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00:30Good afternoon, good afternoon, noisy audience today, and welcome to the Countdown Studio, and after the excitement of our series finals last week, we're kicking off a new series today, on this Monday, and there happens to be another tournament that's kicking off today, the oldest tennis tournament in the whole world. Why? It's Wimbledon 2016. Extraordinary. The competition was founded way back in 1877, and Rachel, I've got some great stats here for you.
00:59I'm not going to ask you questions. Well, maybe I will. How many spectators do you think turn up every year at Wimbledon?
01:06300,000?
01:07Near. Half a million.
01:09Yeah. And how many balls are banged over the net, do you think, during gameplay?
01:16Uh, 10,000?
01:1850,000.
01:19Wow.
01:2050,000. And around 140,000 portions of the iconic strawberries and cream are guzzled in the restaurants and courtside, I suppose, at Wimbledon. It's a great, great tournament. I've been a couple of times. I saw Federer playing. It was brilliant. Have you been? Do you play tennis? Do you like tennis?
01:40I'm terrible at playing, but I've been to Wimbledon once, and it's amazing. The atmosphere is so different, because I'm used to football. So the audiences at Wimbledon, compared to the crowds at Old Trafford, a slightly different genre. And everyone's so polite, and you've got all the armed forces there, keeping everyone in check.
01:54Exactly.
01:54Telling you when to be quiet, when to sit down, when to stand up. It's very civilised.
01:58Let's, uh, let's, uh, hope that, uh, Andy gets, uh, has a good show this year, anyway.
02:03Exactly.
02:03Andy Murray. God bless him. Now then, who's with us, uh, Rachel? We've got Norm Ahmad is back, our reigning champion from Northolt in Middlesex, who's a traveller, and he's clambered up Kilimanjaro. That must have been, uh, fun. What time of year was it?
02:15Uh, it was October, about three years ago.
02:17Okay. Is there always snow on the peak?
02:20Uh, I think there is, yeah. There wasn't too much when I was there, but there was a little bit.
02:24You got to the top?
02:24Yeah.
02:25Good for you.
02:25Good fun.
02:26And you're joined today by, uh, Andrew Fenton, who has something of a mountain to climb if he's, uh, to beat you.
02:32Today's, uh, sales director from Roos in the Vale of Glamorgan, who's, uh, a sports lover, plays cricket for Barry Wanderers Cricket Club, and you play Skittles too.
02:42I do.
02:42Now, tell us a bit about this Skittles of yours.
02:44It's a bit of a dwindling sport, but, um, I'm captain for a local side, um, and called the Caffin Originals in Panath.
02:50Skittles? You play indoors?
02:52Indoor Skittles, yes.
02:53Good fun, though.
02:53Yeah, it is.
02:54Good exercise, too.
02:55Good exercise. Keep, guess everyone out of the house. Gives their respective partners a break for three hours, so.
03:00Exactly. Well, that's a big round of applause, then, for Andrew and Norm.
03:06Andrew and Norm.
03:07And over in the corner, after a peaceful weekend, I trust, the wonderful Susie Dent, joined once again by, well, we term him a friend of the show. None other than John, cultural comedian, impressionist, and all-round good guy. Welcome back, John.
03:21Oh, I always love my countdown weeks, especially at the start of Wimbledon. Indeed.
03:26Yeah, which gives me, you know, a great opportunity, you know, to, like, bring out the Andy Murray, and I'm hoping for some great games, and I will speak with this level of unbridled joy.
03:36Good for you. Good for you. More from you later, John. But now let's get down to business with Norm. Norm.
03:44Hi, Rachel.
03:44Hi, Norm.
03:45Can I start with a consonant, please?
03:46Thank you. Start the week with L.
03:49And another.
03:52H.
03:52And another.
03:55T.
03:56And a vowel.
03:58U.
03:59And a vowel.
04:00E.
04:02And a vowel.
04:04I.
04:05And a consonant.
04:08S.
04:09Consonant.
04:11N.
04:13And, uh...
04:14Final consonant, please.
04:16And a final P.
04:18And here's the countdown clock.
04:20MUSIC PLAYS
04:44Well, Norm.
04:52Uh, seven.
04:53A seven.
04:54Good start.
04:54Andrew.
04:55Add a seven.
04:56Mm-hmm.
04:56Norm.
04:57Puniest.
04:58And?
04:59Same word.
