Skip to playerSkip to main content
Only Connect Season 21 Episode 14
-------------------------------
Welcome to CosmicTrailer!
Your portal for the newest and hottest movie & TV show trailers, teasers, and exclusive sneak peeks. We bring you epic sci-fi, blockbusters, and binge-worthy series updates. Subscribe for your daily dose of cinematic adrenaline!

#CosmicTrailer #MovieTrailers #TVShows #NewTrailers #FilmNews #Cinema
Transcript
00:00The cleverer you are, the damper your armpits.
00:03Let's meet the teams.
00:05On my right, Matt Rowland, a maths teacher who once prepared a 50-layer lasagna.
00:12Dimitri Samarasinga, a commercial planner who attended the premiere of Hannah Montana, the movie.
00:18And their captain, Damian Evans, a retail space planner who played cricket for Pembrokeshire.
00:24Devotees of the district line, they are the Metrophiles.
00:28Damian, we haven't seen you for a few weeks.
00:30What's the most interesting thing you've done since we last met?
00:33Well, Matt's had an Ofsted inspection.
00:37I've been to quite a few music gigs and Dimitri has shaved his beard.
00:42I thought you'd brought a new team member.
00:47Well, very dashing.
00:49Good luck this evening.
00:50You are playing on my left.
00:53Lowry Williams, an HR specialist who has travelled the entirety of Highway 101.
01:00Rhys Davis, an IT manager who's played Seymour in Little Shop of Horrors twice.
01:05And their captain, Tom Parry-Jones, a football journalist who has sung for six members of the royal family.
01:11United by a passion for performing, they are the showstoppers.
01:15Now, that sounds like a glamorous life.
01:17Tom, what have you been up to since we last met?
01:19Well, Rhys and I have just got back from New York.
01:22We went and saw some...
01:23Well, Rhys went to see a Broadway show and I walked a very long way around Manhattan.
01:28And what about you, Lowry?
01:29I've actually been poorly.
01:31I had pneumonia, so I've been bedridden since I saw you last.
01:34Well, I'm very sorry to hear it, but surely nothing will send you back to health than a gruelling evening in this studio.
01:40Exactly.
01:41Welcome back, all of you.
01:42You all won your opening heats outright, so of course you can't be knocked out tonight, however hard you try.
01:46Let's play for the sheer fun of it.
01:48Showstoppers, if you run the toss, you'll be going first.
01:51Please choose a hieroglyph.
01:52I think we'll start with water, please.
01:55Water.
01:56What is the connection between these picture clues?
01:59Here's the first.
02:01Our class is blue sand.
02:04I think we need the next one.
02:05Yeah, next, please.
02:08Four swords.
02:09Could be tarot cards.
02:10That's actually not a match out, tarot cards.
02:12Do you think?
02:13I think maybe the next one.
02:14For two points, yes.
02:15Yeah.
02:15Yeah, next, please.
02:17A mask.
02:18A medical mask.
02:19Is there a mask?
02:2115 seconds.
02:21Yeah, I think maybe the next one.
02:23Yeah, next, please.
02:25An ocarina.
02:27Zelda's got ocarina of time.
02:29There's also an ocarina mentioned in there.
02:30Oh, is it sorts of times?
02:32Two seconds.
02:33Oh, these are all mentioned in Legend of Zelda video game titles.
02:42They are from the Legend of Zelda.
02:45Do you know those titles?
02:47The last one was a picture of an ocarina, so that's ocarina of time.
02:50The mask is the follow-on to that, Majora's Mask.
02:53The second clue was Skyward Sword.
02:56Well, it's four swords.
02:57There's a couple of them.
02:58There's four swords and four swords adventures.
02:59And then the sands of time, I think.
03:02No, it's Phantom Hourglass.
03:05Very well done.
03:06You get the point for that.
03:07Metrophiles, what would you like?
03:08Could we have the Twisted Flax, please?
03:10Yes, you could.
03:11What is the connection between these clues?
03:13Here's the first.
03:14Next, please.
03:44Are these all words that come from German?
03:53They are not all words that come from German.
03:56So, showstoppers, you've got the chance for a bonus point.
03:58They're all words that derive from authors' names.
04:01They are words that come from authors' names.
