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Tam Cowan (born 21 April 1969) is a football journalist, radio and television presenter. He was educated at Braidhurst High School in Motherwell. Cowan presented Scottish football comedy TV show ''Offside''. He has also taken to live stand-up comedy by taking "Offside" to the stage in 2002. The show was recorded live at the King's Theatre, Glasgow for DVD. In February 2010, Cowan presented ''It's Never Too Late'', a six-part documentary series for STV on literacy and numeracy difficulties among adults. Cowan was also a guest presenter for STV's overnight interactive strand ''The Nightshift'' and rejoined the station on Tuesday 20 September 2011 as a main co-presenter for the lifestyle magazine show ''The Hour'', alongside Michelle McManus.〔(Record man Tam Cowan to co-host The Hour as it returns to TV in new format )〕〔(Tam Cowan joins Michelle McManus for The Hour’s new primetime show )〕 The programme was axed four weeks after a move to a weekly prime time slot and a revamp of the programme led to low ratings.〔(BBC News - STV drops magazine show The Hour )〕 For 16 years Cowan was a restaurant critic and reviewer, and additional columnist with the ''Daily Record'' newspaper.〔 He moved to their rival newspaper, The Scottish Sun, in March 2014. Cowan presents the comedy football radio show ''Off the Ball'' on BBC Radio Scotland, along with Daily Record journalist and good friend Stuart Cosgrove. Cowan was temporarily dropped from ''Off the Ball'' in 2013 for allegedly sexist remarks made about women's football in his ''Daily Record'' column. It is also well known that Cowan is a fan of Motherwell. ==References== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Tam Cowan」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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