Co-founders of Arch Motorcycle, Keanu Reeves and Gard Hollinger, explore creativity and craftsmanship in their new docuseries, Visionaries.

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In a world obsessed with horsepower and Hollywood, Arch Motorcycle stands as a rare convergence of art, engineering, and emotion, driven by two men who’ve redefined what it means to build and to be. While most headlines focus on Keanu Reeves, the actor, or Gard Hollinger, the master builder, their latest venture, Visionaries, invites us into a different space altogether: not a garage or film set, but a deeper search for meaning.
Forget celebrity endorsements or lifestyle branding. What Reeves and Hollinger are doing with Arch and Visionaries is something else entirely. It’s an exploration of the human impulse to create, to question, and to feel. Their motorcycles are not just machines; they are philosophical objects. Their docuseries is not just television; it’s a manifesto of curiosity.
Machines as Storytellers
To understand Arch Motorcycle is to understand the soul of its founders. Their flagship model, the KRGT-1, isn’t merely a “performance cruiser.” It’s an attempt to challenge the preconceived limits of American motorcycling itself. But for Reeves, the bike is more than metal and torque; it’s a dialogue.
“There’s a feeling you get when you ride that can’t be replicated,” Reeves says. “You’re connected to the road, to the world, to yourself.” That connection, that raw vulnerability, is echoed in Visionaries, where the duo tracks down individuals across disciplines from aerospace engineers to light artists, to ask: What drives you to build something new?

From Workshop to Worldview
Reeves and Hollinger aren’t evangelising motorcycles in Visionaries; they’re using them as metaphors. The series, streaming on The Roku Channel, treats the motorcycle as a symbol of creative risk: exposed, agile, unfiltered, just like their guests.
“We didn’t want it to be a show about success,” Hollinger says. “We wanted it to be about process, about what compels someone to create despite uncertainty.” The result is a patchwork of deeply human portraits, each subject driven by a desire to reshape their world.
Keanu Reeves, the Curious
This is not the stoic Keanu of John Wick or the transcendent Neo of The Matrix. This Keanu is inquisitive, even tender. He lights up, not talking about fame or film, but about perception, humility, and the pursuit of wonder.
“Interviewing someone is like riding,” Reeves muses. “You don’t always know where it’s going to take you, but you know you’re in it together.” His fascination lies in the how and the why behind invention. In his eyes, a conversation is a ride of its own, a journey through another person’s mind.

Gard Hollinger, the Craftsman Philosopher
Hollinger brings balance. Where Reeves speaks in metaphor, Hollinger grounds the project in its technical beauty. His ability to transform abstract vision into functional design is what made Arch possible, and Visionaries compelling.
For him, motorcycles are meditative. “Riding is the one time in my day where I’m completely present,” he says. “It’s a ritual.” That ritual, whether on the road or behind the camera, becomes a tool for mindfulness—one question or response at a time.
California as Canvas
Their love for California is not incidental. Its roads, Mulholland, Kanan, the Pacific Coast Highway, are both proving grounds for Arch and spiritual corridors for their creativity. “We test the bikes here, we dream here,” says Reeves. Stops at Neptune’s Net or a roadside grille are less about fuel and more about fellowship, a recurring theme in both Arch and Visionaries.
A New Kind of Legacy
In Visionaries, the true subject isn’t innovation, it’s intention. Reeves and Hollinger are reminding us that creation doesn’t always start in a lab or studio. Sometimes it starts with a question, a ride, a quiet moment. Their work isn’t about acceleration; it’s about depth.
So yes, they build motorcycles. And yes, they make television. But what Reeves and Hollinger really offer is a rare glimpse into what happens when craftsmanship meets curiosity, when storytelling moves beyond plotlines and product launches, and into something more elemental.
Because sometimes, the fastest way to the truth is on two wheels.


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