From: TheHuffingtonPost.com, Inc.
Former professional wrestler star
Ric Savage, Host Of 'American Digger,' Ousted At 'American Digger Magazine'
Savage was recently ousted as a columnist at American
Digger Magazine, a move announced by the magazine's publisher Butch Holcombe.
In a post on the online digging forum MyTreasureSpot.com.
Titled, "Some changes at American
Digger Magazine," Holcombe wrote:
After much deliberation, we have decided to
drop American Digger’ Magazine’s association with Rick Savage, who until this
month wrote our Savage Facts column. The parting was amicable, and we
appreciate his work on his column and past promotions of the magazine. We won’t
lie, our dropping his association was in great part because of the controversy
his TV show has created, and the confusion that American Digger Magazine had
anything more than a passing association with the Spike TV series which shares
our name. Please, if you enjoy or have enjoyed American Digger Magazine in the
past, continue to do so, because we will not change our format: A good digging
magazine for those more concerned with historical values than market values. We
wish those connected with the show well, but had to further make a distinction
between the magazine and show. We hope this helps clear things up.
The bevy of supportive comments from digging
enthusiasts that follow Holcombe's announcement demonstrate a dissatisfaction
with how Savage and the show are portraying the digging community. Commenters'
criticisms include Savage's bombastic style, his "Boom, Baby!"
catchphrase and the show's emphasis on selling historical artifacts for profit.
"Putting a price on everything you find is
something I taught my son long ago not to do ... The show is an insult to
diggers who truly enjoy making finds just for the pleasure of the history
involved," wrote Treasure Spot commenter Shenandoah Digger.
"I have watched both episodes and was
deeply disappointed in the showboating and chest thumping that was going on by
Mr. Savage, and only Mr. Savage. That crap belongs in the wrestling ring and
not the field and that's where he should have left it ... This is the second
"reality" metal detecting show that has embarrassed this hobby,"
a commenter posting under the handle sqzdog chimed in.
The move is only the latest example of an
emerging schism between Spike's "American Digger" and the academic
digging community, which has also registered its disapproval of National Geographic's
"Diggers." In early March, The American Anthropological
Association sent Spike TV a
letter "urging [the network] to withdraw or modify the
contents" of "American Digger" because it "wrongly
represents archaeology as a treasure-seeking adventure, in which our collective
heritage is dug up and sold for monetary gain."
In an interview with The New York Times
last week, Savage responded
to the group's criticisms. “I understand where the archaeologists are coming
from. You’ve got two groups of people who want to be part of history, to dig it
up and hold it in their hand. The only difference is I’m doing it to make a
living. They’re doing it to write papers and make it to associate professor and
get tenure.”
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