04:04Please talk me through the clues.
04:05What are the words?
04:06Evoking Victorian city life, I would have said, was Dickensian.
04:08We've got Kafkaesque, Orwellian, and Sadistic.
04:13Exactly right.
04:14They are all adjectives derived from authors' names.
04:17What would you like for your own question?
04:18Two reads, please.
04:19Two reads.
04:20What connects these clues?
04:21Here's the first.
04:22Did she win the Oscar for Blindside in 2013 or a bit later?
04:29No, Pacino would have won an Oscar in 2019.
04:30I think we need the next one.
04:33He's going to be close.
04:35Next, please.
04:36Well, she won the Oscar for...
04:38Oh, it's who won the Razzie.
04:40So it's who won the Oscar and who won the Razzie in those years, I think.
04:43Yeah.
04:43On the top, we have the Oscar winners in the parenthesised year, and on the bottom, we
04:51have winners of the Razzie, the Golden Raspberry Award for that year.
04:56That is not the answer, I'm afraid, so I'm going to bring up all the clues.
05:00Yeah, you're right.
05:01Metrophiles.
05:02Do you want to have a go for a bonus point?
05:03I think it's like you had the word the, for example, heat with Al Pacino and the heat
05:08was a film with Sandra Bullock in those years.
05:10That's what it is.
05:11What can you tell me about the other clues?
05:13Do you know the film names?
05:13The Room and The Room for Brie Larson.
05:16Exactly.
05:16Help and The Help.
05:17Who?
05:17McCartney and Batman.
05:19The Batman.
05:20Exactly so.
05:21So well done, you get that bonus, and what's the next question?
05:24Can we have the lion, please?
05:26Lion.
05:27What connects are these clues?
05:29Here's the first.
05:31Quite big as well, AI.
05:32Okay.
05:33Yeah, big.
05:34I hope the size is going to be...
05:35Next, please.
05:38The abbreviated is TIFF.
05:41TIFF.
05:41AI, TIFF.
05:43Anything else?
05:45No.
05:46Try to give me a question.
05:47What you can buy.
05:47Okay.
05:48Public to buy tickets.
05:49Next, please.
05:52John Paul Gauthier.
05:53I don't know what the audience wants.
05:55Is it Toronto film question?
05:56I don't know.
05:57I think we need the...
05:58Next, please.
05:59We will go with birds.
06:13They feature birds on their things.
06:18I don't think they do feature birds on their things, so a bonus chance for you showstoppers.
06:23When you turn them into acronyms, they are picture file formats.
06:28So you've got AI is Adobe Illustrator.
06:32TIFF is...
06:33I can't remember what it stands for, but that's a picture file format.
06:36Tag image.
06:37JPG is JPEG, obviously, and PNG is a...
06:40Ping file.
06:40Exactly.
06:41You said early on that the initials of the Toronto International Film Festival are TIFF,
06:45and it's .TIFF.
06:46They are image file extensions in computing.
06:50Your turn for a choice, Metrophiles.
06:51What's it to be?
06:52I think Eye of Horus this time.
06:54Eye of Horus.
06:55What connects these clues?
06:56Here's the first.
06:58Thank you, Caesar.
07:00Next, please.
07:02Oh, okay.
07:03If you're anything, they play in purple.
07:05They just people...
07:06So he wore purple a lot.
07:08They just think that I've represented them like purple.
07:10Potentially, do you want to count them?
07:12Next, I don't know.
07:13We've got time gates.
07:14I think they're great.
07:16What else would Fiorentine be?
07:18Florence.
07:18Well, they're from Florence somewhere.
07:19Was Julius Caesar from Florence, or was he Roman?
07:22Do you want to go next?
07:23I think...
07:24All right, next, please.
07:27Yes, the poems when I'm older, all that works.
07:31They're all things that wear purple.
07:33All to do with wearing purple.
07:35In the last clue, simply those glamorous fellows, bishops.
07:39Yes.
07:40What can you tell me about the clues you're looking at?
07:42Julius Caesar's favourite colour was purple.
07:45Like, the Roman emperors were all known for...
07:47It was an imperial colour.
07:48Yeah, Tyrion purple.
07:49Yeah, and Fiorentina.
