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Headless Rider urban legend

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Headless Rider (首なしライダー Kubinashi Rider) is a Japanese urban legend of a motorbike rider with a missing head.

Legend

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A piano wire is stretched across a road at neck height, causing a motorcyclist to become decapitated as a result of running into it at high speed. However, the bike remained upright and continued traveling for some time with the headless rider still on board. The rider becomes a ghost and continues to ride down the same road every night (or at the time/anniversary of the death). The decapitation is sometimes attributed to falling objects from road signs, guardrails, or trucks. The reason for the appearance is often stated to be that the rider is still searching for the murderer or his missing head.[1]

There is also an urban legend of a 'headlemss biker gang', in which a group of headless riders explode on the mountain roads of Mount Hiko in Fukuoka Prefecture.[2] There is also a variation in which severed heads are said to fly in, mostly with cries of despair, in a different location to where the motorbikes appear. It is not clear whether or not they are accompanied by helmets in this case.

Origin

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Rumors of headless riders only really took off after the release of the film Stone (1974) in Australia (released in Japan in 1981). The film contained a scene in which a rider's head is chopped off by a wire stretched across a road, and this is said to have spread in connection with rumors of motorcycle accidents in various parts of the country.

The urban legend is said to have originated from an actual accident in which a person annoyed by a biker gang used a rope stretched across a road as an obstruction, causing the rider(s) to crash. There are various theories about the original accident, but some say that it was actually just an accidental fatal motorbike accident there that was passed on in an amusing manner.

Some believe that it originated when a motorcyclist wearing a dark colored, full-face helmet on a dark road was mistakenly identified as a headless rider. In fact, some riders wearing dark colored helmets have mentioned being mistakenly reported as a headless riders. There are also reportedly some fun-loving riders who deliberately wear black, full-face helmets (which have been treated to reduce light reflections) at night in order to achieve this effect. Others say that witnesses may have also mistaken a person on a supersport type motorcycle, which positions the rider in a leaning-forward prone position on top of the fuel tank, as being a headless rider.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ 並木伸一郎 [in Japanese] (2008). "都市伝説の現代妖怪ベスト10". In 講談社コミッククリエイト (ed.). DISCOVER妖怪 日本妖怪大百科. KODANSHA Official File Magazine. Vol. 10. 講談社. p. 13. ISBN 978-4-06-370040-4.
  2. ^ 山口敏太郎 [in Japanese]. "現代妖怪図鑑 5) 首無し暴走族". 妖怪王マスコミ. ホラーアリス妖怪王(山口敏太郎公式サイト). Archived from the original on 2008-03-21. Retrieved 2010-03-10.