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00:30Hello, everybody. Welcome to Countdown. It's Wednesday afternoon, so we'll do our best to be cheery and sort of kick away any of those midweek blues that we often get. How are you doing, Rachel?
00:41Very well. How are you?
00:42Yeah, we'll start a happy birthday to Dawn French. It's her birthday today. She'd be good in Dictionary Corner if we could afford her.
00:49I totally agree.
00:50Yeah, she'd be wonderful. Right. Haven't done a quiz in ages. Love a little midweek quiz. So, obviously, we know what she's famous for.
00:59Mm-hmm. So, an example would be, I'll say to you, Reverend Geraldine Granger. Right. And you would say to me...
01:08The Vicar of Dibley. Correct. That's what we're going to do to celebrate Dawn French's birthday. Right. So, I will give you the great female sitcom character.
01:16Go on, then. You give me the programme.
01:17OK. The first one's a bit old school. Right.
01:21Sophia Petrillo.
01:26Old school, old school. Yeah.
01:28No, I don't know. Moonlighting.
01:29I'll give you a clue. She was the mum and it was four women and she was scathing. She was scathing. So funny.
01:38Golden Girls? The Golden Girls. Oh, wow.
01:40Yeah, well, you're not getting that. I mean, I basically give it to you.
01:43Right, here's a more modern one that I wouldn't get.
01:46OK.
01:47Leslie Knope.
01:49Give me a clue.
01:52Politics, loosely.
01:54Leslie Knope. I don't know. Politics, Veep.
01:56Parks and Recreation.
01:58Oh, OK.
01:59I thought it would have been your one. Oh, no, it is. It's funny.
02:01OK.
02:02Saoirse Monica Jackson.
02:06Oh, she's got to be Irish.
02:08Saoirse. It's Irish.
02:09Is it Derry Girls?
02:09It's Derry Girls!
02:11Yay!
02:11Derry Girls. Very funny.
02:12One of Channel 4's best shows.
02:14Very, very funny.
02:15Well, the Dictionary Corner, our leading lady of Countdown, our guardian of the Dictionary,
02:19Susie Dent.
02:20And back again, a man of many talents, food being right up there on the list.
02:25Yeah, he's never, ever cooked lunch for us.
02:27And this is his third time in Dictionary Corner.
02:30How many more hints can we drop? Levi Root!
02:34We're rocking and rolling. It's Philip Goodwin.
02:37A very close game yesterday.
02:38We have a new champion, our maths teacher, who's living in Bristol.
02:42How are you, sir?
02:43Yeah, I'm good, thanks.
02:44Good. You're up against Stephanie Mitchell.
02:46How are you, Steph?
02:47Fine, thanks.
02:48You're an international woman of travel.
02:51So you're living in England.
02:52You're from Edinburgh, but you grew up...
02:54I was born in England.
02:55I grew up in New England, in Massachusetts.
02:59Nice.
02:59And now I live in Edinburgh.
03:01Right, so well-travelled.
03:02Well-travelled.
03:03OK.
03:04First of all, dear Stephanie and Philip.
03:08Right, Philip, let's see if you can steal a few points.
03:11Hi, Rachel.
03:12Hi, Philip.
03:13Can I have a vowel, please?
03:14You can indeed start today with A.
03:18And a consonant.
03:20R.
03:22Another consonant.
03:23H.
03:26A vowel, please.
03:28O.
03:29A consonant.
03:32W.
03:34A vowel.
03:36I.
03:38A consonant.
03:41N.
03:43A vowel, please.
03:46E.
03:46And I'll finish off with a consonant.
03:51Finish with P.
03:53At home and in the studio.
03:55Let's play content.
03:55Now I'll finish move on to next.
03:57I'll finish with a little after.
03:58Second.
03:59Take care.
04:01See you through.
04:02Bye.
04:03Bye-bye.
04:03Bye-bye.
04:06Bye.
04:06Bye-bye.
04:07Bye.
04:14Bye-bye.
04:16Bye-bye.
04:18Bye-bye.
04:19Bye-bye.
04:20Bye-bye.
04:23Bye-bye.
04:24Bye-bye.
04:25How many, Philip?
04:27Just five.
04:29Just the five. And Stephanie?
04:31Try a six. Try the six. The five is?
04:33Just power.
04:35Yeah, and the six?
04:36Whiner. Whiner, to whine on.
04:39Real whiner. I'm sure that will be in. Absolutely, yes.
