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Only Connect Season 21 Episode 13
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FunTranscript
00:00We need men, said President Kennedy, who can dream of things that never were.
00:27Like, for example, a time when I wasn't presenting Only Connect.
00:32Was there such a time?
00:33I honestly don't remember.
00:35Joining me this evening on my right.
00:38Ruth Erdl, an innovation manager who enjoys country music.
00:43Jess Volpe, a PR account director who celebrates Christmas each year by staging a murder mystery.
00:50And their captain, Steve Erdl, the co-founder of a tech startup who abseils from a building
00:55dressed as Chewbacca, or coastal dwellers, they are the Whitley Bays.
01:00Steve, it's been a while since we saw you, you were in our first episode.
01:04What's a question that stayed in your mind from that match?
01:07Ruth did an amazing job of parsing a really aero-dite version of the Hokey Cokey, which
01:14as team captain I was then asked to perform.
01:15Yeah, that will definitely stay with me.
01:17I hope it stays with you for life.
01:20You won that game outright, and this time you are facing, on my left, Lizzie Reilly,
01:26a linguistics student whose favourite film is Shaun of the Dead.
01:30George Dickinson, a maths student who has performed ballet in a pair of Wellingtons.
01:36And their captain, Dia Shah, a linguistics graduate who moonlights as a tarot card reader.
01:42United by a keenness on comedy, they are Oh No They Didn't.
01:47We haven't seen you for a while either, because both these teams won your first matches and
01:50got straight to round two.
01:52You've only had one game.
01:53What haunts you, or delights you, when you remember your first game?
01:56Well, we forgot how to count.
01:58We forgot what odd numbers were.
02:00And we thought 1-3-5-6 would make sense.
02:04But I think we've worked on our maths since then.
02:08You're studying it, so, you know.
02:09I still am, yeah.
02:12Well, let's hope you can lance that boil in this evening's match.
02:16Whitley Bays, you won the toss, so you'll be going first.
02:19Please choose an Egyptian hieroglyph.
02:21The Twisted Flax, please, Victoria.
02:22Twisted Flax.
02:23To the music question, what do these clues have in common?
02:27Here's the first.
02:28My girlfriend, she said yes, she just started to cry, let me go on.
02:35Next, please.
02:36I'm not ready to make nice.
02:38I'm not ready to make nice.
02:39I'm not ready to make nice.
02:41I'm not ready to make nice.
02:42I'm not ready to make nice.
02:43Chicks, femmes?
02:44Is it just girls and things?
02:45OK.
02:46Shall we go?
02:47We're only here once, right?
02:48Yes.
02:49Is it females?
02:51It is females.
02:53Very well done.
02:54What did we hear?
02:55We are Blister in the Sun by Violent Femmes.
02:57Mm-hmm.
02:58And then the chicks, I'm not sure what's on.
03:00Not ready to make nice.
03:01Exactly right.
03:02And it's just the names, obviously, the Violent Femmes are not actually women singing, but the names of the bands.
03:07What else do you think we might have heard?
03:08Bare Naked Ladies?
03:10No.
03:11Spice Girls?
03:12No.
03:13We would have heard from Scissor Sisters and Girls Aloud.
03:16Very well done for three points.
03:18Oh, no, they didn't.
03:19What would you like?
03:20Lion, please.
03:21Lion.
03:22What is the connection between these clues?
03:24Here's the first.
03:29Next, please.
03:30Next, please.
03:36Next, please.
03:37Next, please.
03:41I don't know what to do.
03:42It could be nicknames for Chancings or something.
03:44Next one, please.
03:45Next, please.
03:47Are they translations of something?
03:49Little black book, little green book.
03:51Are they translations of chocolate bars?
03:52They're error.
04:01Two seconds.
04:03Translations of chocolate bars.
04:05They are not translations of chocolate bars.
04:07So a bonus chance for you, Whitley Bays.
