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00:30Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio on Reptile Awareness Day.
00:37A day when lovers of these magnificent creatures can celebrate, share their knowledge and indeed raise awareness about them.
00:44Turtles, snakes, alligators, lizards.
00:46I've never owned a snake, but I did once know a woman who lived in Paris and she had, although I never saw it, a boa constrictor living in the apartment.
00:58And it used to live among the central heating pipes underneath the floor.
01:02And she never quite knew where it was, except sometimes she would come home and realise that she hadn't fed it recently because it had tossed a sofa across the room.
01:13This was a big boy.
01:16So there you are.
01:17So I suppose the lesson there is feed your snake.
01:22We don't have to.
01:23What about you?
01:24Now you and your family are animal lovers by excellence, sans paris they say, but your brother is particularly keen on reptiles.
01:31Yeah, he's been volunteering at the Dangerous Wild Animal Rescue Facility Dwarf since he was a teenager.
01:36And it's amazing the amount of boas, particularly seeing as they're so big, that do escape.
01:41Most of the time, I mean, they're absolutely harmless.
01:43You just need to call a number, someone will come along, take it off and hopefully re-home it.
01:48But don't hurt them, they're not going to hurt you.
01:50They're more scared of you than you are of them most of the time.
01:52Quite right.
01:53All right.
01:53Thank you, Rachel.
01:54Now we have two new contestants because, as you know, Andrew became an octo-champer yesterday.
01:59And so we welcome today Dave Chapman, a retired police constable, former member of the British Army from Doncaster.
02:06Loves his walking and his gardening.
02:08And you once, apparently, had to run from Mount Olympus to Curium Beach in Cyprus in a day.
02:14Somebody after you.
02:15No, no, we did it as a unit from the senior command team right down to the privates.
02:23How far was it?
02:2432 miles.
02:25In the heat?
02:26Yeah.
02:26Quite tough.
02:27Well, you're very welcome, Dave.
02:28Very welcome.
02:29And you're joined by Elish Mistry, a strategic finance manager, originally from Leicester, now living in London.
02:36And fascinating that you told me beforehand that you're attempting to see every painting on the 1001 paintings to see before you die, which is presumably a book of some sort.
02:46Yes, I received it as a secret Santa present a few years back.
02:49And so I've just been trying to work through the list.
02:52Fascinating.
02:53And how far have you got?
02:54About a couple hundred.
02:56That's not bad.
02:56And have you travelled to many countries?
02:58Recently had a two-week trip to New York, which helped me tick quite a few off the list there.
03:03Wonderful.
03:04Paris, Rome.
03:05Well, wonderful things to do.
03:07Big round of applause then for Elish and Dave Chapman.
03:13And over in the corner, of course, Susie.
03:16And for the first time, a joyous occasion, because we want to welcome to the Dictionary Corner, none other than Joe Lycett.
03:24Hello.
03:24He's an old favourite on 8 out of 10 cats, of course, and on the comedy circuit, whose book, Parsnips Buttered, was out yesterday.
03:33We hope it's a great success for you.
03:35Bless you.
03:36All right.
03:36We'll hear from you later on, but now we turn to you, Dave Chapman, for a letters game.
03:41Val, please, Rachel.
03:43Thank you, Dave.
03:43Start the day with E.
03:45Another one.
03:47I.
03:49And a consonant.
03:51T.
03:52Another one.
03:54Z.
03:56Another one.
03:58M.
03:59A vowel, please.
04:01E.
04:02Consonant.
04:04L.
04:06Another one.
04:09D.
04:10And a final consonant.
04:11And a final T.
04:12And here comes the countdown clock.
04:15And here comes the countdown clock.
04:17Good.
04:22Bye.
04:24Cheers.
04:29Bye.
04:30Bye.
04:33Bye.
04:34Bye.
04:38Bye.
04:39Bye.
04:42Bye.
04:42Bye.
04:42Yes, Dave?
04:47I have a six.
04:48A six.
04:49Elish?
04:50A six for me as well.
04:51Two sixes.
04:51So, Dave?
04:52Metal.
04:53Yes, Elish.
04:55Titled.
04:56Entitled.
04:57Yes.
