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The BBC quiz show "Only Connect", hosted by Victoria Coren Mitchell. In this thirteenth episode of the series, the Whitley Baes and the Oh No They Didn't try to not get eliminated like a camper in Friday the 13th.

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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, Pringles, aren't they?
05:07Yeah, oh my goodness.
05:08I think they're a good pattern.
05:09Two seconds.
05:10We're going to go patterns named after places.
05:11I need something more specific than that.
05:12Specifically Scottish places.
05:13Named after places in Scotland.
05:14What are those places?
05:15We recognise Fair Isle and Paisley.
05:16Mm-hm.
05:17I don't know the other, do we have any thoughts on that?
05:18The Argyle socks.
05:19Oh, yeah.
05:20And that first one, I think we have a fourth one.
05:21Shall we get a fourth?
05:22Shall we get a fourth?
05:23Yeah.
05:24Next one, please.
05:25They're like, Pringles socks, aren't they?
05:26Yeah, oh my goodness.
05:27I think they're a good pattern.
05:28Two seconds.
05:29We're going to go patterns named after places.
05:36In the first image, the pattern is Sanka, which is a type of knitting
05:40and it would normally be 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?
05:49I've got 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.
06:03Snakes.
06:04Snakes.
06:05Snakes.
06:07Snakes.
06:08It's, yeah.
06:09Next, please.
06:10Copy.
06:11Copy.
06:12Exactly right.
06:13C, A.
06:14C.
06:15A, B, C.
06:16Right, it's not C, it's that?
06:17No.
06:18Oh, yeah.
06:19That's right.
06:20Yeah.
06:21Next, please.
06:22Carbon.
06:23Oh, elements.
06:24Yeah.
06:25Yeah.
06:26So they start with...
06:27Yeah, like, yeah.
06:28They're missing a chemical element symbol before the word.
06:32I will take that answer.
06:33One of the nice things about this question is you could do even more.
06:36So, yes, you add the symbols.
06:38Can you go through all the clues?
06:39You put the name of the elements before it.
06:42You put the name and the symbols.
06:44So, calcium, C, A, at that last clue, to make calcium carbonate.
06:48Carbon, C for copy.
06:50And then, yes, snips and scissors, but tin snips.
06:54Tin, S, N.
06:55And what's A, G?
06:56Is it silver age?
06:57Yeah.
06:58Oh, yeah.
06:59Silver age, yes.
07:00I mean, there's also a golden age of comic books.
07:01But obviously, if you choose the silver age, you can have silver and A, G going before.
07:06Very well done.
07:07Well calculated.
07:08Whitley Bayes, what would you like?
07:10Could I have the Eye of Horus, please?
07:11Yes, you could.
07:12What connects these clues?
07:13Here's the first.
07:17Is he an opera singer?
07:18OK.
07:19I don't know who...
07:20Next, please.
07:22I don't know if it's a championship wins.
07:26I mean, it could be contested.
07:28I don't know.
07:29OK.
07:30OK.
07:31Next, please.
07:32So, 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.
07:39I'm just going to go for it.
07:40Next, please.
07:41Next, please.
07:44Oh.
07:47So, he was famously really badly hurt when he was passionate about Christ.
07:52OK, so...
07:53Two seconds.
07:55They sustained injuries.
07:57I don't think they all sustained injuries in the context of these clues.
08:02So, a bonus chance for you now.
08:04Oh, no, they didn't.
08:05These were...
08:06They had a lovely time.
08:07Yeah.
08:09Final answer.
08:10They might have had a lovely time.
08:12But, no.
08:13This is to do with achievements in languages that people don't speak.
08:21Now, I don't really want to talk about the first clue, because I can't say Bryn Ter Vell's name right, and that drives our director mad.
08:27But that first great Welsh singer sang in Russian, even though it's not one of his languages.
08:36Ted Hughes, you know, he couldn't speak the original classics' languages, but he did the translation anyway.
08:41Nigel Richards at clue two.
08:42I 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.
08:50He 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.
09:00The 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's next?
09:10These clues.
09:11Here's the first.
09:12I don't know who either of those people are.
09:15Next, please.
09:20Oh, is it like a period of time?
09:21Yeah.
09:24Next, please.
09:30Oh, is it five years?
09:31I can't remember.
09:32Next.
09:33Next, please.
09:37Is it five years?
09:38Yeah, should we say five years?
09:39Yeah.
09:40These lasted for five years?
09:42They lasted for five years.
