Walking The Talk
![]()
It was Doors Open day at the BBC in Inverness this morning and Yours Truly was part of the team showing visitors around our refurbished building. My PA, Michelle Walls, greeted each of the three groups of 12 people, Maggie McKinnon, from the Gaelic Department, revealed the inner workings of the BBC Alba news studio and I did what I do best...yes, I talked about the vending machine.
Well, no, I began my spiel with a bite-sized history of the building. I explained how it had been built in 1830 as the professional classes in Inverness moved away from the polluted, smelly River Ness and into street after street of two-storey townhouses. The last private owner died in 1942 and the house was taken into public ownership. It was occupied by the Highlands and Islands development board until it was gifted to the BBC in the 1970's.
The majority of the visitors were local people who were able to confirm some of these facts and add little details of their own. The lush gardens in this part of town stem from the soil that was originally used as ballast in ships arriving from North America. Or so I was told.
As we arrived at the radio studios, most of the questions turned to the technicalities of broadcasting and about why things go wrong. Then questions about the amount of football on the radio, the diction of pundits and the best way to get into broadcasting as a career.
On that last point I've been floating the idea of starting a weekly radio club for local teenagers. Many of the parents I spoke to today were enthusiastic about that, but there weren't enough teenagers in the tour to guage the likely take-up.
Meanwhile, having conducted three back-to-back tours in three hours, I have soaring admiration for the people who do this kind of thing for a living.
It really is about walking the talk.
P.S. Some photographs below show the refurbishment work from February to July last year.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()



~RS~q~RS~~RS~z~RS~14~RS~)
Comments
Sign in or register to comment.
JZ:
Congrats on the improvements at the Building and, great pictures...
=Dennis Junior=
Complain about this comment
This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the House Rules.
hi jeff,why turn radio scotland into a poor mans radio 2? disregarding scotlands young musicians at rsamd, plockton,aberdeen etc?no more pics of yourself eating beans outside a tent please.this page could be put to more use surely?
Complain about this comment
BBC Radio 2 presenters worth tuning in to;
Sir Michael Terence Wogan, K.B.E.
Alex Lester
Steve Wright
Bob Harris
Mike Harding
Brian Matthews
Great presenters all. But they don't play the best music.
BBC presenters who play the best music;
Iain Anderson
Bryan Burnett
Julie Fowlis
Ricky Ross
Tom Morton
Janice Forsyth
In terms of music, BBC Radio Scotland is the standard that BBC Radio 2 aspires to.
The Gaelic channel also broadcasts fab music, particularly Monday and Tuesday 16:00 - 17:00, and on Friday evenings it's the only music channel worth listening to.
Complain about this comment
Malverda
I can happily promise no further picture of me eating beans ...but
can't agree that we don't support young musicians. It's been a regular part of The Highland Cafe to say nothing of the BBC Radio Scotland Young Traditional Musician of the Year competition - now in its tenth year.
You'll also hear live music - from young and established musicians - on the majority of our music programmes, be it Trad, Classical, Jazz, Rock and more.
Jeff
Complain about this comment
View these comments in RSS