Dan Savage

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Dan Savage at the 5th Avenue High School Musical Theatre Awards, 2006
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Dan Savage at the 5th Avenue High School Musical Theatre Awards, 2006

Daniel Keenan Savage (born October 7, 1964[1] near Chicago, Illinois, USA) is an openly gay American sex advice columnist, author, media pundit, journalist, and newspaper editor. His strong opinions pointedly clash with both traditional conservative moral values and those put forth by what Savage has been known to call the "gay establishment." Savage is also a playwright and theater director, both under his real name and under the name Keenan Hollahan, using his middle name and his grandmother's maiden name.[2]

Contents

[edit] Savage Love

Savage is best known for penning the internationally syndicated relationship and sex advice column "Savage Love". Its tone is humorous, profane, and on occasion hostile to conservative opponents, as in the Santorum controversy.

The idea for the column began while Savage was living in Madison, Wisconsin, and working as a manager at Four Star Fiction and Video, a popular local video store that specialized in independent film titles. A friend from The Onion newspaper, which was also based in Madison, was launching The Stranger, and Savage suggested it should have an advice column, not knowing that he would be offered the position.

Savage stated in a February 2006, interview in The Onion AV Club that he began the column with the express purpose of providing mocking advice to heterosexuals. "Forever, I'd read letters that had been written to straight advice columnists from gay people. Sometimes the advice was okay, but oftentimes it was clueless about gay issues or gay people or gay sex or gay rights. And I just thought it would be funny for once if there was an advice column written by a gay person where straight people had to get slapped around or treated with contempt." Savage wanted to call the column "Hey Faggot!" His editors at the time refused his choice of column name, but for the first several years of the column, he attached "Hey Faggot!" at the beginning of each printed letter as a salutation. After the first year or so, he moderated the tone of the column and tried to provide more helpful advice.

Recently, he has written in a number of columns about "straight rights" concerns, such as the HPV vaccine and the morning-after pill, saying in his November 9, 2005, column that "[t]he right-wingers and the fundies and the sex-phobes don't just have it in for the queers. They're coming for your asses too."

[edit] Other projects

In addition to his weekly article and authoring four books, Savage is involved in several other projects.

He is currently the editor of the Seattle weekly newspaper The Stranger and a contributor to This American Life, an hour-long radio show on Chicago's WBEZ syndicated by PRI .

From at least September 1994 until 1997, he had a weekly 2-hour call-in show called Savage Love Live on Seattle's KCMU (now KEXP). From 1998 to 2000, he ran the bi-weekly advice column Dear Dan on the news website abcnews.com. Savage is also a frequent contributor to Out magazine.

[edit] Theatrical works

Savage studied theater and history in college; as a writer and director for theater, Savage (working under the name "Keenan Hollahan") was a founder of Seattle's Greek Active Theater. Much of the group's work was queer re-contextualizations of classic works, such as a tragi-comic Macbeth with both the title character and Lady Macbeth played by performers of the opposite gender. More recently, in March 2001 he directed his own Egguus, a parody of Peter Shaffer's 1973 play Equus that exchanged a fixation on horses for a fixation on chickens.

[edit] Opinions and point of view

[edit] Political advocacy

Savage has written about his interest in political matters. His political leanings are primarily leftist or liberal, with a pronounced libertarian streak.

Dan Savage speaking at Bradley University
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Dan Savage speaking at Bradley University

In 2000, he wrote that while suffering from the influenza virus while on an assignment for salon.com to cover the Iowa caucuses,[3] he was so angered by televised remarks in opposition to same-sex marriage by conservative Republican presidential hopeful Gary Bauer that he abandoned his original plan "to follow one of the loopy conservative Christian candidates around—Bauer or Alan Keyes—and write something insightful and humanizing about him, his campaign, and his supporters."

Instead, he volunteered for the Bauer campaign, intending to infect the candidate with his flu. He wrote that he'd licked doorknobs and other objects in the campaign office, and handed Bauer a saliva-coated pen, hoping to pass the disease on to Bauer and his supporters (though he later said that much of the article had been fictitious). He also registered and participated in the caucus, which was illegal, as Savage was not an Iowa resident. He was charged and pled guilty to a misdemeanor charge of fraudulent voting in a caucus, and was sentenced to a year's probation, 50 hours of community service, and a $750 fine.[4][5][6][7]