09:43Well 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 the big five years long.
10:00The first clue refers to a film, a romantic comedy called The Five-Year Engagement.
10:05Oh.
10:06Do you know Norman Fletcher over there?
10:07Yeah, from Porridge.
10:08Yes.
10:09What if I were to call him Norman Stanley Fletcher?
10:12Have you ever seen Porridge?
10:14I've seen bits of it.
10:15I'm literally, I'm tempted to abandon this quiz at this point and send them off to watch it.
10:20Like the judge who speaks those words.
10:22And that judge is played by?
10:23I don't know.
10:24I don't know.
10:25Sorry.
10:27Robert De Niro.
10:28It's Ronnie Barker.
10:29It's Ronnie Barker, who plays Norman Stanley Fletcher.
10:32Is Norman Stanley Fletcher?
10:33Is also his voice?
10:34Is it also the...
10:35I didn't know that.
10:36Yes.
10:37These 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.
10:57Round two.
10:58Sequence is round.
10:59Whitley 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.
11:10The fourth, straight passage, fifth.
11:12So we're going to have second something first.
11:14Yeah.
11:15Next, please.
11:17Is it between continent sizes?
11:21Oh, that's good.
11:22So it would be between Africa and Asia?
11:28So it would be Suez.
11:30Should we try it?
11:31Try it, yeah.
11:32Do you think we're going to get anything from the third clue?
11:35No.
11:36Because I don't recognise anything, so...
11:37No.
11:38Yeah.
11:39Yeah?
11:40Go for it.
11:41Second, Suez Canal first.
11:44Would be an acceptable answer.
11:46Very well done and nice early buzz.
11:48What's happening here?
11:49These 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.
11:59Something that comes between the continents that are ranked in size fifth, fourth, third, second, and between Africa and Asia, the Gulf of Suez, the Suez Canal, the Isthmus of Suez, all acceptable answers.
12:12Well done.
12:13Oh, no, they didn't.
12:14What would you like?
12:15Two reads, please.
12:16Two reads.
12:17What would come forth in this sequence?
12:19Here's the first.
12:20Oh, hang on, hang on, hang on.
12:21Can you hear this?
12:22No, yeah, because it was...
12:23Next, please.
12:24OK.
12:25Up to the next hole for six.
12:26Is it Edward the Sixth?
12:27Oh, yes, yes, ma'am.
12:28Or is it Edward the Sixth?
12:29Oh, yes.
12:30Very good.
12:31Is it Edward the Sixth?
12:32Is it Edward the Sixth?
12:33Oh, yes, ma'am.
12:34Is it Edward the Sixth?
12:35Oh, yes, ma'am.
12:36Or is it Edward the Sixth?
12:37Oh, yes, ma'am.
12:38Or is it Edward the Sixth?
12:39Oh, yes.
12:40Very good, yeah.
12:41So, aye, aye, aye, aye.
12:42Are you sure?
12:44Yeah.
12:45So, it was...
12:46Shall we get the next one or should we just go now?
12:48I...
12:49I'm not going now.
12:50Shall we go two to three?
12:51No, two to three?
12:52Yes, please.
12:53Is it aye, aye, arrow, aye, aye, aye?
12:56Yes, it is.
12:58And why is that?
12:59These are monarchs in order of ascension to the throne.
13:03So, you'd have Queen Elizabeth the Second to Charles the Third.
13:06And then before that, George the Sixth to Elizabeth the Second.
13:10Exactly.
13:11It's just the regnal numbers.
13:13So, we're starting with George the Fifth.
13:14So, it went George the Fifth, Edward the Eighth,
13:17George the Sixth, Elizabeth the Second, Charles the Third.
13:20So, those are the regnal numbers with the names removed.
13:23Whitley 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.
13:42Next, please.
13:43I don't think that would work.
13:45So, there's a bonus chance for you.
13:46Oh, no, they didn't.
13:47A picture of a big dolphin.
13:48A picture of a big dolphin.
13:49Saying hippie.
13:50Do you know, that's a lot closer.
13:51I'm not going to give it to you.
13:53I thought you were going to get that when you were talking about the second class.
13:54I think it's a big dolphin.
13:55Is it a big dolphin?
13:56I don't think that would work.
13:57So, there's a bonus chance for you.
13:58Oh, no, they didn't.
13:59A picture of a big dolphin.
14:00Saying hippie.
14:01Do you know, that's a lot closer.
14:02I'm not going to give it to you.
