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Naked Video

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48-497: Naked Video is a BBC Scotland sketch show that was aired on BBC2 from 12 May 1986 to 18 November 1991. The show was created by Colin Gilbert who had previously created A Kick Up the Eighties and Naked Radio (the latter being a radio sketch show that was aired on BBC Radio Scotland , began its ten-year run on 22 January 1981, covered all aspects of Scottish society and featured

96-527: A UK audience. When the new commercial broadcaster, Scottish Television (STV), was about to arrive in 1957, BBC Scotland managed to produce slightly improved news coverage by a complicated arrangement involving the newsroom in Queen Margaret Drive in the west of the city and the former Black Cat Cinema in Springfield Road in the east where The White Heather Club was made. Upon the launch of

144-534: A broadcast on BBC Two Scotland as the only Gaelic programme on the channel until 2019. Over the years, BBC Scotland made a number of well known and much loved radio and television programmes both for the BBC networks and for transmission in Scotland only. In television these were known within the BBC as "opt out" programmes. At teatime in the beginning, there was A Quick Look Round with Leonard Maguire. From 1968, as well as

192-457: A day. The channel is a joint partnership between BBC Scotland and MG Alba and is available across the UK on satellite and cable services and Freeview in Scotland only. During downtime, BBC Alba simulcasts Gaelic radio station BBC Radio nan Gàidheal with an in-vision graphical overlay. Prior to digital switchover , some Gaelic programming was carried on BBC Two Scotland , however this ceased following

240-660: A disused whisky distillery. It is the main Scottish drama facilities where programmes such as Still Game and River City are recorded. Also, the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra is resident at Glasgow City Halls having been based at Queen Margaret Drive until 2006. BBC Scotland continues to produce a high number of local programmes for the Scottish audiences. Its flagship news and current affair programmes are Reporting Scotland and Scotland 2016 which provides over an hour of content each weekday. Drama in

288-483: A few weeks, additional news summaries at 21:25 were introduced. From 31 October 1988, newsroom staff started to read the news summaries instead of the announcers. Inevitably, though, viewers started to spot their little idiosyncrasies. Mark Stephen often came perilously close to sending up programmes with his good-natured humour; links of his included: Peter Cushing stars in our late night horror film in 50 minutes. First on BBC One Scotland, Dougie Donnelly rises from

336-419: A lot of topical satire material rather than parody). The series originally starred Ron Bain , Gregor Fisher , Andy Gray , Elaine C. Smith , Tony Roper , Helen Lederer and Jonathan Watson , but they were later joined by Kate Donnelly and Louise Beattie . The series' producer was Colin Gilbert and its script editor was Philip Differ . Naked Radio proved a popular part of the local schedule, and in 1985,

384-576: A new hour-long 9:00 p.m. weeknight newscast that will be produced from Scotland. The proposed newscast been considered a response to the perennial proposals for a local opt-out of the BBC News at Six . Hall also announced that the BBC would increase its overall spending on factual and drama productions in Scotland by £20 million annually. The BBC Scotland channel was approved by Ofcom in June 2018, and subsequently launched on 24 February 2019. The channel

432-574: A number of programme departments, such as Children's, out of London. BBC Scotland broadcasts three television services to Scottish audiences. BBC One Scotland is a separate channel able to opt out of the network feed of BBC One to broadcast its own schedule of regional programming in addition to networked productions. The flagship news programme BBC Reporting Scotland is presented by Laura Miller and Sally Magnusson. BBC Scotland operates BBC Alba , broadcasting programming in Gaelic for up to seven hours

480-477: A regional service relay or closed entirely and replaced by high-power regional broadcasts. Some local studios were retained to provide for programming from specific areas within each region. Most transmitters also carried the National Programme on a local frequency to supplement the longwave broadcasts from 5XX; initially these were on three separate frequencies and programming included some local variations. As

528-401: Is a Gaelic-language station broadcasting for the majority of the day on 103.5-105 FM and simulcasting Radio Scotland's MW service at other times. BBC Scotland operates a mini site on BBC Online consisting of a portal to Scottish news, sport, programmes and items of cultural interest through BBC Online. The department also provides content from Scotland on these subjects to the website and for

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576-455: Is a digital content stream from BBC Scotland aimed at 18-34 year olds. Working with new and emerging talent, The Social develops daily content on a range of subjects including issues, comedy, music, lifestyle and gaming. Launched in December 2015, The Social won a Royal Television Scotland award for Best Digital Innovation in 2016 and another in 2018 for the shortform drama Kidder. In June 2018,