04:57What is this metal?
04:58Excellent.
04:59Well, you talk about being on your metal, don't you?
05:02It's a person's ability to cope well with difficulties,
05:04so to have resilience is to have metal.
05:07Yep.
05:07What else have we got?
05:08In the corner?
05:10There's a seven.
05:11Mittled.
05:12So, mittled is to hurt or mutilate.
05:16Yes.
05:17So, mittled is...
05:19Mittled.
05:20Yeah, dialect word.
05:21It's actually Scottish, I think.
05:22Scottish version of mutilate.
05:23Yeah, in dialect.
05:25Six apiece.
05:26Well done.
05:27Elish, your letters go.
05:29Hi, Rachel.
05:30Hi, Elish.
05:30I'll start with a consonant, please.
05:32Start with M.
05:34And a second.
05:36D.
05:37And a vowel, please.
05:39A.
05:39And another.
05:41E.
05:42And another consonant, please.
05:45S.
05:46And a second.
05:48N.
05:50And a vowel.
05:53A.
05:55A fourth vowel, please.
05:59O.
06:00And finish with the consonant.
06:01And finish with tea.
06:03Stand by.
06:05And a vowel.
06:14And a vowel, please.
06:23.
06:24And a vowel.
06:28And a telephone.
06:29And a vowel.
06:29Elish?
06:36Just a six for me.
06:38A six, Dave?
06:39And a six.
06:40Elish?
06:41Seaman.
06:42Seaman and?
06:44Atones.
06:46Atones.
06:47Yep, very good.
06:48Atones.
06:49One sins.
06:51And in the corner?
06:52There's a couple of eights.
06:53Mandates.
06:54Yeah.
06:55And also adenomas, which is a medical term for a benign tuner.
07:00Oh, right.
07:01Yep.
07:05A benign tuner indeed.
07:07All right, 12 apes.
07:09Now then, Dave, it's the first numbers game.
07:12One from the top, and then the other five, please, Rachel.
07:14Thank you, Dave.
07:15One large, five, little, and the first numbers game of the day is three, ten, nine, two, one,
07:24and the large one, one hundred.
07:26And the target, one hundred and thirty-six.
07:28One, three, six.
07:29One, three, six.
07:30Two, one hundred and thirty-six.
07:35One, three, six.
07:35Two, three, six.
07:36One, four, five.
07:37Two, five, six.
07:38One, three, six.
07:39Two, five, six.
07:41Three, six.
07:43Five, six.
07:44Two, five.
07:54Two, five.
07:55Three, seven, nine, two.
07:56Two, four, five.
07:57Two, six.
07:58Seven, nine, ten,�.
08:00Yes, Dave.
08:011, 3, 6.
08:03Elish.
08:031, 3, 6.
08:05Dave.
08:06100 plus 10 times 3.
08:1010 times 3 for the 30.
08:139 minus 2 minus 1.
08:16Is it 6?
08:17It's 6. Add on.
08:18Perfect. 1, 3, 6.
08:19There we go. Elish.
08:203 plus 1 is 4.
08:22Yeah.
08:22Times by 9.
08:2336.
08:24And add the 100.
08:251, 3, 6. Perfect again.
08:26There we go.
08:27All right.
08:29So, 22 apiece as we lurch into our first Tea Time teaser,
08:35which is iron talc.
08:37And the clue, chop, chop, it's time to get cooking.
08:40Chop, chop, it's time to get cooking.
08:42Welcome back.
09:00I left with a clue.
09:01Chop, chop.
09:01It's time to get cooking.
09:03And the answer is cilantro.
09:05Now, I'm a stranger to the kitchen.
09:07What is this cilantro?
09:08Well, it will be a North American kitchen, Nick,
09:11because it's a North American term for coriander cilantro.
09:14It's from Spanish, originally.
09:1622 apiece.
09:17And Elish, your letters again.
09:19Start this round with a vowel, please.
09:21Thank you, Elish.
09:22I.
09:24And a second.
09:25A.
09:26And a consonant.
09:28V.
09:29And another.
09:31H.
09:32A third.
09:33R.
09:34A fourth, please.
09:36D.
09:37A vowel.
09:40E.