14:03I thought you were going to get that when you were talking about the second clue.
14:07Starry, starry night.
14:08Paint your palette blue and grey.
14:09Look out on a summer's day with eyes that see the darkness in my soul.
14:12Darkness in my soul.
14:13Yes.
14:14I don't think that would work.
14:15I don't think that would work.
14:16So, there's a bonus chance for you.
14:17Oh, no, they didn't.
14:18A picture of a big dolphin.
14:19Saying hippie.
14:20Do you know, that's a lot closer.
14:21I'm not going to give it to you.
14:22I thought you were going to get that when 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 darkness in my soul.
14:36Darkness in my soul.
14:37Darkness in my soul.
14:39The question just came up with this, which reflects the darkness in their souls.
14:42I don't really know what it is, a sort of horned creature.
14:46It is The Great Vincent by Don McLean, a song about Van Gogh.
14:51And those are the, you're looking blank, is he?
14:53Never heard of it.
14:54Okay.
14:55I mean, how you're going to get the jokes in porridge when you've got Don McLean in your ears at the same time?
15:01I don't know.
15:02I was born in 2004.
15:04Oh, my word.
15:09Let's move on.
15:12What would you like for your own question?
15:14The lion, please.
15:15The lion.
15:16What will come forth in this sequence is the first.
15:18Boy.
15:19It can't be fast boy.
15:21Next, please.
15:23First Diary.
15:24First Diary.
15:25First Diary.
15:26First Diary.
15:27First Diary.
15:28And what's this?
15:29Bridget Jones.
15:30Yeah, the Bridget Jones movies.
15:31Oh, yeah.
15:32Movies.
15:33What comes forth in the sequence?
15:35Mad about the boy.
15:36First Diary.
15:37First Diary.
15:38First Diary.
15:40First Diary is the answer.
15:41And talk me through the other clues.
15:42The second film or book is The Edge of Reason.
15:45Third one is Bridget Jones' Baby and then Mad About the Boy.
15:46This is the sequence of the film and we're going backwards.
15:47So the first Bridget Jones' Diary, second, Edge of Reason and so on.
15:50Very well done.
15:51Back to you, Whitley Bayes.
15:52What would you like?
15:53Twisted Flax, please.
15:54Twisted Flax.
15:55What will come forth in this sequence?
15:56Here's the first.
15:57Four UNICEF.
15:58Four piece.
15:59No.
16:00No.
16:01No.
16:02No.
16:03No.
16:04No.
16:05No.
16:06No.
16:07No.
16:08No.
16:09No.
16:10No.
16:11No.
16:12No.
16:13No.
16:14No.
16:15No.
16:16No.
16:17No.
16:18No.
16:19No.
16:20No.
16:21No.
16:22No.
16:23Next, please.
16:24Oh, so, yeah.
16:25Yep.
16:26So, I don't know what the sequence would mean.
16:28So, next, please.
16:30Is it...?
16:31So that was...
16:32So that was Instant.
16:33So that was Marie Theureゆi's second.
16:34Yeah.
16:35Yeah, open the second.
16:36So I don't know.
16:37Who's Wanna?
16:38Maybe for...
16:39So Literature Fields?
16:40Yeah.
16:41Good, medicine.
16:42Let's go for a random Literature winner or Mari's Maybe any other...
16:44Because that was her second part?
16:45Yeah.
16:46... I don't know what was it.
16:48I guess you got that.
16:49Yeah.
16:50Two seconds.
16:52Winston for Literature.
16:55Not it, I'm afraid, so a bonus chance for you.
16:58Bob Dylan for Literature.
17:00That did happen, didn't it?
17:02Oh, yeah.
17:03So weird.
17:04But no, that's not it either.
17:06What do you think the sequence is?
17:08We assume that the Mari in the third one is Marie Curie.
17:11He obviously won two Nobel Prizes.
17:15Well, they are all Curies.
17:19Oh!
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 Frederic Joliot
17:33and they won for chemistry.
17:35So we're going backwards through the Curies,
17:37arriving at, of course, Marie and Pierre for physics.
17:40Back to you.
17:42Oh, no, they didn't.
17:43We're going to ask questions around Horn Viper.
17:45What will come forth in this sequence?
17:46Here's the first.
17:48Is it conversion?
17:50Is it conversion?
17:51Is it decimization?
17:53Yeah.
17:54Yeah.
17:55Yeah.
17:56Next, please.
17:58Yeah, it must be going down in fractions.