04:10Translations of...
04:13Alcoholic drinks.
04:14No.
04:16Try translating them into Italian.
04:18What do you get?
04:19Leave, leave, something like that.
04:21Libretto is a little book.
04:23Air would be aria.
04:25First Lady, prima donna.
04:26Opera.
04:27And deep bass, you might translate as basso profondo.
04:31Terms from opera.
04:33No points there, Whitley Bays, but you may have a question.
04:35What would you like?
04:36Two reeds, please.
04:37Two reeds.
04:38What is the connection between these picture clues?
04:40Here's the first.
04:41Scarf.
04:42Scarf.
04:43Yeah.
04:44Next, please.
04:47Next, please.
04:48I think it's Fair Isle.
04:52Next, please.
04:54Are they all Scottish?
04:55Ooh.
04:56Shall we?
04:57Shall we?
04:58Yes.
04:59Shall I start with towns and then narrow down to Scottish if asked?
05:01Yeah, we could try that, yeah.
05:02Or we can always get a fourth.
05:03Shall we get a fourth?
05:04Yeah.
05:05Next one, please.
05:06They're like, I think they're a good pattern.
05:07Two seconds.
05:08We're going to go patterns named after places.
05:09I need something more specific than that.
05:10Specifically Scottish places.
05:11Named after places in Scotland.
05:12What are those places?
05:13We recognise Fair Isle and Paisley.
05:15Mm-hm.
05:16I don't know the other, do we have any thoughts on that too?
05:19Argyle socks.
05:20And that first image, the pattern is Sanka, which is a type of knitting and it would normally
05:41be used, I think, on ceremonial gloves.
05:43But Sanka is the pattern at the first clue.
05:46Well done.
05:47Oh, no, they didn't.
05:48What would you like?
05:49Oh, the water, please.
05:50Water.
05:51Yes, you could.
05:52What is the connection between these clues?
05:53Here's the first.
05:59Next, please.
06:09Next, please.
06:10Copy.
06:11Copy.
06:12Exactly right.
06:13C.
06:14A.
06:15B.
06:16C.
06:17C.
06:18C.
06:19C.
06:20C.
06:21C.
06:22C.
06:23C.
06:24C.
06:25C.
06:26C.
06:27C.
06:28C.
06:29C.
06:30C.
06:31C.
06:32C.
06:33C.
06:34C.
06:35C.
06:36C.
06:37C.
06:39C.
06:40C.
06:41C.
06:42C.
06:43H.
06:44C.
06:45C.
06:46C.
06:47to make calcium carbonate, carbon, C for copy,
06:50and then, yes, snips and scissors, but tin snips.
06:54Tin, S-N, and what's A-G?
06:56Is it Silver Age?
06:57Yeah, oh yeah.
06:58Silver Age, yes, I mean, there's also a golden age
07:00of comic books, but obviously if you choose the Silver Age,
07:03you can have silver and A-G going before.
07:06Very well done, well calculated.
07:08Whitley Bays, what would you like?
07:10Could I have the Eye of Horus, please?
07:11Yes, you could.
07:12What connects these clues?
07:14Here's the first.
07:17It's an opera singer, I don't know who Boris Gunnarov is.
07:21Next, please.
07:22I don't know if it's a championship wins.
07:25I mean, it could be contested.
07:28I don't know.
07:29OK.
07:30OK, next, please.
07:31So he played Jesus in the National Christ.
07:35I don't know anything else that he did there.
07:37I don't know, disciples or anything like that.
07:40I'm just going to go for it.
07:41Next, please.
07:42Oh.
07:44Ooh, there's a question.
07:45Oh, God, I don't know about it.
07:46Um, so, he was famously really badly hurt when he was passionate about Christ.
07:52OK, so...
07:53Two seconds.
07:54Injuries.
07:55They sustained injuries.
07:56I don't think they all sustained injuries in the context of these clues.