09:42A consonant, please.
09:44Y.
09:46Finish with a consonant, please.
09:49And finish with H.
09:51Stand by.
09:51And finish with a consonant, please.
10:21Elish. Six again. Six. Dave? I only have a five. And your five? Hardie. No, Elish. Varied. Varied.
10:33Oh. Yeah. Give together six out of that section. I got yeah. That's all I got. I'm so bad at this game.
10:42It's amazing. Don't vary it. Is it in the dictionary? Yeah. Yeah. Y-E-A-H. Yes. Oh. It is. There you go. Yeah.
10:49Yeah. That's it. Varied was the best. You can have head as well. Curly head, short head, that sort of thing.
10:56Thank you. 28 plays 22. Elish on 28. And it's Dave's letters game. Consonant, please, Rachel. Thank you, Dave. R. And another. L. A vowel, please. A. And another. I. Consonant, please. R.
11:19Vowel. E. And final. Three consonants, please. T. D. And the final one. R.
11:32Stand by.
11:33T. D. And the final one. R.
11:34T. D. And the final one. R.
11:35T. D. And the final one. R.
11:35T. D. And the final one. R.
11:36T. D. And the final one. R.
11:37T. D. And the final one. R.
11:38T. D. And the final one. R.
11:39T. D. And the final one. R.
11:41T. D. And the final one. R.
11:43T. D. And the final one. R.
11:45T. D. And the final one. R.
11:47T. D. And the final one. R.
11:49T. D. And the final one. R.
12:01Yes, Dave.
12:05Seven.
12:06Seven.
12:07Elish?
12:07Seven as well.
12:08Dave.
12:09Trail word.
12:10Now then, Elish.
12:11Tarried.
12:14Yes.
12:14What does tarried mean?
12:15I don't know that word.
12:16It means to delay or to dither, in a way.
12:20He tarried.
12:21He was slightly...
12:22Don't tarry on the way.
12:23Yes.
12:24There's trailed as well, isn't there?
12:25Yes.
12:26There's only sevens.
12:27That's it?
12:27Yes.
12:28All right.
12:2935 plays 29.
12:31And now, Elish, it's your numbers again.
12:33Two from the top, please.
12:35Thank you, Elish.
12:35Two from the top and four little ones.
12:38And the small ones are 10, 6, 8, 7.
12:43And the big ones, 25 and 50.
12:46And the target, 859.
12:498, 5, 9.
12:59And the big ones are 10, 6, 8, 7.
13:19And the big ones are 10, 6, 8, 7, 8.
13:21Elish.
13:228, 5, 8.
13:23One away, Dave.
13:24No, sorry.
13:25What's that?
13:25Too far?
13:26Too far.
13:27Let's hear from Elish, then.
13:288, 5, 8.
13:3010 plus 7.
13:3110 plus 7, 17.
13:33Times 50.
13:348, 150.
13:35And add the 8.
13:36And you're one away, 8, 5, 8.
13:38Well done.
13:398, 5, 8, but not 8, 5, 9.
13:42Rachel, possible?
13:43Yes, it was.
13:44If you find the 17 with 25 minus 8, and then you can times that by 50 for 850, and then
13:52you've got the 10 to add on, and 7 minus 6 for 1 to take away.
13:568, 5, 9.
13:57Well done.
14:00Well done.
14:01So, Dave's 29K's, Elish's 42.
14:05Well done.
14:06As we turn to Joe.
14:08Joe, what have you been up to recently?
14:11Well, amongst all sorts of things, I've been complaining to my local supermarket about their
14:16avocados.
14:17As you do.
14:19So, I'll just read you the letter I sent to my supermarket.
14:22I wrote,
14:24Hello.
14:26I am writing to you to offer my services in regard to your perfectly ripe avocados.
14:32I would like to dispute your definition of perfectly ripe.
14:35I think you have mistaken the word perfectly for the word not.
14:40If this is in fact the correct definition, I apologise, and I am perfectly a virgin.
14:46I have generously taken time out of my busy day of not eating avocados to compile a list
14:51of the things you may suggest to your customers they use them for instead of a delicious accompaniment
14:55to a salad or crushed and spread onto bread.
