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VIDEO: You belong in Glasgow
 
EDINBURGH may have posh department store Harvey Nicks but Glasgow has much more to offer.<br>Fashion icon Vivienne Westwood chose Glasgow for her first Scottish store over the summer, opening her upmarket shop in Princes Square. <br>Computer giant Apple opened its first store in Glasgow last year, spending more than £1million on developing its Buchanan Street building. <br>Frasers in Glasgow recently unveiled a sparkling new £7.5m menswear floor, part of a £30m overhaul. New labels brought in include Armani Jeans, Versace, Thomas Pink, Zegna and Superdry. <br>And Glasgow's own Bond Street  Ingram Street  now boasts designer labels including Ralph Lauren, Mulberry and Agent Provocateur. <br>
EDINBURGH may have posh department store Harvey Nicks but Glasgow has much more to offer.
Fashion icon Vivienne Westwood chose Glasgow for her first Scottish store over the summer, opening her upmarket shop in Princes Square.
Computer giant Apple opened its first store in Glasgow last year, spending more than £1million on developing its Buchanan Street building.
Frasers in Glasgow recently unveiled a sparkling new £7.5m menswear floor, part of a £30m overhaul. New labels brought in include Armani Jeans, Versace, Thomas Pink, Zegna and Superdry.
And Glasgow's own Bond Street Ingram Street now boasts designer labels including Ralph Lauren, Mulberry and Agent Provocateur.
 
 

by Sarah Swain


THE gloves are off in the battle for Christmas spending as Glasgow today launched an all-out campaign to woo shoppers from Edinburgh.

With the credit crunch in full swing, marketing bosses from Scotland's biggest city are targeting the Capital's famous Princes Street and Waverley Station with a poster campaign promoting what Glasgow has to offer.

Scott Taylor, chief executive of Glasgow City Marketing Bureau, said it was keen to attract Edinburgh people put off by the traffic nightmare caused by roadworks on a new tram system - and to remind everyone Glasgow really is Scotland's top place to shop.

Glasgow was recently voted the best place outside of London for retail therapy, while Edinburgh only managed eighth place.

Reader Poll
As Glasgow launches a new retail campaign, is Scotland’s biggest city better than Edinburgh for shops?
Yes
86.1%
No
11.9%
Don't know
2.1%

The city has also just come top in a Yellow Pages survey to find the UK's best festive shopping destination outside London - while Edinburgh trailed behind in fourth place.

Mr Taylor said: "I think the shopping experience in Glasgow is significantly better. You can get into Glasgow easily and park and walk around easily and there is a train from Edinburgh every 15 minutes.

"There are more shops, better shops and they are more concentrated in one area.

"We want people to get the idea this is where they want to be spending money this Christmas.

"And it's not just a shopping experience - it's got fantastic restaurants, pubs and events like Winterfest going on for a complete great experience."

Posters and TV ads will start promoting Christmas shopping in Glasgow this week across both the west and east of Scotland, as well as on ScotRail trains travelling between the two cities.

Retailers Debenhams, Frasers and John Lewis as well as the St Enoch Centre, Buchanan Galleries and Princes Square have teamed up for the £250,000 Christmas Wrapped Up campaign.

It was officially launched today by Glasgow's panto stars.

And while marketing bosses know money will be tight, they think the recent 1.5% cut in interest rates will mean spending levels this Christmas will be on a par with last year.

It is hoped Glasgow's spectacular Winterfest event will add to the attraction, with events such as Glasgow on Ice, the Christmas Lights unveiling on Sunday all providing a big pull for people who want to have fun while doing their shopping.

A new section of the city's website www.seeglasgow.com offers visitors an easy way to plan their shopping trip as well as book hotels and restaurants.

The Christmas campaign also aims to help the city centre fight off competition from out of town shopping centres such as Brae- head and Silverburn.

Mr Taylor said: "Out of town shopping centres just do not have the same offering that Glasgow city centre has.

"Christmas is not just about filling up the boot of your car and I think that's the difference between Glasgow and everywhere else."

The busiest weekend for Christmas shopping is expected to be November 29 and 30 - just after what will be for many the last pay day before Christmas.

The marketing boss added: "We want to encourage as many people to come to Glasgow to shop as possible.

"We are doing everything we can to promote the city and the city centre as the place to shop at Christmas."


