Good Morning Scotland Explained

Show Name:Good Morning Scotland
Other Names:GMS
Format:News, current affairs
Runtime:Weekdays: 06:00–09:00 (180 minutes)
Weekends: 08:00–10:00 (120 minutes)
Country:Scotland
Language:English
Home Station:BBC Radio Scotland
Syndicates:BBC Radio nan Gàidheal
Presenter:Gary Robertson
Laura Maxwell
Starring:Sport
Phil Goodlad
Heather Dewar
Business
Andrew Black
Weather
Judith Ralston
Gillian Smart
Kawser Quamer
Travel
Anne-Marie Watson
Editor:Chris Cowan
Rec Location:BBC Pacific Quay, Glasgow
Last Aired:date
Audio Format:Stereophonic sound
Website:https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0074hf7

Good Morning Scotland (Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic: Madainn Mhath Alba) is a Scottish breakfast radio news programme on BBC Radio Scotland, broadcast weekdays from 06:00 to 09:00 and produced by BBC News Scotland. Established in 1973, it is the longest-running radio show broadcast from Scotland and remains one of the most popular. Weekend editions, broadcast between 08:00 and 10:00, were introduced in early 2015.

Based in many respects on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, it consists of regular news, sport, business, travel and weather bulletins along with interviews, in-depth reports and a daily religious slot Thought for the Day.

History

The programme was launched on the morning of 31 December 1973 with presenters David Findlay and John Milne. Prior to GMS, radio producers Geoff Cameron and Allan Muirhead were responsible for producing a daily opt-out from Today, called Today in Scotland. Its popularity led to the subsequent Good Morning Scotland.[1]

In 1980, to celebrate 50 years of broadcasting from the BBC's Edinburgh studios at Queen Street, Good Morning Scotland was simulcast on BBC One Scotland for a week, pioneering breakfast television on the BBC (ITV station Yorkshire Television had broadcast a breakfast programme for six weeks during 1977 and thus laid claim to the first semi-regular British breakfast television broadcast).

In 2006 there some major changes to the show, including a change of presenters with Gary Robertson brought in.[2]

The programme had an estimated 455,000 listeners in 2008, which fell to 380,000 the following year.[3]

Local variations

The first half of the programme is also broadcast on BBC Scotland's Gaelic-language station, BBC Radio nan Gàidheal before its Gaelic counterpart Aithris Na Maidne begins at 07:30.

Listeners in Orkney opt-out between 07:30 and 08:00 for Around Orkney, a 30-minute magazine programme with features, local news and weather, diary, jobspot, mart report and postbag.

There are also local news opt-outs from Selkirk for the Borders, Dumfries for the South West, Aberdeen for the North East and Inverness for the Highlands.

Current presenters

Former presenters

Morning Extra

Morning Extra was an associated phone-in programme broadcast from 09.05 - 10.00. Presented by Graham Stewart, it usually debated one of the biggest stories running on Good Morning Scotland. It was previously only 40 minutes long but was extended in 2008 to an hour.

The programme was axed in 2010 and replaced with a phone-in, Call Kaye, presented by Kaye Adams (later replaced by Morning Call). The last edition of Morning Extra aired on 26 February.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 40 Years of Good Morning Scotland. Stewart. Graham. 30 December 2013. BBC. 3 November 2018.
  2. News: Gary Robertson to be new voice of BBC's Good Morning Scotland . . 30 May 2006 . 28 December 2016.
  3. News: Radio Scotland losing 1,500 listeners a week . Stephen . McGinty . . 4 February 2010 . 28 December 2016.
  4. News: Obituary: John Milne, journalist . Alasdair . Steven . The Scotsman . 16 July 2014. 28 December 2016.
  5. News: Neville Garden . The Herald . 25 September 2002 . 28 December 2016.
  6. News: Radio's new air force. Allan . Laing . 25 April 1998. The Herald . Glasgow. 28 December 2016.