04:43What are you harping on about over there, Levi?
04:46A seven, actually. Phonier.
04:48Oh, yeah, there you go.
04:49Yes, more thick.
04:50Whiner and phonier, loads of negative words.
04:52Stephanie, your first time picking the letters.
04:56Hello, Rachel. Hi, Stephanie.
04:58May I have a vowel, please?
04:59You may, indeed.
05:01U.
05:02And a consonant?
05:05N.
05:06And another consonant?
05:08F.
05:10And yet another?
05:12D.
05:13A vowel, please.
05:15A.
05:17Another vowel?
05:18I.
05:18I.
05:21One more vowel.
05:23E.
05:25Consonant?
05:28N.
05:29And consonant.
05:30And a final R.
05:32And 30 seconds.
05:33I.
05:34I.
05:35I.
05:35MUSIC
06:03How many, Stephanie?
06:05Just six.
06:06And Philip?
06:07Seven.
06:08Seven.
06:09The six is?
06:10Unfair.
06:11And the seven is?
06:13Fainter.
06:14Fainter, and that is fair.
06:15Yep.
06:16Sevens, yeah.
06:17Screaming out for something better.
06:19Yeah, there's a seven screaming out, laughing out.
06:21That's funnier.
06:22Funnier.
06:23Funnier.
06:24That's it.
06:25Infante as well, fan of the ruling monarch of Spain,
06:27but couldn't get beyond seven.
06:29OK, numbers.
06:30First time today.
06:32Philip, the maths teacher?
06:33OK, I think I'll just go with one large and five small.
06:38Not go with four large or six small so far, just a gentle one large.
06:43And for the first time today, your selection is nine.
06:46Nine.
06:47One.
06:48One.
06:49Eight.
06:50I say gentle on 75.
06:52This could be horrendous.
06:53The target, 279.
06:55279.
06:56279.
06:57Numbers up.
06:58One.
06:59One.
07:00Two.
07:02Four.
07:03Two.
07:04Two.
07:05One.
07:07Two.
07:08Two.
07:09Three.
07:11Two.
07:13Two.
07:14A low target, but did you get there, Philip?
07:30Two, seven, nine.
07:31Sorry, I went blank on that one.
07:33No worries, big chance for Stephanie.
07:35How did you get on?
07:36Two, eight, two.
07:37That'll be enough to bag you seven points.
07:39Let's hear it.
07:40One plus one is two.
07:42One plus one, two.
07:44Eight divided by two is four.
07:46Yep.
07:47Times 75 is 300.
07:50It is.
07:51Minus both nines, two, eight, two.
07:53Well done.
07:54Two, eight, two.
07:55Three away.
07:55Good for seven points for ten.
07:59I jinxed it.
07:59That's the best you could have done.
08:00Three away.
08:01Oh, there you go.
08:01Look how thrilled you are, Stephanie.
08:03As you should be.
08:04Well done.
08:05And a slight lead for our challengers.
08:08We get our first tea time teaser of the day.
08:10And it is sensational.
08:12Predator.
08:13And what a clue.
08:14Predator.
08:15Did sheddiness help Julian cope?
08:17Did sheddiness help Julian cope?
08:19Julian cope as in a teardrop explodes?
08:42Brilliant reference.
08:43Teardrop is the answer.
08:45Right.
08:46The reward for Stephanie for her performance in part one is a slight lead of six points.
08:50And you're picking these letters.
08:52A consonant, please.
08:53Thank you, Stephanie.
08:55X.
08:57A better consonant, please.
08:59S.
09:00Another consonant.
09:02N.
09:04Vowel.
09:04O.
09:06Vowel.
09:07Vowel.
09:08A.
09:09Consonant.
09:11G.
09:14And vowel.
09:16A.
09:17And another vowel.
09:20I.
09:22And a consonant.
09:24And lastly, R.
09:26Sankovic.
09:27Let's go.
09:30Some way.
09:37Bye-bye.
09:39We'll see you next time.
09:45Bye-bye.
09:48Bye-bye.
09:50Bye-bye.
09:51Bye-bye.
09:52Bye-bye.
09:54Bye-bye.
09:55Bye-bye.
09:56Bye-bye.
09:56Give me a number, Stephanie.
09:59Six. Six for you. And Philip?
10:02Seven. And a seven for Philip.
10:05Stephanie, what did you have?
10:06Grains. Grains. And Philip?
