The Real Parking War

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“1. The Customer is always right. 2. If you have money, you have the right to get whatever that money can buy you... But in the parking lot they were simply not true.” (Eckman, 2010) The Parking Lot Movie is a documentary based on The Corner Parking Lot in Charlottesville, Virginia. The director spent three years documenting this parking lot and the eccentric characters who work there as attendants. This movie is mostly a compilation of interviews with the attendants and scenes from daily life at the lot. The attendants in general are a very interesting group of people, and the owner is no different. They range from former philosophy professors to anthropology graduate students, with a smattering of the occasional undergraduate student. They classed themselves in several different terms such as: different, freaks and losers. There are several facets to the daily life as a parking lot attendant, particularly at this lot. The shelter that the attendants work from, is a tiny shed-like building, with one very small counter and a single chair, the inside walls are cardboard and pasted with various cartoons, drawings, and any other random parking or car related montages. The entrance gate is changed regularly and each gate has some entertaining message like: “bullitt”, “meta-gate”, “December-girls”, “civility”. In the beginning you see the attendants having fun and things at the corner lot seem very entertaining, but as the film wears on you begin to realize that while it is fun there is a deeper meaning for these people and it can make you a bit crazy. Social psychology is at play in The Parking Lot Movie at every turn, but the one that seems to rule the parking lot is stereotypes from both parties, both the attendants and the customer...

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...e very selectively hired, and each one has a story as to how they got their job and it’s always through a friend, the owner is very eccentric and has obviously staffed his business with people he can call like-minded friends. This was a very interesting movie and the dynamic within this little parking lot was even more interesting. In conclusion, this movie demonstrated not only that people make snap judgments in their social perception process, and stereotype people by their jobs, but that violence is alive and well within the American people and our entertainment.

Works Cited

Eckman, Meghan (Director). (2010). The Parking Lot Movie [Web]. Available from http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/The_Parking_Lot_Movie/70134661? trkid=1996918#height1450

Kassin, Saul, Fein, Steven, & Markus, Hazel Rose. (2008). Social psychology. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Company.

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