18:02Yeah.
18:03Next.
18:04Next, please.
18:05What do you think this is?
18:0710p.
18:0810p and 0.8333.
18:10Yeah?
18:11Yeah.
18:12Yeah.
18:1310p 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?
18:23No, 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 by the number of edges they have.
18:37Exactly.
18:38Or sides.
18:39So a Β£1 coin has 12 edges.
18:42So we've divided 100p by 12 and 50p by 7 and 20p by 7.
18:47So a 10p has just the one edge.
18:51So 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,
19:04Oh No They Didn't have seven points.
19:06The 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.
19:24Um, Dalek.
19:25Oh, the oud, the silence.
19:27Yeah.
19:28Sontaran.
19:29Dalek.
19:30Dalek.
19:31Yeah.
19:32Also the master.
19:33And the master.
19:34Okay.
19:35Um, okay.
19:36It could maybe not be silence.
19:37Okay.
19:38Um, so, uh,
19:41on the verge, on the rim, on the border, on the lip.
19:43Okay.
19:44Yeah.
19:45Um, verge.
19:47Ferdinand, border lip.
19:49Ferdinand, border lip.
19:54Yes.
19:55Um, definitely has to be oud.
19:57Definitely has to...
19:58Well, if we try and work out the other ones,
19:59and then we just can...
20:00Um, master and...
20:03The master and Sontaran, let's say.
20:04Okay.
20:05What's nesting?
20:06Is that an anagram?
20:07The nesting consciousness.
20:08Nesting consciousness.
20:09The autons.
20:10Oh, the autons.
20:11That's a deep cut.
20:12Um, chimney.
20:13Chimney sweep.
20:14Chimney sweep.
20:15Hairsweep.
20:16Hairsweep.
20:18Um...
20:19Um...
20:20Inter Milan.
20:21International.
20:22Oman.
20:23Hair spray.
20:24Women.
20:25Winter.
20:26Water.
20:27Wedge.
20:28Oh, and wood, actually.
20:29Wedge.
20:30Wedge.
20:31Wedge.
20:32Winter.
20:33Winter.
20:34Yeah.
20:35Okay, so you've got...
20:36So then...
20:37Chimney nesting.
20:38Oh, silence as well.
20:39So silence.
20:40Yeah.
20:41And...
20:42So should we...
20:43What do you think?
20:44Hair.
20:45Spray.
20:46Hair's a musical.
20:47Hair's a film.
20:48Chimney sweep.
20:49Chimney sweep.
20:50Um, I guess...
20:51Father Christmas lives there.
20:52In the north of.
20:53He doesn't live in the chimney.
20:54What does that mean?
20:56Um, you can alter something, but not spell like that.
20:59Yeah.
21:00We've got 30 seconds.
21:01Um...
21:02Shall we try a Doctor Who block?
21:03Yeah.
21:04Yes.
21:05Are there any others, like any of these, which could also be Doctor Who?
21:09Apart from nesting, not sure, but that's a deep cut.
21:12Okay.
21:13So should we try...
21:14Shall we try the Doctor Who one first?
21:15Okay.
21:16So...
21:17So Dalek Master, Silent Suntaran.
21:19Yeah.
21:20Ten seconds.
21:21Two lives.
21:22Just try nesting.
21:23Nesting and Suntaran.
21:25One life.
21:26Oh!
21:27That's it.
21:28You've used your three lives.
21:29The wall has frozen.
21:30But you've found two groups.
21:31Tell me what connects.
21:32Border, Rim, 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.
21:45And you can get points for the connections in 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, Hair, Chimney and so on.
22:01I'd sweep after them.
22:02Or Shifu?
22:03Not really.
22:05What you can put after all of them is Peace.
22:08Masterpiece, 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, give 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.
22:26Okay, guys.
22:28Anything we've got?
22:30Spanish cities.
22:32Yes.
22:33How many have we got?
22:34Peplona, Granada, Bilbao.
22:37Is Sabadell?
22:38Valencia is obviously.
22:39Victoria, Darbishers.
22:40Any other one?
22:41Victoria is no.
22:43Seville is a Spanish city as well.
22:45You've got Valencia, Bilbao, Granada.
22:47Dishes.
22:48Seville orange, blood orange.
22:50Oh, I love it.
22:51Naval orange.
22:52Naval orange.
22:53Bergamot is a type of orange, is it?
22:55No.
22:56Any other one?
22:57Valencia is that an orange?
