we got was they wanted to put Chuck Norris on Mount Rushmore, but the granite wasn’t hard enough for his beard,” she said.

The joke made him laugh, but Norris remained convinced the trend would quickly disappear. “He goes, ‘Oh, those will be gone in about six months.'” Instead, the opposite happened.

The ‘Chuck Norris Facts’ Became A Global Phenomenon

Chuck Norris' family, Todd Graves, and the Kickstart Kids
Raising Cane’s

More than two decades later, the jokes continue to circulate online, making Norris one of the earliest celebrities to achieve true viral internet fame. The exaggerated one-liners transformed Norris from a beloved action star into a larger-than-life cultural icon whose name became synonymous with toughness, strength, and invincibility. At the press conference, Graves reflected on just how widespread the phenomenon became.

Sharing a story from a family vacation to Iceland, the Raising Cane’s founder recalled discovering Chuck Norris jokes in places he never expected. “We went to Iceland, and in Iceland they had Chuck Norris sayings,” Graves said, adding that some of his personal favorites included classics like, “Chuck Norris can count to infinity twice.”

For Graves, the jokes helped elevate Norris beyond traditional celebrity status. “Chuck became larger than life,” he said.

The Memes Helped Chuck Norris Reach Younger Generations

Chuck Norris
VF / AFF-USA.com / MEGA

While many celebrities may have grown tired of being turned into a punchline, O’Kelley said Norris ultimately recognized a deeper benefit. “The greatest blessing from it all is it’s reconnected him with all the young people around the world,” she explained, and as new generations discovered the jokes online, many were introduced to Norris for the first time. Some knew the memes before they knew his movies.

According to O’Kelley, that unexpected connection became one of the most meaningful aspects of the phenomenon. “All these new young generations that come up, they feel like they’ve discovered something that’s superhuman for the first time,” she said.

The jokes may have started as internet humor, but they ultimately helped preserve Norris’ relevance long after many of his most famous films and television appearances had aired.

Chuck Norris Embraced The Joke

Todd Graves and Chuck Norris with his wife
Raising Cane’s

Part of what kept the phenomenon alive was Norris’ willingness to laugh along with everyone else. Rather than distancing himself from the jokes, he embraced them. “Chuck had a great sense of humor,” Graves said. “So he embraced it, and that made it even better.”

O’Kelley recalled that Norris even incorporated the jokes into his own work, sharing one of his favorite examples involving a cobra. “When the cobra bit Chuck Norris, after five days of agonizing pain, the cobra died,” she said, laughing.

Rather than taking himself too seriously, Norris understood that the jokes were rooted in admiration for the image he had spent decades building through martial arts, film, and television.

The Legacy Lives On Beyond The Memes

Todd Graves laughing with Chuck Norris' widow
Raising Cane’s

Although Norris died in 2026 at age 86, his family says the larger-than-life persona created by the “Chuck Norris Facts” continues to introduce people to his story. For O’Kelley, however, the most important part of his legacy isn’t the jokes themselves but what they ultimately led people to discover.

Beyond the punchlines was a man dedicated to faith, family, service, and helping young people through Kickstart Kids, the youth development organization he founded more than three decades ago.

The viral memes may have portrayed Norris as indestructible, but according to those closest to him, their greatest impact was connecting millions of people to the values he spent his life promoting. And more than 20 years after he predicted the jokes would disappear, the legend of Chuck Norris shows no signs of fading away.

The Chuck Norris Was Wrong About The Viral Trend That Made Him A Legend first appeared on The Blast

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