07:51Football team, football club from Florence.
07:53They are known as the Viola because they wear purple.
07:56And the poem is, when I'm older, I shall wear purple.
07:59That's it.
07:59When I'm an old woman, I'll wear purple with a red hat,
08:02which doesn't go and doesn't suit me.
08:05I mean, I'm already there.
08:06A great poem by Jenny Joseph.
08:08Well done.
08:09All about wearing purple.
08:10One question remains.
08:11The horned viper.
08:12That will go to you, metrophiles.
08:15It's the music question.
08:17And here's your first clue.
08:18I don't want you to get lost.
08:43I don't want you to go, bro.
08:48Sorry.
08:49The song's on.
08:50Next, please.
08:55Two seconds.
08:59Are these places you will eat?
09:02They are places you eat.
09:03What did you recognise?
09:05I only really recognised Tom's Diner at the end, actually.
09:08That's two four.
09:08Was it Joni Mitchell in number two, but I didn't know the song?
09:11It's called Chinese Cafe.
09:12Oh, right.
09:13And the first one, Sam Fender, Greasy Spoon.
09:16And clue three, did you recognise the voice of the person singing?
09:19I did, but I wouldn't drag it up now.
09:21It's a big recent star.
09:23Harry Styles.
09:24Yeah, Harry Styles.
09:25Scene for a sushi restaurant or something like that?
09:26Music for a sushi restaurant.
09:27Exactly it.
09:28That means, at the end of round one, the Metrophiles have two points.
09:32The Showstoppers have five.
09:36On to the sequences round.
09:37And Showstoppers, you'll be going first again.
09:39What would you like?
09:40Uh, may we have the twisted flax, please?
09:43Yes, you may.
09:44What would come forth in this sequence?
09:47Here's the first.
09:49What marriages?
09:50I don't want to throw in.
09:51Got to go next.
09:52Next, please.
09:54All marriages.
09:56All marriages.
09:58All marriages.
09:58So a third of marriages end in divorce.
10:00Half of marriages don't result in children.
10:03Is it that many?
10:04No.
10:05I don't know.
10:05Do we know next?
10:06No.
10:07Next, please.
10:08Oh, my gosh.
10:10Okay.
10:12One second.
10:24Um...
10:25One out of one...
10:27Uh...
10:28Happen.
10:29I haven't got a clue.
10:31I mean, yeah, I think three people will email in and say, well, that's sort of correct,
10:37but I'm not going to accept it.
10:40Metrophiles, you've got a chance for bonus points.
10:41Six out of six married Henry VIII.
10:45I think I'm going to take your answer.
10:48It is not absolutely perfect in every respect, but you've solved the puzzle.
10:53So, we're thinking of the six marriages of Henry VIII.
10:57Two out of six, or a third, as we've expressed it, end in divorce.
11:01Which marriages are those?
11:02Catherine of Aragon and Anna Cleese.
11:03Anna Cleese.
11:04Exactly.
11:05A half, or three out of the six marriages, don't result in children.
11:08That's the last three marriages.
11:11Two thirds, or four out of six, are those born in England.
11:14Who wasn't born in England?
11:15Anna Cleese and Catherine of Aragon.
11:16And Catherine of Aragon.
11:17So, if you were going to complete a sequence of parts of six, you'd have five out of six,
11:23for example, end with Henry surviving.
11:25But the fractions get bigger, and we're talking about larger components of the marriages of
11:31Henry VIII specifically, so I want to hear a number bigger than two thirds that would apply,
11:36and six out of six, of course, for better or worse, were married to Henry VIII.
11:41Well done.
11:42You get that bonus point.
11:43What would you like for your own question?
11:44Could we have the lion, please?
11:45Lion.
11:46Okay, these are going to be picture clues, what will come forth in this sequence.
11:50Here's the first.
11:52And results.
11:53As in results.
11:54Score on.
11:55Cricket.
11:56CMS.
11:57A to Z.
11:59A to Z, yeah.
12:00Next, please.
12:02Boris Johnson, B, Y.
12:03So, it's going to be D, W.
12:05David Walliams.
12:06David Walliams, yes.
12:07Good show.
12:09We think it might be a picture of David Walliams, for example.
