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The Key Club is a live music venue and nightclub in the Merrion Centre, Leeds that is owned by Slam Dunk Records. [15] It has a 300-person capacity, [16] is the successor to the Cockpit, [17] and hosts many events that the Cockpit did such as Slam Dunk and the Garage club nights. [15] It is advertised as the "first pure rock venue in Leeds". [17]
Leeds is a city recognised for its cultural offering in the fields of art, architecture, music, sport, film and television. [1] In 2015, after a fourteen-month consultation and a public vote, Leeds City Council (LCC) approved the creation of a bid for the city to the UK's nomination for European Capital of Culture in 2023. [2]
BBC Look North is the BBC's regional television news service for West, South and North Yorkshire and northern parts of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire.The service is produced and broadcast from the BBC Broadcasting Centre at St. Peter's Square in Leeds with district newsrooms based in Bradford, Sheffield and York.
Leeds is known for its culture in the fields of art, architecture, music, sport, film and television. As the largest city in Yorkshire, Leeds is a centre of Yorkshire's contemporary culture and is the base for Yorkshire's television (BBC, ITV, and Channel 4) [1] and regional newspapers.
The Square Ball fanzine was founded in 1989. [4] [5] [6] In 2020, they raised over £10,000 for food banks after completing a 24-hour livestream playing video game Football Manager. [7]
Local TV Leeds [1] (formerly known by the names of TalkLeeds, Leeds TV and Made in Leeds) is a local television station serving Leeds and West Yorkshire. The station is owned and operated by Local Television Limited and forms part of a group of eight Local TV stations. It broadcasts from studios and offices in the Chapeltown area of Leeds.
David Blaine is a daredevil at heart. In PEOPLE's exclusive sneak peek of National Geographic's latest series, David Blaine Do Not Attempt, the famed magician, 51, pushes the boundaries of what ...
The venue for the Leeds Academy on Cookridge Street in the city was originally opened in 1885 by Prince Albert [3] and is a grade II listed Gothic building. [4] [5] In the nineteenth century there was a legal dispute with the Sunday Lecture Society that met here as they were accused of disturbing the sabbath.