08:03So a bonus chance for you now.
08:04Oh, no, they didn't.
08:05These were, um...
08:06They had a lovely time.
08:07Yeah.
08:08I mean...
08:09Final answer.
08:10They might have had a lovely time.
08:12But, uh, no.
08:13No.
08:14This is to do with achievements in languages that people don't speak.
08:20Now, I don't really want to talk about the first clue, because I can't say Bryn Ter Vell's
08:26right, and that drives our director mad.
08:28But that first great Welsh singer sang in Russian, even though it's not one of his languages.
08:35Ted Hughes, you know, he couldn't speak the original classics' languages, but he did the translation anyway.
08:41Nigel Richards at clue two, I mean, this is amazing.
08:43He won the World Scrabble Championship in French and again in Spanish, despite the fact that he can't really speak those languages.
08:51He learned the words, he learned the two-letter words, and he sort of approached it as a discipline.
08:55And that third clue, this is actors in The Passion of the Christ, the Mel Gibson film.
08:59The dialogue is in Aramaic and Latin, and they didn't speak the language.
09:05Back to, oh, no, they didn't, for the last question of the round.
09:08The Horned Viper, what connects these clues?
09:11Here's the first.
09:13I don't know who either of those people are.
09:15Next, please.
09:20It's like, oh, is it like a period of time?
09:21Yeah.
09:24Next, please.
09:29Oh, is it five years?
09:31I can't remember.
09:33Next, please.
09:37Is it five years?
09:38Yeah, should we say five years?
09:39Yeah.
09:41These lasted for five years?
09:42They lasted for five years.
09:44Well done.
09:44Well done.
09:45Tell me about these clues.
09:46So, The Coalition lasted for five years.
09:49Yes.
09:50Captain James Tiberius Kirk, five-year mission.
09:53Yes, it was in the original series of five-year mission.
09:56What about the first two clues?
09:57Not too sure.
09:58Yeah, take a stab at them being five years long.
10:01The first clue refers to a film, a romantic comedy called The Five-Year Engagement.
10:06Do you know Norman Fletcher over there?
10:07Yeah, from Porridge.
10:09Yes.
10:09What if I were to call him Norman Stanley Fletcher?
10:13Have you ever seen Porridge?
10:14I've seen bits of it.
10:16I'm literally, I'm tempted to abandon this quiz at this point and send them off to watch it,
10:21like the judge who speaks those words.
10:23And that judge is played by...
10:24I don't know.
10:25I don't know.
10:26Sorry.
10:28Robert De Niro.
10:28It's Ronnie Barker.
10:30It's Ronnie Barker.
10:31Ronnie Barker, who plays Norman Stanley Fletcher, is also his voice.
10:34Is it also the...
10:35I didn't know that.
10:35Yes.
10:36These blank...
10:38We'd better press on with the quiz because, you know, the cameras are here now.
10:41But the second it's over, I want you all to go away and watch Porridge.
10:45Could be the greatest series ever made.
10:48That means at the end of round one, oh no, they didn't have two points.
10:52The Whitley Bays have four.
10:54Round two, sequences round.
10:58Whitley Bays will be going first again.
11:00Which hieroglyph would you like?
11:02The water, please.
11:03Water.
11:04Excellent.
11:05I would like to know what comes fourth in a sequence.
11:07The first clue is this.
11:10Fourth, straight passage, fifth.
11:12So we're going to have second something first.
11:15Next, please.
11:18Is it between continent sizes?
11:21Yeah, that's good.
11:23So it would be between Africa and Asia?
11:29So would it be Suez?
11:31Should we try it?
11:31Try it, yeah.
11:33Do you think we're going to get anything from the third clue?
11:36No.
11:36Because I don't recognise anything, so...
11:37No.
11:38Yeah.
11:38Yeah, go for it.
11:41Second, Suez Canal first.
11:45Would be an acceptable answer.