Savage often makes mention of political issues in his column, particularly issues that affect family planning, birth control, and sexuality. He often encourages readers to get involved, and often voices a positive or negative opinion about a politician or public official. After Rick Santorum, then a United States senator from Pennsylvania, made comments to a reporter comparing homosexual sex to bestiality and incest, Savage assailed Santorum in his columns, and eventually had a contest that ultimately led to the name santorum being used to refer to a byproduct of anal sex. [2] See Santorum (sexual slang). Savage also strongly supported the war in Iraq in the pages of The Stranger in October of 2002 [8], though by the time of the U.S. invasion in March 2003 he had somewhat softened his argument.[9]

[edit] Personal opinions

Savage often surprises readers by defending unexpected positions. Among his more surprising or controversial statements:

  • Savage wrote a piece questioning the validity of the gay pride parade as a way to build community.
  • Savage supports sending more American troops to Iraq in order to improve the situation of civilians there.
  • He describes his view towards family as "conservative", and his boyfriend, Terry Miller, is a "stay-at-home dad" for the couple's adopted son, Daryl Jude "DJ" Pierce (born 1998). However he has also expressed skepticism of simplistic views of monogamy.
  • He has often clashed with other perceived leaders of Seattle's gay community. For example, he has often expressed contempt for the editorial calibre of the Seattle Gay News and under his editorship, The Stranger frequently publishes criticisms of the messages put out by local AIDS organizations and of how they handle their money.

[edit] Local issues

Savage's editorship of The Stranger has established him as a voice in local Seattle politics. His most high-profile commentary has been as an outspoken critic of the Teen Dance Ordinance and other crackdowns on all-ages events.

Savage argues that closing down supervised all-ages dance venues drives teens to boredom and reckless activities: "Places like Ground Zero and the Kirkland Teen Center are invaluable from a law enforcement point of view. They keep kids out of, say, 7-Eleven parking lots or the homes of friends whose parents are away."[10]

[edit] Religion

Savage declared in his syndicated sex advice column: "I'm Catholic—in a cultural sense, not an eat-the-wafer, say-the-rosary, burn-down-the-women's-health-center sense. I attended Quigley Preparatory Seminary North, a Catholic high school in Chicago for boys thinking of becoming priests. I got to meet the pope in 1979 when he dropped by our school during his visit to Chicago" [11]. Shortly after the death of Pope John Paul II, he wrote in the same column:

John Paul II had more "no's" for straight people than he did for gays. But when he tried to meddle in the private lives of straights, the same people who deferred to his delicate sensibilities where my rights were concerned suddenly blew [him] off. Gay blowjobs are expendable, it seems; straight ones are sacred.
So I can't get behind this orgy of cheap and easy piety . . .. I'm sorry the old bastard's dead, I'm sorry he suffered. But I'm not so sorry that I won't stoop to working John Paul II into a column about zombie fetishism.

[edit] Ann Landers

On December 3, 2002, Savage announced in an article that he had purchased columnist Ann Landers' desk; she had died earlier in the year (on June 22). [12] Dan Savage often sarcastically referred to Ann Landers as "[his] college roommate".[citation needed]

[edit] Publications

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ This American Life, episode 118 uncut, 32:22–32:32.
  2. ^ Kittenpants interview with Dan Savage Kittenpants 04.10.01 Issue 9.
  3. ^ Salon.com's editorial, The firestorm over "Stalking Gary Bauer"
  4. ^ http://www.dmregister.com/news/stories/c4789004/12880264.html Des Moines Register article.
  5. ^ [1]
  6. ^ Dan Savage on NNDB.
  7. ^ Dan Savage, Germ Warfare, The Stranger, January 27February 2, 2000.
  8. ^ Dan Savage, Say "YES" to War on Iraq, The Stranger, Oct 17 - Oct 23, 2002. Accessed online 6 November 2006.
  9. ^ Dan Savage, Against the War--For Now Mar 13 - Mar 19, 2003. Accessed online 6 November 2006.
  10. ^ Josh Feit and Dan Savage, "Raving Mad", The Stranger, March 30 - April 5, 2006. Accessed 6 April 2006.
  11. ^ Dan Savage, Savage Love (column), The Village Voice, April 12, 2005. In fact, Pope John Paul II did not drop by Quigley North; he did come to Quigley South at 77th and south Western Avenue, where students of the entire Chicago seminary system were invited to greet him; the Pope used the Quigley South chapel for a meeting of all the North American Catholic bishops. See "Papal Visit to Quigley South, October 5, 1979" on Quigley's official site.
  12. ^ Dan Savage, "Savage Love: Advice Regarding Minors; Childbirth Fetish; I Bought Ann Landers's Desk!", The Village Voice, December 4-December 10, 2002.

[edit] External links

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