12:12Even more beautiful than the face of David Walliams is that wonderful singer Dionne Warwick.
12:19Tell me what's happening here.
12:20Andy Zaltzman, for example, his first name begins with the letter A and his surname begins
12:25with Z, and then you, Boris Yeltsin, you move on a letter for B, Boris, and move back
12:30a letter from Z for Yeltsin, Charlie XCX, and Dionne Warwick.
12:35Exactly so.
12:36Well done.
12:38Showstoppers, what would you like?
12:39Two reeds, please.
12:40Two reeds?
12:41Ah, a music sequence.
12:44Tell me what you'd expect to hear in fourth place.
12:46Here's the first.
12:47It could be, uh...
12:58Next, please.
13:03These all get smaller as wind instruments, so is it going to be going to hear something
13:08played on the clarinet, or something?
13:09Or is that going to be played on the super-soon clarinet?
13:13What is it?
13:14Flute?
13:14What is it?
13:15Next, please.
13:17Two seconds.
13:28We can't think of any specific examples, but something played on a piece of classical music
13:34played on a flute.
13:36Well, I would have loved that answer to be more specific, but I would have loved your opponents
13:42to say five out of six in the matter of Henry VIII's marriages, so I will take that answer,
13:46because it is a piece played on a flute, and what sequence have you spotted?
13:50We think they are woodwind instruments getting smaller.
13:54Decreasing in size.
13:56Uh, well, I mean, they're getting higher in sound.
13:59Higher in page.
13:59Bassoon, clarinet, oboe.
14:01So, actually, anything played on flute fits that sequence, but there is another sequence
14:05going on.
14:05There's two ways to solve this question.
14:07Do you know over there?
14:08Uh, are they all from Peter and the Wolf?
14:09They're from Peter and the Wolf.
14:11And the Bassoon is the appearance of the Grandfather, and we're going backwards to the first appearance
14:17of the bird.
14:20Metrophiles, what would you like?
14:21Uh, can we have the, uh, Eye of Horus, please?
14:23The Eye of Horus?
14:25What would come forth in this sequence?
14:27Here's the first.
14:28Uh, I don't think it is.
14:32No, no, it's all one.
14:33Uh, I think Thierman, as well.
14:35Thierman.
14:36Uh, next, please.
14:41I don't know if that is.
14:43Do you know that?
14:44Anagram, hit, tiger.
14:46Tiger, yeah.
14:48I think we need that.
14:49Next, please.
14:49One second.
15:04Uh, we're going to go for the word flack.
15:08Not it, I'm afraid.
15:09Showstoppers, you've got a chance for both.
15:11It's going to be some variation on the word shift.
15:14I'm going to say shift.
15:15Shaft.
15:16Or shaft.
15:17Shaft.
15:17Unlucky.
15:18Okay.
15:18It isn't shift.
15:19It isn't shaft.
15:20I think it's a great vowel shift.
15:21It's shoft.
15:22Shaft.
15:23Yes.
15:24So, we've taken the phrase, the greater vowel shift, and we've shifted each vowel one place
15:30along.
15:30So, in every clue, A becomes E, E becomes I, I becomes O, O becomes U, and U goes around
15:38the corner if it came up.
15:39So, we need the I in shift to become an O for shoft.
15:43You gave me two answers.
15:44Both wrong.
15:45Unlucky.
15:46But you may choose a question.
15:47What would you like?
15:48Uh, it better be water.
15:49Okay.
15:50Water question.
15:51What will come forth in this sequence?
15:52Here's the first.
15:54Okay.
15:54The cat is now.
15:55So, that'll be the top.
15:56Yeah.
15:57So, that'll be the last one.
16:00And then, um, the tree.
16:02Next.
16:03Yeah.
16:03Next, please.
16:06Spring.
16:07Spring.
16:07Spring.
16:07Spring.
16:07Okay.
16:08So, that'll be the next one.
16:12I can't reckon it's the name's at all, do you?
16:14Next, please.
16:15Next, please.
16:19Oh, okay.
16:21So, it's going to be, so, winter, spring, spring, autumn.
16:25What's something in autumn?
16:28It's a novel.
16:28What about that problem?
16:29What about autumn leaves?
16:31Two seconds.