22:58No.
22:59Yeah.
23:00Weir.
23:01Try it.
23:02Sorry.
23:03Is Naval definitely an orange, Jess?
23:05Yes.
23:06Shall I go around then?
23:07What was the other one we said?
23:08Possibly?
23:09Bergamot.
23:10Oh, they're great.
23:11So, 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.
23:25Seville, Granada, Pamplona.
23:27Do we think Sabadell?
23:28Potentially, erm...
23:29Okay.
23:30I think Derbyshire, Schumann, Gordon sound like surnames.
23:34They do, and Weir.
23:35Weir, Wallen could also be that.
23:37Could it be Gordon, Rishi, like something to do with Prime Minister?
23:40Oh, Gordon Brown, Keir Starmer.
23:42Brilliant.
23:43And Neville Chamberlain.
23:45Yes.
23:46So then we've got Wallen, Element, Derbyshire, Schumann.
23:49Wouldn't be true.
23:50Any thoughts?
23:52Schumann?
23:53Schumann?
23:54No, it's not Schumann.
23:55Schumann?
23:56No, it's not Schumann.
23:57Yeah.
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.
24:06No.
24:07Wall, Element.
24:08I'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?
24:15It could be.
24:16Yeah.
24:17OK.
24:20One life.
24:21What should we go for?
24:23Ten seconds.
24:25Sorry.
24:26Not it.
24:27That's your third life.
24:28The wall has frozen.
24:29But you found 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.
24:49Have you seen anything?
24:50No.
24:51I'm sorry.
24:52Victoria's.
24:53No.
24:54It's not even Victoria Derbyshire, it's Delia Derbyshire.
24:56They are all composers.
24:58Judith Weir was master of the Queen's music for a time.
25:01Delia Derbyshire, Erelyn Wallen and Clara Schumann.
25:04And the last group, Seville, Element and so on.
25:08We didn't spot Clement.
25:09These are last names of Prime Ministers.
25:11Oh, sorry.
25:12First names of Prime Ministers.
25:13Apologies.
25:14And if you change the first letter.
25:16Exactly so.
25:17To 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, they didn't have 12 points.
25:32The Whitley Bays have 12 points.
25:36And if you know your ouds from your nestines, why don't you come along and play the next series of Only Connect.
25:41Go to the website bbc.co.uk slash onlyconnect 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.
26:15Oh, no, they didn't.
26:16The Palace of Knottos.
26:18Correct.
26:21Whitley Bays.
26:23The Parthony.
26:24Yes, it is.
26:25Next group, musical acts after white has been removed.
26:32Oh, no, they didn't.
26:33Snake.
26:34As in Whitesnake.
26:38Oh, no, they didn't.
26:39The Stripes.
26:40Yes, it is.
26:43Whitley Bays.
26:44Bowie.
26:45Correct.
26:48Whitley Bays.
26:49Sorry.
26:50Oh, no, they didn't.
26:51Do you know?
26:52Red Floyd.
26:53Red Floyd.
26:54Because the whites come out from pink.
26:55Next group, fictional teachers and what they teach.
27:01Oh, no, they didn't.
27:02Walter White and chemistry.
27:03Yes, it is.
27:07Oh, no, they didn't.
27:08Do you think it's Maggie and Karate?
27:09Yes, 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.
27:18You lose a point.
27:19Whitley Bays, do you know?
27:20Dolores Umbridge and defence against the dark arts.
27:22That's right.
27:23You threw in a rogue V.
27:24But the bell has gone for the end of the quiz.
27:25And looking at the final scores, the winners with 19 points are Oh No They Didn't.
27:37Very well done.
27:38You are through to the next round.
27:40Whitley Bays, you finished with 14.
27:41You haven't lost a match before, so you are not out.
27:43We will see you again later in the competition.
27:46Now it is time to end the show with another reading from lovely Paradise Lost by John Milton.
27:52We've still yet to get to the end of it, but we are providing the added value the BBC asked for.
27:57It's a sort of cut out.
27:58If you edit all the endings of the shows together, you'll have a full audio book of Paradise Lost,
28:04completely free, courtesy of BBC Two.
28:07Nine times the space that measures day and night.
28:11To mortal men he with his horrid crew lay vanquished, rolling in the fiery gulf, confounded though immortal.
28:18But his doom...
28:20His doom what?
28:22Find out next week.
28:24Goodbye.
28:37Thank you
28:48Five beling
28:54Mark
28:55Bill
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