White van man

"White van man" is a stereotype used in the United Kingdom for a smaller-sized commercial van driver,[1] typically perceived as a selfish, inconsiderate driver who is mostly petit bourgeois and often aggressive.[2] According to this stereotype, the "white van man" is typically an independent tradesperson, such as a builder, plumber or locksmith, self-employed, or running a small enterprise,[2] for whom driving a commercial vehicle is not their main line of business, as it would be for a professional freight-driver.[3]

Reconstruction work on Mansfield Road, Oxford, with assorted white vans
A Mercedes-Benz Sprinter, a typical white van

Usage

The first recorded use in the British press was in an article titled "Number is up for White Van Man – scourge of the road." published by The Sunday Times on 18 May 1997 written by Jonathan Leake, that paper's then-transport editor. Later in 1997, it was used by BBC Radio 2's Sarah Kennedy. She was made honorary president of the First Ford Transit Owner's Club in 2005.[4]

The Sun newspaper ran a regular "White Van Man" column for some years in which the driver of a light goods vehicle was interviewed in his van on the issues of the day. These columns were accompanied by a picture of whichever driver had been interviewed leaning out of his cab.

The term was used in 2010 as part of road safety campaigns by the Freight Transport Association.[5]

gollark: From reading the start of that I expected that someone would just use an excessively big bit of paper, but that's much funnier.
gollark: I'm interested, and do have a decent amount of available time.
gollark: I just want rectangles. Mediocre-resolution, flat, no-cutout rectangles! They're cheaper, even, and yet everything has the stupid notchy design now.
gollark: Phones are mostly getting worse for my preferences, even: weird non-rectangle screens, no headphone jacks, bigger harder to hold screens, even less durability and repairability, battery-sucking fancier displays and more RAM, and an Android more Google-dependent and locked down every version.
gollark: Ah.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.