Media in Glasgow

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This article deals with the Media in Glasgow. The city of Glasgow, Scotland is home to large sections of the Scottish national media. It hosts the following:

Television[]

  • BBC Scotland — the national broadcaster, based in Pacific Quay Studios at Pacific Quay.[1]
  • BBC Alba — a Scottish Gaelic language channel jointly owned by the BBC and MG Alba.[2] It has its headquarters at Pacific Quay.
  • STV — (previously known as Scottish Television in Central Scotland, and Grampian Television in Northern Scotland). Scotland's largest independent ITV company, owned by the STV Group plc, based in Pacific Quay.[3]

Television programmes set in Glasgow include: Taggart, Rebus (set in Edinburgh but shot mostly in Glasgow), High Times, Rab C Nesbitt, City Lights, Chewing the Fat, River City, Still Game and Lovesick.

Radio[]

Magazines[]

  • bunkered — Scotland's best-selling golf magazine and the biggest-selling golf magazine in the UK per capita.

Newspapers[]

A number of major Scottish newspapers are published in the city:

  • The Daily Record and Sunday Mail — Scotland's best-selling tabloid, based at Central Quay
  • The Herald — Scotland's best-selling broadsheet
  • The Sunday Herald — its five-year-old sister title
  • The Evening Times — an evening tabloid distributed in the west of Scotland

As well as Scottish editions of:

  • The Sun
  • The Daily Mail and The Mail on Sunday
  • The Times and Sunday Times

Local newspapers are:

  • The Glaswegian — Covering Glasgow and parts of East Renfrewshire
  • The Digger — Mainly covering the North of Glasgow
  • Local News for Southsiders — The Southside of Glasgow and the Govan area.
  • The Glasgow East News — The East End of the City
  • The West End Mail — Partick, West-End and the Northwest outskirts. -Ceased December 2006 [4]
  • The Springburn Herald — Weekly newspaper covering the area of North Glasgow and East Dunbartonshire
  • G41 — Monthly community newspaper serving Dumbreck, Pollokshields, Strathbungo, Shawlands and Langside. Published by a social enterprise called Southside Media.

Internet[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "BBC Scotland headquarters". Clyde Waterfront. Clyde Waterfront. Retrieved 3 March 2018.
  2. ^ Scott, Kevin (10 February 2018). "£500,000 funding boost for Gaelic media firm behind BBC Alba". The Herald. Retrieved 3 March 2018.
  3. ^ "STV Studios". Doors Open Days. Doors Open Days (Scottish Civic Trust). Retrieved 3 March 2018.
  4. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2 December 2008. Retrieved 14 April 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

Resources[]

Gurevitch M. Culture, Society and the Media. Routledge: New Ed edition, 1982

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