The Oak Bluffs select board approved filming for the second season of the reality television series, but several residents said it casts the Island in a poor light.
Producers of Summer House: Martha’s Vineyard, a Bravo reality television series that premiered earlier this year, received Oak Bluffs select board approval Tuesday to start filming scenes for its second season later this week.
The decision was met with resistance from town residents who disapproved of the show’s content and representation of the Vineyard.
To celebrate Oak Bluffs’ rich history as an African American vacation spot, the show’s first season followed 12 Black men and women on a 15-day trip at a luxurious rental home. Between scenes of relationship drama and risqué parties were clips of glistening Vineyard waters, bustling down-Island streets and Island wildlife.
When line producer Angel Johnson requested permission to film new scenic shots for season two, people at the Oak Bluffs select board meeting Tuesday questioned whether the select board should condone the show’s production at all.
“This program is a horrible reflection of Martha’s Vineyard and Oak Bluffs,” said Oak Bluffs resident Thelma Baxter. “I am seriously worried about the people who were attracted to come here by Summer House: Martha’s Vineyard… and I am concerned about my property value.”
Select board member Dion Alley warned Ms. Baxter and other frustrated residents that the board’s objection to film production would be inappropriate and violate free speech. The board's job, he said, is to rule specifically on the company’s application and the potential impacts of filming on the town.
But Oak Bluffs resident Leslie Fitzsimmons argued that the show has negative impacts on the town that fall under the board’s jurisdiction.
“I am a year-round resident and I come to all of the meetings and see everything that the select board tries to do in service of our town,” she said. “But this is not in service of our town… and to assist them by making their show more attractive seems counterintuitive to our best interest.”
Select board chair Emma Green-Beach agreed with Ms. Fitzsimmons’ feelings about Summer House, but ultimately pushed that the board cannot restrict production.
After Ms. Johnson promised to provide the board with additional details about the times and locations of filming, she received its unanimous support.
In other business, the board approved the installation of AT&T cellular service equipment on a Pequot avenue telephone pole to boost cellular signal in the area.
Several Pequot avenue residents, including The Cottagers, Inc., an organization of African-American homeowners, attended the meeting in protest of the installation and frustration over their lack of notice.
“We had no notification about this, as The Cottagers, and that’s a concern,” said Patricia Bush, president of The Cottagers, Inc. “And we are concerned with the aesthetics and don’t really understand where this will be.”
Board member Jason Balboni explained that the installation of the cellular infrastructure, known as a small cell, has been in the works since 2021. It will be on an existing pole and should not be easily noticeable, he said.
Ms. Green-Beach added that, according to town records, notifications were sent out to Pequot addresses in 2021.
The board approved the small cell unanimously.
The board also gave its support to a BiodiversityWorks project that involves placing 12 camera traps around Oak Bluffs to track Island mammals.
Cameras will be attached 10 to 12 inches above the ground on trees on public land, with the hopes of capturing footage of wandering animals. The videos will be reviewed by Oak Bluffs School students learning about data collection and Island habitats.
When the board expressed concerns about privacy, Silas Beers, a BiodiversityWorks researcher, assured it that the cameras’ artificial intelligence system blanks out any human presence detected.

Comments
What are they complaining
Charlie callahan So Boston edgartownWhat are they complaining about.If you want to use cell phones u need antennas.Stop whining
I hope it is not as
Bridget MinneapolisI hope it is not as unappealing as the original summer house..
This is the worst, bravo
Andrea Palm Desert CAThis is the worst, bravo shall I have Seen
If the residents do not want this to happen, it should not happen. I will not be watching. I only watched two episodes of the first season, one horrible, horrible horrible and I am a Bravo fan.
This is the last thing the
Matthew CentervilleThis is the last thing the Vineyard needs. Disgraceful.
We are already sliding down a
Tom Engley West TisburyWe are already sliding down a seriously slippery slope. The island is over run with people and bad choices. There is a house in Edgartown on state road across from meeting house that has been a problem all summer having whiskey tastings crowded cars parked every where. We’ve sold out we are dependent on these people to survive. No place to live prices out of reach for our children to buy a house. How hard do u have to work to survive. This show is symptom of the problem it’s too late already. Sad
I agree with Mr. Engley. Out
Christine SengeI agree with Mr. Engley. Out of state commercial players are exploiting the Vineyard, and destroying its peaceful serenity. Bravo TV, based in Burbank CA, films a set of swinging singles who just pass through the island for a couple of weeks. Chicago based Brian Epstein profits big-time bringing tens of thousands of people into a residential neighborhood Little League park, and a Tennessee based whiskey company buys a home in another island neighborhood to hold weekly tastings, causing parking, congestion, and noise. Why should we expect people from California, Chicago, and Tennessee to understand the qualities that made this island a distinctive place of solace? The Martha’s Vineyard commission needs to take action to prevent the island from becoming just another tacky generic resort.
Would there be some way of
John At seaWould there be some way of combining Summer House filming with the wildlife camera traps?
At least then it might appear as a true reality program instead of obviously staged and scripted.
Love to vacation at MV
Brigida Castillo Ridgefield parkLove to vacation at MV
It's worth noting that the
Concerned citizen Martha's VineyardIt's worth noting that the house used for the series was illegally built on Sengekontacket shoreline encroaching on the pond.
Concerns? I think this doesn
Jerry OBConcerns? I think this doesn't make the Top 100 of things OB should be concerned about.
I don’t think any of the cast
Christine MVI don’t think any of the cast ever grew-up vacationing on MV, and all are pretty much 1st Timers to the Island. And that’s because young adults who did grow-up visiting MV
(for ex…Malia & Sasha Obama, Spike Lee’s & Michele Norris’ kids, etc ) wouldn’t be caught dead on a BRAVO Reality Show behaving badly & acting a fool!
Add new comment