14:58One, paperweight.
15:00Two, as a replacement hammer.
15:03Three, refined to a point and placed at the end of a spear.
15:08Four, inserted into a catapult to demonstrate medieval warfare.
15:13Five, used alongside a thick ceramic bowl as a makeshift pestle and mortar.
15:18Four, and finally placed into the pockets of canal boat dwellers you wish to drown.
15:25Should you wish, I am happy to dwell next to your avocados and explain the options to
15:29passing customers with a small fee of £10,000.
15:31Please let me know how you'd like to proceed.
15:33Many thanks, Joe Lassett.
15:34Now, it's a posh supermarket that is near me.
15:37I can't say the brand name of it for legal reasons.
15:40And I put at the end,
15:41P.S.
15:42Your name for spring onions is salad onions.
15:45Why?
15:46Literally no one calls them this.
15:47Anyway, I found them for a pound cheaper in a different store,
15:50and it gave me a real salad in my step.
15:58Well done.
15:59So, Elish on 42,
16:00Dave on 29.
16:02And now, Dave,
16:03it's your letters game.
16:04Well, please, Rachel.
16:05Thank you, Dave.
16:06O.
16:08Another.
16:10I.
16:11Consonant, please.
16:14F.
16:15Consonant.
16:17N.
16:19Consonant.
16:21S.
16:23Vowel.
16:25A.
16:27Consonant.
16:29P.
16:31Consonant.
16:32G.
16:36Another consonant, please.
16:37And the last one.
16:38T.
16:40Stand by.
16:41We are all about to forward.
16:53Yes, Dave?
17:13Seven.
17:13A seven.
17:14Elish?
17:15Seven.
17:16Two sevens.
17:16Dave?
17:17Fasting.
17:18And Elish?
17:19You're both fasting.
17:22Very good.
17:22Anybody else fasting?
17:24There's just another seven posting.
17:27I wrote down pigs because I want to get a pet pig.
17:31Why?
17:32Just think it'd be hilarious.
17:34Just wander around with a pig on a leash.
17:36They're very hot, you know, to hold.
17:41I was not expecting that.
17:42No, if you cuddle a pig really hot.
17:45You want a little pot-bellied pig?
17:48I don't know.
17:48English pig or a little...
17:50They say you can get micro pigs,
17:52but apparently that's not a thing.
17:54That's just a child pig.
17:56And people buy them to have in their flats
17:58and they become giant pigs.
18:00But you have to have a licence.
18:01I've researched all of this.
18:03You have to have a licence to get a pet pig.
18:04What?
18:05Just to check that you're all right to have a pig, I don't know.
18:08But I like the idea there's a little picture of the pig in the licence.
18:11I don't know.
18:11It's just I want a pig.
18:12Nick Nix has been crossed off the list
18:14because he's been too much cuddling of them.
18:15Yeah.
18:16What do you do?
18:17You pick them up and you give them a cuddle, don't you?
18:1949 plays 36 and it's Elish's letters game.
18:23Elish.
18:24Start with a consonant, please.
18:25Thank you, Elish.
18:27S.
18:28And a second.
18:30G.
18:31And a third.
18:34W.
18:35A vowel, please.
18:36E.
18:37And another.
18:39A.
18:41And one more.
18:43U.
18:43A consonant.
18:47R.
18:49Another, please.
18:51N.
18:53And I'll finish with a vowel, please.
18:57And finish with E.
18:59Stand by.
19:00.
19:01.
19:10.
19:14.
19:16.
19:19Elish, I'll stick with a six.
19:34Dave? A six.
19:36Two sixes, Elish? Greens. Greens and?
19:40Wagers. Wagers? Yeah.
19:43OK. Now, Jo, Susie. Jo?
19:46Yes, there's wieners.
19:49Which is a calf, lamb or pig weaned during the current year.
19:55Pigs are smart.
19:56That's another reason why I want one.
19:58So we can watch Countdown together and the pig.
20:02They'd do the numbers, I reckon.
20:04Yeah.
20:05Very good. What else have you got there?
20:08Enrages for another seven.
20:11Enrages. Something you mustn't do to a big pig.
20:1555 for 42. Elish on 55.