We've got teams with proud Euro tradition. They have Hearts, Hibs . . . and rugby

By John McCann

LABELLED "Edina, Scotia's midden" by Chewin' the Fat's Banter Boys, it's anyone's guess why Edinburgh still gets to call itself the capital of Scotland. Maybe it's like letting Inverness say it's a city.

If the gallusness of Glasgow and its irreverent humour can best be summed up by Billy Connolly, there's still a touch of the Miss Jean Brodies about Auld Reekie.

The average Glaswegian has to remember to look up to see the fabulous Victorian architecture lining so many of our streets.

The average Edinburgher has their nose in the air at the best of times - and still can't see that half the buildings need a good wash.

Take a short drive west from Glasgow and you're in beautiful countryside en route to Loch Lomond.

Try the same in Edinburgh and you'll wind up in Wester Hailes. Think "Oatlands before the demolition" without even a decent chippie for comfort.

Speaking of which, stray into a Corstorphine chip shop and you'll be offered "condiments" with your fish supper.

In other words, a sachet of brown sauce dissolved in a pint of vinegar and slittered over your dinner before you can say "Naaaaaw!"

Much of Edinburgh's New Town was designed by architect Robert Adam whose solid, dependable style also extended to fireplaces.

They seem somehow proud of this.

Glasgow gave the World Charles Rennie Mackintosh whose decorative style works as well in an earring as it does on the fine facade of Glasgow School of Art.

And we have Colin and Justin, fearless interior decorators who dared to transform the lives of the less fortunate in Arden.

Did I mention we know how to laugh at ourselves?

As the capital, Edinburgh has the politicians, sitting in the £414million Scottish Parliament.

And Glasgow has the platforms at Queen Street so we can wave them on their way.

They have Edinburgh Zoo while we have Sauchiehall Street at chucking out time.

Scotland's biggest city really knows how to let its hair down - not to mention its parents, partner, friends and anyone else who finds out what happened last Bank Holiday Friday.

But that helps the Barrowlands have the best concert atmosphere on the planet with a heaving, sweating mosh pit in front of the stage whether the band is the latest rock sensation or a man in a cardigan.

In Edinburgh, some bands settle for a smattering of golf applause that would seem ungrateful to a greenkeeper sweeping the bunkers at St Andrews.

We have football teams with a proud European tradition in Celtic and Rangers, as well as the National Stadium.

They have Hearts and Hibs - and rugby.

Ivor Cutler joked his Gorbals childhood was plagued by the smell of "fecund Edinburgh middens, 40 miles distant" but that seems to have cleared due to the massively ambitious regeneration.

Not in the East, but in the West where the New Gorbals shows what can be achieved when people demand decent homes.

They've got Princes Street, where you can buy a cheap brollie every 50 yards and need to when the weather gets rough.

We've got Princes Square - a shopping oasis in the middle of the, well, bigger shopping oasis that is Buchanan Street.

And while they can pause to look up at the castle, we're too busy shopping to care.

And what is that Waverley Centre all about, anyway?

Okay, they've got Harvey Nicks but we've got time.

Veteran English comedian Jeremy Harding often says how comfortable he feels in Edinburgh because the posh accents of most locals made him feel like he never left home.

But he still got the warmest of welcomes when he came across to a city that loves to laugh at itself. And everyone else while it's at it.

They have their shops, their traditions, their personalities and we have ours - maybe one day we'll meet in the middle.

Aye, and maybe we'll bump into Gordon Ramsay there, opening his new restaurant in the Harthill services.

Publication date 12/11/08

Posted by: martin, Glasgow on 11:16am Wed 12 Nov 08
The reader (sic) poll in this case should have a fourth option; Don't care
Posted by: Eric Flack, Glasgow on 11:26am Wed 12 Nov 08
Lets all go to Braehead its not in Glasgow!
Posted by: jefstewa, govan on 11:32am Wed 12 Nov 08
aye we was robbed of braehead because renfewshire council wanted its grubby hands on it!!
Posted by: jim, Glasgow on 12:03pm Wed 12 Nov 08
If we bulldozed st enoch and buchanan galleries.it would still be better place to shop.
Posted by: Meep, Shawlands on 12:47pm Wed 12 Nov 08
I would like to be positive about this, but the recession is already here. And its irresponsible to sell the idea that we need to "shop" to stop the recession. most of the people ion that video are locals who are probably more worried about paying their gas and food bills than any sort of "luxury" item thats going to cause them greif on their credit card. Tough times are here now, and pretending otherwise is just irresponsible and dangerous.
Posted by: Gazza, Glasgow on 1:06pm Wed 12 Nov 08
The second paragraph of this 'news item' opens with the statement - "With the credit crunch in full swing..." - as if that is, in itself, some sort of marketing slogan. Where is the critical eye here? People should not be goaded into rampant consumerism at a time when many are struggling to make ends meet.
Posted by: Helmut de Smegma, Glasgow on 1:17pm Wed 12 Nov 08
"It was officially launched today by Glasgow's panto stars".

