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The contrasting attitudes of the men and their propensity for sulking often lead to fiery but humorous verbal exchanges as they meet unusually short schedule deadlines for building distinct custom Choppers .

Typically Paul Jr. works alongside fabricators and mechanics such as Vinnie DiMartino, Rick Petko, Cody Connelly (a BOCES student intern who has since left the show to attend motorcycle maintenance school), and Christian Helter to create dozens of custom motorbikes. Paul Sr. supervises the builds and has built motorcycles himself. Michael Teutul , commonly referred to as ''Mikey'', appears and provides comic relief, though has been seen doing metal work now and then because one of his early jobs was working at Orange County Ironworks .

The show also documents their personal and promotional activities ranging from magazine photo shoots to family holidays and custom bike shows.

American Chopper has been on the receiving end of criticism from more traditional Discovery Channel viewers who point out that the show has nothing to do with the channel's theme of discovery and learning as well as being a low-brow show on a relatively intellectual channel. In response to this the new commercials that advertise new seasons (including American Chopper) have had promotional messages. American Chopper's message states, "Let's all discover...the vision."

Despite the criticism, American Chopper continues to be a highly successful and popular show on The Discovery Channel .


THE APPEAL OF THE SHOW


Verbal battles - These occur mainly between Paul Sr. and Paul Jr. Since the premiere of the show the two have had endless arguments, mostly related to Jr.'s working pace, which Sr. considers too slow. Paul Jr. has also been known to arrive late to work, take long lunchbreaks and leave unexpectedly without informing his co-workers. Sr., however, has his own personality quirks; aside from the frustration he expresses over Jr.'s work ethic he is constantly critical of Jr.'s choices in design details, especially when a deadline for completion of a cycle is approaching. He also tends to get himself worked up over seemingly small problems (at least in Jr.'s view). They also bicker about design elements, production deadlines, travel arrangements, and whose authority a design team will recognize and many, many other subjects.

Blue collar work - The cast members are manual laborers who have become incredibly successful. The dialect they use definitively reflects this segment of society and they have often participated in leisure activities together. As a group, the crew have hunted pheasant, gone snowmobiling, fished for striped bass on the Hudson River and, in one of the earliest episodes, closed the shop for a few hours to go bowling.

Small business success - Although OCC itself started as a small business and was built and expanded by Paul Sr., it was not his first foray into this segment of the private sector. A few years before he started OCC he'd built a successful iron-working shop making wrought-iron fencing and other products. This business is now run by another of Sr.'s sons, Daniel. However, OCC is considered by many to be Sr.'s greater success because of the uniqueness of the cycles they build, his son's talent for original design ideas, the crew they've assembled and, of course, the television series.


FANTASY BIKE


During 2005, Discovery Channel ran a contest that allows each of the 4 finalists to win a OCC motorcycle, with features specified by the winner, by sending in video to express the reason of wanting a bike. The winners of the contest are (in episode order): Jeff Clegg (Corporal Punishment), Susan Morisset (female bike), Joseph McClendon (custom hog), Bryan King (trike). Each winner and the bike was made into a TV episode. 2 days were allocated for building each vehicle.


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