05:00There we go.
05:03Puniest, gentlemen.
05:05Absolutely fine.
05:06Yes.
05:07And John?
05:08Susie?
05:08Yeah, there was another, an alternative seven there.
05:11Uh, utensil.
05:12Yeah.
05:12Uh, but just at the last moment, uh, Susie uncovered an eight.
05:16Uh, sulfite, uh, is there.
05:18Ten from chemistry.
05:19It's a salt of sulfurous acid.
05:21Thank goodness for that.
05:23All right, well done.
05:24Seven apiece.
05:24And we turn to you, Andrew.
05:26Letters.
05:27Hi, Rachel.
05:28Hi, Andrew.
05:28Consonant, please.
05:30Start with L.
05:31And a vowel.
05:32O.
05:34Uh, consonant.
05:36S.
05:38Vowel.
05:40A.
05:41Consonant, please.
05:43R.
05:45Consonant.
05:46N.
05:48A vowel.
05:49E.
05:51Consonant.
05:53F.
05:55And a final vowel, please.
05:58And a final I.
06:00Stand by.
06:02And a kernel.
06:04So.
06:05And a conduction.
06:06Here to the.
06:09I am.
06:09Talk to you.
06:10Okay.
06:11Bye.
06:11I am.
06:17Are you.
06:20And also.
06:21Come.
06:25I am.
06:26Bye.
06:29Bye.
06:31Bye.
06:32yes Andrew a risky eight risky eight thank you eight and a certain eight I
06:39think Andrew four-lane and Norm ailerons ailerons yeah come up now and
06:48again they do so to speak yes there's um what about Andrew on an airplane wing
06:53um four-lane unfortunately Andrew is not there so it was a risky one I'm sorry
06:59bad luck yeah now then in the corner there was another an eight starting with
07:06four which was a for sale yes as in for sale in the shipping term okay rather
07:12than the for sale yeah yeah all right anything else insofar is there for seven
07:19insofar all right well done 15 therefore to Norm Andrew on seven Norm's taking
07:24the lead and it's his numbers game can I go for three large please you can indeed
07:30thank you norm three from the top row and three little ones for the first time this
07:33series and these numbers are ten four one and the large three 175 and 50 and the
07:42target four hundred and nine four oh nine
07:49yes Norm
08:16Yes, Norm?
08:18409.
08:19409, Andrew?
08:21409.
08:21Norm?
08:22100 times 4.
08:24100 times 4, 400.
08:26Plus 10.
08:27Yeah.
08:27Minus 1.
08:28Yeah, very straightforward.
08:29There we go.
08:30Andrew?
08:31Same way.
08:32OK.
08:33There we go.
08:33All right.
08:36So 25 plays 17 as we go into our first tea time teaser,
08:40which is shame, bud.
08:42And the clue, attack surprisingly, and I'm tired.
08:46Attack surprisingly, and I'm tired.
09:05Welcome back.
09:06I left you with the clue, attack surprisingly, and I'm tired.
09:12I've been ambushed.
09:14Ambushed is the word.
09:16There we go.
09:16Norm on 25, Andrew's 17, and it's Andrew's letters game.
09:20Good luck.
09:20Consonant, please, Rachel.
09:21Thank you, Andrew.
09:23S.
09:23And a vowel.
09:25A.
09:27Consonant.
09:29H.
09:30A vowel.
09:32U.
09:34Consonant, please.
09:36P.
09:38Vowel.
09:38O.
09:40O.
09:41Consonant.
09:43R.
09:44A consonant.
09:46N.
09:48And a vowel, please.
09:51And the last one, E.
09:53Stand by.
09:54And the last one.
10:04I'll now be with you.
10:08I'll see you next time.
10:09What glory?
10:10I'll see you next time from the another вот hoy.
10:11And the last one, I'll see you next time.
10:11I'll see you next time.
10:11Voila.
10:12And the last one, E.
10:13We watch you next time.
10:13I'll see you next time.
10:13Thanks to Julie.
10:14See you next time.
10:14Y'all.
10:14See you next time.
10:15Why can I listen like you?
10:15Today?
10:15I'll see you next time.
10:16Bye.
10:16Bye.
10:17Bye.
10:17Bye-bye.
10:17Bye.
10:18Bye.
10:18Bye.
10:18Bye.
10:19Bye.
10:20Stand by.
10:21Andrew?
