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PARK CITY ā When three sisters were looking for a way to spend their Saturday, they got some parental permission and hopped on a bus, heading downtown in a search for celebrities.
āIf you see a mob of people screaming, just follow them,ā said Ivy Malman, sharing her secrets for success.
She and her accomplices will settle for nothing less than absolute victory. Her sister Sidney Hatcher was keeping a sharp eye out for Taylor Swift while her other sister Ruby Hatcher was on a quest to track down Will Smith or Oprah.
As for Ivy, she had a hard time even keeping track of who she wants to find.
āWe watched āAladdinā last night, and I really liked Will Ferrell as the genie,ā she said. āThat was pretty cool.ā
āWill Smith was in it, not Will Ferrell,ā Ruby said, correcting her sister with a laugh.
But while the public may be on the chase for a coveted selfie, businesses were craving customers. Inside Java Cow, a coffee and ice cream shop on Main Street, the cups werenāt churning quite as quickly as last year.
āThis is normal, but itās normally like this all day long,ā said manager Rebecca Williams, whoās been running the place for the past five years. āWeāre busy, but not as busy it should be.ā
Down the street at Dollyās Books, the sweets werenāt selling like they used to.
āA lot slower than last year,ā said Luke Fairman, the General Manager of the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory, which is attached to the bookstore. āLast year was probably double what weāll do today. I donāt know exactly why, but itās definitely slower. A lot less people.ā
To the untrained eye, the sidewalks may have looked like a swarm ā but Fairman and Williams agreed that something was different.
āRight now Iād say itās like a ghost town compared to how it usually is,ā Fairman said, gesturing out the front window of his shop. āUsually, itād be packed.ā

While tracking the exact attendance numbers at the Sundance Film Festival can be a challenge, Salt Lake City-based Y2 Analytics uses data provided by another company that anonymously tracks the number of cell phones that move through the area. They estimated a slight dip in attendance last year, following huge gains in previous years ā their report showed around 122,000 people attended some part of the festival in 2019, down from about 125,000 in 2018.
Although the experiences of a couple of businesses on Main Street arenāt exactly scientific, Fairman and Williams both think locals may be scared off by the traffic situation, which they said can be more than a little daunting.
āTheyāre charging crazy, crazy amounts for China Bridge,ā Williams said, referring to a nearby parking garage. āParking is a little more limited than it used to be.ā
āYesterday, there was like an hour and a half wait to get into Swede Alley,ā Fairman said. āSo I think some people are just giving up. Most people park at the high school and then just bus over, which is usually pretty quick, but last night it took me almost two hours to pick up some stuff from here.ā
Williams also believed whatās traditionally been the main attraction of Sundance ā the films ā may be undergoing a bit of a shift.
āYou hear everybody talking about how they can see some of these films the next month on HBO or on Netflix,ā she said. āSo itās not as much of an adventure as it used to be.ā
āNetflix, Hulu, see them all in a couple of months anyway,ā Fairman said. āItās gotten a lot more expensive, too.ā
You might believe lower foot traffic might make businesses bitter, but shop owners said, on the whole, Park City is booming.
āWe have so many events during the summer up here,ā Williams said. āEvery single weekend, thereās something going on.ā
āEvery year just gets blown out of the water,ā Fairman said. āYou think you canāt go any bigger, and then it just crushes it. During Christmas, weāve never seen anything like it.ā
This Saturday may have been a bit slower, but according to Fairman and Williams, businesses donāt completely rely on Sundance to keep their doors open. Theyāre both happy with the number of customers they see and said business is consistent. Change is something they expect one way or another ā and Fairman said Sundance itself is no exception.
āBefore it was mostly about the films, now itās more about people trying to see people,ā he said with a smile.
As long as celebrities walk among us, some people like Ivy Malman and her sisters will always be on the hunt, regardless of who played the part of āThe Genie.ā
āWe do this every year,ā she said, before clarifying that it was, in fact, Will Smith sheās on the lookout for.
She plans to keep searching, trying to prove that where thereās a will, thereās a way.







