I'm asking you where is my destination? If you would kindly point me in the direction I'm supposed to go

He's Angry as Hell, And He's Not Going to Take You Anymore! As of May 2016, the service was available in over 66 countries and 449 cities worldwide.

In his words, she made him hurry up and wait. An Uber driver called a woman he drove to Kaiser Hospital a "f-----g moron," then accused her of being "extremely rude." Apparently he didn't know the man in the back seat was videotaping him, and intended to post their encounter online.

All this and more, in a YouTube posted Thursday, the Uber driver howls "Get out of my car" repeatedly. Uber suspended the driver's access as their "Trust and Safety Team" review the encounter, said an Uber spokesman.

"Get out of my car now," said the driver, but the woman wouldn't exit because she didn't see the ER entrance. "I have the right to tell you when to get out of my car. It's right now!" The woman appears to me, a casual observer and part time Lyft driver, to want to prevent the driver from winning through angry intimidation. The driver appears just as determined to win by being angry.

"I don't know where I am," the rider protests. "I'm asking you where is my destination? If you would kindly point me in the direction I'm supposed to go."

The driver could be seen yelling "Get out of my car" perhaps ten times during the footage. The video was uploaded last week and has been viewed over a million times.

"I pulled into your destination," the driver said, holding up his cell phone. "It said here I was at your destination. It's over. Get out of my car now."

The woman did not raise her voice in the footage, yet she would not believe the driver that they had made it to the hospital's emergency room. The driver said she had kept him waiting too long when he picked her up.

He grew more irate as he demanded she leave again and told her "I will f---ing talk to you any God d--- way I want" when she asked why he was yelling at her.

Some Uber and Lyft drivers have defended the viral video drivers actions, pointing out that driving in Southern California is inherently stressful. And that we do not know what the woman and her male backseat companion did previous to the short video, to make the driver so stressed out and determined to get away from them.

The three-minute video ended with a bystander promising to walk the woman to the emergency room. The video, "Hostile Uber driver refuses to take me to ER!," had been viewed over half a million times by Wednesday afternoon.

It wasn't immediately clear what exactly the woman had done to make the driver so angry. an Uber spokeswoman declined to give more details such as the name of the driver, citing privacy laws. The company's rules call for drivers and riders "to act appropriately and respect boundaries" and exercise "human kindness" during each ride.

"This conduct has no place on our platform and we're reviewing the matter," an Uber spokeswoman said in an emailed statement.

The driver does appear to be suffering from a psychological illness, perhaps a chemical problem. Intermittent explosive disorder (sometimes abbreviated as IED) is a behavioral disorder characterized by explosive outbursts of anger and violence, often to the point of rage, that are disproportionate to the situation at hand (e.g., impulsive screaming triggered by relatively inconsequential events).

Uber Technologies Inc. is an American multinational online transportation network company headquartered in San Francisco, California. It develops, markets and operates the Uber mobile app, which allows consumers with smartphones to submit a trip request which is then routed to Uber drivers who use their own cars.

Uber driver video "Get out of my car!!"

Uber was founded as "UberCab" by Travis Kalanick and Garrett Camp in 2009 and the app was released the following June. Beginning in 2012, Uber expanded internationally. As of May 2016, the service was available in over 66 countries and 449 cities worldwide. Since Uber's launch, several other companies have replicated its business model, a trend that has come to be referred to as "Uberification".

In 2014, it experimented with carpooling features and made other updates. Klout ranked the San Francisco-based company as the 48th-most powerful company in America in 2014.

By late-2015, Uber was estimated to be worth $62.5 billion. It has become a symbol of the new "sharing economy."

The legality of Uber has been challenged by governments and taxi companies, who allege that its use of drivers who are not licensed to drive taxicabs is unsafe and illegal.