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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

Stalwart 7 in Varsity Maine baseball poll

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Stalwart 7 in Varsity Maine baseball poll


Gorham shortstop Miles Brenner throws to first during the Rams’ 8-0 win over the Cheverus on May 5 in Gorham. (Derek Davis/Staff Photographer)

The only notable change in the top-seven of the Varsity Maine baseball poll is that Gorham now has eight first-place votes, two more than last week. The order of the seven teams is identical. In fact, the only change in the top-seven over the past three polls is the swap at the top after Gorham’s win over South Portland on May 19.

Furthermore, Gorham, South Portland, Oxford Hills, Cheverus, Bangor, Mt. Ararat and Fryeburg have been ranked in the top seven for four straight weeks, and six of those squads have been among the top seven in every poll this spring.

Meanwhile, Scarborough is ranked for the first time since May 5, and Ellsworth and Thornton swapped spots.

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The Varsity Maine baseball poll is based on games played before June 2, 2026. The top 10 teams are voted on by the Varsity Maine staff, with first-place votes in parentheses, followed by total points.

1. Gorham (8) 89
2. South Portland 79
3. Oxford Hills (1) 75
4. Cheverus 55
5. Bangor 42
6. Mt. Ararat 41
7. Fryeburg Academy 30
8. Ellsworth 27
9. Thornton Academy 25
10. Scarborough 12

Also receiving votes: Washington Academy 8, Monmouth Academy 4, Cony 4, Leavitt 2, Falmouth 2.



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Maine harbormasters are having a moment. What do they do?

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Maine harbormasters are  having a moment. What do they do?


Portland Deputy Harbor Master Elizabeth Morrissey talks with Ruthann Weist, an animal control officer, after recovering a dead bottlenose dolphin in May 2024. A Maine harbormaster is a coastal traffic cop, park ranger and first responder rolled into one municipal job. (Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Staff Photographer)

Harbormasters are the municipal protectors of Maine’s 5,300-mile coastline, where a single day might include tasks as diverse as saving a sinking skiff, sorting a same-day mooring request and seizing undersized quahogs.

The job has existed for more than a century, but a buzzworthy political campaign and a heated lobster turf war have elevated this obscure government position to a new level of visibility in the public discourse, even if few people know what they really do.

“No day is the same,” says Daryen Granata, harbormaster and shellfish warden for Scarborough and Cape Elizabeth. “Ride in my truck or my boat for a week, and I can practically guarantee you that we wouldn’t do the same thing twice.”

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Graham Platner used his $3,000-a-year gig as Sullivan’s former harbormaster to help frame his run for U.S. Senate. Meanwhile, South Thomaston hopes that hiring a harbormaster can resolve a dispute over dock access that some lobstermen say threatens their livelihoods.

Beyond the headlines, however, the duties of Maine’s 250 or so harbormasters vary from town to town. Some are highly paid police officers with arrest powers; others are seasonal mooring managers, like Platner was before he resigned in August, according to the town manager.

“Most people doing this job aren’t doing it for the money,” says Granata, who is vice president of the Maine Harbor Masters Association. “They’re doing it to be a steward, to be an ambassador of the harbor.”

Platner, who operates an oyster harvesting business, said he took the post to make sure the person hired to “run the show” had local waterfront experience. He said he was “bummed” that he had to give up the role due to his campaign schedule.

“There is something to be said about working-class folks coming together over the water despite their differences, all with the same goal in mind — to protect and preserve their way of life,” he said.

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South Thomaston was one of Maine’s rare shoreline communities that had resisted hiring a harbormaster. Residents preferred to solve their own problems to keep their mooring prices artificially low. But that changed when a lobster turf war broke out.

The town is now advertising for a per-diem harbormaster to resolve the dispute.

A typical day for Granata might start by answering office emails at 7 a.m. and end with a 5 p.m. radio call about a boat sinking off Prouts Neck. In between, he juggles calls for illegal fishing, a shark sighting and a boat diesel spill, all while juggling walk-ins.

One of the most time-consuming parts of a harbormaster’s job, regardless of whether they are a police officer or a seasonal volunteer, is managing the vessel placements, or moorings, in their local harbor, Granata said.

Maine has more than 30,000 moorings. Small harbors may have a couple dozen, but larger ones can have up to 1,300. The harbormaster ensures each one is in the proper location with enough depth for a boat’s draft and enough anchor to hold it in place.

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Unlike their counterparts in warmer climates, Maine harbormasters face a seasonal scramble. Because of winter ice, most of the state’s moorings must be pulled ashore in the fall and reset each spring to avoid being dragged around by moving ice.

The role is also one of public safety. Harbormasters coordinate with the U.S. Coast Guard and Maine Marine Patrol on search-and-rescue operations, monitor for navigational hazards, and inspect critical marine infrastructure like piers, docks and cranes.

In Portland, harbormaster Paul Plummer and his six seasonal deputies spend a lot of time keeping Portland Harbor safe — from marine debris that could cause accidents, from environmental threats, and from commercial-recreational boating conflicts.

