Portland is a small city that gets treated like a big one. Food writers cover it like it’s a culinary capital. Travel magazines rank it alongside places ten times its size. The real estate market behaves as though the population is growing faster than it actually is, which has made housing expensive in ways that catch people off guard when they move here from elsewhere in Maine.
Yehuda Gittelson moved here from Aroostook County and still hasn’t fully adjusted to the cost of rent. But he’s adjusted to something else about Portland that took longer to notice. The city is small enough that professional circles overlap in ways they wouldn’t in Boston or New York. The solar installer knows the energy auditor, who knows the weatherization contractor, who knows the state-level policy person. You run into the same people at the hardware store, at the co-op, at shows on Congress Street. That proximity is wired into On The Roof, whether Gittelson intended it or not.
“I didn’t pick Portland because it was a good place to start a podcast,” he said. “I picked Portland because that’s where the job was. The podcast came later. But the city turned out to be the right size for it.”
Small Enough to Know Everyone
Most of Gittelson’s guests so far have come from within a two-hour drive of Portland. That’s not a limitation he imposed. It’s a reflection of where his professional network lives. He installs solar across southern Maine, and the people he meets through that work, the electricians and inspectors and auditors and fellow installers, are concentrated in the corridor between Portland and Augusta, with some scattered along the midcoast.
On a podcast produced in Los Angeles or Austin, booking a guest usually means sending cold emails, negotiating with publicists, and recording remotely over unstable internet connections. Gittelson books most of his guests by running into them. He’ll mention the show on a job site or at an industry training, and a few weeks later, he’s recording in his living room with someone he already knows well enough to skip the small talk.
That familiarity changes the texture of the episodes. Guests aren’t performing for a stranger. “They’re talking to someone who’s been in the same crawl spaces,” Gittelson told a fellow installer who’d asked what made the conversations feel different from other industry podcasts. The interviews start closer to the real stuff because there’s less distance to cross before you get there.
A Maine Sound
On The Roof doesn’t announce itself as a Maine podcast. There’s no lobster in the branding. Gittelson doesn’t open episodes with weather reports or folksy regional commentary. But the show sounds like Maine anyway, in ways that are hard to separate from the content.
The pacing is unhurried. Guests take their time getting to the point, and Gittelson lets them. There aren’t quick cuts or produced transitions between segments.
The subject matter is local in its specifics but not in its relevance. When Gittelson and a guest discuss the challenge of installing solar in older homes with balloon-frame construction and knob-and-tube wiring, that’s a New England problem with national parallels. When they discuss what happens to weatherization funding when state budget priorities shift, the details are Maine-specific, but the dynamic plays out the same way in Ohio and Oregon. The show works because it’s grounded in one place rather than trying to speak from everywhere at once.
Yehuda Gittelson has received messages from listeners in states with newer housing stock, a more modern grid, and milder winters, saying that the episodes still felt relevant. He finds this slightly funny.
“People in Arizona don’t have the same roof problems we do,” he said. “But they’ve got their own version. The specifics change. The job doesn’t.”
Why Portland Keeps Him
There’s a running tension in Gittelson’s life that shows up across multiple episodes of On The Roof. He’s saving for property in western Maine. He talks about it openly. The land is cheaper out there, the taxes are lower, and the idea of building something self-sufficient on his own terms appeals to the engineer in him.
But Portland keeps pulling him back. The food, which he could talk about for an hour, has. The weekend shows on Congress Street, where he’s spent more money than he’d probably admit. Casco Bay is fifteen minutes from his front door, which is the kind of recreational access that people in other cities pay vacation money for in a week. And now the podcast, which depends on the same professional proximity that makes Portland work for him as a tradesperson.
He couldn’t make On The Roof from a cabin in the western mountains. Not easily. The guests are here. The recording happens in person more often than not, and that in-person quality is part of what separates the show from the remote-interview podcasts that dominate the space. What frustrates him is that Portland’s rent keeps rising while wages for installation work don’t keep pace. The city is getting harder to afford for exactly the kind of tradespeople his podcast is about. He’s mentioned this on the show more than once, and it’s never been played for sympathy. It’s stated as a fact, the way he states most things.
Yehuda Gittelson lives in Portland for work, stays for everything around the work, and records a podcast that couldn’t exist the same way anywhere else. Whether that holds depends partly on whether the city stays affordable enough for the people who actually build things in it.
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