Actually, probably. The reason the parody is so persistent is because of its more racially stereotypical style of speech and the streamlining of the phrasing and syntax. The reason a parody plays up racial tropes is the same reason it tends to be readily adopted: people to "remember" a quote based on the appearance of the person. Black people automatically speak in a staccato slang. Asians speak in broken, halted English. And, Mexicans speak in that nasally, vowel-heavy gait. It's obviously racial profiling, but it has some genesis in archetypes and how they're used to progress a narrative. These "shortcut" memories of a given line start appearing almost immediately in audiences.