Schooner Ernestina At The Gloucester Maritime Heritage Center

Schoooner Ernestina Getting Ready To Head Out To Make “Official” Gloucester arrival later in the morning.

An Eider Hunts and Snares A Crab

I shot this video out the window of my office here at the dock.  Talk about a birds eye view!

Joe “Stoga” Scola Tells About His Adventures Picking Up Firewood On Eastern Point

Brenda Malloy’s Gloucester Imagine Video

Happy Day!-  That’s the standard Brenda Malloy greeting.

Click this text to check out Brenda’s Gloucester Video

Al Fresco Cinco de Mayo Event At Seaport Grill

Johnny Arnold Gives Us The Scoop Along With Sweeping Views Of Gloucester’s Working Waterfront-

Dead and Rotting Video-Sometimes It Ain’t All That Romantic

Click The Picture To See The Video-

WARNING- This Video May Make You Uncomfortable

Menage Gallery Striper Video

Y’all know how I feel about Fish Art hung on locals walls-  It should be indigenous to these waters.

Well the Mrs saw this striper in the window at Menage Gallery and asked me if I thought they would let me take it home to see if it would work in the spot she had in mind for it.

So yesterday I rolled on in to the Menage Gallery and asked “Goody” if it was possible.

Willie Alexander Bass Rocks Video From The Early Eighties

Back in the eighties I heard this song on WBCN once, just once.  I loved it but never found out who sang it and always wanted to find out.

Fast forward 20 plus years and I’m at the library thumbing through the cd collection and lo and behold I run across Willie Alexander’s “The East Main Street Suite” cd and the third song is “Bass Rocks

I had an idea for making a video of Back Shore photos put to Willie’s song and asked his permission which he kindly granted.

But in Willie’s email he asked which version I had, “The East Main Street Suite” version or “the earlier version“?

Intrigued, I checked youtube for “the earlier version”

That’s when I found the following video and decided to scrap my project in favor of Willie’s early eighties music video-

Check out Willie’s website by clicking this text

You can even check out Willie’s wikipedia page by clicking this text

Did you know that Gloucester resident and bad ass Willie Alexander was a part of The Velvet Underground?

BTW Willie if you read this, I think you look like you are in way better shape now than you were back in the early eighties.

Sargent House Museum Tour Part IV-

Bringing Access To The People

Downtown Gloucester’s Most Underutilized Space No More-

Gloucester Zen XXIII Video

Minimal Editing- Minimal Commentary- Just A Slice Of Time On Gloucester Harbor

I’m thinking LobsterLady will love this one.

Sargent House Video Tour Part III

Judith Sargent Murray’s Writing Closet and Concealment Shoes Found In The House

Sargent House Museum Video Tour Part II

Barb Silberman and Judith Nast Show GMG Readers What’s Up At The House On The Hill

To Learn More About The Sargent House Click This Text For The Website

Sargent House Museum Video Tour

If you are like me you’ve walked past this place thousands of times, looked up on the hill and wondered what the hell goes on up there.  Well wonder no longer my loyal readers, because your boy Joey once again gets you unfettered access with a four part video tour and pics of places that you don’t get to go when you go on the regular tour (places like the attic and stuff).

It’s what we do here at GMG.  Bring you behind the scenes, we roll back the curtains, peek under the hood and bring this stuff to you, stuff you might never have had access to.  It’s what we pride ourselves on, getting you an insider peek.  So buckle up for another video series in another one of Gloucester’s crown jewels- The Sargent House Museum.

Barb Silberman and Judith Nast Show GMG Readers What’s Up At The House On The Hill

From The Sargent House Museum Website-

Welcome to The Sargent House Museum. For over 100 years, the Sargent House Museum was the home of sea merchants, patriots and community leaders. A fine example of high-style Georgian domestic architecture, the house was built in 1782 for Judith Sargent Murray (1751-1820), a philosopher, writer and an early advocate of women’s equality.

Visitors to the Sargent House Museum learn about the early history of Gloucester from its beginnings as a farming and lumbering outpost to its evolution into the country’s premier seaport. Visitors will also see a collection of original works by the great portrait painter John Singer Sargent (1856-1925) descendant of the Sargent family, who loved the house and its ties to Colonial Gloucester.”

To Learn More About The Sargent House Click This Text For The Website