10:27Seven.
10:28Seven, Norm?
10:30Six.
10:31You're six?
10:32Phones.
10:33Now then, Andrew.
10:34A bit risky.
10:35Phoners.
10:36Phoners.
10:38OK.
10:39Let's have a look.
10:42Sometimes they refer to an interview as a phoner,
10:44if it's on the phone, that type of thing.
10:46Absolutely right, yes.
10:47And that's originally US, but it's an interview conducted over the telephone
10:51or, indeed, a person who makes a telephone call.
10:53Well done.
10:54Good man.
10:54Yeah.
10:55Well done.
10:56Does wonders for you, too.
10:5724 to Norm's 25.
10:59Over in the corner, what have you dialled up?
11:03We spotted quite a nice six prunes, was there, for six.
11:07But a seven, another seven orphans.
11:10Very good.
11:10That lot.
11:11Very good.
11:12Prunes.
11:13Very good.
11:14Make you not only regular, but frequent.
11:16There used to be Granny's warning.
11:18Anything else, is it?
11:19No.
11:19We should start with orphans and prunes, not together.
11:22Thank you very well.
11:23Thank you very much.
11:2425 to 24, then.
11:26And Norm, only a point in it.
11:28Consonant, please.
11:29Thank you, Norm.
11:31W.
11:32And another.
11:34T.
11:35And another.
11:37R.
11:38And a vowel.
11:40I.
11:41Vowel.
11:43A.
11:44Consonant.
11:46P.
11:46Vowel.
11:50O.
11:53Vowel.
11:55A.
11:57And a...
12:00Consonant, please.
12:01And the last one.
12:02C.
12:03Stand by.
12:04Off.
12:06Catch you later.
12:09T.
12:14wondering who I am.
12:15Oder,
12:25T.
12:26T.
12:27T.
12:27T.
12:27T.
12:28T.
12:29T.
12:29T.
12:30T.
12:30T.
12:31T.
12:31T.
12:31T.
12:31T.
12:32T.
12:32T.
12:32Yes, Norm?
12:37Seven.
12:37A seven.
12:38Andrew?
12:39Only mine's a four there.
12:41That four...
12:42Yep.
12:42...is...
12:43Crow.
12:44Now then, Norm.
12:45Apricot.
12:47Apricot.
12:48Crow one minute, apricot the next.
12:51And in the corner, John?
12:53This particular word, it's one of the finest you can say in a Geordie accent.
12:56Go on.
12:56And it's...
12:57Tap you, Walker.
13:01Tap you, Walker.
13:02Oh, lovely.
13:05You do make me laugh.
13:07That was lovely.
13:0832 to 24.
13:10Norm in the lead.
13:11Stronger in the lead.
13:12Andrew, numbers time.
13:13Two from the top, please, and four from anywhere else.
13:16Thank you, Andrew.
13:16Two large, four not large.
13:19And this time, they are eight.
13:21Another eight.
13:22Seven, one.
13:24And the large two, 150.
13:27And the target, 905.
13:30905.
13:32One.
13:36One.
13:43One.
13:45One.
13:45One.
13:50One.
13:51Two.
13:52Andrew.
14:039.05, not written down.
14:06All right, and Norm?
14:079.06.
14:099.06.
14:10Andrew.
14:118 times 100.
14:138 times 100, 800.
14:158.7 is 56.
14:16The other 8.
14:19Add the 50 as well.
14:22906.
14:22And minus 1.
14:239.05, lovely.
14:24Very good.
14:25All right.
14:27Thank you very much.
14:29So you've sprung into a lead by two points, 34 to 32.
14:33As we turn to John Culshaw.
14:36John Culshaw.
14:38You've been working with the great Tom Baker, I hear.
14:40Yes, a few months ago on one of the Big Finish audio Doctor Who productions.
14:46And when you're working with Tom Baker, the anecdotes are non-stop.
14:52It was a three-day record.
14:54And he was sitting there in the green room and the anecdotes were just perpetual and absolutely
15:00marvellous, just springing from the top of the mind all the time.
15:03And there was one of them where he said, yes, I love to rise at early light, just before
15:09dawn.
15:10Wonderful time.
15:11It feels you have the whole planet to yourself.
15:14And I love to take the dog for a walk.
15:16We have a wonderful lurcher, a wonderful lurcher who follows me around in the woodland near
15:22my home.
