Calendars Are Now Available
You can go to EJ’s website to order yours- www.khanstudiointernational.com
My View of Life on the Dock
Calendars Are Now Available
You can go to EJ’s website to order yours- www.khanstudiointernational.com
Videos Coming-
The amenities from access to Bass Rocks Golf, Billiards, Discount Parking At Good Harbor Beach, Updated Spotless Rooms with Pillowtop Beds, Libraries, Breakfast, the Stunning Views, Complimentary Bikes, Bocce, Croquet, Horseshoes, Crystal Clear HEATED Pool and huge balconies outside of your room the place is incredible. Look for our room tour videos throughout the week.
For More Info- Bass Rocks Ocean Inn
Heated Crystal Clear Pool
Super Friendly Staff
Suite With Unobstructed Views
Billiard Room With Library
Standard Room With Double Beds
Observation Deck
http://Liveoncapeann.com Shots of Eastern Point, The Dog Bar, The Back Shore and Good Harbor Beach, all at half/low tide. More
A Ride Around Gloucester’s East Gloucester Coast The Morning Of Hurricane Irene
Filmed Using The Kodak Playsport Zx3 and Kayalu nClamp Camera Mount
Live On Stacy Boulevard A Report Of Current Conditions
I love this video for so many reasons.
First it’s so visually stunning. But then the way Rick Edited it not just visually, but the audio as well.
It is completely humbling and makes me realize I have so very very much to learn.
I’d be happy with 25 % of his video producing knowledge.
http://vimeo.com/25195465
Pinky Schooner Ardelle Enters New Home In Gloucester Harbor For First Time. Filmed By Barbara Luster
click for the video
The Race hasn’t even ended and we already have live video up for you!
It’s what we do. Crush the coverage.
Video Of All The Runners as They Pass By Our Dock- Captain Joe and Sons In The Heart of God’s Country, Beautiful East Gloucester
On September 23, 2008 Mark Teiwes and I were granted special access to the Paint Factory. We documented it’s final state before the sterilization for the general public would take place.
Laura Bly swung by the dock on July 8th as part of her tour of Gloucester for a story she would be producing. Well that story hit USA Today and the internet today.
Travel writer Laura said she decided to write this story after seeing a story that PR firm Matter Communications worked with one of her colleagues on about cruise ships coming to Gloucester. It ran in USA Today in April. Matter Communications is the PR firm in which my pal John McElhenny works and has been hired to promote Gloucester under the stewardship of the Cape Ann Chamber of Commerce.
Congratulations to the Cape Ann Chamber of Commerce and kudos to those local businesses who had the vision to hire Matter Communications and lead this positive PR campaign for Gloucester.
You can read it here-
GLOUCESTER, Mass. – Twenty years ago this October, a howling Nor’easter blindsided the New England coast and sank a Gloucester-based swordfish boat at sea with all six hands aboard. Author and then-resident Sebastian Junger weathered the tempest from town, and his best-selling account of the tragedy, The Perfect Storm, prompted a Hollywood film and a wave of visitors curious to learn more about America’s oldest seaport.
Even before the loss of the Andrea Gail and her crew, rampant overfishing by foreign vessels, dwindling fish stocks and stringent government regulations were deep-sixing a once-vibrant marine economy in Gloucester, less than an hour’s drive northeast of Boston.
PHOTOS: Gloucester’s charm and character
Now tourists — including a record 20,000 cruise-ship passengers expected this year — are challenging fishing as the town’s leading economic driver. While parts of the waterfront remain crumbling eyesores, a microbrewery and upscale restaurants have moved in. And that evolution continues to fuel a passionate debate about the close-knit community’s authenticity and seafaring future.
“A lot of the old-timers here are resistant to change,” says Heidi Wakeman, 41, who sells high-end tote bags made from recycled sailcloth at a local shop called Again and Again.
“There’s still a public hunger,” says Wakeman, for the iconic fisherman represented by Gloucester’s “Man at the Wheel,” a statue of an old salt in a slicker and sou’wester gazing resolutely toward the open sea.
I find it incredibly ironic that she writes in the top part of the story with a picture that-
The most iconic structure in Gloucester is the Tarr & Wonson Paint Manufactory, a marine paint factory built in 1863. Vacant since the 1980s, it has been purchased by the Ocean Alliance and will be used as a research and public outreach center.
In light of the proposed demolition.
For the entire Gloucester article from Laura Bly at USAToday click here
Here are some pictures of Laura and I that Craig Kimberly took while he was down the dock-(click pic for slideshow)
and here are some of my photos she used in the story on USAToday-
Here is good egg Heidi Wakeman who was quoted in the USAToday article talking about her feelings for Gloucester in a GMG interview 3 years ago-
and part II
Click the screen shot below to check out MatterCommunications.com video and my buddy John McElhenney’s blog post featuring GMG and some social media tips from your boy Joey.
Tim writes-
August 13, 2011 – Our four month old Shiba Inu puppy, Truckee, learns to Stand-Up Paddleboard (SUP) along the Mill River in Gloucester, MA. Truckee weighs about 15 lbs soaking wet…but she didn’t fall in once! Filmed with my GroPro HD camera. Song: The Kooks – “See the Sun”