10:09Soaring. Yeah, using the ing, soaring for seven.
10:15We were all looking for something like that. How did you get on, Levi?
10:18Yeah, nothing further than a seven, but a nice red sangria.
10:21Nice. Summer in Spain and sangria.
10:25Right, let's get more letters. Philip?
10:28Can I have a consonant, please? Thank you, Philip.
10:31Y.
10:34Vowel.
10:35O.
10:37Consonant.
10:39M.
10:41Vowel, please.
10:44E.
10:45Another vowel.
10:47A.
10:49Consonant.
10:51S.
10:53B.
10:54Another consonant.
10:55B.
10:58And a...
11:00..a vowel.
11:03E.
11:06And a consonant.
11:07Lastly, P.
11:09Half a minute.
11:10Vowel, please.
11:21No one.
11:23Nope.
11:23So...
11:23No one.
11:25Go!
11:27Let's go!
11:35No one!
11:38Philip a six a six and Stephanie just a five what's the five beams and the six
11:48maybes yeah absolutely fine very good yeah and we only had another six embase
11:54what's that mean yeah it's an unusual one it's um when wind forces a boat into a
11:59bay it embase it all right very nice indeed as Stephanie it's your first time
12:04picking the numbers so let's see what you get up to too large please Rachel too
12:09large and for little normally comfortable choice but not after that
12:13first round who knows what we're gonna get this time the numbers are six eight
12:18one five and the large ones 125 will it be possible the target 152 152 numbers up
12:34it's only easy if you see it Stephanie yep 152 and Philip yeah 152
12:39it's only easy if you see it Stephanie yep 152 and Philip yeah 152 off you go Steph
12:54uh six times 25 for 150 yep eight from a five from eight is three take away the one 152 well done and
13:16Philip okay uh yeah I said I'd do it the same way I'm sure you're right well done
13:2130 players 23 as we take a little breather this Wednesday afternoon and have a chat with
13:30a sharply dressed Levi roots hey I'm always having fun with you because we've known each
13:34other a while now yeah we have we don't talk a huge amount about the the more serious work that
13:40you do tell us a little bit about about that because we we usually have a laugh about music
13:45and what have you yeah yeah I know Colin I think working with charities is my favorite things I
13:50absolutely love it I think when my mum passed away a few years ago it was something that she said to
13:55me before she passed away that I should keep going doing well especially for the aged so I've talked
14:00about you know age concern before and now I've been doing a lot of stuff with um Alzheimer's and
14:05dementia research and recently they asked me to join a campaign working with City Sightseed London
14:11which is a bit of a thief full for me right now it's in London to raise funds and awareness of
14:17dementia research and the campaign is all about helping to preserve and protect people's precious
14:23memories and we all know that one of the first thing that goes through dementia is that memories
14:27of families and that sort of stuff like that so I think one of the best thing is going around
14:31taking pictures with these elders so this um City Sightseed campaign had me on an open top bus
14:37throughout London because I'd never done that before and you'd be surprising the things that when you
14:41live in a city like London that you take for granted that you don't actually see what's there
14:47so me sitting on top of this this amazing London you know bus you know with the older pictures and
14:52everything on there the open top and and as a kid even though I never did it as a kid but I know
14:57that many kids that weren't you always want to go to the top of the bus and get there so I was a bit like a
15:01kid then you know get to the top of the bus so I can sit and and see everything but I think the
15:06campaign is about saying to people look up on the bus bring your elders you know allow them to see
15:12memories and be able to capture these memories so that so that we can retain them and of course you
15:17know that our difficult dementia dementia is so that kind of charity for me working with them and
15:22and helping to raise this especially for the research yeah because I think that is the most important
15:27thing is trying to find that crucial research for dementia which I think you know if there was
15:32enough money pumped into it I think we would have a better grip yeah we can actually handle this
15:36detrimental type of disease so I say hop on a bus guy cuz it's not just helping you it's helping a lot of
15:42other people even if it's your home time absolutely which we take for granted thank you Levi and it's eyes
15:53down for nine more letters Philip can I have a constant please thank you and never constant oh and never
