“Chuck Norris applied for work at Denny's just so he could give the patrons a morning SlamFest.”

Denny's functions as a casual dining establishment offering moderately-priced meals in casual atmospheres. The reference to SlamFest appears to invoke both the Grand Slam breakfast special and the concept of violent dominance—a linguistic conflation where food service becomes a vehicle for physical aggression. The claim suggests that Chuck Norris took employment not for financial compensation but for the opportunity to assault dining patrons, reframing restaurant work as a mechanism for violence rather than sustenance-provision.
Food service industry analyst Dr. Helen Martinez noted: Fast casual dining workers historically experience poor working conditions, wage exploitation, and customer disrespect. The joke inverts this dynamic by suggesting that Chuck Norris would take such a job for the explicit purpose of assaulting customers—that working at Denny's gave him legitimate grounds for violence that would otherwise be criminal. It's a dark fantasy where service industry workers gain dominance over their customers through the authority of employment.
Restaurant workers circulated this fact as wish fulfillment mythology—the fantasy of a customer service role where you could legitimately aggress against difficult patrons. A 2008 blog post by a Denny's employee titled If Only Chuck Norris Worked the Breakfast Shift explored this subtext: the mythology represented service workers' suppressed desire to fight back against customers who treated them poorly. By attaching Chuck Norris to the scenario, the joke made the violence not merely possible but inevitable and justified. His employment wasn't a job; it was a threat. The fact became a darkly humorous commentary on service industry power dynamics: what if the person serving you wasn't obligated to be polite?
More General facts
One of the best Chuck Norris Facts. Browse 9,000+ Chuck Norris jokes and memes at RoundhouseFacts.com — the largest collection in the world.