16:33Autumn leaves.
16:34Yeah.
16:36The things that fall off trees and someone who wrote a novel about autumn leaves.
16:43We're having a terrible time today.
16:45I think I, I've been veiling it to both sides and I think I'm going to say no to that one.
16:50Fair enough.
16:51Metrophiles, your chance for a bonus point.
16:53Autumn Almanac by the Kinks, a description of the Almanac of Autumn by the Kinks.
16:58No, it isn't.
16:59It's more about the specific words in the titles of literary works.
17:04So, what literary works are being, as they say, clued here?
17:08The Shakespeare one is A Midsummer Night's Dream.
17:10Mm-hmm.
17:10Um.
17:12The Lion in Winter.
17:13The Lion in Winter.
17:14That's the, you know, the play and film about Henry II.
17:16The Beginning of Spring.
17:18And we went with paraphrasing Quartet in Autumn by Barbara Pym, which we did as The Beatles
17:24at Halloween.
17:25Ah.
17:26One question remains.
17:28The Horned Viper.
17:29What would come forth in this sequence?
17:31Here's the first.
17:34Like Westerloose, isn't it?
17:36Yeah.
17:36And then it would probably be some sort of play on Westerloose.
17:39Yeah.
17:40Okay.
17:41Next, please.
17:44What's the horse doing there?
17:47Oh.
17:48I don't know.
17:48I'm sure if that helps the latches, I don't know.
17:51I don't know if you don't know.
17:52Next, please.
17:55Are they the names of the winds that go in different directions?
17:58Is it like that?
17:59Westerloose, that's like the North or that's the East?
18:02I don't know if you want to have a new wind.
18:04I don't know if it goes south, doesn't it?
18:08Yeah.
18:09I don't know.
18:10Yeah, there you go.
18:12Um, an Arctic, uh, wind?
18:16Not correct, I'm afraid.
18:18Showstoppers, last bonus chance of this round?
18:20A Zephyr.
18:22No.
18:22No.
18:23There's two possible answers here.
18:24Doldrums, which is the one we put on the screen.
18:26Or, I would have accepted, intertropical convergence zone.
18:30What can you tell me about the sequence?
18:32We thought there were winds going in different cardinal directions.
18:36I mean, they're not all...
18:37A horse latitudes, actually, is talking about the latitudes of 30 and 35 degrees.
18:45And the sequence is you're going south towards the equator.
18:50It's a geographical sequence.
18:51So, after the trade winds, we need a weather zone further south towards the equator.
18:55And doldrums is what we went for.
18:57That means, at the end of round two, the Metrophiles have six points.
19:01The Showstoppers have seven.
19:05Time for a connecting wall.
19:07And time for you to go first, Metrophiles.
19:08Would you like Lion or water?
19:10Uh, Lion, please.
19:11Lion, two and a half minutes to solve it.
19:13Starting now.
19:16Bloodhairs are...
19:17There might always be those Blackhairs, Mirage, Excalibur...
19:22Okay, Optimus, Pine, Bumblebee...
19:23Jazz is, uh...
19:24Jazz, um, Transformers...
19:26Jetfire?
19:27Jetfire is another one.
19:28Yeah, okay.
19:28Did you say about Mirage, Mirage, Excalibur, Casinos...
19:35And there's one.
19:36Horseshoe.
19:37Are they in Vegas?
19:38They are Vegas.
19:38Horseshoe.
19:39There you go.
19:40So you've got Kina Colada.
19:42You've got Sting, which is in the sword in what's it?
19:44Mjolnir the Hammer.
19:45Is it Hruiting what?
19:46Hruiting, yes.
19:47Mjolnir.
19:48So these are kind of, uh...
19:50Mjolnir kind of weapons, maybe?
19:52Yeah.
19:52Sting, Mjolnir, Fruiting.
19:55Well, what do we have?
19:56What's Jim, Jim?
19:57Any ideas?
19:58Are there any anagrams in there?
20:00What do we have?
20:00There's nothing else in there.
20:01Is it more of the, uh...
20:02Mjolnir, which is yes.
20:04Uh, Cola.
20:06It starts with Cola.
20:08Anything else we'd like to use?
20:10Thanks.
