A TikToker who spent time at California’s off-grid community known as Slab City posted a glowing video about the experience, then quietly walked it back with a comment telling followers not to visit. Taylor Hereid, a van-dwelling traveler who goes by @taylorhereid on TikTok, described the desert settlement as “the last free place in America” before his follow-up comment drew just as much attention as the original video.
According to BroBible, Slab City sits in the California desert and operates with no official government, no formal property ownership, and little to no police presence. It also has no trash service, no water supply, and no electrical grid, though parallel systems have developed over time that allow people to live there. A small tourist economy has grown up around it as well.
Hereid’s video showed him exploring the area with genuine curiosity. He stopped at a gift shop, bought a ring and a sticker, and chatted with the owner about what life there is actually like. He also visited Salvation Mountain, the famous hand-painted hill created by the late artist Leonard Knight, and pointed out a concert hall that hosts open mics every weekend, along with art exhibits and a skate park.
He left early, then warned others to stay away
Despite opening his video by saying he planned to stay for 24 hours, Hereid cut the trip short. The combination of flies and garbage in the area became too much, and he left to get food in a nearby town instead. His actual experience never quite matched the enthusiastic framing he used to open the video. He later dropped a short comment under the post: “I’m not recommending travel here.” That one line, buried under the original video, ended up sparking its own wave of reactions.
The comments section filled up fast after the video went up. Many users backed the warning and called Slab City genuinely dangerous. One commenter called it a “scary place to take your loving girlfriend or wife.” Another urged viewers to stop romanticizing it. A third said they were relieved Hereid had not actually slept there, adding they would “never sleep in that city, especially with my wife.”
The practical risks are real. The nearest hospital is around 40 minutes away, there is no running water, and temperatures in the area regularly hit 120 degrees Fahrenheit, making heat-related illness a serious concern. Locals acknowledge that drug use is common, and the area has seen occasional incidents involving more serious crime, including property disputes that escalated to arson and isolated cases of murder.
That said, not everyone who showed up in the comments had a bad experience to report. Several people pushed back on the doom-and-gloom reaction. One commenter who grew up near Slab City said people were “acting ridiculous in the comments” and that visitors just need to be respectful and aware of their surroundings, the same as in any unfamiliar place.
Another person said they visited while nine weeks pregnant and had a positive time, even meeting a local figure they recognized from a documentary. A third recalled a resident handing their daughter “a really cool sticker.” These kinds of stories show up regularly in viral travel content, where individual experiences can vary wildly from one person to the next, not unlike the mixed reactions that followed when a man’s date night decision split the internet down the middle.
There is no hard data suggesting Slab City is disproportionately dangerous compared to other remote, underserved communities. But the combination of extreme heat, no emergency services nearby, and an absence of any formal law enforcement does create real risks that a casual visitor might not account for going in. Stories like this one keep surfacing as more travelers document unexpected encounters online, from viral community disputes to unsettling discoveries in everyday products that leave people questioning what they thought was safe.
For Hereid, the gap between his video and his comment says it all. He went to Slab City looking for something genuine, found parts of it worth filming, and still walked away telling people it was not worth the trip.









