John MacKay | |
---|---|
Born | John MacKay 13 September 1966 Glasgow, Scotland |
Nationality | Scottish |
Alma mater | University of Glasgow |
Occupation(s) | Broadcaster, journalist, producer |
Years active | 1987–present |
Employer(s) | BBC (1987–1994) STV (1994–present) |
Children | 2 |
John MacKay (born 13 September 1966) [1] [2] is a Scottish broadcast journalist, television presenter, producer and writer. He currently is a main anchor for the STV News at Six in Central Scotland and the current affairs programme Scotland Tonight .
Born and raised in Glasgow, MacKay attended the University of Glasgow, where he was an editor for the Glasgow University Guardian. He began his career at The Sunday Post newspaper, before trialling for Radio Clyde and later joining BBC Radio Scotland. MacKay joined STV in 1994 as a presenter and reporter for Scotland Today .
John MacKay was born on 13 September 1966 in Glasgow, the son of an aero engineer. [3] His family are from the Isle of Lewis in the western isles of Scotland. [4] MacKay grew up in the outskirts of Glasgow in Hillington and attended Penilee Secondary School. He studied politics at the University of Glasgow, where MacKay was an editor of the Glasgow University Guardian. [5] [6]
MacKay began his journalism career with The Sunday Post in 1986. He trialled as a radio presenter for Radio Clyde, however, he was later told he “didn't have a voice for broadcast”. After a year at the Post, MacKay left to be a print reporter.
In 1987, MacKay joined BBC Scotland, initially as a news trainee for Radio Scotland and later as a reporter, presenter and producer for radio and television services, including the national news programme Reporting Scotland . He also worked as a sports correspondent. sub-editor and duty editor.
He joined Scottish Television (now STV Central) in September 1994 as a reporter and presenter for the regional news programme Scotland Today and became a main anchor four years later, alongside Shereen Nanjiani. In 2006, Scotland Today was rebranded as the STV News at Six. MacKay served as the sole chief anchor and presented the main 6pm programme for Glasgow and the West and the lunchtime bulletin for the Central Scotland region. In October 2011, he became a presenter of STV's current affairs programme, Scotland Tonight , with MacKay presenting on alternate nights with Rona Dougall. [7] [8]
MacKay has also presented and produced non-news programming for STV including the one-off documentary Sir Alex Ferguson: How to Win Games and Influence People and online content including the popular video blog The Real MacKay and the feature series Diary of a Pipe Band. [9]
In September 2018, STV announced it would merge its Glasgow and Edinburgh-based news programmes and relaunch a Central Scotland edition of STV News at Six, [10] co-anchored by MacKay in Glasgow and Kelly Ann Woodland in Edinburgh. [11]
In April 2020, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, MacKay was furloughed by STV and as result halted presenting both the STV News at Six and Scotland Tonight. [12] The North and Central editions of the STV News were merged to create one nightly news programme.[ citation needed ] MacKay and Kelly Ann Woodland returned to co-presenting the six o'clock news in September 2020 [13]
In October 2024, the programme reverted to a single-anchor format with MacKay presenting from Wednesday to Friday.
Of Hebridean descent, from the district of Carloway, MacKay has written three books all based in the Isle of Lewis. They are the best selling "The Road Dance", "Heartland" and "The Last of the Line" (all Luath Press, 2002, 2004 and 2006 respectively). [14] In May 2022, The Road Dance book was produced as a film of the same name, starring Hermione Corfield as Kirsty Macleod. [15] [16]
In 2015, MacKay published "Notes of a Newsman", written about his journey as a news journalist and his news coverage of the Lockerbie bombing, the opening of the Scottish Parliament and the 2014 Scottish Independence Referendum. He published his fifth book, "Home", in 2021. [17]
An updated version of "Notes of a Newsman", entitled "Scotland Today and Yesterday", is due to be published in December 2024. [18]
MacKay is a well-known figure in Scotland, particularly in the central belt through his long association with STV. He was portrayed by comedian Jonathan Watson on his sketch show Only an Excuse with the use of his popular opening catchphrase "I'm John MacKay". The Glasgow-based comedian Kevin Bridges has also stated his admiration for MacKay, saying the highlight of his career was saying "Back to John in the studio."
