People who have vanity plates on their cars have a very specific reputation in society. They’re the kind of people who, others assume (right off the bat), believe they deserve special treatment. A TikTok user might have just poured fuel on that assumption when she caught a Mercedes-Maybach GLS 600 parked beside a handicap spot in Houston, Texas.
The TikTok user was understandably irate when she saw the car parked right beside a Nissan that was parked in the handicap spot. The Maybach was clearly parked over an area marked “No Parking Here.” The woman unloaded her unfiltered thoughts on the inconsiderate Maybach driver with the vanity plate reading “Colaaa.”
The video went viral
She was clearly not even talking to the owner specifically, but rather to the culture of people who think wealth means they can abandon basic human qualities like consideration and empathy. She told whoever the car’s owner is that she doesn’t care how nice his car is and that he needs to “get a grip on reality.”
The clip, as short as it is, immediately went viral. It currently has over 780,000 likes. These callouts have become increasingly common on TikTok as people around the country have started complaining that this didn’t used to be customary. There was a time when people didn’t take up illegal parking space beside handicap spots — not because of tickets, but because people simply had a “grip on reality,” to quote her ever-so-eloquent callout.
Surprisingly, there was someone in the comments who showed this kind of thinking has taken root, writing, “I spend 400k on a car, I’m parking wherever I want!” And that’s not the least bit surprising, sadly. It hasn’t even been a year since Jeff Bezos decided to flex his financial muscle by carrying out a hat trick of what many considered out-of-touch moves: first flying his friends to space, then disrupting the entire city of Venice by turning it into a wedding venue, and finally turning the Met Gala into what many felt was basically a party celebrating him.
Luckily, most people in the comments didn’t feel that way. One user wrote, “We love those people that notice our needs and call it out like this EXTRA HARD. WE THANK YOU!” Another even suggested what they would do as a long-term solution, writing, “I’m parking behind them till a tow truck shows up. They want me to move? It’s going to cost them more than the tow truck.”
According to the Texas Transportation Code, someone who parks in a handicap space without authorization is committing a violation and, depending on how many times they’ve done so, could be fined anywhere from $500 to $2,500.
Whoever Colaaa is, they could probably afford those fines without much concern. Keeping a car like that serviced and fueled is not an easy task in this economy. To someone who can afford a Maybach, a parking fine may not be much of a deterrent.
However, what can’t be quantified is shame. People often get cars like this because they enjoy the attention and respect they bring — but if all society sees is a nuisance, now that could be a true inspiration for a change in behavior.
Published: Jul 7, 2026 08:01 am