Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Still Game is a Scottish sitcom produced by Effingee Productions, The Comedy Unit and BBC Scotland.It was created by Ford Kiernan and Greg Hemphill, who played the lead characters, Jack Jarvis, Esq and Victor McDade, two Glaswegian pensioners.
Still Game is a Scottish sitcom series, following the lives of a group of pensioners who live in Craiglang, a fictional area of Glasgow. [1] The show was created by and stars Ford Kiernan and Greg Hemphill, [2] and first aired on BBC One Scotland on 6 September 2002.
The following is an episode list for Still Game. The first series began on 6 September 2002 and its ninth and final series aired on 28 March 2019. In the first three series the episode titles were all Scots words that were related to the episode. This was changed to standard English titles for Series 4, so that the rest of UK audience could ...
Six television channels, namely STV-US, CSB News, Channel 1, Diganta Television, Islamic TV, and Channel 16, have been taken off air. Bangladesh has four state-owned television stations, of which only three broadcast on terrestrial television, which are BTV Dhaka, BTV Chittagong, and Sangsad Television.
Ford John Kiernan (born 10 January 1962) is a Scottish actor, comedian and writer. He is best known for his work with Greg Hemphill on the BBC Scotland sketch comedy series Chewin' the Fat (1999–2005) and the sitcom Still Game (2002–2007, 2016–2019).
Bangladesh Television was the sole television broadcaster in Bangladesh [52] until the launch of ATN Bangla on satellite television in 1997, and Ekushey Television on terrestrial in 2000. As competition grew over the years, BTV declined and stagnated, and privately owned television channels gained more popularity among locals.
Private television networks include ATN Bangla, Channel I, NTV, RTV, Ekushey TV, Ekattor TV, Jamuna TV and Somoy TV. [373] Print media is the second-most widely consumed, and newspapers are privately owned and outspoken, including The Daily Star , Dhaka Tribune , The Financial Express , Bangladesh Pratidin , Kaler Kantho , Prothom Alo , The ...
The Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission granted Channel 9 a license to broadcast among other privately owned Bangladeshi television channels on 20 October 2009. [2] It commenced test transmissions on 8 April 2011, [ citation needed ] and officially began broadcasting on 30 January 2012.