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00:30Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown Studio.
00:34Now, it's 75 years since the first Jeep rolled off the production lines.
00:38That was way back in 1941.
00:41And the Jeep, of course, was that ubiquitous war vehicle,
00:45little personnel carrier that the Americans introduced into Europe back in 1941.
00:50An extraordinary thing.
00:51And if you look very carefully at the screen, you will see just the most perfect little Jeep.
00:56And it's mine. It's all mine.
00:58And there it is with the windscreen down.
01:00And I use that to trickle around in the forest.
01:03I love that vehicle.
01:05Do you like green laning, as it's called?
01:07I've been in a 4x4 in Brazil.
01:09That's brilliant.
01:10Because we were in the Pantana, I think I've mentioned before.
01:13And it's wetlands.
01:13So you need that kind of vehicle there.
01:15But the couple that were staying in the same resort just before us got stuck.
01:20Had to go and get towed.
01:21Even those kind of vehicles can't handle everything.
01:24But good fun, aren't they?
01:24I think it's great fun.
01:26I just love the freedom of it.
01:27Now then, who's back with us?
01:29None other than Annie Humphries, retired teacher from Basildon, with five wins under her belt and counting.
01:35That's fantastic.
01:37Steamrolling her way to becoming an octocham.
01:41But let's see.
01:43Let's not count our chickens.
01:45Because we have here with us Jane Ashton from Macclesfield, currently studying aerospace engineering at the University of Manchester.
01:52Three daughters, Jade, Rosie and Bella, all of whom play for Macclesfield Town FC ladies team.
02:00They do.
02:00They must be little ladies.
02:03They're 10, 9 and 7.
02:04And they love their football.
02:06Absolutely adore their football.
02:07That's excellent.
02:08You were involved in a record-breaking feat earlier this year.
02:12Yes.
02:12Jane, what were you up to?
02:14I took part in Ulverston in June in the Guinness World Record, breaking most people simultaneously throwing foam pies at each other.
02:25How many of you were there?
02:271,187.
02:29Brilliant.
02:30Which smashed the previous record that was something like 800 nod.
02:33Yeah?
02:33Yeah, it was fabulous.
02:34So that'll be in the book, will it?
02:35Yes, certainly will.
02:36Fantastic.
02:37Well done, well done.
02:38Well, good luck, Jane.
02:39And good luck, Annie, too.
02:41Both of you.
02:42And over in the corner, of course, Susie, as ever, joined once again by Charlie State of BBC Breakfast fame, journalist and a good guy.
02:50What do you think about all those people throwing foam pies?
02:53I have once been pied in the face on air.
02:58And it's quite, just completely in the face.
03:02Just one of those ones.
03:02How did you react?
03:04Just, just, well, there wasn't much to do, was there?
03:06I mean, I think it slides very slowly down and just wipe away the bit there.
03:10Yeah, you just had to carry on as normal.
03:12Go with it.
03:12Good for you.
03:13All right.
03:14Thanks, Charlie.
03:15Now then, Annie Humphries.
03:16Let's have, or let's have a letters game, shall we?
03:19OK, Rachel, good afternoon.
03:22Afternoon, Annie.
03:23Let's start with a vowel, please.
03:25Start today with E.
03:29And consonant.
03:31F.
03:33And consonant.
03:35P.
03:37And vowel, please.
03:39A.
03:41Consonant.
03:43L.
03:45Consonant.
03:47R.
03:49Consonant.
03:51H.
03:55Consonant.
03:56T.
04:00Vow, please.
04:01And lastly, I.
04:03And here is the countdown clock.
04:05T.
04:18Eh.
04:18And now, we'll see you next week.
04:20Yes, Annie?
04:38Six.
04:40Six. Jane?
04:41Six. Two sixes. Annie?
04:44False, sir.
04:46Jane Ashton? Father.
04:48Father.
04:48Mm-hm. Happy, Susie?
04:52Yes.
04:53And what has the corner got? Charlie and Susie?
04:55I just said paler.
04:58Yeah. More pale.
04:59Yeah. A couple of sevens there.
05:03There's a hair lip. We tend to talk about cleft lip these days.
05:07And a platter. Somebody who plaits hair material, that kind of thing.
05:12That's also there for seven.
05:13Yeah.
05:14Good enough. Six apiece, and it's Jane's letters game.
05:17Jane?
05:18Hi, Rachel.
05:19Hi, Jane.
05:19Consonant, please.
05:21Thank you. Start with L.
05:23And a vowel.
05:25U.
05:26And a consonant.
05:29P.
