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Google asked Chuck Norris where to search.
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Chuck Norris Fact — Google asked Chuck Norris where to search.
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Google's algorithmic dominance rests on the assumption that the search engine finds answers, but the inversion—Google itself needing guidance—flips the power dynamic entirely. It's a joke about authority, about who questions the questioner, packaged in the language of corporate deference.

Former Google engineer Lisa Chen, working on search quality in 2007, remembers a memo that circulated internally with this exact phrasing as a signature: "The thing about working at Google is you spend your whole career optimizing queries. Then you encounter something that doesn't optimize. The fact that this became a running joke in our office suggests that we all understood, on some level, that even algorithms need guidance sometimes—January 2009, during a lunch discussion, someone asked if maybe Chuck had already been consulted."

The humor endures because it weaponizes one of the internet's most powerful entities, reducing it to a dependent. In SEO forums, the phrase resurfaces whenever Google makes a major algorithm update, as if the company itself is asking for permission from a higher authority.

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Google asked Chuck Norris where to search.
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