Skip to content
MarketScale
‹ Back to Industries

Professional AV

Discover the Truth: Metal Detecting Through a Kid’s Eyes with 8-Year-Old Emily Copeland

It’s tempting to say Emily Copeland is not like other 8-year-olds, but the truth is she’s a curious, inquisitive little girl like any other. She just has the right tools to indulge her curiosity. On this episode of Discover the Truth by Garrett Metal Detectors, host Shelby Skrhak sat down with young metal detectorist…

This story was produced through MarketScale. See how Professional AV teams put it to work with Customer Stories & Case Studies.

Share

It’s tempting to say Emily Copeland is not like other 8-year-olds, but the truth is she’s a curious, inquisitive little girl like any other.

She just has the right tools to indulge her curiosity.

On this episode of Discover the Truth by Garrett Metal Detectors, host Shelby Skrhak sat down with young metal detectorist Emily Copeland to discuss how she got into detecting and how she’s encouraging others to try out the sport.

Emily began metal detecting with her dad, Shannon Copeland, when she was 4 years old.

“My dad said, ‘Here try this,'” Copeland said. While her dad held the top of the metal detector and she held the bottom, she made her first discovery.

“I swung it and found my first pull tab. I didn’t really care if it was trash or not. I was so excited, I felt my face was going to blow up,” she said.

She began documenting her finds on social media and her own YouTube channel, Little Dirt Diggers, where she’s posted 150 videos that have more than 25,000 views, and she’s garnered more than 600 subscribers, young and old.

Copeland takes her Garrett AT Pro everywhere, from her parents’ and grandparents’ rural properties to historic Civil War sites and the beach in Florida. She was hunting a Civil War encampment in the woods near Adairsville, Georgia when she found a U.S. box plate, or soldier belt buckle.

Another time, she found something more personal than she could have imagined — a brass, hammered bracelet belonging to her great great great grandmother and engraved with her initials.

The beach was less fruitful for her, but she takes disappointment in stride.

“It’s not that frustrating to me, just a little tiny bit,” Copeland said. She encourages newcomers to the sport to stick with it and have fun, whether you find anything or not.

“You have to find the trash to find the good stuff,” Copeland said. “That’s what I always say.”

For the latest news, videos, and podcasts in the Sports & Entertainment Industry, be sure to subscribe to our industry publication.

Follow us on social media for the latest updates in B2B!

Twitter – @MarketScale

Facebook – facebook.com/marketscale

LinkedIn – linkedin.com/company/marketscale

New to MarketScale?

MarketScale is the platform Professional AV companies use to turn their own experts into content like this. Want the short overview?

Free workspace

You just read one expert. Imagine publishing your whole team.

This article was produced through MarketScale. Create a free workspace and turn your own team's expertise into articles, video, and social posts. No credit card, no demo required.

NPS +73 · 1,000+ creators · 38+ countries

What you get, free

Your own MarketScale Studio workspace
One video edit a month, on us
AI writing, editing, and publishing tools
In-platform coaching to learn the system

More Professional AV Insights

InfoComm 2026 felt different: less specs, more real problem-solving

InfoComm 2026 felt different: less specs, more real problem-solving

InfoComm 2026 focused more on solving real-world problems rather than just showcasing specifications. The event highlighted a shift towards practical applications and solutions in the Pro AV industry. Attendees discussed innovative approaches to addressing industry challenges.

  • 01Shift in focus from specifications to problem-solving at InfoComm 2026.
  • 02Increased emphasis on practical applications in the Pro AV industry.
  • 03Discussion on innovative solutions to industry challenges.

Jun 22, 2026

InfoComm 2026: buyers demand usable agentic-AI products as any-vendor interoperability goes live

InfoComm 2026: buyers demand usable agentic-AI products as any-vendor interoperability goes live

InfoComm 2026 in Las Vegas marked two industry shifts: buyers now demand usable agentic-AI products over conceptual pitches, and IPMX certification enables full any-vendor interoperability, ending single-vendor lock-in. These converge to create a more modular, capability-driven audiovisual market where integrators can assemble solutions across manufacturers based on performance and price.

  • 01InfoComm 2026 features 750+ exhibitors.
  • 02The event introduces any-vendor IPMX interoperability.
  • 03AI-focused sessions number 46, reflecting the industry's growth in agentic AI.

Jun 17, 2026

FIFA World Cup 2026 reshapes the pro AV landscape

FIFA World Cup 2026 reshapes the pro AV landscape

The 2026 FIFA World Cup is driving growth in the professional audio-visual (pro AV) industry. This event presents substantial opportunities for AV installers and marketers due to its large scale. The changes necessitate advancements in technology and service offerings.

  • 01The 2026 FIFA World Cup is larger in scale than previous tournaments.
  • 02Significant opportunities arise for pro AV installers and marketers.
  • 03Technological advancements are needed in the pro AV industry to meet new demands.

Jun 10, 2026

Explore More Professional AV Insights

Read more expert perspectives from across Professional AV.

Browse Professional AV Hub