His office escorts big commercial vessels through the busy harbor to protect the people in kayaks and sailboats that fill it up during the summer, many of whom are not familiar with Maine landmarks and water rules, Plummer said.

“We are out in the harbor and visit the islands every day,” Plummer said. “It’s not just to protect boats, but also the fragile working waterfront infrastructure. We have a lot of old piers and wharves that require a lot of care but are critical to our economy.”

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Despite these differences, state law requires all harbormasters to get certification through the Maine Harbor Masters Association within a year of taking the job. The four-day certification must be renewed every three years.

Success in the role requires more than a technical knowledge of shackles and swivels, Granata said. Harbormasters must be able to shift from “swearing like a pirate” with a lobsterman to politely guiding a Vineyard Vines-clad tourist to a local luncheon spot.

“You can’t be down here being a stiff shirt,” Granata says. “This job is crazy, but it’s a privilege. Drinking straight from the hose, every day. You never get a break, not really, but you never get bored, either.”



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‘Malicious gossip’: Wife of Senate candidate Graham Platner responds to texting claims

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‘Malicious gossip’: Wife of Senate candidate Graham Platner responds to texting claims


PORTLAND (WGME) – The wife of Democrat Graham Platner, who is running for U.S. Senate in Maine, is responding to stories in the Wall Street Journal and New York Times about sexually explicit text messages Platner allegedly sent to other women during their marriage.

CBS13 reached out to the Platner campaign for comment Monday but did not hear back.

According to multiple reports, Platner calls the stories “gossip.”

Amy Gertner, his wife of nearly three years, called the former staffer’s claims a “betrayal” and an “invasion of our privacy.”

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Platner says the Wall Street Journal and New York Times ran stories without any evidence, based solely on gossip from a former staffer.

The wife of Democrat Graham Platner, who is running for U.S. Senate in Maine, is responding to stories in the Wall Street Journal and New York Times about sexually explicit text messages Platner allegedly sent to other women during their marriage. (WGME)

He says claims made by that staffer, former State Representative Genevieve McDonald, are untrue.

Platner’s wife, Amy Gertner, says she trusted McDonald with the most private chapter of their lives.

“I confided deeply personal details about my marriage to someone I considered a friend. In the months since, I have had to watch as she spread malicious gossip to anyone who would take her call,” Gertner said.

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“The situation he’s in right now that’s most uncomfortable, I think, is that he and his wife seem to be telling different versions of the story,” USM Political Science Professor Ron Schmidt said.

Gertner defended her husband in a video she posted.

“I find it really shameful that there’s a group of media outlets, and people who are willing to spread gossip, instead of talking about real issues that Graham is running on like healthcare and education and childcare,” Gertner said.

The wife of Democrat Graham Platner, who is running for U.S. Senate in Maine, is responding to stories in the Wall Street Journal and New York Times about sexually explicit text messages Platner allegedly sent to other women during their marriage. (WGME)

The wife of Democrat Graham Platner, who is running for U.S. Senate in Maine, is responding to stories in the Wall Street Journal and New York Times about sexually explicit text messages Platner allegedly sent to other women during their marriage. (WGME)

She says being newly married while going through infertility and a Senate campaign is hard, but she says they are working on their marriage and mental health.

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“I knew the man that I married had been through an immense amount of violent, active combat,” Gertner said. “No marriage is perfect, and I don’t want a perfect marriage. I want my marriage.”

“If this is a case of mistakes made early on in the marriage, and they’ve had marriage counseling, then the best thing to do is to say ‘I made a mistake. It was a while ago. It was related to something else, and it doesn’t have a bearing on where I am right now,’” Schmidt said.

A Platner supporter, who attended Sunday’s town hall meeting with the candidate, says the focus needs to be on policy, not personal matters.

“I think people should really continue to engage with Platner and the campaign around affordable housing, universal healthcare and issues that really matter to us,” Auburn Community Organizer Safiya Khalid said.

The wife of Democrat Graham Platner, who is running for U.S. Senate in Maine, is responding to stories in the Wall Street Journal and New York Times about sexually explicit text messages Platner allegedly sent to other women during their marriage. (WGME)

The wife of Democrat Graham Platner, who is running for U.S. Senate in Maine, is responding to stories in the Wall Street Journal and New York Times about sexually explicit text messages Platner allegedly sent to other women during their marriage. (WGME)

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“Graham and I have a great marriage,” Gertner said. “And we love each other deeply. We deserve better. I think Mainers deserve better.”

Platner has apologized for other controversies like now-deleted Reddit posts calling himself a communist and blaming victims of rape, and a nazi-symbol skull tattoo his military unit got that he’s since covered up.

Through it all, he’s still leading in the polls.

Schmidt says Democratic voters like what Platner stands for, but he says the controversies are certainly a concern, especially with Senator Susan Collins, in his view, doing a good job distancing herself from President Donald Trump.



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