Lamont has hosted talk radio shows in the persona of Scottie McClue since the 1990s. When Lancashire independent radio station
Red Rose Radio was split into two frequencies, Programme Director
John Myers wanted distinctive programming for the medium wave service,
Red Rose Gold. Myers encouraged Colin Lamont to present the station's late-night phone-in. They believed, however, that the name 'Colin' did not connote showbusiness. Inspired by Scottie Buccleugh, the host of a weekly children's film club in
Carlisle known as 'Uncle Scottie', Myers suggested that Lamont's on-air identity should be 'something mad like this' that would be memorable. The pair eventually came up with Scottie McClue. In 1994 McClue moved to
Scot FM in
Edinburgh, to present a new late night phone in. He was fined by the
Radio Authority on one occasion for breaching the
1990 Broadcasting Act on taste and decency, in comments made about single mothers and gay people. In January 1997 McClue left the station after talks about a new contract broke down and moved to
Hallam FM in Sheffield and by April 1998, his show was syndicated across TFM in Middlesbrough and all
Magic stations then owned by
EMAP in
Liverpool,
Yorkshire and
North East England. McClue also presented on
Border Television-owned stations including
100-102 Century FM in Newcastle becoming the late night phone-in presenter on its
Salford Quays-based sister regional station
105.4 Century FM, when it launched in September 1998, with his show being networked to cover The Midlands on
Century 106 in Nottingham in 1999. In 2001 McClue returned to Scotland on
Q96 with his shows being simulcast and networked across the UK. He then returned to EMAP's Magic stations in Sheffield, Liverpool, Leeds and Hull also broadcasting for SRH on Clyde 2 Glasgow on Saturday evenings and Forth 2 Edinburgh on Sunday mornings and also a stint co-hosting with
Lesley Riddoch sitting in for
Fred MacAulay on BBC Radio Scotland. McClue had, as analyst
Mary Talbot observes, achieved "a degree of infamy as a highly confrontational talk radio host". before moving to its 24-hour
talk radio sister station of
Talk 107, later that year. He remained as a presenter until March 2008 where Talk 107 replaced him with a simulcast of
The James Whale Show from London on sister station
Talksport. In July 2008 McClue participated in a special edition of BBC Radio's
Fighting Talk at the Radio Academy's Radio Festival in Glasgow. McClue also presented on many mainstream Scottish radio stations including
Radio Forth &
Radio Clyde. From 2008, he worked on
L107 where he also served in a shareholder and management role at the station. The station lasted just over a year until reported company debts caused an ownership dispute which led to the breakdown of the partnership, and McClue's withdrawal from the station's output. A live video, "An Audience With Scottie McClue" was released in 1996. While working with Century 105 in Salford in 1999, he also released a CD called
The Best of Scottie McClue. In September 2018, McClue joined
Nation Radio Scotland to present a late night phone-in show which aired three nights a week. Since his absence from the radio, McClue has been live streaming daily on
TikTok. He started throughout the
COVID-19 outbreak. ==References==