Jesse James: Founder of West Coast Choppers, Welding an Empire From Scratch & Finding The Spotlight
Team Never Quit
Marcus Luttrell
4.9 • 6K Ratings
🗓️ 4 February 2026
⏱️ 96 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Forged by Fire: Jesse James on Craftsmanship, Controversy, and Reinvention
This week, Marcus and Melanie sit down with Jesse James, one of the most influential custom motorcycle builders of the modern era. A fabricator at heart and an old-school craftsman by trade, Jesse is best known as the founder of West Coast Choppers, a brand that redefined the custom chopper world with raw metal, rigid frames, and uncompromising attention to detail.
Jesse’s journey began in his mother’s garage, where he learned the art of fabrication under the mentorship of legendary hot rod builder Boyd Coddington. What started as a passion for building with his hands quickly evolved into a full-scale operation in Long Beach, California—one that would grow to employ more than 50 people and produce hand-built motorcycles commanding prices from $50,000 to $150,000.
His rise to national fame came through the Discovery Channel’s Motorcycle Mania, which gave viewers an unfiltered look into his shop, his process, and his relentless standards. That exposure led to Monster Garage, cementing Jesse as a household name and a defining figure in reality-based automotive television.
Known for crafting—not assembling—his bikes, Jesse’s signature style emphasizes stretched frames, precision metalwork, and function-driven design over flash. His work has been commissioned by high-profile clients including Kid Rock and Shaquille O'Neal, further solidifying his influence across culture, sports, and entertainment.
In 2010, after facing both personal and business challenges, Jesse closed the original West Coast Choppers headquarters and relocated to Texas. There, he rebuilt—both personally and professionally—continuing to create custom machines and expanding into new ventures, including firearms manufacturing and direct-to-consumer media through platforms like OTLW.tv.
In this episode, Jesse opens up about learning discipline and skill the hard way, building a brand from nothing, the cost of fame and fast success, and why craftsmanship, grit, and honesty still matter
This is a raw, no-nonsense conversation about earning your skills, owning your mistakes, and building something real—one weld at a time.
In this episode you will hear:
• I went to Iraq in ’03, a month after we invaded. We did a USO tour and Kid Rock went and invited me. Nobody from USO knew who I was, so I told them I was, so I lied and said I was his tour manager. (1:13)
• I ended up going t jail my senior year for stealing cars. (14:47)
• I went to college and it was like crabs trying to get out of a barrel. (15:25)
• I was always working in the garage, building bikes. I had a Harley in High school. I was restoring bicycles, and building Volkswagons and sending them to Japan. I was hustling. (16:11)
• From my parents being antique dealers, I had a huge, pretty valuable tin toy collection. Like really rare Mark 10 toys worth thousands of dollars. I loaded ‘em up in my car and took ‘em to the big toy show in Pasadena. I sold them all to a dealer, and I used that money to buy a mill and a lathe and a welder for my garage. (23:27)
• If you’re gonna wait for the right time, that’s never coming. (23:51)
• My dad started me really young working. I literally despised him for it. And now I’m thankful because I have this relentless work ethic. (25:01)
• I restored a 1940 or ’41 bicycle called the Hiawatha Chippewa. I bought it for $100. (29:08)
• The first thing I ever made was a dust pan. (32:33)
• I was getting pai $750 a week salary, and at night I was making about 15 grand a week, making and shipping fenders. (43:56)
• If you would watch the Discovery channel in ’99 and 2000, they would run [my documentary on how a motorcycle gets built by hand] over and over. It was the highest rated show in the history of the network. (53:32)
• I did 118 cars. (56:43)
• I love taking about what I do. I love interaction. (60:11)
• [Marcus] When you’re driving into work early – with an hour difference – what type of cars are on the road early in the morning as opposed to the ones during rush hour. I heard that. (61:47)
• Success in this country, and in the world, isn’t defined by tactile skills. (62:40)
• I’m eliminating everything in my life that keeps me from working and being a craftsman. (63:48)
Support Jesse:
- IG: popeofwelding
- https://westcoastchoppers.com/
- https://jessejamesculinary.com/
Support TNQ
- IG: team_neverquit , marcusluttrell , melanieluttrell , huntero13
- https://www.patreon.com/teamneverquit
Sponsors:
- Navyfederal.org
- selectquote.com/TNQ
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- mizzenandmain.com [Promo code: TNQ20]
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Transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | The Team Never Quit podcast is proudly sponsored by Navy Federal Credit Union. |
| 0:05.4 | Navy Federal is here to help you dominate your debt with a platinum card. |
| 0:09.7 | Go check out how they can help you at NavyFederal.org. |
| 0:14.0 | I'm eliminating everything from my life that gets in the way of me working and being a craftsman. |
| 0:20.8 | Because that's what makes me happy. |
| 0:23.0 | All right, everybody, welcome back to the T TNGU podcast. I'm your host, Marcus |
| 0:40.8 | LaTrell. Every week, it's my job to fire you up to ignite the legend inside of you and to push |
| 0:46.4 | you to your greatness. Join me every week as I take you into my briefing room with some of the |
| 0:50.8 | most hard charging people on the planet. They're going to show you how to embrace the suck of life, teach you the values of working your ass off, and charge through whatever life throws at you. This is the team never quit podcast. Don't buckle up, Buttercup. |
| 1:19.6 | I went to Iraq in 2003, like a month after we invaded. |
| 1:24.7 | They did like a USO tour, and Kid Rock went and invited me. |
| 1:31.0 | And I don't feel like anybody from USO really knew who I was so I lied and said I was his tour manager and went over there and then when I went over there and went to |
| 1:35.7 | Baghdad and like all over the Middle East and Qatar Doha Bahrain and everybody all the troops |
| 1:42.4 | were like God I think they were all fans of Monster Garage. |
| 1:45.7 | And like, I remember Wayne Newton was kind of the figurehead of the USO at the time. |
| 1:51.5 | Was it really? |
| 1:52.2 | Yeah, and he, and we had used him on an episode of Monster Garage. |
| 1:55.9 | I built a suburban into a mobile wedding chapel. |
| 2:00.1 | And so Wayne Newton was on the episode, |
| 2:03.5 | and then I don't think he couldn't really put it together. |
| 2:09.4 | When you see people out of context, |
| 2:11.0 | it's like, wait, I know I know you. |
... |
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