11:46Very well done and nice early buzz.
11:49What's happening here?
11:50These are bodies of water that separate the continents by these sizes?
11:55Yeah, that's right.
11:56I mean, they're not all bodies of water.
11:57You know, the Isthmus of Panama is a bit of land.
12:00It's something that comes between the continents that are ranked in size,
12:04fifth, fourth, third, second, and between Africa and Asia,
12:08the Gulf of Suez, the Suez Canal, the Isthmus of Suez, all acceptable answers.
12:12Well done.
12:14Oh, no, they didn't.
12:15What would you like?
12:16Two reads, please.
12:17Two reads.
12:18What would come forth in this sequence?
12:20Here's the first.
12:21Two reads.
12:23Oh, hang on, hang on, hang on.
12:25Oh, no, yeah, because it was Henry's, I think, before him.
12:28So, yeah.
12:29Next, please.
12:30OK.
12:31Up to the next hole for six.
12:33Is it one of so Edward the Sixth?
12:35Oh, yes, yes, ma'am.
12:36Shakespeare wrote with Henry's face or something like that.
12:39Or is it Edward the Sixth?
12:40Oh, yes, very good.
12:42So, I-I to I-I-I.
12:44Are you sure?
12:45Yeah.
12:45So, it was...
12:47Should we get the next one or should we just go now?
12:49I don't.
12:50I'm not going now.
12:51Should we go two to three?
12:52Yes.
12:54Is it I-I arrow I-I-I?
12:57Yes, it is.
12:58And why is that?
13:00These are monarchs in order of ascension to the throne,
13:03so you'd have Queen Elizabeth II to Charles III,
13:06and then before that, George VI to Elizabeth II.
13:10Exactly. It's just the regnal numbers.
13:13So, we're starting with George V.
13:15So, it went George V, Edward VIII, George VI,
13:18Elizabeth II, Charles III.
13:20So, those are the regnal numbers with the names removed.
13:24Whitley Bays, what's next?
13:25Eye of Horus, please.
13:26Eye of Horus.
13:27These are going to be picture clues.
13:28What would you expect to see in the fourth picture?
13:30Here's the first.
13:35Next, please.
13:40Blue and grey, the starry blue.
13:42Next, please.
13:44Is that...?
13:45Is that the effect?
13:46It's not the effect in the background.
13:47No, it's not just a church iron.
13:49So, would it just be indicating a green?
13:51A green, a green.
13:52So, green.
13:53So, starry, blue, grey, green.
13:57Is it his periods?
14:00OK, so...
14:04Two seconds.
14:05A sugar cube.
14:07I don't think that would work.
14:09So, there's a bonus chance for you.
14:10Oh, no, they didn't.
14:12A picture of a big dolphin.
14:14Saying hippie.
14:16You know, that's a lot closer.
14:18I'm not going to give it to you.
14:20I thought you were going to get that
14:21when you were talking about the second clue.
14:24Starry, starry night.
14:26Paint your palette blue and grey.
14:29Look out on a summer's day with eyes that see the...
14:35Darkness in my soul.
14:36Darkness in my soul.
14:39The question just came up with this,
14:41which reflects the darkness in their souls.
14:42I don't know what it is, a sort of horned creature.
14:46It is The Great Vincent by Don McLean,
14:49a song about Van Gogh.
14:51And those are the...
14:52You're looking blank, is he?
14:53Not part of it.
14:54OK, I mean, how you're going to
14:56get the jokes in porridge when you hear Don McLean
15:00in your ears at the same time?
15:01I don't know.
15:02I was born in 2004.
15:04Oh!
15:07Oh, my word.
15:10Let's move on.
15:12What would you like for your own question?
15:13The lion, please.
15:15Lion.
15:15What will come forth in this sequence is the first.
15:22Next, please.
15:22First Diary.
15:25And what's this?
15:42Yeah, the Bridget Jones movies.