16:05a constant a vowel please a another vowel a constant please s another one and vowel you and final
16:32consonant a final D start the clock
17:02time's up Philip I think eight Stephanie I think a seven what's the seven snarled snarled great word and
17:16Philip I think launders launders yeah excellent any other rates are beyond a couple of sevens but but
17:26nothing beyond an eight a sundar is the best seven okay off we go Stephanie let's do it again
17:32consonant please Rachel thank you Stephanie w and another one ah and a consonant s vowel I another vowel please oh
17:48consonant j another consonant t and a vowel e and one more vowel lastly you and here we go
18:18Stephanie seven
18:24and it's a try trying eight trying an eight risky business Stephanie you didn't say think this time so what seven are you sure of writers we'll come back to that next time
18:36the second the eight so at wires actually the seven we can rule out straight away we can you need to answer that I'm afraid Stephanie I'm sorry and I have to let out wire as well because that's not in the dictionary
18:43there you go well the big fat zero then for Philip and Stephanie on national TV just pointed out Susie there's a familiar word there because we we had it last week yes one for any
18:52budding night a jouster how many body nights are there it's like you I like the idea is three people sitting at home and in full regalia body night
19:0238 plays 23
19:07star
19:10seven we can rule out straight away we can you need to answer that I'm afraid Stephanie I'm sorry and I have to let out wire as well because that's not in the dictionary
19:14I like the idea is three people sitting at home and in full regalia body night
19:2038 plays 23 still close enough back to the numbers Philip
19:24so I think I'll play it safe
19:26so let's go one large and five small I wasn't safe last time but let's see if it's safe this time
19:32you're safe is better around here the five little ones are seven seven
19:36two
19:38one
19:40six and the large on 100 and the target 519
19:45five one nine numbers up
20:10five one nine with one large Philip
20:20um so I've used seven twice
20:23oh no worries Stephanie a little window of opportunity
20:26five one seven that'll be seven points let's try
20:29a hundred plus two
20:31one hundred and two
20:32six minus one
20:33is five
20:34multiply the five by the hundred and two
20:36five hundred and ten
20:37five hundred and ten
20:38add a seven
20:39yep two away five one seven
20:41well Rachel it looked easy and it just wasn't so five one nine
20:46well this one was possible still tricky but 100 less both sevens gives you 86
20:5286 times six gives you 516 and you have a two and a one left over for 519
20:59so
21:01nice one
21:02second key time teaser
21:03is Edna pate
21:05Edna pate
21:06they run out of pate so Edna ordered this instead
21:10they run out of pate so Edna ordered this instead
21:14tapping yad
21:16tapping yad
21:17tapping yad
21:18as my granny says tape nade
21:20like some tape nade
21:21right
21:22Philip and Stephanie
21:23great game so far
21:24six rounds to go
21:25Stephanie all yours
21:26good
21:27good
21:28good
21:29good
21:30good
21:31good
21:32good
21:33good
21:34good
21:35good
21:36good
21:37good
21:38good
21:39good
21:40good
21:41good
21:42good
21:43thank you Stephanie
21:44all yours
21:45consonant please Rachel
21:46thanks Stephanie
21:47L
21:48another consonant
21:49C
21:50and a third please
21:52N
21:53vowel
21:55I
21:56vowel
21:57A
21:59consonant
22:01G
22:03consonant
22:04R
22:05another vowel
22:07E
22:08Vowel. A. And a consonant. And the last one, D. Let's play.
22:38Stephanie? Seven. Philip? I think nine.
22:51Oh, he hopes he thinks? Oh, my goodness me. Stephanie, the seven?
22:57Dealing. The nine? I think declaring.
23:01Well done. Absolutely brilliant.
23:02Is there any other variations on it?
23:09Well, I wanted to do the nine. I wanted to get up and punch the hair with the nine, but he beat me to it.
23:13How dare he? How dare he?
23:15It's almost like he's a champion.
23:17Well, that puts a bit of daylight between Philip and Stephanie, but five rounds still to go. It can change very quickly.
23:24Philip? Could I have a consonant, please?
23:27Thank you, Philip. M.
23:30Another consonant. D.
23:32A vowel.
23:35O.
23:36A consonant.
23:38T.
23:40A vowel.
23:42I.
23:44Another vowel.
23:47A.
23:49A consonant.
23:51N.
23:54A consonant.
23:57G.
23:59And a vowel.
24:01Lastly, E.
24:03Kind time.
24:35Give me a number, Philip.
24:36It's a seven.
24:37A seven.
24:38And Stephanie?
24:39Seven.
24:40And a seven.
24:40What have you got?
24:42Teaming.
24:43And Stephanie?
24:44Moating.
24:45Teaming and moating, Susie.