15:23And we walk just before dawn.
15:25Sometimes the cat joins us too, and we form a little pack.
15:28And I simply like to walk around with that sense that you have the whole planet to yourself.
15:33And I love to recite Shakespeare to myself.
15:37Yes, I do let all the number of stars give light to thy fair way.
15:41Wonderful.
15:42One of life's little pleasures.
15:43And I thought, imagine if you were just innocently going about your business, strolling around
15:47early one morning, and there you saw Tom Baker, the doctor, walking around, quoting Shakespeare
15:53in the woodland.
15:55It would be such a marvellous sight.
15:56And these anecdotes were endless and quite wonderful.
16:02The rest of them, however, were unbroadcastable.
16:07So I must leave it there, as a matter of fact.
16:09But yeah, wonderful.
16:10He makes, he once said that, you know, he could make any old rubbish sound like Shakespeare.
16:15You know his voice wherever it is.
16:17Yes, there's not too many commercial ad breaks where you don't hear Tom Baker talking about
16:23something.
16:24Call now.
16:25No too far away.
16:28Brilliant.
16:28Well done, John.
16:29Lovely.
16:31Well done.
16:34Because you do two of the great voices, Baker, which is so...
16:39And the other one, of course, is William Hague.
16:41Nobody else has got a voice like Hague.
16:43Oh, no, certainly not.
16:44There is a very nice way that he sort of stretches the words.
16:49Maybe I will announce the next few words as William Hague as the crucial countdown conundrum.
17:00Well done, John.
17:01Now then, what shall we do?
17:02Norm, let's have a letters game.
17:04Can I have a consonant, please?
17:06Thank you, Norm.
17:07R.
17:08Any consonant?
17:10D.
17:11Consonant?
17:14R.
17:15Vowel.
17:15U.
17:17Vowel.
17:19E.
17:20Vowel.
17:22I.
17:24Consonant?
17:26V.
17:27Consonant?
17:29T.
17:31And a vowel, please.
17:33And lastly, A.
17:36Stand by.
17:45Well, Norm.
18:09Seven.
18:10And Andrew.
18:12Seven.
18:12Two sevens.
18:14Arrived.
18:15Andrew.
18:16I've also arrived.
18:18I've all come together.
18:20And John?
18:21Yes, quite a nice bunch of sevens in that line-up there.
18:24Tarried was there for seven.
18:27Tardier.
18:28Yes.
18:28Another seven, but there is an eight, isn't there, Susie?
18:30There is, yes.
18:31It's a grammatical term, durative, D-U-R-A-T-I-V-E, and it is relating to continuing action of a tense,
18:40for example, as opposed to punctual, something that occurs at a very specific time.
18:45Well done.
18:48OK.
18:50So, Andrew, 41, plays Norm on 39, and it's Andrew's letters game now.
18:55Andrew.
18:56A consonant, please, Rachel.
18:57Thank you, Andrew.
18:59G.
19:00And another?
19:02D.
19:03And a vowel, please.
19:05E.
19:07Consonant.
19:08Q.
19:09Thanks.
19:10Vowel.
19:12Any time.
19:13O.
19:14Another vowel.
19:16I.
19:17Consonant.
19:19R.
19:20Consonant.
19:22N.
19:24And another consonant, please.
19:25And the last one.
19:26S.
19:28Stand by.
19:28And another consonant, please.
19:30And another consonant, please.
19:31And another consonant, please.
19:32And another consonant, please.
19:33And another consonant, please.
19:34And another consonant, please.
19:35And another consonant, please.
19:36And another consonant, please.
19:37And another consonant, please.
19:38And another consonant, please.
19:39And another consonant, please.
19:40And another consonant, please.
19:41And another consonant, please.
19:42And another consonant, please.
19:43And another consonant, please.
19:44And another consonant, please.
19:45And another consonant, please.
19:46And another consonant, please.
19:47And another consonant, please.
19:48And another consonant, please.
19:49And another consonant, please.
19:50And another consonant, please.
19:51And another consonant, please.
19:52And another consonant, please.
19:53And another consonant, please.
19:54And another consonant, please.
19:55And another consonant, please.