20:18Dave, it's your numbers game.
20:19Same again. One from the top and then the other five, please, Rachel.
20:22Thank you, Dave.
20:23One from the top, one row, and five others.
20:25And the five others are two, eight, three.
20:30Another three, one, and the big one, 75.
20:34And this target, 614.
20:35Six, one, four.
20:37Six, one, four.
20:37Six, one, four.
20:37Six, one, four.
20:38Six, one, four.
20:39Six, one, four.
20:40Six, one, four.
20:40Six, one, four.
20:41Six, one, four.
20:41Six, one, four.
20:42Six, one, four.
20:42Six, one, four.
20:43Six, one, four.
20:43Six, one, four.
20:44Six, one, four.
20:44Six, one, four.
20:45Six, one, four.
20:46Six, one, four.
20:47Six, one, four.
20:48Six, one, four.
20:49Six, one, four.
20:50Six, one, four.
20:51Six, one, four.
20:52Six, one, four.
20:53Six, one, four.
20:54Six, one, four.
20:55Six, one, four.
20:56Six, one, four.
20:57Six, one, four.
20:58Six, one, four.
20:59Yes, Dave?
21:09No, sorry, I lost it.
21:10Too far? How about Elish?
21:12614.
21:13614, all right.
21:1575 plus 2.
21:1675 plus 2, 77.
21:18Times by 8 for 616.
21:21And 3 minus 1 gives me another 2.
21:23Lovely.
21:23And take that off.
21:24614, perfect.
21:25Well done.
21:26Good man.
21:28So, Elish, 65.
21:29Dave, on 42.
21:30Still well in touch there, Dave,
21:32as we turn to our second Tea Time teaser,
21:34which is multi-cue.
21:36And the clue.
21:36Is this chemical element used to make instruments?
21:40Is this chemical element used to make instruments?
21:43Welcome back.
21:59I left with a clue.
22:00Is this chemical element used to make instruments?
22:03And the answer is lutetium.
22:08Susie Dent.
22:09Lutetium.
22:10Chemical element of atomic number 71.
22:14Silvery white metal.
22:15And very, very rare.
22:16So, probably not used to make lutes.
22:18It's apparently very, very expensive.
22:20Lutetium.
22:21Yes.
22:21All right.
22:2265 to 42.
22:24Now, Elish, it's your letters again.
22:26Start with the consonant, please, Rachel.
22:28Thank you, Elish.
22:29S.
22:30And another, please.
22:32N.
22:33And a third.
22:35R.
22:37Vowel, please.
22:39O.
22:40And another.
22:41U.
22:42One more, please.
22:43A.
22:46Consonant.
22:47K.
22:48Another consonant.
22:50L.
22:53And I'll finish with a consonant.
22:55And finish with P.
22:58And here's the countdown clock.
23:31Elish.
23:32Seven.
23:33A seven, Dave?
23:34No, just a five.
23:35And your five?
23:36Pause.
23:38Elish.
23:38Parlous.
23:39Parlous.
23:40Very nice.
23:41Parlous.
23:42Parallous.
23:42Dangerous, yes.
23:44I got pork.
23:46Of course you did.
23:48That time.
23:50Yeah.
23:51Just to keep on there.
23:52I'll bet you'll get rash, buddy.
23:53Every time you finish.
23:55What else have we got?
23:57We have a mixture of the sun and the moon in Soluna, S-O-L-U-N-A-R, relating to the combined
24:03influence or conjunction of the sun and the moon.
24:08So in the days when the planets were thought to have great influence over human activity,
24:13Soluna influence would be very important.
24:15Indeed it would.
24:16All right.
24:1772 to 42.
24:19Dave, letters time.
24:22Vowel, please.
24:23Thank you, Dave.
24:24I.
24:26Vowel, please, Rachel.
24:28E.
24:28Consonant.
24:31C.
24:33Consonant.
24:35Q.
24:36A vowel.
24:38O.
24:40Consonant.
24:42D.
24:44Consonant.
24:45M.
24:47Consonant.
24:49V.
24:51Another consonant, please.
24:53And lastly, N.
24:55Stand by.
24:56Saw it.
24:57Time for it.
