People who ride will tell you getting a bike changes your life with the freedom and the community. And a lot of that is real. But what the YouTube videos and TikTok testimonials tend to leave out is that any tight-knit community also comes with politics, gossip, and more drama than most people bargain for. One rider is breaking that part down. Yes, There’s Biker Drama In a video with around 5,500 views, content creator @dopey.ninja admits what a lot of motorcycle content creators won't: the bike community comes with baggage. He calls it "bike drama" and says no matter how hard you try to avoid it, it will find you. "Whether you like to gossip or whether you don't even wanna get involved, it will find its way to you one way or another," he says. Rather than just venting, he runs through four tips for staying out of it. "Don't enter the conversation," he says. "If one of your friends come up to you and say, 'Oh, did you hear about this? Did you hear about that,’ you gotta cut it off right then and there. Because once you listen to that tea, you are now involved, whether you like it or not. And somehow, the story always comes back around, but this time your name is gonna be in it." His second tip: don't speak on what you don't know. Most drama is half a story, he says, and if you weren't there, staying quiet saves you from problems you didn't even create. Tell us what you think! View Comments Third, not everything needs a reaction. Some people will talk no matter what, and sometimes the best response is no response. And finally, stay neutral. You don't have to pick sides in situations that have nothing to do with you. "You could be cool with multiple people without being involved in their problems," he says. Where Biker Culture Actually Comes From The tight-knit, us-versus-them nature of motorcycle communities didn't come out of nowhere. According to History.com, it traces directly back to World War II veterans who came home restless, changed, and not quite ready to slot back into civilian life. Motorcycles were cheap, fast, and familiar (many vets had ridden them during the war), and riding clubs gave them the camaraderie and adrenaline they'd gotten used to on the front. The fashion followed naturally: the leather jacket started as a flight jacket, practical for wind and rain, and stuck. Things got complicated fast. On the July 4th weekend in 1947, a motorcycle rally in Hollister, California, descended into drunken brawling and street racing, drawing national headlines and branding biker culture with an outlaw image it never fully shook. According to NPR, it was around this time that the mainstream motorcycle community publicly dismissed the troublemakers as "1 percent" of law-abiding riders, a label the outlaws promptly adopted with pride. That split between the mainstream riding community and its rowdier fringe has defined biker culture ever since. Commenters React “3 years deep never had any drama so far hope to keep it that way,” a top comment read. “Good sir, you’re implying I have bike friends,” a person said. “I am too old for that shoit lol. It is completely out of control and people have their priorities mixed up!!!” another wrote. “This is so true! There’s groups I stay away from for these reasons. Protect yourself and your mind,” a commenter added. Motor1 reached out to @dopey.ninja for comment via TikTok direct message and comment. We'll be sure to update this if they respond. We want your opinion! What would you like to see on Motor1.com? Take our 3 minute survey. - The Motor1.com Team