That`ll be it dead in the water then.
Posted by: annie, Glasgow on 1:48pm Wed 12 Nov 08
jefstewa wrote:
aye we was robbed of braehead because renfewshire council wanted its grubby hands on it!!
Eh, you are still allowed to go there you know or you could even visit Glasgow's revenge...Silverburn
.
Posted by: GJS, Glasgow on 1:52pm Wed 12 Nov 08
I also believe that in Edinburgh they occasionally act like civilised human beings but understandably you wanted to miss that part out.
Posted by: wild wadi, kirkie on 3:39pm Wed 12 Nov 08
As much as I slag Glasgow I have to say that it definitely has better shops and better food and at least Glasgow folk have a sense of humour.Oh and less speed cameras.
Posted by: Aly, knightswood on 3:45pm Wed 12 Nov 08
wild wadi wrote:
As much as I slag Glasgow I have to say that it definitely has better shops and better food and at least Glasgow folk have a sense of humour.Oh and less speed cameras.
Glasgow folk have a sense of humor? I'll crack the jokes on this forum pal.
Posted by: The Missing City, Glasgow on 4:22pm Wed 12 Nov 08
GJS wrote:
I also believe that in Edinburgh they occasionally act like civilised human beings but understandably you wanted to miss that part out.
Ha Ha that was funny, but oh so very true being in Edinburgh on numerous occasions throughout the year I can say that Edinburgherers are usually more polite.

Said on here before, I can usually get a smile or a hello out of Edinburgh women before I can get one from women in my native Glasgow. Women in Glasgow are more prone to be aggressive and start a fight, little in the way of pleasantries with the females in this city - most of them probably think you'd be a potential rapist or mugger with even the slightest of eye contact.

Sad but true

Still, its only an advert plugging the crack cocaine type epidemic that is retail therapy - as long as you can get a piece of it, then it seems all is well regardless of what else goes on.
Posted by: Helmut de Smegma, Glasgow on 4:52pm Wed 12 Nov 08
The Missing City wrote:
GJS wrote: I also believe that in Edinburgh they occasionally act like civilised human beings but understandably you wanted to miss that part out.
Ha Ha that was funny, but oh so very true being in Edinburgh on numerous occasions throughout the year I can say that Edinburgherers are usually more polite. Said on here before, I can usually get a smile or a hello out of Edinburgh women before I can get one from women in my native Glasgow. Women in Glasgow are more prone to be aggressive and start a fight, little in the way of pleasantries with the females in this city - most of them probably think you'd be a potential rapist or mugger with even the slightest of eye contact. Sad but true Still, its only an advert plugging the crack cocaine type epidemic that is retail therapy - as long as you can get a piece of it, then it seems all is well regardless of what else goes on.
Obviously Edinburgh women have sympathy for ugly guys?
Posted by: The Missing City, Glasgow on 5:09pm Wed 12 Nov 08
Helmut de Smegma wrote:
The Missing City wrote:
GJS wrote: I also believe that in Edinburgh they occasionally act like civilised human beings but understandably you wanted to miss that part out.
Ha Ha that was funny, but oh so very true being in Edinburgh on numerous occasions throughout the year I can say that Edinburgherers are usually more polite. Said on here before, I can usually get a smile or a hello out of Edinburgh women before I can get one from women in my native Glasgow. Women in Glasgow are more prone to be aggressive and start a fight, little in the way of pleasantries with the females in this city - most of them probably think you'd be a potential rapist or mugger with even the slightest of eye contact. Sad but true Still, its only an advert plugging the crack cocaine type epidemic that is retail therapy - as long as you can get a piece of it, then it seems all is well regardless of what else goes on.
Obviously Edinburgh women have sympathy for ugly guys?
Be it the case that Glasgow guys are pot ugly, fellow Glasgow guy, or whatever you may be - with a name that begins with helmet, I can hardly believe you are the female type unless you have gender issues ;-)

Hmm I rarely see fat and ugly types in Edinburgh, but they exist in Glasgow, perhaps you are self conscious???

