Chuck Norris, dead at 86, was a certain type of hairy 1980s American man. For the uninitiated, here are a few jokes that Gen Xers and millennials used to make in middle school about the all-American martial arts star of their youth. You can still see some shared on social media: The flu gets a Chuck Norris shot every year. The chief export of Chuck Norris is pain. There is no chin behind Chuck Norris’ beard, only another fist. And perhaps most timely for our world today: Chuck Norris doesn’t worry about high gas prices, his vehicles run on fear.

The legendary martial arts master and actor died on Friday, after years of being the epitome of toughness and dodging death with jokes that ludicrously snowballed with higher stakes of death-defying physical and mental fortitude.

The Walker, Texas Ranger star first gained notoriety for his physical command as a martial artist, eventually working his way into Hollywood as an action film star in the late 1970s. Outside of playing the title character on Walker, Texas Ranger on CBS from April 1993, to May 2001 (in which he played a gun-totting, no-nonsense lawman), he was the lead in a string of action movies, famously starring opposite Bruce Lee in The Way of the Dragon—his debut screen role, where he played a thug opposite Lee’s hero trying to save his family’s restaurant in Rome) and even turned to thrillers before he took a break from acting. But he still maintained his tough persona throughout the years, posting on Instagram just 10 days ago “I don’t age. I level up,” and sharing a video of him boxing on his 86th birthday. 

But his physical and mental fortitude weren’t the only things the action star is known for: he’s amassed a $70 million fortune in his five-decade long career, and has poured significantly into giving back to the community. But most strikingly, he stayed true to his ever-increasingly tough-guy persona by offering CBS an offer they couldn’t refuse after taking on the network for refusing to honor their contract.

A $70 million fortune

Norris built one of Hollywood’s most unlikely financial empires— starting with nothing and eventually amassing an estimated net worth of $70 million. His rise from a $12-a-week laborer to a global action icon tracks as closely with discipline as it does with dollars.

His early film paychecks were modest by any standard. Norris earned just $10,000 for his 1976 debut Breaker! Breaker!, which jumped to $40,000 for Good Guys Wear Black the following year, then $125,000 for A Force of One in 1978, and $250,000 for An Eye for an Eye by 1980. His salary exploded, however, when he landed the starring role in Walker, Texas Ranger, where he commanded $375,000 per episode across 203 episodes—a figure that dwarfed every other cast member on the show.

Despite that hefty per-episode rate, Norris alleged he wasn’t getting his full cut. In 2018, he filed a lawsuit against CBS claiming the network owed him more than $30 million in profits from Walker, Texas Ranger. His contract had entitled him to 23% of all profits, but Norris argued CBS structured the show’s distribution deals—including streaming revenue going back to 2004—in ways that deliberately avoided triggering the profit-sharing clause. At the time of the suit, the series had generated over $692 million in total revenue, making the alleged shortfall all the more striking. The case was settled in July 2023 for an undisclosed amount, with CBS issuing only a brief statement that “the parties have resolved the dispute”.

Beyond the courtroom, Norris’s current income draws from a wide range of sources—including endorsement deals, real estate, and his brand ventures—putting his estimated annual earnings at around $30 million.

Off the balance sheet, Norris has poured significant energy into giving back. In 1990, he founded Kickstart Kids, originally called the Kick Drugs Out of America Foundation, which provides free martial arts and character development programs to middle and high school students. Launched in four Houston-area schools with the support of President George H.W. Bush in 1992, the program now operates in 58 schools across Texas, has served over 120,000 students since its inception, and currently enrolls approximately 8,349 students annually. Norris himself has said the program teaches kids “how to make good decisions,” and research tied to it shows participants demonstrate higher self-esteem, lower drug use, and less violence.

“He lived his life with faith, purpose, and an unwavering commitment to the people he loved,” wrote his family in an Instagram post announcing his death. “Through his work, discipline, and kindness, he inspired millions around the world and left a lasting impact on so many lives.”

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

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