624-633: Is allocated £32 million in annual funding, and its SD variant has displaced BBC Four on the Freeview EPG. BBC Scotland also operates two radio stations covering Scotland: BBC Radio Scotland and BBC Radio nan Gàidheal . The former broadcasts English programming 24 hours a day on the frequencies 92-95 FM and 810 MW . The station has specific programming opt outs for Orkney and Shetland in addition to regional news opt outs for four additional sub regions - North East, Highlands & Islands, South West and Borders. BBC Radio nan Gàidheal in contrast

672-516: Is near to the Scottish Parliament building and contains television and radio studios in addition to a newsroom. The college closed in 1935 and principal architect James Miller began adapting the Glasgow site for BBC Scotland in 1936, allowing for the site's buildings to be used in the production, administration and broadcasting of BBC Scotland's radio and television.(RCAHMS) In the early 1960s,

720-674: Is raised in Scotland, with expenditure on purely local content set to stand at £86 million by 2016–2017. The remainder of licence fee revenue raised in the country is spent on networked programmes shown throughout the UK. BBC Scotland operates television channels such as the Scottish variant of BBC One , the BBC Scotland channel and the Gaelic-language channel BBC Alba , and radio stations BBC Radio Scotland and Gaelic-language BBC Radio nan Gàidheal . The first radio service in Scotland

768-837: The BBC Light Programme . Similarly, the Regional Programme broadcast much more light and dance music than its successor, the Home Service. When the British Broadcasting Company first began transmissions on 14 November 1922 from station 2LO in the Strand , which it had inherited from the Marconi Company (one of six commercial companies which created), but technology did not yet exist either for national coverage or joint programming between transmitters . Whilst it

816-520: The BBC National Programme and the Regional Programme provided a mixed mainstream radio service. Whilst the two services provided different programming, allowing listeners a choice they were not streamed to appeal to different audiences, rather they were intended to offer a choice of programming to a single audience. While using the same transmitters, the National Programme broadcast significantly more speech and classical music than its successor,

864-425: The BBC National Programme from London and available to the majority of the population. By combining the resources of the local stations into one regional station in each area with a basic sustaining service from London, the BBC hoped to increase programme quality whilst also centralising the management of the radio service known as the "regional scheme". The local transmitters were gradually either converted to

912-519: The BBC Red Button interactive TV service. BBC Scotland previously offered a podcast download of the top news items of the week and the online streaming of several key sections of output. However following the widespread introduction of the BBC iPlayer service, which allowed the streaming and download of nearly all BBC programmes including news, these services were discontinued as defunct. BBC The Social

960-724: The River Clyde in Glasgow . The studio centre was announced in 1999, constructed between 2004 and 2006 and was opened in 2007. Designed by David Chipperfield and reportedly costing £188 million, the studio contains three television studios and five radio studios as well as the first HD newsroom used by the BBC. In addition to the Glasgow and Edinburgh bases of the broadcaster, BBC Scotland also has offices and studios located in Aberdeen , Dundee , Portree , Stornoway , Inverness , Selkirk , Dumfries , Kirkwall and Lerwick . Of these,

1008-544: The BBC acquired Queen Margaret College at North Park House, Queen Margaret Drive, Glasgow, near to the Glasgow Botanic Gardens , and the headquarters operation moved back to Glasgow in 1936 accompanying the Glasgow radio station. BBC Scotland remained based at these premises until the move to Pacific Quay in 2007. The Edinburgh operation remained on Queen Street until the move to The Tun in April 2002. The Tun building

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1056-481: The BBC acquired land adjacent to its Queen Margaret Drive base and eventually three colour studios were built together with significant radio facilities and a Film Unit with its own film processing. The BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra and the BBC Scottish Radio Orchestra had access to a large sound studio - Studio 1. BBC Scotland's headquarters are currently located at BBC Pacific Quay on the banks of

1104-479: The BBC announced the formation of a third "digital hub" in Glasgow, which will facilitate design and engineering of BBC digital platforms. When BBC Television first came to Scotland, there were no dedicated studios and Scotland shared an outside broadcast unit with BBC North in Manchester. Apart from a limited news service, all programmes about Scotland had to be transmitted from London and had to have an appeal to

1152-510: The BBC closed both existing National and Regional radio programmes to replace them with a single channel known as the BBC Home Service . The transmitter network was synchronised on 668 kHz and 767 kHz in order to use the other frequencies for propaganda broadcasts in foreign languages. Each transmitter group would be turned off during air raids to prevent their signals being used as navigational beacons . Listeners were required to retune to

1200-596: The BBC in Scotland in 1923, the service originally occupied Rex House at 202 Bath Street, Glasgow, before moving to properties in Blythswood Square and subsequently in West George Street. In 1929, the decision was made to move the headquarters operation to Queen Street , Edinburgh , where the Edinburgh station had been based since 1924 following a move from the original 79 George Street premises. However, in 1935