20:10Add an A, Angela.
20:13Jim, Jim.
20:14Mjolnir is a Kirk, right?
20:17Yeah, that's right.
20:18Yeah, Gaila, Oogila.
20:20Victoria.
20:22Um...
20:23Um...
20:25Jim, Jim.
20:26Swords?
20:27Well, Mjolnir's...
20:28Mjolnir's...
20:29I don't know what hunting is, but...
20:30What should we...
20:30We should probably start...
20:32Who's that?
20:33Well, Mjolnir's a Hammer rather than...
20:36But Sting's...
20:37It's mythical.
20:38It's the Terrier.
20:39What should we go with those three?
20:41What are the others then?
20:43We have no idea.
20:44Angel Cake.
20:44Angel Cake.
20:45Angel Cake.
20:45Victoria Cake.
20:47Jim, Jim.
20:48Sounds like a cake, doesn't it?
20:48We go with two, go ahead.
20:49Go with two.
20:50No.
20:51Hello, we go with...
20:52Ballada.
20:52Ballada.
20:54You're sold for me.
20:56Very well done.
20:57Let's look for the connections.
20:59Tell me about the first group.
20:59Bumblebee, Jazz and so on.
21:01It's all, uh...
21:02Transformers.
21:03All part of the Transformers.
21:04They're Transformers.
21:06Mirage, Bellagio, Excalibur and Horseshoe.
21:08Vegas Casinos.
21:09Oh, God, I wish I was there.
21:11They're all Vegas Hotel Casinos.
21:14And the next group starting, Mjolnir.
21:16Mythical Weaponry?
21:17Yeah, that's right.
21:18And you know, some of them are swords, but Mjolnir's a hammer.
21:20And Kalada, you didn't know, is one of El Cid's swords.
21:24Oh, right.
21:24Okay.
21:25And the last group, Victoria, Angel and so on.
21:28Cakes?
21:29No.
21:30They're waterfalls.
21:32Victoria Falls, Angel Falls, Jim Jim.
21:33It's in Australia.
21:34Oh, my God.
21:35They're all waterfalls.
21:36But you did solve the wall and give me three connections, so that's a total of seven points.
21:40Let's bring in the other team, give them the other wall and see how they get on.
21:44Welcome back, showstoppers.
21:46Two and a half minutes for you to solve your wall.
21:49Starting now.
21:50Okay.
21:52High Society, Jeroboam.
21:54Let's go Cricketers, Cricketers, Croft, Ambrose is there, Bishop is there as well.
21:59Holding, Bishop, Ambrose.
22:03Great.
22:03Plot twist, you've got...
22:04Plot twist.
22:05Okay, so we've got Solomon, Jeroboam, Saul and Asa.
22:08They're all biblical patriarchs of some sort.
22:12Lot and David also, so you've got King Solomon, King David, Saul and Asa.
22:19Yeah, I think Lot will be biblical.
22:21Yeah.
22:22So there's Parsel.
22:23We've got Plot of Land, a Parsel of Land, a Lot.
22:25A lot.
22:25That's your Plaster.
22:26Great.
22:27Okay.
22:28What have we got?
22:29So we've got the four...
22:31What's Jeroboam?
22:32A Jeroboam is, well, he's a biblical figure, but it's also a size of wine bottle.
22:36Okay.
22:37But I think...
22:39What have we got?
22:39We've got High Society, Field Marshal.
22:46Is Marshal someone's name?
22:49Yes, Caroline David, Marshall.
22:50Saul.
22:52Yes, well, Saul is in the Bible as well.
22:54So we've got King David, King Solomon.
22:57What did you try with regards to...
22:58I can't remember.
22:59Should we try the biblical ones again?
23:02Jeroboam and Solomon.
23:07So Solo and Carol, two different types of singing.
23:10Yeah.
23:11I can't think.
23:12I can't see any of the others.
23:13Mars.
23:15There's Mars in there as well.
23:19I can't think of any...
23:20Carol.
23:21We're going with Caroline.
23:22Car.
23:22Car.
23:24No.
23:25That's...
23:26I mean, I'm stuck on biblical figures.
23:31Yeah.
23:32I think it's...
23:34Um...
23:35Oh, Mars.
