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Marty Engstrom, Maine’s reluctant celebrity TV weatherman, dies at 86

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Marty Engstrom, Maine’s reluctant celebrity TV weatherman, dies at 86


Though he gave TV weather reports seen across northern New England for 38 years and was recognized wherever he went, Marty Engstrom was quick to tell people he was not a weatherman.

A broadcast engineer by training, Engstrom reluctantly began giving weather reports for Portland station WMTW from the station’s broadcast tower atop Mount Washington in New Hampshire in 1964. With a Maine accent so thick some viewers thought it must be fake, Engstrom wore a clip-on bow tie and read his reports from hand-written cue cards he taped to the camera. His folksy, unpolished style made him a hit with viewers, and he became known to generations of Mainers simply as “Marty on the Mountain.”

Engstrom, who retired from WMTW in 2002,  was inducted into the Maine Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame in 2019. He died Thursday at his home in Fryeburg, at the age of 86, said his daughter, Anita Williams.

Marty Engstrom broadcast weather forecasts from Mount Washington for 38 years. Photo courtesy of WMTW

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Williams said her father gained a deep love and appreciation for weather from his time on Mount Washington and had kept a daily weather log in his Fryeburg home for the past 20 years. But he didn’t always seem to understand or acknowledge how popular and well-known he’d become.

“He was very humble. People would come up to him excited and say ‘Oh, you’re Marty Engstrom’ and he’d just say ‘Yup’” said Williams, of Fryeburg. “We’d tell him, “Dad, you’re famous, people know who you are.”

Engstrom grew more comfortable with his celebrity over time, said Steve Minich, an anchor at WMTW (Channel 8)  since 1991. Engstrom even wrote a book about his long and unexpected career, “Marty on the Mountain: 38 Years on Mount Washington.”

Minich remembers early in his tenure attending a banquet with other WMTW anchors and Engstrom. When Minich and the other anchors were introduced, they got polite applause. But when Engstrom was announced, “the place went wild, everybody cheering,” Minich said.

“He’s the one people loved. What you saw what was you got with him, and I think people knew that,” Minich said.

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Engstrom grew up in Fryeburg, where his parents worked at a nearby corn canning plant, his daughter said. He left home to join the Air Force, where he was a weapons control technician. When finished his time in the service, he got a commercial radio license and began looking for jobs with local TV and radio stations. He landed a job running WMTW’s transmitter on the summit of Mount Washington, some 6,200 feet high and home to some of the worst weather in the country.

In the days before cable, satellite, and streaming services, TV stations broadcast their signals to homes over the air, and WMTW’s summit tower allowed it – and Engstrom – to reach viewing households all over northern New England and even into Canada.

On his very first day of work, Engstrom was told that besides driving up the mountain and running the transmitting equipment, he’d have to give daily on-air reports about the summit’s weather, to be shown on the evening newscast.

His response, he told Minich and others, was “What? Me?”

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“After the first few times they told him, ‘Come on, you’ve got to put some personality into it, smile,’” said Minich, who interviewed Engstrom about his career. “So he forced a smile at the end and that became his trademark.”

Minich thinks the contrast between Engstrom and most other local TV personalities was part of what endeared him to viewers. News anchors wore pressed suit jackets, had perfectly styled hair, and spoke with broadcast school diction. Engstrom spoke slowly as he read his 30-second report, with a heavy Maine accent, and wore a clip-on Western-style bow tie.

While anchors have video and flashy background graphics to augment their reports, Engstrom sat in front of a cardboard backdrop picturing the old Summit House Hotel on the mountain.  His reports included the visibility, wind speed, and temperature on the summit that day. Since he worked alone in a small building on top of the mountain, he wrote the report himself, taped it to the camera, and then sat in front of the camera to go on air.

Engstrom lived on the summit for a week straight, then would drive down the mountain to spend a week at home. Williams said her family marked weeks on the calendar with “U” or “D” for up or down, so they’d know when Engstrom would be home. The station began broadcasting from a tower in Baldwin in early 2002, just before Engstrom retired.

“He was definitely unique — no one will argue that. I remember people asking me if he really talked like that, they couldn’t believe his accent wasn’t put on,” said Tim Moore, president and CEO of the Maine Association of Broadcasters. “But he was the real deal.”

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Harold L. Osher, Maine physician, philanthropist, map collector, dies at 99



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Maine

Maine legalized iGaming. Will tribes actually benefit?

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Maine legalized iGaming. Will tribes actually benefit?


Clarissa Sabattis, Chief of the Houlton Band of Maliseets, foreground, and other leaders of Maine’s tribes are welcomed by lawmakers into the House Chamber in March, 2023 in Augusta. (Robert F. Bukaty, /Associated Press)

Maine’s gambling landscape is set to expand after Gov. Janet Mills decided Thursday to let tribes offer online casino games, but numerous questions remain over the launch of the new market and how much it will benefit the Wabanaki Nations.

Namely, there is no concrete timeline for when the new gambling options that make Maine the eighth “iGaming” state will become available. Maine’s current sports betting market that has been dominated by the Passamaquoddy Tribe through its partnership with DraftKings is evidence that not all tribes may reap equal rewards.

A national anti-online gaming group also vowed to ask Maine voters to overturn the law via a people’s veto effort and cited its own poll finding a majority of Mainers oppose online casino gaming.

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Here are the big remaining questions around iGaming.

1. When will iGaming go into effect?

The law takes effect 90 days after the Legislature adjourns this year. Adjournment is slated for mid-April, but Mills spokesperson Ben Goodman noted it is not yet known when lawmakers will actually finish their work.