24:47Yes, to moat is to surround somewhere with a moat, if you're lucky enough.
24:53But, yeah, there is a verb.
24:55Maybe any of those body knights that are watching might be doing that.
24:59But I have a feeling this is the punch, dear.
25:01Yes, this is the punch, dear.
25:02Can I do it, sir?
25:03Go for it.
25:04Ah, magnetoid.
25:06Yes!
25:09Now, I know everybody knows what a magnetoid is, but, Susie?
25:14Yes, so, if you were a budding astronomer, you will know about this one.
25:20So, it is a hypothetical supermassive rotating body of magnetised plasma.
25:27Yes.
25:28There you go.
25:28Magnetoid it is.
25:29OK, let's stay with you, Susie.
25:31Origins of words.
25:32Well, the history of colours is always, I think, really fascinating because they shed so much light on the history of civilisation, really, which colours have been important.
25:41We have been talking, Levi and I, a lot about purple because we were both, incidentally, wearing purple yesterday and that comes from the porphora in ancient Greek.
25:51So, I think, mollusks that yielded a really strongly coloured dye, crimson goes back to an insect called a kermis, whose body was kind of ground up to produce this particular dye, this crimson dye.
26:02And quite a few of them are named after liqueurs or alcohol.
26:07So, you have mimosa, which is an orange juice and champagne, as we know, but also a very bright orange colour, burgundy champagne, of course.
26:15And also, chartreuse or chartreuse is often used, particularly if you're watching any kind of royal occasion, quite often that colour name will come up.
26:24And that's got a lovely history because chartreuse is also a liqueur, which some people may have tried.
26:32So, yellowish-green and one of the very few naturally green liqueurs, actually, that you can find.
26:38But anyway, chartreuse was first produced by monks in a monastery.
26:44So, they were in the Carthusian order of monks and they were entrusted with the recipe for this liqueur by alchemists.
26:51And alchemists famously tried to produce the elixir of life.
26:55So, it had these sort of magical qualities.
26:58It tasted so good, it was sent to the Carthusian headquarters near Grenoble in France.
27:03And it was first produced, not commercially, but sort of properly in 1737.
27:09And the original monastery, where it was first made, was known as La Grande Chartreuse.
27:15And that was because it nestled in the Chartreuse mountains in the pre-Alps of France.
27:19And, in fact, the Latin for chartreuse is actually Carthus or Carthusians, which is why we get the name for the order of monks themselves.
27:27So, it's just, it's kind of got a wonderful history.
27:30And, as I say, it really shows, you know, where these things come from, but tied up with so much.
27:34And monks were very much associated with ale-making as well.
27:38Some of the earliest pubs, we think, set up by monks in their earliest forms.
27:42But my favourite use of chartreuse is in the Quentin Tarantino film Death Proof, where he plays a bartender and he offers everybody a shot of this chartreuse.
27:52And he takes one himself and he slams the glass down and he says, chartreuse, the only liqueur so good, they named a colour after it.
27:59Love it.
28:00APPLAUSE
28:016337.
28:05Stephanie, your letters.
28:07Consonant, please.
28:08Thank you, Stephanie.
28:09R.
28:10And another one.
28:12V.
28:14Another one, please.
28:16S.
28:17Vowel.
28:19O.
28:20Another vowel.
28:22A.
28:24Consonant.
28:26L.
28:27Consonant.
28:28S.
28:31Vowel.
28:33U.
28:36And a consonant, please.
28:38Lastly, D.
28:39Good luck.
28:58Difficult, Stephanie.
29:12How do you get on?
29:13Six.
29:14A six is very good.
29:15And Philip?
29:15I think I'll stick with a six.
29:18OK.
29:19What have you got, Stephanie?
29:20Salvos.
29:21Salvos.
29:22And Philip?
29:22I'm not sure that's solars.
29:26Solars.
29:27Pluralising solar.
29:28OK.
29:28So just checking salvos.
29:30You can spell it O-S or O-E-S in the plural, so that's absolutely fine.
29:34Solar, I think, may just be an adjective.
29:37No, it is there as a noun, actually.
29:40An upper chamber in a medieval house.
29:42I didn't know this, so that's brilliant.
29:43Levi?
29:44Yeah, nothing bigger than a six.
29:45We've got dorsal.
29:47Yeah.
29:47Dorsal.
29:48Yes, dorsal relating to the upper side or back of an animal.
29:51We talk about dorsal fins, don't we?
