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Maine For Keeps
Jonathan Bush
22 episodes
4 days ago
Welcome to Maine For Keeps, hosted by Jonathan Bush. Each week, we're sitting down with real Mainers - from small business owners fighting to survive, to industry leaders and innovators, to working folks trying to make ends meet - for raw, unfiltered conversations about: → The real stories of what's killing Maine jobs (like the 174 we just lost at the cement plant) → How Maine's smartest businesses are finding ways to win despite the obstacles → Why "environmental protection" often hurts both business AND the environment
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Non-Profit
Business
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All content for Maine For Keeps is the property of Jonathan Bush and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Welcome to Maine For Keeps, hosted by Jonathan Bush. Each week, we're sitting down with real Mainers - from small business owners fighting to survive, to industry leaders and innovators, to working folks trying to make ends meet - for raw, unfiltered conversations about: → The real stories of what's killing Maine jobs (like the 174 we just lost at the cement plant) → How Maine's smartest businesses are finding ways to win despite the obstacles → Why "environmental protection" often hurts both business AND the environment
Show more...
Non-Profit
Business
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The Invisible Hand of Maine’s Lobster Market: Meet Marty Molloy
Maine For Keeps
42 minutes 55 seconds
5 months ago
The Invisible Hand of Maine’s Lobster Market: Meet Marty Molloy

What happens when the boats disappear, the buyers retire, and the next generation doesn’t come back?


In this raw and revealing conversation, Jonathan Bush sits down with Martin Molloy—a Navy vet turned legendary lobster buyer—to unpack what’s really happening to Maine’s working waterfront.


They talk about the hard truths behind the decline in young lobstermen, the quiet collapse of Matinicus and North Haven’s fleets, and why labor shortages, pricing pressure from Canadian seasons, and outdated state policies are making survival harder than ever.


But they also spotlight what’s still working—and what might save the fishery.


Key themes include:


  • How Matinicus went from 20 boats to 10—and what that says about the future

  • Why Maine lobstermen are struggling to find crew (and how “Probation Point” became a labor pool)


  • The market dynamics driving lobster prices from $9.50 to $5 in weeks


  • The cultural tension between stewardship, competition, and survival


  • What aquaculture and bait diversification are teaching us about adaptation


This isn’t just a story about lobster.


It’s a story about rural economies, generational handoffs, and whether Maine can hold onto the soul of its coastal identity.


⏱️ Chapters:


00:00 – Matinicus memories and how they met


04:00 – What a lobster buyer really does


06:00 – The Navy, the transition, and family legacy


13:00 – The decline of the island fleets


16:00 – The labor shortage no one’s solving


22:00 – Why Canadian supply crushes Maine’s lobster price


27:00 – The lost opportunity in processing and exports


32:00 – The case for diversification (bait, mussels, aquaculture)


35:00 – Reflections on stewardship, policy, and the fight to stay in business


Subscribe for weekly conversations on the real challenges and future of Maine’s economy.


🎧 Search Maine For Keeps wherever you get your podcasts.

Maine For Keeps
Welcome to Maine For Keeps, hosted by Jonathan Bush. Each week, we're sitting down with real Mainers - from small business owners fighting to survive, to industry leaders and innovators, to working folks trying to make ends meet - for raw, unfiltered conversations about: → The real stories of what's killing Maine jobs (like the 174 we just lost at the cement plant) → How Maine's smartest businesses are finding ways to win despite the obstacles → Why "environmental protection" often hurts both business AND the environment