Call Elizabeth today! 207.885.5568 or visit ScarboroughTerrace.com 600 Commerce Drive Scarborough, ME 04074 “As Mom aged, we thought it best if she stayed in her house, but, we were wrong. Even with hours of expensive home care, Mom wasn’t thriving. She needed more. She especially needed more socialization - not isolation. And more affordable and reliable access to care when she needed it. So she made the move to Scarborough Terrace. She truly loves her elegant new home! Life is more complete in a community with lots of friends and activities, chef-prepared meals, daily care, medication management, and even transportation to appointments and outings. I visit her often, so I know Mom is happier and more relaxed now... and I am too. We only wish she’d moved sooner.” “We are so happy Mom is thriving again.” STJ7674 Mom Thriving 4.75x7.5_PM.indd 1 9/26/18 10:30 AM 494 Stevens Avenue, Portland, Maine • thehoneyexchange.com • 207.773.9333 • 10-6 Tuesday-Saturday • 10-2 Sunday unique gifts, mead, wine, and beer all natural line of skincare products explore our honey tasting bar observation hive & hobbyist beekeeping Come see us harvest local honey! 494 Stevens Avenue, Portland, Maine • thehoneyexchange.com • 207.773.9333 • 10-6 Tuesday-Saturday • 10-2 Sunday unique gifts, mead, wine, and beer all natural line of skincare products explore our honey tasting bar observation hive & hobbyist beekeeping Come watch local honey being harvested! n o v e m b e r 2 0 1 8 4 3 tain looking out longingly.’ Great. That person should be a man.” On top of changing the composition, Severance has his ear to the ground for re- al Maine stories. “We were brought on to do a commercial for a hospital system that spanned the entire state. Every visual they wanted to shoot was on the coast—sea kay- aking, sailing, lobster boats, lighthouses. I said, ‘Guys, this isn’t Maine.’ Mainers aren’t getting together in groups and sea kayaking around! Let’s get real. If you’re marketing to Mainers in interior Maine, then you proba- bly want to show four-wheeling. But hikers on the coast hate four-wheelers. If you show sailing, Millinocket will groan. There’s this balance, right? How do you walk that line and show what the core of Maine is about and cross that divide? When we’re talking about diversity of race and gender, diversi- ty of class is equally as important. The peo- ple of interior Maine don’t get represented. I’m from a small town—not in Maine—but New Hampshire. My dad was a carpenter. I get it. If you’re talking to Mainers, you’ve got to get into what those people value and it’s very different. Those are battles.” While agencies already have their pick of filmmakers, writers, and artists in big- ger cities, Severance wants the Portland brainpower to stay right here. “The on- ly way young, homegrown talent can stay is if there is enough of an economy here to work as a freelancer. One way I combat the brain drain is by hiring a crew here and taking them down to New York. That way the money is going back to the merry men up here in Sherwood Forest, and we’re just stealing it from down there in New York. And that’s what gets me through those aw- ful days in New York.” As for the work, Severance is busy pro- ducing videos like “Fisherman,” a two-min- ute PSA telling the story of a third genera- tion lobsterman for The Nature Conser- vancy. Last year, he was hired by the United Nations to film “Another Silent Night,” de- picting the stories of refugees. Much of that was filmed right here in Portland. Other projects include videos for Friends of Aca- dia, Motorola, and the Blanchard River Watershed Partnership in Ohio, a PSA that won a 2014 EMMY. It’s hard not to get behind this Robin Hood. Severance is in for the good fight and has a vision many in Maine are seeing clear- ly—one that extends beyond the screen.