29:52And there was one seven, actually.
29:54Yeah, yeah, savours.
29:56Savour the flavour.
29:58Well spotted.
29:59Savour the flavour, indeed.
30:00Last letters round.
30:03Philip, not quite there yet, but this could do it for you.
30:05Have a consonant, please.
30:07Thank you, Philip.
30:08P.
30:11Another consonant.
30:12Another consonant.
30:16C.
30:18A vowel.
30:20E.
30:22Another vowel.
30:24I.
30:26A consonant, please.
30:28T.
30:30A consonant, please.
30:32M.
30:34And, er...
30:36Sorry, a vowel.
30:38O.
30:39And, er...
30:42A vowel.
30:43And lastly, I.
30:46And last letters.
30:47A consonant.
30:52I.
30:54I.
30:54I cant be.
30:55I.
30:55I.
30:56I.
30:57How many, Philip?
31:18Six.
31:19Six there.
31:20And Stephanie?
31:21And another six.
31:22There you go.
31:23Picket.
31:24Picket.
31:24Pocket.
31:25And pocket.
31:25Was there anything above sixes from Dixie?
31:28Nothing above six, but a nice six for me is poetic.
31:31Poetic, yeah.
31:32Poetic, yeah.
31:33Lovely indeed.
31:34Right, 75 players, 49.
31:37Last numbers round.
31:38Steph, the pressure's off.
31:40The gap's just slightly too big.
31:41You made a great fist of it.
31:42So have all the fun you want now.
31:44Four large, please, Rachel.
31:45Four large.
31:45All the fun we can have.
31:47Most fun on this programme.
31:48Four large, two little.
31:50And the final numbers today, we have one and six for the littles.
31:54And 125, 75 and 50 for the big ones.
31:59And you need to make 186 with them.
32:02One, eight, six.
32:03Numbers up.
32:04academic, yes.
32:05Wow.
32:05He's my girl.
32:06Oh.
32:07He's going to be thingy.
32:08Yes, he's going to be right now.
32:09He's going to be there.
32:13Yes.
32:15You're
32:23in Jude.
32:24But the world, you're going to be doing the way.
32:27Andå·§, Harry, that we can't promise you.
32:281.86 a target, Stephanie?
32:36Just 1.75.
32:38Your fault, you picked it.
32:39Philip?
32:401.86.
32:42Yeah, off you go.
32:43So, 100, take away 6, take away 1.
32:4993.
32:50So separately, yes, I did then 50 over 25.
32:53For 2.
32:54Then 2, and then times it together.
32:56Yeah, 1.86, well done.
32:58Yeah, well done.
33:02Very well done, Philip.
33:03That takes you to 85.
33:04Really healthy score as you confirm your second win.
33:09Stephanie, it's been a good day, so let's see if you can go out in a high.
33:12Finger on that buzzer.
33:14You too, Philip, as we reveal today's Countdown Conundrum.
33:25Go on, Phil.
33:26I think it's over-risers.
33:28Over-risers.
33:30It's incorrect.
33:31Stephanie, have a ball.
33:37Go on.
33:38Over-riser.
33:39Over-riser?
33:41Oh, it's reservoir!
33:42Reservoir of tears after that conundrum.
33:48Stephanie, it's been so nice to have you here.
33:50Your positive spirit, your smile.
33:52Did you enjoy it?
33:53I did.
33:54I'm critiquing myself, but it was a good day.
33:56Stephanie, thank you for being here.
33:57Thank you so, so much.
33:58And, Philip, we'll see you tomorrow.
34:00Yeah, see you tomorrow.
34:01And, Levi, I want to thank you, because you've turned up here so dapper.
34:06And I think, Susie, you've responded.
34:08That's, I think, my favourite top that you've worn of all time.
34:11Oh, thank you.
34:11Is it like a bejeweled tiger?
34:14I think it's, yeah, a jaguar or a...
34:16Oh, thank you.
34:17Fantastic.
34:18Love it.
34:18Right, Rach, could Dave see you tomorrow?
34:19Oh, I just like how it goes full circle.
34:21We end up with a reservoir, reservoir dogs,
34:23back to Susie, Tarantino and colours.
34:25And it all makes sense.
34:26It always does make sense in the end.
34:28We'll see you again tomorrow.
34:29Rachel, Susie and I will be here.
34:31You can count on us.
34:33You can contact the programme by email at countdown at channel4.com.
34:37You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash
34:41countdown.
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