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March 21, 2026 - Special Reports & Tweets
06:26
My thoughts on the death and life of the GREAT American PATRIOT Chuck Norris. Norris was and will always be pure Americana. I am blessed to have known him…. https://t.co/F3A2l7RCV9

Chuck Norris, a true American icon and "the real deal," is mourned by a host who reveals Norris influenced his anti-globalist views on the North American Union. Recalling their friendship with Mike Norris and a movie with Gary Haven, the speaker details Norris's dirty-fighting prowess against bullies and his pre-UFC dominance over larger opponents. After learning of Norris's impending burial in Kauai, the host celebrates his behind-the-scenes defense of the country and charity work, concluding with a tribute to Norris as a lasting example of Americana for future generations. [Automatically generated summary]

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Remembering Chuck Norris 00:05:06
Yesterday morning, I woke up to the terrible news of the unexpected death of Chuck Norris, who I knew and had interviewed quite a few times.
I've gotten to be friends with his son, Mike Norris, that obviously made a lot of movies with him.
And I made a movie with Mike.
You guys know him through Gary Haven.
And people are asking my opinion or my views on it.
And I sat down in my hotel room, so I'm on vacation.
And I just started thinking about Chuck Norris and all the great things he's done, what a true American icon he is, the real deal.
And it's just, it was hard to stop writing.
I wrote like five pages of things I wanted to say.
And as you get older, you get more and more nostalgia too for great people you've known.
And great people have done great things for the country and that have been role models for you.
And it's just a loss, but with his great contributions and his great family, he'll live on forever.
I just know how much Chuck truly loved his country.
I was so flattered to learn like 16, 17 years ago from Chuck that he'd been a long time listener and listened on a weekly basis when he was out and about on his ranch in Texas and other places.
And then I'd influence a lot of his political views.
That meant a lot to me.
And then I got to know his son, the Gary Haven, and made a great film with him about the globalist.
And it was just amazing.
And I already knew about Chuck Norris, obviously a fan when I was a kid from the movies and all the things he'd done.
And as I learned more about martial arts and talked to Joe Rodin, who's also a world champion, full contact Taekwondo, famous flying back kick, that he was like, Chuck Norris is as bad as ever comes.
And famously took on really mean bullies and people that had never been beaten who basically fought dirty and beat them.
It's just amazing.
And I was kind of doing a Chuck Norris Bender just a few months ago over a weekend, watched just hundreds of interviews with him and re-watched my interviews, some of my interviews with him, and also watched a lot of his famous fights, you know, the real ones.
And then the movies with him and Bruce Lee, who people always were saying who was better.
I mean, Bruce Lee was more of a choreographed acrobat type person.
Chuck Norris was a real deal.
And, you know, Chuck talked about that.
But when you see these American icons, you know, who've been with us leave, and you just think about what these older generation Americans were like, it's really not a cliche that they were amazing people.
You know, I'm from Texas and my grandfathers and grandmothers were amazing people.
I don't see a lot of people as amazing as them today.
Chuck Norris was from Oklahoma, very similar to upbringing in Texas in the Air Force, military police, didn't even start training until he was older.
Just a truly American individual.
And so it was like a punch in the stomach to learn that he died.
You know, it was some foreshadowing.
It was some foreshadowing when, I guess it was six months ago, Gary Haven was at the office in an interview.
And Gary Haven comes in to come on the show.
And I look over in the dark and I'm like, who is that guy?
Because the lights are on her face, but I recognize the person, just a silhouette.
He goes, oh, that's Mike Norris.
I hadn't talked to Mike in years.
Walked over to the breaks, talked to him.
They had to go.
And I said, how's your dad doing?
And he said, he's doing great, but he ain't ever coming back from Kauai.
He's going to be buried there.
And I said, is he okay?
He goes, oh, no, he's fine.
He just says he's never coming back.
I thought, wow.
I said, all right, well, let's get together sometime.
All right.
Talk to you soon.
And that was the last I talked to Mike.
You know, we're all busy.
But I remember sitting down after they left continuing the show and thinking, man, what's it mean like when Chuck Norris dies?
Because you have all the famous memes and things about Chuck Norris ties his shoes with his feet and all of that stuff.
There's so many of them.
He was so good natured, you know making the jokes, and also about Walker Texas Ranger, which was a great show, hilarious too.
They always did basically one take.
And it's just reminds us that we're all not going to be here forever either.
So, yeah, I wrote all these notes.
And when I get back on Monday, I'm going to probably do an hour of the show about Chuck Norris and pull up all the clips and all the cool stuff about him and those fights he won when they were first going into full contact.
This is pre-UFC, but that basically started with Norris, and that's when they really started going full at it.
And he took on guys much bigger, much overall stronger than him, but just with determination, beat them.
It was just the real deal.
So you see him in those fun movies, there's so many of them.
But at the core of it, it comes off as believable because Chuck Norris was the real McCoy.
And a fellow, I call him Texans.
You could say Oklahoma's North Texas, you could say Oklahoma's South Texas.
No, no, you could say Oklahoma's North Texas and Texas is South Oklahoma.
Sorry.
So that's the bottom line.
And so I really appreciate Chuck.
His Political Legacy 00:01:19
I really appreciate his family and all his contributions and how he stood up and spoke out against the North American Union, against open borders, against globalism, and all the stuff I knew politically behind the scenes he did to try to fund movements and things to defend the country that nobody ever knew about.
And the things I learned from other people that wasn't public about how much he gave charity, not just all the public things he did with the charities.
It was just really amazing.
So I've been very blessed to have known Chuck Norris, to have had him appreciate my show, tell me that he appreciated my show on air and off air.
He said that.
And it's just, it's really cool.
I got to know Charlton Heston too.
And I got to know a lot of other really, really amazing people in this fight.
And I don't care about actors just because they're actors, but when they do so many good things for humanity and for our rights and freedoms, and they're just the real deal, I just am blessed to be alive and part of this.
And I want to be an example to others in the future so that people can look back on my work and see me as a piece of Americana, an example to what they're going to do in the future.
So to Chuck Norris's entire family, to Mike Norris and all of you, we love you.
We appreciate you.
We know this is a tough time, but at the same time, you got to be proud to have been associated with somebody as great as Chuck Norris.
So Chuck, we love you.
Viking Dios, happy trails, my friend.
We're proud of you.
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