With Kaye Adams - 02/12/2019
Scottish Conservatives interim leader Jackson Carlaw takes your calls. Call now on 0808 5 92 95 00 Text 80295.
Also Strictly, Tech Talk and Speed Awareness Courses.
ON THE PHONE-IN
In the lead up to the General Election you will have the opportunity to ‘Call the Leader’ on Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radio Scotland.
KAYE ASKS
Today, Scottish Conservatives interim leader Jackson Carlaw will be answering your questions. Call now on 0808 5 92 95 00 Text 80295
Also on the show…
STRICTLY COME DANCING
We've made it to Blackpool but who got the boot on this week's Strictly Come Dancing? We find out the backstage gossip with the Official Strictly podcast presenter Kim Winston.
ALL FEMALE PANTO
All female panto - oh yes we should or oh no we shouldn’t? Johnny McKnight, a Pantomime director and writer, wants to fight the battle for gender equality in panto and has created an all-female panto at the Tron Theatre.
SOUR-FAUX
How do you spot your sourdough from your ‘sourfaux’?
SOCIAL CLASS
‘Climbed socially and left us behind’ . . . those are the words Meghan Markle's uncle used to describe the Duchess in an article for Woman Magazine. Can you ever leave your social class behind?
SANTA SCHOOL
There’s a nationwide shortage of Santas - do you have what it takes to fill those very big boots?
TECH TALK
In this week's Tech Talk Louise Blain and Carrie Marshall mull over the best tech for the festive period and how to bag a good cyber Monday deal.
TOURETTES
This Friday sees the release of Motherless Brooklyn - an American neo-noir crime film produced, directed and starring Edward Norton. Norton plays Lionel Essrog who has Tourette syndrome which alienates him from friends and colleagues but a photographic memory makes him a brilliant detective. We hear about the everyday challenges of holding down a job when you have Tourette’s syndrome.
SPEED AWARENESS
Drivers in Scotland could be offered speed awareness courses as an alternative to points – what happens on a speed awareness course?
APOSTROPHE
A retired journalist who founded a campaign to preserve the correct use of the apostrophe is bowing out because "ignorance has won". Have we lost the battle against bad grammar?