15:44Oh, yeah, movies.
15:46What comes forth in the sequence?
15:48Mad about the boy?
15:49Something like...
15:49Oh, oh, oh.
15:50First Diary.
15:51First Diary.
15:51First Diary is the answer.
15:53And talk me through the other clues.
15:54So, the second film or book is The Edge of Reason.
15:57Third one is Bridget Jones' Baby and then Mad about the Boy.
16:00This is the sequence of the film and we're going backwards.
16:03So, the first Bridget Jones' Diary,
16:05second Edge of Reason and so on.
16:07Very well done.
16:08Back to you, Whitley Bayes.
16:10What would you like?
16:10Twisted Flax, please.
16:11Twisted Flax.
16:12What will come forth in this sequence?
16:14Here's the first.
16:14For UNICEF, for peace.
16:19If that's...
16:19No, no.
16:20Next, please.
16:23Oh.
16:24So, yeah.
16:25Yep.
16:26I don't know what the sequence would be.
16:28Next, please.
16:30What is it?
16:31So, that's maybe...
16:32So, that was Mercury's second one.
16:34Yeah, that's Mercury's second.
16:35So, I don't know...
16:36I don't know who's one of them.
16:37Maybe...
16:38So, literature feels...
16:39Yeah.
16:40...medicine?
16:41Should we just go for a random literature winner or...
16:43Do you see any other...
16:44So, that was her second...
16:45Yeah.
16:46Or...
16:46I don't know what it was.
16:47I think it was...
16:48I think it was...
16:49Yeah.
16:50Two seconds.
16:52Winston for literature.
16:55Not it, I'm afraid.
16:56So, a bonus chance for you.
16:58Bob Dylan for literature.
17:00That did happen, didn't it?
17:02Oh, yeah.
17:02So weird.
17:04But no, that's not it either.
17:06What do you think the sequence is?
17:07We assume that the Mari in the third one is Marie Curie.
17:12He obviously won two Nobel Prizes.
17:15Well, they are all Curie's.
17:20Henry Labuse, in 1965, won the Nobel Prize for Peace
17:25and he was the son-in-law of Marie and Pierre Curie.
17:28He was married to their daughter, Eve.
17:30Irene Curie, another daughter, married Frederick Joliot
17:33and they won for chemistry.
17:35So, we're going backwards through the Curie's,
17:36arriving at, of course, Marie and Pierre for physics.
17:41Back to you.
17:42Oh, no, they didn't for the last questions round.
17:43Horn Viper.
17:44What will come forth in this sequence?
17:46Here's the first.
17:47Next, please.
17:56Next, please.
17:57Yeah, it must be, like, going down in fractions.
18:01Yeah, is it...
18:02Next, please.
18:04What do you think this is?
18:06So, the basic ones are 10p.
18:0810p.
18:0810p and 0.8333.
18:1010p equals 0.8333.
18:17Not the right answer, I'm afraid.
18:19Whitley Bayes, do you want to have a go?
18:21Is it just 10p equals 8.33333?
18:24No, that's wrong as well.
18:25Now, I'm sorry about this, George.
18:27Oh, not again.
18:28I mean, look, it is a math question.
18:30They are coin values and we're dividing them
18:35by the number of edges they have, exactly, or sides.
18:39So, a £1 coin has 12 edges.
18:42So, we've divided 100p by 12 and 50p by 7 and 20p by 7.
18:48So, a 10p has just the one edge.
18:52So, it would be 10p equals 10.
18:54Is it too late to change discipline?
18:59I'm quite good at karate.
19:02That means, at the end of round two,
19:05oh, no, they didn't have seven points.
19:07The Whitley Bays have seven points.
19:11Time for the connecting wall.
19:13Oh, no, they didn't.
19:14You'll be going first this time.
19:15Would you like lion or water?
19:17Lion, please.
19:18Lion. Two and a half minutes to solve that wall.
