Seven Days, Vermont’s free, independent newsweekly, today released the 500th episode of
Eva Sollberger’s video series,
Stuck in Vermont. Since 2007, Sollberger has been documenting Vermont people, places, events and traditions in her videos, which are published each Thursday on sevendaysvt.com. Her Stuck in Vermont stories have been viewed nearly four million times on
YouTube. Since 2012, Sollberger and her videos have also appeared weekly on the WCAX local news.
For her 500th episode, Sollberger wrote, directed and starred in a 22-minute musical, featuring several well-known locals, including actor
Rusty DeWees, Vermont cartoonist laureate
Alison Bechdel, Burlington police chief
Brandon Del Pozo,
Festival of Fools creator
Woody Keppel and VPR’s Friday Night Jazz host Reuben Jackson. The video can be viewed on sevendaysvt.com, and on the Stuck in Vermont YouTube channel.
Many members of the production’s sizable cast and crew attended an invitation-only premiere at
Hotel Vermont on Thursday, August 17; the Burlington boutique hotel has sponsored Stuck in Vermont since 2013. General manager Hans van Wees addressed the crowd of 75, along with Cindy Morgan of
New England Federal Credit Union, also a current Stuck in Vermont sponsor. Representatives from past sponsoring entities —
Coldwell Banker Hickok and Boardman Realty and the
Vermont Department of Tourism — also praised Sollberger before the screening.
Steve Cook, deputy commissioner of tourism and marketing for the State of Vermont, said he has heard from numerous people who have visited and even moved to the state after discovering Sollberger’s videos.
Before the screening,
Seven Days associate publisher
Cathy Resmer noted that the national
Association of Alternative Newsmedia recently honored Sollberger with its top multimedia prize at its July convention (see River of Light video below). Over the past two years, the
New England Newspaper and Press Association has recognized her work with five first-place awards. Sollberger also won last year's Best Video award from the New England Society of News Editors.
Resmer detailed the astounding amount of work that goes into each episode. “From finding and vetting the stories, to setting up the shoots, to packing and schlepping the cameras, mikes, gimbals and lights, to shooting the footage, to editing … Keeping this up year after year after year requires incredible drive, stamina, persistence and passion,” she said.
In a letter to Sollberger, Gov. Phil Scott echoed that praise. “I commend you for your exceptional drive and dedication to documenting Vermont culture,” he wrote. “Stuck in Vermont serves as a celebration of values Vermonters have always held dear — our cherished independence and strong sense of community — and it serves the public by being made available, for free, to anyone with an internet connection.”