Alison Rowat

Senior politics and features writer

I joined The Herald in 1998. Currently the paper's film writer and columnist, I was previously a leader writer, foreign editor and sub-editor.

I joined The Herald in 1998. Currently the paper's film writer and columnist, I was previously a leader writer, foreign editor and sub-editor.

Latest articles from Alison Rowat

TV REVIEW Alison Rowat: New Rebus is a mix of fallen angel and fledgling devil - and it's great

How edgy is the new Rebus (BBC Scotland, Friday, BBC1, Saturday)? Well, besides scenes of sex,drugs and violence, there is a gag about hummus. That would never have been served up in Taggart. But that’s Edinburgh for you, all fur coat and nae square sausage. There has been some head-scratching over the new Rebus. He is younger than in previous television versions, and in the books, but it is not a prequel. In this Rebus, Edinburgh has foodbanks, smartphones, suspects who say “no comment” and, yes, hummus.

Alison Rowat: What Scotland's Lorraine Kelly can teach the UK about class

Here is what happened at the Baftas on Sunday. Lorraine Kelly had just accepted a special award from fellow Scot Brian Cox to mark her 40 years in television. After thanking Bafta she told the audience what a good thing it was to give others a helping hand. Don’t pull up the ladder behind you, she said. Please make it possible for kids like her, from a very working-class Glasgow background, to have the same chances she had. Gesturing to Cox, who grew up desperately poor in Dundee, she said: “We’ve had amazing opportunities, but I just want everyone to have those opportunities.”

Alison Rowat: Red Rosie, the Greens' Robin, and the way we were at Holyrood

What does politics need? After the last three weeks a nice lie down in a darkened room might be just the ticket. Alas, with a general election on the way the chances of that happening are zero. Still, it had been just days since Scotland’s new First Minister appealed for less shouting in politics and more conversation, fewer rammies and more harmony. Would this advice survive on contact with the Sunday politics shows?

TV PREVIEW What happened when Nicola Sturgeon met Janey Godley at Aye Write

Couldn’t get a ticket to the world premiere of Janey at this year’s Glasgow Film Festival? Then have I got (good) news for you. John Archer’s documentary about Janey Godley, Glaswegian comedian and sometime panellist on HIGNFY, transfers to the small screen in Janey (BBC Scotland, Tuesday, 10pm). It’s an hour-long version of what was a feature-length film, but in the trimming it has lost none of its power to amuse and move.

TV REVIEW Martin Freeman's Responder is a nerve-shredder but I wouldn't miss it for the world

Martin Freeman is back serving the nation in The Responder (BBC1, Sunday). Whatever your everyday stresses and woes, rest assured that compared to Chris Carson, “the angriest copper alive”, you, fella, are living the dream. What does Chris *not* have to complain about? He is on constant night shift. Separated from his cheating wife, who might be taking his beloved daughter from Liverpool to that London, he’s skint, depressed, possibly in the middle of a full-blown breakdown, and now someone is threatening hMartin Freeman is back serving the nation in The Responder (BBC1, Sunday). Whatever your everyday stresses and woes, rest assured that compared to Chris Carson, “the angriest copper alive”, you, fella, are living the dream.

Alison Rowat: Is John Swinney Scotland's first mid-life crisis First Minister?

Mr Swinney was declared SNP leader on Monday in a ceremony in Glasgow that had as much fizz as a two-day-old glass of Irn-Bru. Much thought had obviously gone into making the event as low-key as possible. This was the new, slightly more humble SNP showing its face, a party getting back to normal after the upheaval of the past fortnight.

Alison Rowat: Decisions loom for Swinney and changes on way at BBC Scotland

Mark Harper, the UK transport secretary, was the lucky minister sent out to tour the Sunday shows with a dual message from Number 10: yes the results were disappointing, but the plan is to stick to the plan. Clear enough? Not to Suella Braverman, who popped up on BBC1’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg. The former home secretary appeared more furious than disappointed, saying it was a “disgrace” for the Tories to be trailing Starmer, a man with “the charisma of a peanut”.

THIS WEEK'S TV Is Scots solicitor Aamer Anwar really Suits' Harvey Specter in disguise?

When I recently reviewed The Firm, a profile of Scottish solicitor Aamer Anwar (still available on iPlayer), I could not for the life of me work out what the deal was with tight skirts, high heels and slo-mo walking. The camera seemed obsessed with following the women solicitors in the firm, shooting them from their red Christian Louboutin soles upwards as they walked to the office across Blythswood Square. Sometimes Anwar walked between them, a dapper Don in a bespoke suit. All was revealed later on when he said one of his favourite programmes, the one that steered him toward the law as an interesting career, was Suits.

TV REVIEW New BBC Scotland crime drama is as slow as a week in the jail

On behalf of Scotland, I’d like to put Granite Harbour (BBC Scotland, Thursday, BBC1, Friday) forward as the world’s first slow crime drama. As it begins its second series, not much has changed down Aberdeen way. Following his transfer from Jamaica, former royal military policeman Davis Lindo (Romario Simpson) is still finding his way in Police Scotland under the guidance of his boss, DCI Cora MacMillan (Dawn Steele), and work partner DS Lara “Bart” Bartlett (Hannah Donaldson).