23:40I can't...
23:43I can't...
23:44Ten seconds.
23:48Not it, I'm afraid.
23:50That's your last fight.
23:51Okay.
23:51But you found two groups.
23:52What can you tell me about the connections?
23:54Holding, Ambrose and so on?
23:56They're all cricketers.
23:58Perhaps all West Indian cricketers?
24:00No.
24:00They're all cricketers.
24:01They're just cricketers.
24:02Crofters.
24:02Robert Crofters.
24:03Well, it could be...
24:03Have you chaptered it yourselves?
24:04They are all West Indian cricketers.
24:06West Indian fast bowlers, in fact.
24:08Not Robert Croft, but Colin Croft is the one we were thinking of.
24:11And the next group, Lot, Plot, Pasture and Parcel.
24:15They're all descriptions of areas of land.
24:17Areas of land.
24:18And you can get points for the connections in the groups you didn't find.
24:20So let's resolve the wall.
24:23Here we are.
24:24Solomon, Marshall, Caroline, Society.
24:26Well, the Solomon Islands and the Marshall Islands are a thing.
24:29I've never heard of the Caroline Islands or the Society Islands.
24:31Maybe islands?
24:34They are all groups of Pacific Islands.
24:36And the last group, Saul, David, Jeroboam and Asa.
24:41Biblical kings.
24:42They are the biblical kings.
24:43Yes, you kept trying, but you never got those four all together.
24:47So you found two groups, but you gave me four connections.
24:50So that's a total of six points.
24:52Let's have a look at the overall scores.
24:55The Metrophiles have 13 points.
24:58The Showstoppers have 13 points.
25:01We are going to take this very close match into the missing vowels round.
25:05Fingers on buzzers, teams.
25:08The first group of disguised clues are all the nationality and surname of a famous author.
25:18Showstoppers?
25:19English and Wordsworth.
25:21Not it, I'm afraid.
25:22Metrophiles, do you know?
25:23English, Wordsworth.
25:24No, and I'm afraid.
25:25Next clue.
25:29Metrophiles?
25:30German grass.
25:32Correct.
25:32Correct.
25:35Showstoppers?
25:36Scottish Welsh.
25:38Irvine Welsh, that's right.
25:42Metrophiles?
25:43Irish murder.
25:44Correct.
25:45Next category, check boxes on a website.
25:50Showstoppers?
25:51Accept all.
25:54Too long, I'm afraid.
25:55Metrophiles, do you know?
25:56Accept all cookies.
25:57Correct.
25:57Agree to the terms and conditions.
26:03Correct.
26:08Metrophiles?
26:09Unsubscribed from emails.
26:11Not it, I'm afraid.
26:12Showstoppers, do you know?
26:13Unsubscribed from all emails.
26:15All emails.
26:16Next clue.
26:19Showstoppers?
26:19I am not a robot.
26:20Correct.
26:21Next category, Bond films with life and death swapped.
26:25Showstoppers?
26:29Tomorrow never lives.
26:30Correct.
26:34Metrophiles?
26:35You only die twice.
26:36Correct.
26:40Showstoppers?
26:40Die and let live.
26:41Yes, it is.
26:46What an eventful round.
26:49Looking at the final scores, the Metrophiles finish with 17 points.
26:55The showstoppers have 17 points.
27:00It's a tiebreaker.
27:01There will be one clue.
27:04Fingers on buzzers, captains.
27:07Here is your tiebreak clue.
27:16Metrophiles?
27:17Too close for comfort.
27:18Is the right answer.
27:20Is the right answer.
27:23Very well done and well played, all of you.
27:26What an excellent match.
27:27How exciting.
27:29Let's relax with a little bit of Milton.
27:31Last week, we actually finished on a cliffhanger.
27:33Lucifer had been thrown out of heaven and something was going to happen with his doom.
27:38And we're going to find out what.
27:39His doom reserved him to more wrath.
27:43For now the thought both of lost happiness and lasting pain torments him.
27:48And it's lasting pain and torment for all of the people in this room because nobody is actually knocked out.
27:54The Metrophiles just go quicker to the next stage.
27:57But I'm afraid you're all still with us.
28:01Good night.
28:01Good night.
Comments

Recommended