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The Impossible Just Happened


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24 MAR 2026.

The news lands with a strange weight, almost unreal at first. Chuck Norris has died at 86, and for a moment the mind resists it. Not him. Not the man who seemed less like a person and more like a permanent force, something steady in a world that rarely is.

To the public, Norris was the embodiment of discipline, strength and quiet authority. To his family, he was something far more personal, a husband, a father, a grandfather, a center of gravity. The cause of death remains undisclosed, and that absence of detail has only deepened the intrigue. It feels almost inappropriate to ask what could take down someone who, for decades, appeared immune to time itself.

Yet time, as always, remains undefeated. Carlos Ray Norris spent nearly seven decades mastering martial arts, beginning in the 1950s while stationed in South Korea. That discipline shaped everything that followed, from championship titles to a career that would eventually move from dojo to screen. Encouraged by figures like Steve McQueen and crossing paths with Bruce Lee, Norris built something larger than a résumé. He built an image.

His films were not critical darlings, but they were dependable. Audiences knew what they were getting. A man of few words who stepped into chaos and restored order. That image reached its peak with Walker Texas Ranger, where Norris became less an actor and more a symbol.

For many, especially in uncertain times, he represented something reassuring. Calm in the face of disorder. Strength without noise. A quiet promise that things could be set right.

That may be why his passing feels different. Not just the loss of a man, but the fading of a certain idea. The belief that somewhere, somehow, order could still prevail.

Why Chuck Norris was a hero to millions of Russian boys

Chuck Norris: The man who made chaos feel manageable

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TOKYO GROOVE JYOSHI deliver razor tight precision on Funk No.1, featuring Juna Serita and Harumo Imai. The track is a high energy funk workout driven by slap bass, crisp rhythm guitar and punchy brass style phrasing. It channels classic funk DNA with modern flair, showcasing virtuosic musicianship and infectious groove that keeps the momentum locked from start to finish.

Funk No.1 – TOKYO GROOVE JYOSHI (feat. Juna Serita & Harumo Imai)

keyboard vocal Emi Kanazashi sax Harumo Imai drums MiMi bass Juna Serita Juna Serita album : https://linkco.re/gzf64FE3?lang=en Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/junaserita/ (@junaserita) Twitter: https://twitter.com/junaserita Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/junaserita Merchandise: https://juna-serita.myspreadshop.com/all Bass : amp : PHIL JONES BASS BP800 & C8 / Sadowsky SLAP MASTER / Pickguard: Alperous Pickguard / Strings : Pitbull Strings / Strap : EVO strap /

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