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Snowplow Driver Garners Heat for Intentionally Piling Snow Onto Park Cars in Wild Viral Video

Guess Snowplow Man is at it again. Taking a cue from the 2000 film Snow Day, one snowplow driver decided to become a real-life villain. A viral video showed the driver intentionally burying parked cars in feet of snow.

Videos by Wide Open Country

Taken from the driver's seat of a city sanitation truck in Philadelphia, the driver gleefully pushed snow along the side of parked cars. The incident happened on Allegheny Avenue in Kensington on Monday, Jan. 26. The area got more than nine inches of snow last weekend.

The snowpile pushed the fresh snow towards the parked cars, which already had a good amount of snow around them. The driver laughed with manic glee, imagining the drivers finding their cars buried in the snow. "If your car look like this, just go and head the f-k back in the house. Just go in the house. Ain't no need for you to be outside today," the driver shouted.

Snowplow Driver Goes Viral

"If I can't drive, you b---hes can't drive," he shouted.

He also yelled, "Happy snow day, motherf-kers. We tearing this s-t up. Allegheny don't need to go nowhere. Go in the f-king house. Go in the house!"

Philadelphia's Director of Clean and Green Initiative Carlton Williams weighed in on the viral video. He said the city has received reports about several drivers intentionally burying people in their cars. He urged for locals to report such behaviors to his office and file a complaint with the plice.

"Unfortunately, I received several reports of activity when there were drivers who intentionally buried people in their cars, often causing safety and dangerous conditions," Williams said in the video 

posted to Facebook. "The City of Philadelphia does not tolerate this type of behavior and if it occurs, we will address it immediately."

Williams insisted that the city doesn't tolerate such behavor from its drivers.

"We do not tolerate the unsafe conditions of any citizen in the City of Philadelphia, especially in communities that need our help the most," he said.