MacKay has also interviewed fictional anchorman Ron Burgundy (played by Will Ferrell) from the 2004 comedy film Anchorman .
MacKay lives in Renfrewshire with his wife Jo. They have two sons. [19]
James Martin Delahunt is a Scottish sports presenter and newspaper columnist, best known for his 8-year tenure as presenter of STV's long-running sports programme Scotsport and as a sports columnist with the Scottish Sun newspaper.
BBC Reporting Scotland is the BBC's national television news programme for Scotland, broadcast on BBC One Scotland from the headquarters of BBC Scotland in Pacific Quay, Glasgow.
Arthur Montford was a Scottish Television sports journalist, best known for his 32-year tenure as the presenter of Scottish Television's Scotsport. Although he was most associated with football, he covered a number of other sports for ITV, notably golf.
Anne Erica Isobel Mackenzie is a former BBC political and current affairs presenter. Mackenzie worked as a newscaster between 1981 and 1997. She started her career with Grampian TV, in Aberdeen, before joining BBC Scotland in 1995. She became a political and current affairs presenter in 1998, anchoring several BBC network programmes. Mackenzie was also part of the Newsnight Scotland team, with BBC Scotland, from its launch in October 1999 to July 2007. She could also be heard fronting factual programmes for BBC Radio 4 in London.
Scotland Today was a Scottish regional news programme covering Central Scotland, produced by STV Central. Despite its name suggesting a national remit, the programme was actually limited to stories around STV's Central Belt franchise. North Tonight covered STV's North Scotland region, until both programmes were renamed STV News at Six in March 2009.
Bernard Ponsonby is a Scottish broadcast journalist for regional news and current affairs programming for STV. He joined the station in 1990 and was appointed political editor in 2000, following the retirement of longstanding political editor Fiona Ross. Since 2019, Ponsonby has been Special Correspondent for STV News.
Kirstin Gove is a Scottish PR & media consultant, who previously worked as a broadcast journalist and presenter for STV North.
Norman Macleod is a STV North news presenter and journalist for the Northern Scotland edition of STV News at Six.
Donald MacCormick was a Scottish broadcast journalist.
John Duncanson was a Scottish television presenter and journalist, best known as a main anchor of Grampian Television's nightly regional news programme, North Tonight.
STV News is a Scottish news division produced by STV. The news department produces two regional services covering STV's Channel 3 franchise areas of Northern and Central Scotland.
The Hour is a lifestyle magazine programme that was broadcast on STV, the ITV franchise in Northern and Central Scotland, premiering on 26 May 2009. Originally broadcast each weekday afternoon at 5pm, the programme was presented for much of its run by Michelle McManus and Stephen Jardine and broadcast from STV's Pacific Quay studios in Glasgow. The programme moved to a weekly peak time slot in September 2011, but was cancelled in October 2011.
Gordon Chree is a Scottish reporter for STV News and occasional relief anchor on the East edition of STV News at Six, and the online video blog Not The Real MacKay. Chree was one of the live reporters at the Glasgow Airport attack for STV, ITV News, and CNN. Prior to STV, Chree worked for several commercial radio stations, including the now-defunct Edinburgh station Talk 107.
Scotland Tonight is a Scottish news and current affairs programme, covering the two STV franchise areas of Northern and Central Scotland, produced by STV News. The programme is presented by STV News at Six Central anchor John MacKay on Mondays & Tuesdays and former Sky News Scotland correspondent Rona Dougall on Wednesdays & Thursday.
STV Children's Appeal is a Scottish charity appeal organised by STV and The Hunter Foundation, in aid of the STV Charitable Trust.
Andrea Brymer is a Scottish television presenter who is one of the main anchors for the Northern Scotland edition of STV News at Six.
Rona Dougall is a Scottish broadcast journalist and television presenter. She currently acts as a main anchor on STV's current affairs programme, Scotland Tonight.
Kelly-Ann Woodland is a Scottish newsreader and journalist, best known as a main anchor of STV News at Six in Central Scotland.
Halla Mohieddeen is a Scottish journalist, broadcaster and television presenter.
Colin Hinshelwood MacKay was a Scottish journalist who served as political editor of STV for nineteen years. He also worked in radio broadcasting for sixteen years.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty |title=
(help)