19:56andrew seven seven norm seven andrew redoing redoing and eroding and eroding very nice yes
20:10happy about that yes deliriously happy yes yes yes but you can beat it no we can't actually
20:18we're matching our sevens yeah we can offer a couple of alternatives regions and ignores
20:22i was there for another alternative couple of sevens very good but that's as far as it goes
20:27thank you susie all right norm it's numbers time i'll try six small please thank you norm six
20:34little ones coming up for you and we'll see if this changes the lead right these six little ones
20:39are seven one ten another seven three and four and the target 280 280
20:50so
20:55thank you norm
21:23uh 280 and andrew yes 280 there we go let's uh let's hear it norm four times seven times ten
21:30yeah very straightforward and andrew same with me there we go let's not waste too much time on that
21:35so it's 58 to norms 56 as we turn to our second tea time teaser which is seek tall and the clue the
21:44woman was seeking a tall man but she didn't want anybody too thin the woman was seeking a tall man
21:50but she didn't want anybody too thin
21:56anybody that was too sort of skeletal skeletal is the word there we go 58 plays 56 andrew two points in the lead andrew
22:03uh
22:24uh consonant please thank you andrew n and another t and another b and a vowel please
22:36u another vowel a and another vowel i and a consonant g consonant r and continent please and lastly s
22:54stand by
22:55so
23:01so
23:03andrew um
23:17andrew eight and eight norm eight
23:22Andrew?
23:28Eight.
23:29And A, Norm?
23:30Eight.
23:31Andrew?
23:32Bursting.
23:33And?
23:34Same.
23:35There we go.
23:36We're happy with that bursting.
23:42And can we match it in the corner?
23:45Yeah, there was...
23:46We spotted guitars for quite a nice seven.
23:49But urbanist is there for a rather good eight, isn't it?
23:53It is, yes.
23:54An advocate of or expert in city planning.
23:57That is an urbanist.
23:58An urbanist, indeed.
23:59Well done.
24:00Thank you for that.
24:01Still two points in it.
24:0266 to Norm 64.
24:05Norm, what are we going to do?
24:07A consonant, please.
24:08Thank you, Norm.
24:09R.
24:10And a consonant.
24:13G.
24:14And a consonant.
24:16R.
24:17A vowel.
24:19E.
24:20Vowel.
24:21A.
24:23Vowel.
24:25I.
24:26A consonant.
24:28T.
24:29A consonant.
24:32K.
24:33And a vowel, please.
24:36And lastly, O.
24:39Stand by.
24:40And a vowel.
24:41And a vowel, please.
24:41And a vowel, please.
24:43And a vowel, please.
24:43And a vowel, please.
24:44And a vowel, please.
24:45And a vowel, please.
24:45And a vowel, please.
24:45And a vowel, please.
24:45And a vowel, please.
24:46And a vowel, please.
24:46And a vowel, please.
24:47And a vowel, please.
24:47And a vowel, please.
24:48And a vowel, please.
24:49And a vowel, please.
24:49And a vowel, please.
24:50And a vowel, please.
24:51And a vowel, please.
24:51And a vowel, please.
24:52And a vowel, please.
24:53And a vowel, please.
24:53And a vowel, please.
24:54And a vowel, please.
24:55And a vowel, please.
24:55And a vowel, please.
24:56And a vowel, please.
24:57And a vowel, please.
25:10Norm?
25:12A six.
25:14A six, and Andrew?
25:15And a six.
25:17Norm?
25:18Garter.
25:19And Goiter.
25:22Can we stretch it beyond six?
25:25There's a run of sixes on that one.
25:26Grater was there for six.
25:28Yes, as in cheese.
25:29Yes.
25:29Toreg.
25:30Toreg.
25:31We're just there for another six.
25:33Who was saying that, Toreg?
25:35You used to hear it, Only Fools and Horses.
25:38I heard that quite a lot on there.
25:39Or maybe, Albert Steptoe, you toe rag.
25:44He'd probably say it about arrows, wouldn't he?
25:48I'm sure he was.
25:50Now then, what do we do?
25:5117 to 72, and on 72, as we turn to the wonder that is Susie Dent.
25:58Susie, what have you got for us today?
25:59Well, I'm going to be covering some of our wonderful viewers' emails,
26:04because they're coming in thick and fast, which many thanks.
26:06And this one comes from Neil Jones, who emailed in to say,
26:10Etiquette is clearly French, but where does it come from?
26:14And he's right.
26:15Etiquette is, of course, French.
26:16And we're all ruled by it, codes of social behavior.
26:20And even today, we observe these rituals, or we fulfill the expectations, really,
26:26of our society in so many ways.
