Wild footage has emerged of the moment a motorcyclist was abused by a driver she claims tried to cut her off during a heated road rage clash.
The New Zealand woman, who lives in Australia, shared shocking footage of the altercation to TikTok with the man heard telling her to ‘die’.
The motorcyclist and her passenger managed to stay calm throughout the terrifying ordeal.
Dashcam footage from her bike showed a driver in a white station wagon launching into an expletive-laden tirade at a set of traffic lights.
‘F**king stick up peoples’ a**es,’ he said.
The New Zealand woman didn’t respond to the driver and instead waited for the traffic light to turn green so she could keep driving.
The foul-mouthed motorist then made a rude hand gesture before he turned left, with the motorcyclist continuing straight ahead.
The motorcyclist shared footage of what had happened moments earlier with video showing her overtake the car before the driver sped up to pass her.
The motorcyclist (pictured) and her passenger were both shocked and couldn’t believe the motorist acted the way he did, which included purposefully going slow so she had no choice but to overtake him
She explained that when the driver slowed down in front of her, she overtook him again before claiming he undercut her.
‘Undercuts me at an intersection (I had left some extra space so he didn’t rear end me),’ she wrote in the caption.
Footage showed how the driver put his brakes on again, prompting the motorcyclist to overtake him again.
The motorcyclist was left visibly shaken as she eventually reached her destination.
‘That was insane, I’ve never had someone scream at me like that before,’ she said.
Her passenger added: ‘He was angry. He was proper p**sed.’
‘He could have just let me go and that would have been it, but no he had to like, get in front of me,’ the motorcyclist said.
Social media users were quick to show support to the motorcyclist with many praising her composure.
‘The worst thing you can do in a road rage incident is respond. It does the opposite of helping. So, good on ya for not doing that,’ one wrote
‘It’s so hard not to engage sometimes but you did the right thing. Not worth it,’ another said.
Another added: ‘That’s terrible, glad you’re safe’.
Some defended the driver claiming the the motorcyclist was at fault.
‘I mean you did cut him off twice for no reason, you didn’t need to get over like that,’ one wrote.