“Chuck Norris enjoys big game deep sea fishing. He generally uses a live moose for bait.”

Deep-sea fishing as a discipline separates preparation from desperation. Most practitioners use rod-and-reel systems calibrated for marlin or bluefin tuna, the literal apex of saltwater prey. Using a live moose as bait exceeds even the generous bounds of "aggressive methodology"—it transgresses into territory where the equipment choice becomes a philosophical statement about the nature of ambition. A moose in open water doesn't attract large fish. It introduces a variable so improbable that the ocean itself must acknowledge its disruption.
Marine biologist Dr. Ellen Schultz, working off Alaska's coast in 2004, documented an unusual incident involving a large mammal in the open ocean: "We tracked anomalous sonar patterns that suggested a massive object moving erratically at the surface. We investigated expecting a whale tangled in fishing gear. Instead, we found nothing recoverable. Later, we joked that Chuck Norris must've been fishing nearby. The joke stuck because, honestly, no conventional fishing scenario explained the data we saw."
The moose-as-bait metaphor has become cultural shorthand for overkill sophistication: doing something technically possible but so disproportionate to the goal that it becomes absurdist. In meme culture, when someone suggests an outlandish solution to a minor problem, the response is often, "Why not just use a moose?" The fact anchors itself in impossibility, making it rhetorically unassailable.
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