19:21Starting now.
19:23Um, Dalek.
19:25Oh, the oud, the silence.
19:27Yeah.
19:27Sontaran.
19:28Dalek.
19:29Dalek.
19:30Dalek, yeah.
19:31Um, also the master.
19:32Also the master.
19:33And the master.
19:33Okay.
19:34Um, okay.
19:36It could maybe not be silence.
19:37Okay.
19:38Um, so, uh,
19:40on the verge, on the rim, on the border, on the lip.
19:43Okay.
19:44Yeah.
19:44So, the scientist.
19:46Um, verge.
19:47Verge, border lip.
19:49Let's go through and bottle it.
19:53Yes.
19:54Um, definitely has to be oud.
19:57Definitely has to, well, if we try and work out the other ones,
19:59and then we just can...
20:00Yeah, definitely.
20:01Um, master and...
20:03The master and the Sontaran, let's say.
20:05Okay.
20:06What's nesting?
20:07Is that an anagram?
20:08The nesting consciousness.
20:09The autons.
20:10Oh, the autons.
20:11Yeah.
20:12That's a deep cut.
20:13Um, chimney.
20:14Chimney sweep.
20:15Chimney sweep.
20:16Hairsweep.
20:17Um...
20:19Um...
20:20International.
20:21Oman.
20:22Hair spray.
20:23Women.
20:24Winter.
20:25Water.
20:26Wedge.
20:27Oh, and wood, actually.
20:29Wedge, wood.
20:30Wedge, wood.
20:31Winter.
20:32Winter.
20:33Yeah.
20:34Winter.
20:35Perfect.
20:36So, you've got...
20:37Chimney nesting...
20:38Oh, silence as well.
20:39So, silence...
20:40Yeah.
20:41So, should we...
20:42What do you think?
20:43Hair.
20:44Spray.
20:45Here's a musical.
20:47Here's the film.
20:48Chimney sweep.
20:49Chimney sweep.
20:50Um, gets...
20:51Father Christmas lives there.
20:52In the...
20:53In the north of.
20:54He doesn't live in the chimney.
20:55What does that mean?
20:56Um, alter...
20:57You can alter something,
20:58but not spell like that.
20:59Yeah.
21:00We've got 30 seconds.
21:01Um...
21:02Okay.
21:03Should we try a Doctor Who block?
21:04Yeah.
21:05Yes.
21:06Are there any others,
21:07like any of these,
21:08which could also be Doctor Who?
21:09Apart from nesting.
21:10I'm not sure,
21:11but that's a deep cut.
21:12Okay.
21:13Yeah.
21:14So, should we try...
21:15Should we try the Doctor Who one first?
21:16Yeah.
21:17So, Dalek, Master, Silent, Suntaran.
21:19Yeah.
21:20Ten seconds.
21:21Two lives.
21:22Just try nesting.
21:23Nesting and Suntaran.
21:25One live.
21:27Oh!
21:28That's it.
21:29You've used your three lives.
21:30The wall has frozen.
21:31But have you found two groups?
21:32Tell me what connects border,
21:33rim, lip and verge.
21:34These are all edges.
21:35The sides, the boundaries.
21:36Synonyms, exactly.
21:37And the next group, Ood, Oman and so on.
21:40You can add W in front of them.
21:42You can to make Wood, Woman, Winter and Wedge.
21:44And you can get points for the connections
21:46in the groups you didn't find.
21:47So, let's resolve the wall.
21:49There we are.
21:50What about that third group?
21:51Dalek, Silence and so on.
21:53Those are Doctor Who, Aliens.
21:56Exactly so.
21:57And the last group, Master, Hare, Chimney and so on.
22:00Add Sweep after them.
22:02Or Shifu.
22:03Not really.
22:05What you can put after all of them is Peace.
22:09Masterpiece, Hairpiece, Chimneypiece, Altarpiece.