Next time a woman has a go at you, just make sure its your fault or you will end up leathered in the Royal.

I've seen this with my own eyes, its not a crime to comment on this, though you may have a differing opinion on that, maybe some people just don't get out much to see what actually goes on.

Ha Ha!
Posted by: Brad on 5:46pm Wed 12 Nov 08
Women in Glasgow are more prone to be aggressive and start a fight, little in the way of pleasantries with the females in this city - most of them probably think you'd be a potential rapist or mugger with even the slightest of eye contact.
I feel compelled to stand up for Weegie burdz here (although they probably don't need my help). I get out plenty, partly in order to, err, interface with Weegie wimmin, and I don't have any problems with the ones I meet. They take no sh!t - but I like that.
Posted by: The Missing City, Glasgow on 6:18pm Wed 12 Nov 08
Brad wrote:
Women in Glasgow are more prone to be aggressive and start a fight, little in the way of pleasantries with the females in this city - most of them probably think you'd be a potential rapist or mugger with even the slightest of eye contact.
I feel compelled to stand up for Weegie burdz here (although they probably don't need my help). I get out plenty, partly in order to, err, interface with Weegie wimmin, and I don't have any problems with the ones I meet. They take no sh!t - but I like that.
They take no sh!t - but I like that.

Hmmmm... that could be dangerous maaaate - especially if she's on her time of the month!!

Ha Ha

Still - I normally don't have a problem with them myself, just some are PURE LOUD, some are PURE PSYCHO, but I suppose some are ok, just have to be in the right places to mingle with the less crazy one's.

The crazy one's being the burd wi the 10 brothers or the one who has the boyfriend wi 15 pals or she may have a gold ring or giant chain thats almost as thick as the Lord Provost's displaying the name of her local team in thick gold letters.

And that being in the city centre.

I should get upmarket - go to the Candleriggs instead of Hope Street (which is a stinking dive may I add - Toby Jug, screaming teenagers out their faces etc - been in that filthy outlet once, some guy wanted a fight for sitting on his seat and all I done was talk to the manager of the place) - it seems to be more civilised down in the old part of town with the healthy hoard of reputable outlets like the Red Lizard etc but I have only saw the area on weeknights after uni.

Time for new adventures haha
Posted by: tadger, big smoke on 7:05pm Wed 12 Nov 08
you sound like a drone
Posted by: wild wadi, kirkie on 8:44pm Wed 12 Nov 08
Aly wrote:
wild wadi wrote: As much as I slag Glasgow I have to say that it definitely has better shops and better food and at least Glasgow folk have a sense of humour.Oh and less speed cameras.
Glasgow folk have a sense of humor? I'll crack the jokes on this forum pal.
We have football teams with a proud European tradition in Celtic and Rangers, as well as the National Stadium.
They have Hearts and Hibs



They've got Hearts and Hibs? We've got Rangers and Celtic? Hardly a boast? Eh?
Posted by: whiskyjack, Tyne and Wear on 10:37pm Wed 12 Nov 08
Me and ma missus r off tae Glesga furra Xmas shop, and to see the lights in Geo Sq. It's no the same on the cooncil webcam :o( As a weegie, I don't understand how Glasgow gets slagged off so much. Ok... so the subway can't take wheelchairs, and First Bus WON'T take wheelchairs! Glesga folk should be proud of their city, no' havin a dig at it. Every place has it's faults, so talk about the positives and not the negatives. I grew up in one of the "deprived" areas... Possilpark. We had plenty to do when we were weans. Putting greens, fitba' pitches, swing park, Springburn Park, Art Galleries, Transport Museum... ALL free!!!!! Plus the famous Glesga dry humour, and very helpful people.
Posted by: weeglo, Hawaii on 3:44am Thu 13 Nov 08
whiskyjack wrote:
Me and ma missus r off tae Glesga furra Xmas shop, and to see the lights in Geo Sq. It's no the same on the cooncil webcam :o( As a weegie, I don't understand how Glasgow gets slagged off so much. Ok... so the subway can't take wheelchairs, and First Bus WON'T take wheelchairs! Glesga folk should be proud of their city, no' havin a dig at it. Every place has it's faults, so talk about the positives and not the negatives. I grew up in one of the "deprived" areas... Possilpark. We had plenty to do when we were weans. Putting greens, fitba' pitches, swing park, Springburn Park, Art Galleries, Transport Museum... ALL free!!!!! Plus the famous Glesga dry humour, and very helpful people.
couldn't agree with you more whiskyjack, I was also brought up in Possil, I am thankfull for what I have now, but they were some of the bast days I have ever lived all the neighbors were in the same boat as everyone else so there was no trying to keep up with the Jones's.
Posted by: Titus a duxas, Ft.McMurray on 4:18am Thu 13 Nov 08
ah hiv a question that might **** off some of the posters here, can anyone please tell me why about 90 to 99 per cent of people in Glasgow wear mostly black clothing, I don't mean tae slag anyone it's just when ah was watching the video nearly everyone was wearing black.all ma family live in Glasgow so ah'm no trying tae be sarcastic, ah jist wondered........
Posted by: The Missing City, Glasgow on 9:57am Thu 13 Nov 08
tadger wrote:
you sound like a drone
If that was in reference to me