24:59Many times, sadly, we have some keys.
25:06Please leave your tongue in love.
25:11The end of the video.
25:14Somebody has thecker.
25:16Have you ever hadency америкans?
25:18The end of the video.
25:19I know you want to be, in終最後.
25:25Best friend.
25:25Ciao.
25:26Yes, Dave?
25:28Five.
25:30Five. Elish? Six.
25:33Thank you. Dave?
25:34Movie. Movie and?
25:36Income. Thank you.
25:38Can we match or beat it?
25:40Yes, there is a seven. Demonic.
25:43All right.
25:44As of the devil.
25:46As of the devil, yes.
25:47Yes, demonic influences this time.
25:49Anything else?
25:49Minster, novice, we're our sixes.
25:5378 to 42.
25:56Susie, it's your wonderful origins of words.
26:00Thanks to John Hubbard, who emailed in and asked why we call a nap 40 winks.
26:05Why 40 and why winks?
26:07And also our wonderful floor manager, Jay, asked me about hoodwinks.
26:11So I'm going to try and answer both of those today.
26:15First of all, wink hasn't always been the one-eyed signal that we give today.
26:20Because the first meaning of the word, if you go back to the Anglo-Saxons and the Old English,
26:24was the closing of both eyes, either to blink or in slumber.
26:30And for Shakespeare, a wink was often the sleep of death.
26:34In The Tempest, he says,
26:35To the perpetual wink for eye might put this ancient morsel.
26:40So today, when we talk about not having slept a wink or of taking a nap or 40 winks,
26:45we look back to that original sense of closing one's eyes in sleep or in rest.
26:50Why 40?
26:51That's probably because 40 was just chosen as a random but quite popular number in lots of different expressions and terms.
26:58So 40 legs was a popular name for the centipede, which I quite like.
27:03And 40 pence, if somebody was putting down a wager or a bet, that was the customary amount that they would put down.
27:09So I hope that answers John's question.
27:12But to hoodwink, to go back to Jay's question here, to hoodwink was originally to place a hood over someone's eyes,
27:19either prior to execution or in readiness to attack them or to rob them in some way.
27:25So it was closing their eyes quite brutally as well as figuratively.
27:30And of course, the figurative sense is the one that we have today.
27:32You're hoodwinking somebody or literally putting something over their eyes so that they can't see what you're up to.
27:36So there we go, 40 winks, something one might all like to do this afternoon.
27:41But 40 being a slightly random number, but the wink is closing both eyes.
27:45Fantastic.
27:50Brilliant, as always.
27:52So Elish on 78 and Dave on 42.
27:56Elish, let us go.
27:58Start with the consonant, please.
27:59Thank you, Elish.
28:00R.
28:02And another.
28:04S.
28:05Vowel, please.
28:06U.
28:08And a second.
28:09A.
28:11Consonant, please.
28:13R.
28:15Another vowel, please.
28:18E.
28:19Consonant.
28:21P.
28:23Another consonant.
28:25T.
28:27I'll finish with a vowel, please.
28:29And finish with A.
28:32Stand by.
28:33Not one.
28:35Son of a vowel, please.
28:36Thanks.
28:38I'll be right back.
28:39I'll be right back.
28:39Not one.
28:40I'll raise a vowel, please.
28:42And that one is a vowel.
28:43But then I'll keep on the sentence.
28:44And that oneatri axes, as we go on and what's going on.
28:45Then I go left.
28:46And then that one is the vowel.
28:47And then that's all you have to be there.
28:48And then that one will just see that they can't get a word out on the word.
28:49And you get it.
28:51And I'll see it.
28:52And then that's a vowel.
28:52And then there we go, but it's just to be with love.
28:53Elish.
29:05Eight.
29:06And eight, Dave?
29:07Eight.
29:09Elish?
29:09Raptures.
29:10Same word.
29:11Raptures.
29:16Well done.
29:18So, what has the corner got to offer?
29:20There's one of their eight, Pasturer, which is someone who keeps animals.
29:25Indeed.
29:26Especially cattle or sheep, normally.
29:28But you could be a pig owner and be a pasturer.
29:32What has happened to this show?