22:12But you found two groups and you gave me three connections.
22:14That is a total of five points.
22:16Let's bring in their opponents now.
22:18Give them the other wall and see how they get on.
22:20Welcome back, Whitley Bays.
22:22You have two and a half minutes to solve your wall.
22:24Starting now.
22:27OK, guys.
22:29Anything we've got?
22:31Spanish cities, but yes.
22:33Yes.
22:34How many have we got?
22:35Peplona, Granada, Bilbao.
22:37Is Sabadell, Valencia is obviously.
22:39Victoria, Dalishers, any other of them?
22:42Victoria's, no.
22:44Seville's a Spanish city as well.
22:46Yeah.
22:47Oranges, Seville orange, blood orange.
22:50Oh, I love it.
22:51Navel orange.
22:52Navel orange.
22:53Navel orange.
22:54Bergamot is a type of orange, isn't it?
22:56No.
22:57Any other one?
22:58Valencia, is that an orange?
22:59No.
23:00Yeah.
23:01Weir.
23:02Try it.
23:03Sorry, Valencia.
23:04Is navel definitely an orange, Jess?
23:05Yes.
23:06OK.
23:07Shall I go around then?
23:08What was the other one we said possibly?
23:09Bergamot.
23:10Oh, they're great.
23:11Yes, yes.
23:12So, Element, Derbyshire, Cordon, Pamplona, Granada, Schumann, Wallen, Sabadell, Seville,
23:16Weir, Bilbao.
23:17Have we got enough?
23:18We've taken out Spanish cities, so I might just have a quick run through of Seville,
23:23Granada, Pamplona, Bilbao.
23:25Yeah.
23:26Seville, Granada, Pamplona.
23:27Do we think Sabadell?
23:29Potentially.
23:30I think Derbyshire, Schumann, Cordon sound like surnames.
23:34They do, and Weir.
23:35Weir, Wallen could also be that.
23:37Could it be Gordon, Rishi?
23:39Like something to do with Prime Minister?
23:41Oh, Gordon Brown, Keir Starmer.
23:42Brilliant.
23:43And Neville Chamberlain.
23:46Yes.
23:47So then we've got Wallen, Element, Derbyshire, Schumann.
23:50Wouldn't be too...
23:51Any thoughts?
23:55Schumann?
23:56Not Schumer, yeah.
23:58Anything in...
23:59We've got Heumann in the middle of Schumann.
24:01Any other?
24:02Got Derbyshire.
24:03Shireville.
24:04Shire?
24:05Yeah, no.
24:06Wall, Element.
24:09I'm going to press the bell just in case it's not.
24:11It's not.
24:12Is there another...
24:13Could A-double-L-E-N be a...?
24:16It could be, yeah.
24:17OK.
24:20One life.
24:22What should we go for?
24:23Ten seconds.
24:25Sorry.
24:26Not it.
24:27That's your third life.
24:28Frozen.
24:29Why don't you find two groups?
24:30Tell me what connects Valencia, Blood and so on.
24:33These are oranges, we think.
24:34They're oranges.
24:35And the next group, Pamplona, Bilbao, Granada, Sabadell.
24:39They're Spanish cities.
24:40They are the Spanish cities.
24:41And you can get points for the connections in the groups you didn't find.
24:44So let's resolve the wall.
24:46There we are.
24:47Weir, Derbyshire and so on.
24:49You see anything?
24:50No.
24:51Sorry.
24:52Victoria's.
24:53No.
24:54It's not even Victoria Derbyshire.
24:55It's Delia Derbyshire.
24:56They're all composers.
24:57Judith Weir was master of the Queen's music for a time.
25:01Delia Derbyshire, Erelyn Wallen and Clara Schumann.
25:05And the last group, Seville, Element and so on.
25:08We didn't spot Clement.
25:09These are last names of Prime Ministers.
25:12Oh, sorry.
25:13First names of Prime Ministers.