Definition of Drone:

One who performs menial or tedious work; a drudge.

Yip, the work I do is absolutely pish

However, if it was a dig, as to slag me, thats rich coming from a poster who goes by the name of tadger - Big Smoke.

Not suggesting that you smoke a lot of tadgers of course!!! ;-)
Posted by: The Missing City, Glasgow on 10:04am Thu 13 Nov 08
Titus a duxas wrote:
ah hiv a question that might **** off some of the posters here, can anyone please tell me why about 90 to 99 per cent of people in Glasgow wear mostly black clothing, I don't mean tae slag anyone it's just when ah was watching the video nearly everyone was wearing black.all ma family live in Glasgow so ah'm no trying tae be sarcastic, ah jist wondered........
Black is a cool colour actually
Posted by: The Missing City, Glasgow on 10:08am Thu 13 Nov 08
whiskyjack wrote:
Me and ma missus r off tae Glesga furra Xmas shop, and to see the lights in Geo Sq. It's no the same on the cooncil webcam :o( As a weegie, I don't understand how Glasgow gets slagged off so much. Ok... so the subway can't take wheelchairs, and First Bus WON'T take wheelchairs! Glesga folk should be proud of their city, no' havin a dig at it. Every place has it's faults, so talk about the positives and not the negatives. I grew up in one of the "deprived" areas... Possilpark. We had plenty to do when we were weans. Putting greens, fitba' pitches, swing park, Springburn Park, Art Galleries, Transport Museum... ALL free!!!!! Plus the famous Glesga dry humour, and very helpful people.
We had plenty to do when we were weans. Putting greens, fitba' pitches, swing park, Springburn Park, Transport Museum... ALL free!!!!! Plus the famous Glesga dry humour, and very helpful people.

Don't think there is much to do in Springburn or Possil nowadays

Thats unless you like a drink of course, maybe something a bit stronger, but you would have to watch oot furra polis!


Posted by: ERIC LOTHIAN, everywhere on 10:22am Thu 13 Nov 08
no thanks im not into shopping in provincial cities so i'll be steering away from glasgow
Posted by: rmackay2, vancouver bc on 12:31pm Thu 13 Nov 08
To Whiskyjack, I couldn't have said it better,I remember the old Glasgow well,going to see Santa Claus at Lewis's,the big queue, I think it was Miller street all the way up to the 4TH. floor now it's a gigantic mall, I liked Virgin & H.M.V. shops, there is no better place to spend Xmas than Glasgow, you feel the atmosphere, shopping,pantomines etc. Agnes & Robert Mackay Vancouver B.C. Can.
Posted by: wild wadi, kirkie on 4:23pm Thu 13 Nov 08
Titus a duxas wrote:
ah hiv a question that might **** off some of the posters here, can anyone please tell me why about 90 to 99 per cent of people in Glasgow wear mostly black clothing, I don't mean tae slag anyone it's just when ah was watching the video nearly everyone was wearing black.all ma family live in Glasgow so ah'm no trying tae be sarcastic, ah jist wondered........
Somebody said that BLACK is "slimming".

As I write this I'm wearing black trousers, black t shirt, black trainers, black sox, black trakie top and a'v got black hair.So that when a go intae the "toon" a don't stick oot.
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