Shocking Update: Nanny Faye’s HILARIOUS ‘Ram It’ Moment on Chrisley Knows Best – Going Analog!
If viewers of Chrisley Knows Best thought they had already witnessed every version of Nanny Faye Chrisley’s comedic genius, this week delivered a reminder:
never, ever underestimate the queen of one-liners. In a moment that is already being replayed across fan accounts and meme pages, the family matriarch reached her limit
with modern technology and delivered a declaration for the ages. “To hell with this,” she snapped, shutting her laptop with unmistakable finality. “I’m going analog.
You can take it and ram it where the sun doesn’t shine.” And just like that, a routine attempt to log into a website became reality-TV legend.
The Setup: A Simple Task Gone Wrong
What should have been easy quickly turned into chaos. Todd noticed his mother hunched over the computer and asked the innocent question that launched the spiral.
“What are you doing, honey? Trying to get into a website?”
Yes. Yes, she was.
But first, the internet demanded proof that she was human.
Select every square with a bicycle.
Straightforward, right? Not in the Chrisley household.
Nanny Faye peered at the screen, tapping carefully, confident she had cracked the code. Seconds later, the message flashed back with cold digital indifference: Try again.
Todd burst out laughing. Chase hovered nearby offering enthusiastic but wildly unhelpful commentary. Julie leaned in, determined that together they would conquer the robot overlords.
“We’re going to get you into this account,” Julie promised.
Famous last words.
Family Versus CAPTCHA
What followed was pure ensemble comedy. Three generations of Chrisleys—none willing to admit defeat—debated whether blurry shapes were bicycles, birds, or possibly modern art.
“Oh, those are birds,” Todd announced at one point, suddenly unsure of everything he believed five seconds earlier.
They clicked again.
Try again.
Nanny Faye sighed the sigh of a woman who has lived long enough to know nonsense when she sees it. Todd grew louder. Chase became a backseat driver of doom.
“How many people does it take to find freaking bicycles?” Todd demanded, exasperated. “I hate these stupid things.”
Viewers at home felt the same pain. Who among us has not been betrayed by a traffic light that might also be a mailbox?
The Breaking Point
Then came the moment.
Nanny Faye, 78 years young and gloriously done with everyone’s advice, closed the laptop. The sound alone carried authority.
She had tried. She had cooperated. She had given the digital age an opportunity.
The digital age failed.
“To hell with this,” she declared. “I’m going analog.”
The line detonated like fireworks. Todd doubled over. Chase lost it. Julie tried to maintain order and failed spectacularly.
In seconds, the clip transformed from family frustration to viral brilliance.
Why It Hit So Hard
Part of the magic is timing. The Chrisleys have been navigating heavy public chapters, and fans often look to Nanny Faye as a burst of levity—a reminder of the humor that made them fall in love with the show in the first place.
Her rebellion against technology wasn’t just funny. It was cathartic.
Because let’s be honest: we have all wanted to slam a laptop shut and announce retirement from passwords.
An Ongoing War With the Future
Longtime viewers know this isn’t Nanny Faye’s first skirmish with modern life. She has battled smartphones, misunderstood apps, and regularly questioned why anything requires more than common sense and a phone call.
But this felt different.
This felt like surrender—and victory—at the same time.
According to those close to the family, her frustration has been simmering for a while. Endless updates, mysterious error messages, voices in devices telling her what to do. For a woman raised in an era of directness, it’s all a bit suspicious.
If it doesn’t work the first time, why is it still here?
A fair question.
Todd vs. Mom: The Eternal Match
No Chrisley moment is complete without Todd attempting to restore order, usually while making everything louder.
He tried encouragement. He tried coaching. He tried mockery disguised as motivation.
None of it moved the needle.
When Nanny Faye makes up her mind, the discussion is over.
Later, Todd reportedly joked that technology should include a “Nanny Mode” where everything simply agrees with her. Frankly, it might sell.
Savannah and Chase React
Savannah, fluent in social media survival, seemed torn between laughter and admiration. Reaching her grandmother without digital tools, she joked, might soon require carrier pigeons.
Chase, meanwhile, appeared delighted. Few things entertain him more than watching Todd lose control of a situation he cannot command into submission.
And this one? Uncommandable.
Fans Choose a Side
Online, the reaction was immediate and explosive. Supporters called Nanny Faye “iconic,” “relatable,” and “the only person brave enough to say what we’re all thinking.”
Of course, critics surfaced too, some insisting the family should focus on more serious matters.
But even many skeptics admitted the moment was funny. Resistance to Nanny Faye’s charm rarely lasts long.
More Than a Joke
Here’s the twist: beneath the humor sits something unexpectedly touching.
Nanny Faye’s declaration is about simplicity. About refusing to let frustration steal joy. About knowing your limits and choosing peace anyway.
For a family whose lives often unfold at high volume, her analog fantasy offers a breather.
Call back later. Show up in person. If it matters, you’ll find a way.
What Comes Next?
Will she permanently abandon technology? Probably not. Even legends must occasionally reset the router.
But for one perfect moment, she spoke for everyone exhausted by spinning wheels and impossible grids.
And she did it with style.
Because when Nanny Faye Chrisley says “ram it,” the world listens.