26:28The term began with the old French, estiquier, and that actually meant to fix or to attach.
26:36It's the root of the English verb to stick.
26:38So, estiquier also was related to an estiquette, and that was a written order that originally assigned a soldier to his billet.
26:48And then after that, it was any general notice that was pinned up or stuck on the wall,
26:53declaring certain events or certain prohibitions, for example.
26:58And this sentence was taken up in English as ticket, something stuck up, really.
27:03But etiquette moved in a slightly different direction.
27:06And if you take the court of Louis XIV, all visitors would be issued with an etiquette card.
27:13And this etiquette card was incredibly important.
27:15It brought instructions on what to wear, what to call the people around you.
27:21There was, for example, no touching at all of any royal personage, so that was down on there as well.
27:27But etiquette really began to take off with the Victorians,
27:30and that was when it really came into English.
27:33The Victorians loved manuals, telling them what to do, essentially.
27:37But if you look back to Louis XIV, that's where etiquette was incredibly important.
27:43And we still, in some way, bear that legacy today.
27:46Brilliant.
27:47So good.
27:52That's wonderful.
27:54And the etiquette in letter writing, there's a book on it, actually.
27:57Yeah, well, there's all sorts of etiquette books, and they're still very popular today, I think.
28:01Yeah.
28:01All right, so 72 to 17.
28:03Andrew's still wafer-thin lead there of two points, as we turn back to you, Andrew, for a letters game.
28:09A consonant, please.
28:10Thank you, Andrew.
28:11M.
28:12And a vowel, please.
28:14A.
28:15Consonant.
28:18D.
28:18And another.
28:19And the last one, I.
28:41Stand by.
29:12Yeah.
29:14Andrew.
29:15Six.
29:16A six and?
29:17Six also.
29:18Andrew.
29:19Summit.
29:19Summit and?
29:21Amidst.
29:23Hmm.
29:24Nice.
29:24Nicely done, yeah.
29:25I haven't seen that one.
29:26Can we beat it?
29:28Er, no, there was another six there.
29:30Autism was there for another six.
29:33And although all the letters together, Mad Sumati, it sounds like a martial art yet to be invented.
29:39Exactly.
29:39A black belt in Mad Sumati.
29:41Yeah, dangerous thing.
29:42Very, very dangerous, John.
29:44Susie, anything else?
29:45No, admits Summit again, but it seemed to be a run of sixes, that one.
29:49All right.
29:50All right.
29:51Still drew points as we go to the final letters game.
29:55Norm, things are getting dangerous here.
29:57Yeah.
29:58Can I start with a consonant, please?
29:59Thank you, Norm.
30:00D.
30:01And a consonant.
30:04L.
30:05And a consonant.
30:07N.
30:09A vowel.
30:10E.
30:12Vowel.
30:13A.
30:14A vowel.
30:16O.
30:17Consonant.
30:19G.
30:20A.
30:22Vowel.
30:24E.
30:26And the final vowel, please.
30:28And the last one.
30:29I.
30:31Countdown.
30:31B.
30:33A.
30:34Bean,
30:37C.
30:40A.
30:44Telem,
30:45C.
30:47A.
30:47Norm?
31:04Seven.
31:04A seven and?
31:06Seven.
31:06Two sevens. Norm?
31:08Leading.
31:09Now then, Andrew.
31:10Aligned.
31:12And aligned.
31:13Yes, very nice.
31:14Very good.
31:15Yep.
31:15What can we do better?
31:17We have an eight.
31:18News just in.
31:19Yes, it's a literary term and it's legioned.
31:23So something is legioned if it's arrayed in legions.
31:32Sorry, can you just explain that a little bit more deeply?
31:34Well, you might talk about meadows being legioned with daisies or flowers, for example.
31:38It just means populated by many, I think, in that literary sense.
31:44All right.
31:4583 to 85.
31:47Now then, Andrew.
31:49Numbers time.
31:50Two from the top.
31:51Please raise your four anywhere else.
31:53Thank you, Andrew.
31:53Two large, four, little.
31:55And the final one of the day is 10, 6, 8, 2.
32:01And the large, 250.
32:02And 100, all the evens.
32:05And the target, 857.
32:078, 5, 7.
32:088, 5, 7.
32:088, 5, 7.
32:088, 5, 7.
32:08Transcription by CastingWords
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