2. Where will the iGaming revenue go?

The iGaming law gives the state 18% of the gross receipts, which will translate into millions of dollars annually for gambling addiction and opioid use treatment funds, Maine veterans, school renovation loans and emergency housing relief.

Leaders of the four federally recognized tribes in Maine highlighted the “life-changing revenue” that will come thanks to the decision from Mills, a Democrat who has clashed with the Wabanaki Nations over the years over more sweeping tribal sovereignty measures.

But one chief went so far Thursday as to call her the “greatest ever” governor for “Wabanaki economic progress.”

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3. What gaming companies will the tribes work with?

DraftKings has partnered with the Passamaquoddy to dominate Maine’s sports betting market, while the Penobscot Nation, the Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians and the Mi’kmaq Nation have partnered with Caesars Entertainment to garner a smaller share of the revenue.

Wall Street analysts predicted the two companies will likely remain the major players in Maine’s iGaming market.

The partnership between the Passamaquoddy and DraftKings has brought in more than $100 million in gross revenue since 2024, but the Press Herald reported last month that some members of the tribe’s Sipayik reservation have criticized Chief Amkuwiposohehs “Pos” Bassett, saying they haven’t reaped enough benefits from the gambling money.

4. Has Mills always supported gambling measures?

The iGaming measure from Rep. Ambureen Rana, D-Bangor, factored into a long-running debate in Maine over gambling. In 2022, lawmakers and Mills legalized online sports betting and gave tribes the exclusive rights to offer it beginning in 2023.

But allowing online casino games such as poker and roulette in Maine looked less likely to become reality under Mills. Her administration had previously testified against the bill by arguing the games are addictive.

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But Mills, who is in the final year of her tenure and is running in the high-profile U.S. Senate primary for the chance to unseat U.S. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said Thursday she would let the iGaming bill become law without her signature. She said she viewed iGaming as a way to “improve the lives and livelihoods of the Wabanaki Nations.”

5. Who is against iGaming?

Maine’s two casinos in Bangor and Oxford opposed the iGaming bill, as did Gambling Control Board Chair Steve Silver and the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, among other opponents.

Silver noted Hollywood Casino Bangor and Oxford Casino employ nearly 1,000 Mainers, and he argued that giving tribes exclusive rights to iGaming will lead to job losses.

He also said in a Friday interview the new law will violate existing statutes by cutting out his board from iGaming oversight.

“I don’t think there’s anything the board can do at this point,” Silver said.

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The National Association Against iGaming has pledged to mount an effort to overturn the law via a popular referendum process known as the “people’s veto.” But such attempts have a mixed record of success.



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Flu, norovirus and other illnesses circulating in Maine

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Flu, norovirus and other illnesses circulating in Maine


While influenza remains the top concern for Maine public health experts, other viruses are also currently circulating, including norovirus and COVID-19.

“Influenza is clearly the main event,” said Dr. Cheryl Liechty, a MaineHealth infectious disease specialist. “The curve in terms of the rise of influenza cases was really steep.”

Maine reported 1,343 flu cases for the week ending Jan. 3, an uptick from the 1,283 cases recorded the previous week, according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Hospitalizations increased to 147 from 108 during the same time periods.

“I hope the peak is now,” Liechty said, “but I’m not really sure.”

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The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported on Friday that all of New England, except for Vermont, is currently experiencing “very high” levels of influenza. Vermont is in the “moderate” category.

“What we are seeing, overwhelmingly, is the flu,” said Andrew Donovan, associate vice president of infection prevention for Northern Light Health. “We are seeing both respiratory and gastrointestinal viruses in our patients.”

Norovirus also appears to be circulating, although due to its short duration and because it’s less severe than the flu, public health data on the illness — which causes gastrointestinal symptoms that typically resolve within a few days — is not as robust.

“Norovirus is the gastrointestinal scourge of New England winters and cruise ships,” Liechty said.

According to surveillance data at wastewater treatment plants in Portland, Bangor and Lewiston, norovirus levels detected in those communities are currently “high.” The treatment plants participate in WastewaterSCAN, which reports virus levels in wastewater through a program run by Stanford University and Emory University.

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Dr. Genevieve Whiting, a Westbrook pediatrician and secretary of the Maine chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said viruses are prevalent right now, especially the flu and norovirus.

“For my patients right now, it’s a rare encounter that I hear everyone in a family has been healthy,” Whiting said. “I’ve had families come in and say their entire family has had norovirus. Several of my patients have had ER visits for suspected norovirus, where they needed IV fluids because they were dehydrated.”

Both Liechty and Whiting said they are seeing less respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, likely because there has been good uptake of the new RSV vaccine, which is recommended for older people and those who are pregnant. The vaccine was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2023.

“The RSV vaccine has been a real success, as RSV was a leading cause of hospitalizations for babies,” Whiting said.

Meanwhile, COVID-19 cases increased to 610 in the final week of 2025, compared to 279 the previous week. Influenza and COVID-19 vaccinations are available at primary care, pharmacies and clinics across the state.

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“If you haven’t gotten your flu shot yet,” Liechty said, “you should beat a hasty path to get your shot.”



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After feds cut key food insecurity survey, Maine lawmaker urges state to fill data void

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After feds cut key food insecurity survey, Maine lawmaker urges state to fill data void


With food insecurity on the rise, Maine lawmakers are scrambling to ensure they have a sense of how many people are going hungry after the federal government’s recent cancellation of a key food insecurity survey. The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Household Food Security Report, started under former President Bill Clinton, measured rates of food insecurity […]



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