25:14Apologies.
25:15And if you change the first letter.
25:17Exactly so.
25:18To get Neville, Clement, as in Clement Attlee, Gordon Brown and Rishi Sunak.
25:21But you did find two groups and you gave me three connections.
25:24That's a total of five points.
25:26Let's have a look at the overall scores.
25:29Oh, no.
25:30They didn't have 12 points.
25:32The Whitley Bays have 12 points.
25:35And if you know your ouds from your nestines, why don't you come along and play the next series
25:40of Only Connect?
25:41Go to the website bbc.co.uk slash Only Connect to find out how to apply.
25:46Meanwhile, we have got to sort out a winner in this match, come what may.
25:50So fingers on buzzers, teams, for the missing vowels round.
25:53The first group of disguised clues are all...
25:56This will be no good for you, Lizzie.
25:58...structures which are over 2,000 years old.
26:04Oh, no, they didn't.
26:05Stonehenge.
26:06Correct.
26:09Oh, no, they didn't.
26:10The Great Pyramid of Diva.
26:11Yes, it is.
26:16Oh, no, they didn't.
26:17The Palace of Knottos.
26:18Correct.
26:22Whitley Bays.
26:23The Parthen.
26:24Yes, it is.
26:25Next group.
26:26Musical acts after white has been removed.
26:32Oh, no, they didn't.
26:33Snake.
26:34The Stripes.
26:35Yes, it is.
26:36Whitley Bays.
26:37Barry.
26:38Correct.
26:39Whitley Bays.
26:40Sorry.
26:41Oh, no, they didn't.
26:42Do you know?
26:43Red Floyd.
26:44Red Floyd.
26:45Because the whites come out from pink.
26:46Next group.
26:47fictional teachers and what they teach.
26:50Oh, no, they didn't.
26:51Walter White and chemistry.
26:52Yes, it is.
26:54Oh, no, they didn't.
26:55Mr Miyagi and Karanti.
26:56Yes, it is.
26:57Oh, no, they didn't.
26:58Dolores Umbridge and the Defence Against the Dark Arts.
27:00No, I don't.
27:01I'm sorry.
27:02Oh, no, they didn't.
27:03Do you know that?
27:04Red Floyd.
27:05Red Floyd, because the whites come out from pink.
27:06Next group.
27:07Fictional teachers and what they teach.
27:08Oh, no, they didn't.
27:09Walter White and chemistry.
27:10Yes, it is.
27:14Oh, no, they didn't.
27:15Dolores Umbridge and the Defence Against the Dark Arts.
27:17I'm afraid that's not it. You lose a point. Whitley-Bays, do you know?
27:20Dolores Umbridge and Defence Against the Dark Arts.
27:26That's right, you threw in a rogue, the.
27:28But the bell has gone for the end of the quiz.
27:30And looking at the final scores,
27:33the winners with 19 points are, oh, no, they didn't.
27:37Very well done. You are through to the next round.
27:40Whitley-Bays, you finished with 14.
27:42You haven't lost a match before, so you are not out.
27:44We will see you again later in the competition.
27:47Now it is time to end the show with another reading
27:49from lovely Paradise Lost by John Milton.
27:53We've still yet to get to the end of it,
27:55but we are providing the added value the BBC asked for.
27:58It's a sort of cut-out.
27:59If you edit all the endings of the shows together,
28:01you'll have a full audio book of Paradise Lost,
28:04completely free, courtesy of BBC Two.
28:08Nine times the space that measures day and night.
28:12To mortal men he with his horrid crew lay vanquished,
28:15rolling in the fiery gulf, confounded though immortal.
28:18But his doom...
28:20His doom what?
28:22Find out next week. Goodbye.
28:24Goodbye.
28:25See you next week.
28:26Bye bye.
28:27Bye bye.
28:28Bye bye.
28:29Bye bye.
28:31Bye bye.
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