Dumpster Dive

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

A dumpster dive happens when someone intentionally searches for something in someone else's pile of refuse.

Someone on a dumpster dive may be looking for things to reuse or to sell to recyclers, improperly destroyed confidential information to misuse, or evidence of a crime.

May lead to the discovery of a Grail in the Garbage. Not to be confused with Trash Landing (a pile of refuse breaks one's fall).

Examples of Dumpster Dive include:

Film

  • The 2010 documentary film Dive! investigates dumpster diving in the Los Angeles area.

Literature

  • In 2001, dumpster diving was popularized in the book Evasion, published by CrimethInc.
  • Author John Hoffman wrote two books based on his own dumpster diving exploits; The Art and Science of Dumpster Diving and Dumpster Diving: The Advanced Course: How to Turn Other People's Trash into Money, Publicity, and Power, and was featured in the documentary DVD The Ultimate Dive.

Live-Action TV

Western Animation

Real Life

  • When a company replaces old computers with new computers, geeks will search the company's dumpster for equipment.
  • Freeganism, a sustainable living philosophy that includes dumpster diving to not waste food.
  • Dumpster diving is a living in Manshiyat Naser, whose residents live off Cairo's garbage, making it one of Cracked.com‍'‍s The 6 Weirdest Cities People Actually Live In.
  • Identity thieves searching for people's personally identifying information in dumpsters, and hackers searching for passwords and other information they can use to break into corporate or government computers, are part of the darker side of dumpster diving.
  • Garbage picking is Older Than Radio: In 19th-century London, dumpster divers were called Rag-and-bone men. They still are, in fact—after a brief disappearance during the middle-late 20th century, rag-and-bone men are enjoying a renaissance in the age of recycling.
  • In 2009, pro-surfer Dane Reynolds salvaged a piece of polyester foam from a dumpster behind the Channel Islands Surfboard factory. He shaped the foam into a surfboard that, at the time, was thought to be "short, fat, and ugly." The goal of this new shape was to distribute volume to the width and thickness of the board, cutting down on the overall board length needed to use in smaller surf, while staying progressive on the face of the wave. The board was a hit and was dubbed the "dumpster diver". The board changed the way surfboard shapers designed boards for use in smaller waves.