29:35It's like basically pig hour now.
29:37Pigging out.
29:38What else have you got over there?
29:41Raptures and Pasturer, both are eight.
29:42That's it.
29:43All right.
29:44Eighty-six plays.
29:45Fifty.
29:46And Dave, it's a letters game.
29:48Consonant, please, Rachel.
29:49Thank you, Dave.
29:51G.
29:52And another.
29:55L.
29:57Vowel.
29:59O.
30:00Vowel.
30:02E.
30:04Consonant.
30:05B.
30:08Vowel.
30:10O.
30:12Consonant.
30:13P.
30:15Consonant.
30:16C.
30:17And a final consonant, please.
30:21And lastly, S.
30:23And here's the countdown clock.
30:25B.
30:26Safety.
30:26B.
30:27B.
30:29B.
30:29B.
30:30B.
30:30�를.
30:34B.
30:35B.
30:35B.
30:36B.
30:36B.
30:37B.
30:37B.
30:38B.
30:44B.
30:45Yes, Dave?
30:56Six.
30:57Six.
30:58Elish?
30:59Six as well.
31:00Dave?
31:00Globes.
31:02Globes.
31:02Globes, very good, yes.
31:04That was ours too.
31:05Joe, anything else?
31:06No.
31:07We thought maybe gloops, but it's not our word.
31:09Well, it is gloop is there, but no plural, sadly.
31:13So, six for us with globes as well.
31:1592 plays 56.
31:17Elish on 92.
31:18And it's Elish's numbers game.
31:21Two from the top, please.
31:22Thank you, Elish.
31:22Two large, four little for the final one of the week.
31:26And these numbers are eight, six, nine, seven.
31:31And the large ones, 175.
31:34And the target, 855.
31:37855.
31:43Elish.
32:10855.
32:12855.
32:125, Dave. Too far are we, sorry.
32:14Too far. All right. So, Elish.
32:17100 plus 6.
32:19106. Times by
32:208 for 848. Yep.
32:22And add the 7. Well done, 855.
32:24Very good.
32:27A very good opening score there
32:30of 102 as we go into our final
32:32round. Dave and Elish, fingers
32:34on buzzers. Let's reveal today's countdown
32:36conundrum.
32:42No, we're stumped up here.
33:10Time's up and we turn
33:11to our audience and we're looking
33:14for a hand. I see a hand. Yes, sir.
33:16Is it somewhere, Nick?
33:18Let's see whether you're right.
33:21And there it is.
33:22Somewhere. Well done.
33:27Well done indeed.
33:28Somewhere. So,
33:30there we have it. Dave, you played
33:32really well. 56. Good score.
33:34Good score. But not quite
33:36good enough today. Elish takes the
33:38day with 102. So, it's
33:40back to Doncaster
33:42with our very best wishes and
33:44your goodie bag. Thank you for coming.
33:46Thank you very much. Elish mystery.
33:48Good score. 102. First time out.
33:50We shall see you on Monday.
33:52Well, I just got showed up by my old man.
33:54Is that right? Yes.
33:56Well done. Well done to dad then.
33:58We'll see you on
34:00Monday. Well done.
34:02And you too, young man. Yes.
34:04You come and see us again? Yeah.
34:06Look forward to it. And Susie too, of course.
34:08Have a great weekend. See you then.
34:10And Rachel? If you've taken anything
34:12away from today, hug a reptile,
34:14not a pig, because they're too hot.
34:17Of course.
34:18Reptiles never hot. No, cold-blooded.
34:20Stick with the reptiles. All right.
34:22See you Monday. See you then.
34:23Same time, same place.
34:24You'll be with a very good afternoon.
34:27Contact us by email at
34:29countdown at channel4.com
34:31by Twitter at
34:32C4Countdown
34:33or write to us at
34:34Countdown, Leeds, LS3, 1JS.
34:37You can also find our webpage
34:39at channel4.com forward slash
34:41Countdown.
34:44Gogglebox,
34:45Humans, The Last Leg.
34:47Celebrity specials tonight.
34:48Join Davina and Stand Up to Cancer
34:51live at Savon.
34:53Next on 4, it's Deal or No Deal
34:55with Noel.

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