1248-704: The British network has included such recent high-profile dramas as Shetland , Hope Springs , Waterloo Road and Single Father . BBC Scotland also produces a high number of gamesshows which feature The National Lottery Draws . BBC Scotland also produces the Scottish opt-out sections of British-wide programmes such as Sunday Politics and Children in Need . Until 2010, a high number of Gaelic programmes were broadcast on BBC One and Two Scotland before transferring over to BBC Alba. Its flagship programmes, which both started in 1993, are Dè a-nis? and Eòrpa . Eòrpa hit

1296-844: The Glen , and Sutherland's Law . In recent years, BBC Scotland comedy shows such as Mrs. Brown's Boys , Two Doors Down and Mountain Goats have been lambasted by critics. BBC Scotland has also produced two highly controversial programmes, Scotch on the Rocks and Secret Society , with the latter resulting in BBC Scotland being raided by the police. BBC Scotland started using their own television continuity announcers voicing over specific BBC Scotland station idents for all evening and weekend afternoon junctions around 1977. Before this, announcers only introduced occasional opt-outs, which resulted in

1344-576: The London announcer being heard most of the time, the Scottish announcer wasn't even heard before Reporting Scotland because in those days the early evening Regional News magazines began with a 'throw' from the Nationwide programme. The announcers were "self-op" - they had to speak and press the buttons to change the sound and picture and cue in telecine (film), videotape recordings (VTR) and live programmes. From 1979, their duties were expanded to cover reading

1392-558: The UK were merged to form the BBC Home Service in 1939, and, with a break for the Second World War, national opt outs remained on the station and its successor BBC Radio 4 until the establishment of a separate BBC Radio Scotland in November 1978. Television in Scotland began formally on 14 March 1952 using the 405-line television system broadcast from the Kirk o'Shotts transmitter . In

1440-404: The beginning, all programmes came from London but some with Scottish content were made using an outside broadcast unit. By 1962, there were plans for television news interview studios in Edinburgh and Aberdeen. Eventually, BBC Scotland established the right to "opt-out" of the network more and more. When BBC Two arrived in Scotland in 1966 (having begun in London two years earlier and spread across

1488-429: The cast mounted the series on stage at the year's Edinburgh Festival Fringe . Gilbert realised the series had potential for television and Naked Video was created. It proved popular at a time when alternative comedy was at its peak. The Naked Radio series ended in 1991, when it was cancelled along with Naked Video . The show also spawned a radio spin-off: the football-themed Only an Excuse? , which later also made

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1536-593: The country), broadcasts began in black and white on 405-lines from the Black Hill transmitter. BBC Two upgraded to PAL colour in 1967 (including Scotland) across the UK, with BBC One (network programmes only at first, with local output still in black-and-white) and STV following in December 1969, and in 1971, BBC Scotland's Queen Margaret Drive Studio "A" in Glasgow became one of the first regional studios in Britain to upgrade to colour. In September 1998, BBC Choice Scotland

1584-668: The flagship evening news programme Reporting Scotland , presented by Mary Marquis and Douglas Kynoch, with contributions from Renton Laidlaw in Edinburgh and Donny B. MacLeod in Aberdeen, there were popular current affairs series such as Compass , Checkpoint with Professor Esmond Wright and Magnus Magnusson , Person to Person with Mary Marquis, Current Account , Public Account and Agenda . Many comedy series have been made by BBC Scotland, including Scotch and Wry , Rab C. Nesbitt , Naked Video and Still Game , while with dramas included Hamish Macbeth , Monarch of

1632-514: The form of River City . With sport on Radio Scotland, along with Sportscene , cover a large number of local sports including football, rugby and bowls. BBC Scotland also produces over 20 hours of comedy programmers for radio and television. While features and documentaries is BBC Scotland's biggest output, with The Beechgrove Garden , Landward , Sport Monthly , The Adventure Show , The Mountain , BBC Scotland Investigates and many other covering all aspect of Scottish life. Output for

1680-478: The grave with today's football action in Sportscene . Directors and Controllers of BBC Scotland: BBC Regional Programme The BBC Regional Programme was a radio service which was on the air from 9 March 1930 – replacing a number of earlier BBC local stations between 1922 and 1924 – until 1 September 1939 when it was subsumed into the BBC Home Service , two days before the outbreak of World War II . Both

1728-668: The headlines in May 2008, specially mentioned in the Scottish Broadcasting Commission's report. "It was intriguing to note that without fail at every one of our public events, BBC2 Scotland's Eòrpa programme was raised, unsolicited, and by non-Gaelic speakers, as an example of a positive, well-respected programme", commented Blair Jenkins , the Chair of the Scottish Broadcasting Commission . It continued to be given

