Catriona Shearer

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Catriona Shearer is a Scottish journalist, broadcaster and producer, best known as a former presenter for BBC Scotland's national news programme Reporting Scotland.

Shearer graduated from Edinburgh Napier University with a BA (Hons) degree in Journalism.[1][2]

Career[]

Shortly after graduation, Shearer joined BBC Radio 5 Live in 2003 as a journalist and producer for the station's flagship news programmes - 5 Live Breakfast, Drive, The Midday News, and Weekend Breakfast. She later moved to BBC Radio Wales as a co-presenter for the Saturday afternoon sports show Sportstime and a producer on the station's entertainment, music and features output.

Shearer later joined BBC Radio Scotland as a producer for news programmes Newsdrive and Scotland Live and presented traffic updates during the flagship breakfast programme Good Morning Scotland. She also presented a weekly online video podcast and worked on the radio quiz show Soundbites before becoming a television news presenter in 2007. Shearer currently presents Reporting Scotland's breakfast bulletins on weekdays and is a stand-in anchor for the main 6:30pm evening programme. In May 2021 Shearer announced she was leaving BBC Scotland after 16 years

Alongside Reporting Scotland, Shearer has also been involved with several BBC Scotland non-news programmes, including presenting a documentary on Pope Benedict XVI's tour visit to Scotland and a guest appearance on the football comedy series Only An Excuse?. As a keen music fan, she has also been presented BBC Radio Scotland's overnight New Music Zone strand and has contributed to Kruger magazine and Gigwise. She is also a columnist for the Sunday edition of The Scottish Sun.[citation needed]

References[]

  1. ^ "Catriona Shearer speaking at Edinburgh Napier University - allmediascotland…media jobs, media release service and media resources for all". www.allmediascotland.com. Retrieved 1 October 2019.
  2. ^ Stephen, Phyllis (4 December 2012). "Awards ceremony for Edinburgh Napier journalism alumni". The Edinburgh Reporter. Retrieved 1 October 2019.

External links[]

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