1776-460: The latter two locations operate radio opt-outs from BBC Radio Scotland with BBC Radio Orkney and BBC Radio Shetland while the Aberdeen, Inverness, Selkirk and Dumfries newsrooms produce local radio bulletins for the North East, Highlands & Islands, Borders and South West respectively. In addition to these premises, BBC Scotland operates a drama productions studio at Dumbarton on the site of

1824-411: The lunchtime news bulletin in vision at 12:40, just before the network Midday News at 12:45. There was one announcer who was never seen. Robert Logan was also a Conservative local councillor. Consequently, he never read the news summaries, nor did he ever give his name at closedown. From 1985, the announcing team started doing a news summary just before children's programmes at around 15:53, and within

1872-424: The regional network expanded these transmissions were fully synchronised with those from Brookmans Park and several other frequencies initially: A relay station for Brookmans Park on 1402 kHz was due to open at Acle near Norwich in 1940, but construction was postponed by the outbreak of World War II . The station was never completed and was replaced by one at Postwick . Upon the outbreak of World War II ,

1920-730: The same year, and Series 3 on 29 January 2007. As of 2021, Series 4 and 5 have not been released, whilst series 1-3 have been discontinued and are hard to locate. BBC Scotland BBC Scotland is a division of the BBC and the main public broadcaster in Scotland . It is one of the four BBC national regions, together with the BBC English Regions , BBC Cymru Wales and BBC Northern Ireland . Its headquarters are in Glasgow . It employs approximately 1,250 staff as of 2017, to produce 15,000 hours of television and radio programming per year. Some £320 million of licence fee revenue

1968-516: The switchover. Thirdly, the BBC Scotland channel commenced broadcasting at 7:00 p.m. on Sunday 24 February 2019. On 22 February 2017, director general Tony Hall announced plans to launch a dedicated English-language BBC Scotland channel in 2018, which would replace the BBC Two Scotland opt-out. It would broadcast from 7:00 p.m. to midnight nightly, and feature a lineup composed entirely of new and archived Scottish programming, including

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2016-550: The transition to television. In 2000, the cast reunited for a theatre show and radio broadcast, and in 2005, Gerard Kelly presented a documentary for the Radio Roots season on BBC Radio Scotland, looking at how the series "sprouted a generation of TV writing and performing talent". Naked Video featured many characters (most of which were one-offs) but some of the recurring ones were: A total of thirty 25-minute episodes were produced over five six-episode series. The third series

2064-434: Was also produced in 1988 prior to the pilot episode of Rab C. Nesbitt (as evidenced by a VHS tape named "Mary and Jim's Wedding, 2nd November 1988" which dropped out of a Polaroid camera and had an "18" sticker placed on it at the end of its third episode), but it was not transmitted until 19 January 1989. On 17 July 2006, Series 1 was released on DVD by BBC Worldwide and 2Entertain , followed by Series 2 on 9 October of

2112-472: Was broadcast at approximately 1 kilowatt (kW): Each of these relay stations were broadcast at approximately 120 watts (W): On 21 August 1927, the BBC opened a high-power medium wave transmitter 5GB at its Daventry site to replace the existing local stations in the English Midlands , that allowed the experimental longwave transmitter 5XX to provide a service – which eventually came to be called

2160-401: Was launched as BBC Scotland's first digital service. For many years, BBC Scotland has tried to increase the number of programmes it makes to be shown on the networks. This ambition was greatly aided by the move of BBC Scotland's headquarters in 2007 from Queen Margaret Drive to BBC Pacific Quay where state of the art digital studios were built and by the decision of the BBC centrally to move

2208-566: Was launched by the British Broadcasting Company on 6 March 1923. Named 5SC and located in Bath Street in Glasgow, the services gradually expanded to include the new stations 2BD, 2DE and 2EH, based at Aberdeen, Dundee and Edinburgh respectively. Around 1927, the new Corporation, as the BBC now was, decided to combine these local stations into regions under the generic banner of the BBC Regional Programme . Regional programmes throughout

2256-529: Was possible to combine large numbers of trunk telephone lines to link transmitters for individual programmes, the process was expensive and not encouraged by the General Post Office as it tied up large parts of the telephone network. The stations that followed the establishment of 2LO in London were therefore autonomously programmed using local talent and facilities. By May 1923, simultaneous broadcasting

2304-415: Was technically possible at least between main transmitters and relay stations , the quality was not felt to be high enough to provide a national service or regular simultaneous broadcasts. In 1924, it was felt that technical standards had improved enough for London to start to provide the majority of the output, cutting the local stations back to providing items of local interest. Each of these main stations

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