05:30And another consonant.
05:33V.
05:34Ooh.
05:35Vowel, please.
05:37I.
05:38And consonant.
05:40D.
05:41Vowel.
05:43Vowel.
05:44O.
05:46Ooh.
05:46Consonant.
05:48R.
05:49Ooh.
05:50And another vowel, please.
05:52And the last one.
05:53E.
05:55Stand by.
05:56And another vowel.
05:57Vowel.
05:58And another vowel.
05:59And the HEAV.
05:59In this ë’¤, it's oddly enough to try to hear it when it's coming.
06:01Old age.
06:01But this hasn't necessarily hadowed on time in a waiting line.
06:04Well, I say the spell and I do.
06:04But this is just one slightly later.
06:06And for women, let's see.
06:07And then I'm going to show you the last one.
06:09I do love you.
06:09As beautiful as you're right on time on.
06:10I own aulsive options down.
06:10And you think the other focal rep?
06:11And then I hope you're claiming it.
06:11It's OK.
06:12I don't know.
06:13It's all right.
06:13I'm notEO.
06:14And I'm going to see you see one relatively slow newspaper.
06:15And the latest one.
06:17I haven't even more.
06:17Yes, Jane?
06:27Six.
06:28Annie?
06:29Six.
06:30Jane?
06:31Perled.
06:32Perled.
06:33And?
06:34Plover.
06:35Plover.
06:37How are you spelling pearled?
06:38P-U-R-L-E-D.
06:40Absolutely fine.
06:41No problem with that at all.
06:44Very good.
06:45And?
06:46Provide is there for seven.
06:48Take it one letter further.
06:49Provide.
06:50Thanks for providing that.
06:51Twelve apiece and it's numbers time for Annie.
06:54Annie Humphries.
06:56Rachel, I'd like one from the top, please, and five little ones.
07:01Only the usual one large five.
07:02Little.
07:03And the first one of the day is three, ten, nine, another ten, eight, and fifty.
07:12And your target, four hundred and forty-eight.
07:14Four, four, eight.
07:16Four, eight.
07:46Annie?
07:48448.
07:50448. Jane?
07:51448.
07:53Right. Annie?
07:5450 times 9.
07:56450.
07:5710 divided by 10 is 1.
08:00Yep.
08:003 minus 1 is 2.
08:03It is indeed.
08:05Lovely.
08:06And Jane?
08:08Nearly the same.
08:0950 multiplied by 9.
08:11Yep.
08:11Minus 10 plus 8.
08:12Yep.
08:13Well done.
08:13There we go.
08:15Very good.
08:1622 apiece as we go into the first Tea Time teaser, which is Cake Chip.
08:22And the clue, no more cakes and chips, eat something healthy.
08:27No more cake and chips, eat something healthy.
08:29Welcome back.
08:46I left with the clue, no more cake and chips, eat something healthy.
08:49And the answer is chickpea.
08:52Chickpea.
08:53Now, 22 apiece and Jane, it's your letters game.
08:58Jane?
08:58OK.
08:59A consonant, please, Rachel.
09:00Thank you, Jane.
09:02S.
09:03And a vowel?
09:05A.
09:06And a consonant?
09:08W.
09:09And a vowel?
09:11U.
09:12O.
09:13Consonant?
09:15D.
09:16And another one?
09:18R.
09:20Vowel, please.
09:22I.
09:24Consonant?
09:27L.
09:30And a vowel, please.
09:32And the last one?
09:34Oh.
09:34Oh.
09:35Done-bye.
09:35BELL RINGS
09:38MUSIC CONTINUES
10:08MUSIC CONTINUES
10:38MUSIC CONTINUES
11:08Countdown.
11:38Annie.
11:41Seven.
11:43Seven and Jane.
11:44Seven.
11:46Summing.
11:47And Jane.
11:48There we go.
11:49Same.
11:50Two great competitors here, my word.
11:53Now, Susie, Charlie.
11:57There is a nine there, which is magnesium.
12:00There we go.
12:02Magnesium, well done.
12:0635 apiece.
12:08Now, Jane, numbers time.
12:10Six more ones, please, Rachel.
12:12Thank you, Jane.
12:13Definitely a fight on now.
12:14Six little ones coming up.
12:15And they are six, seven, two, five, four.
12:22And another seven.
12:24And the target, 559.
12:26Five, five, nine.
12:27Five, five, five, six, six, seven, nine.
12:33Five, five, five, five.
12:33Five,, five, five.
12:35Do not expect, yeah.
12:36And the target, that one would come up there.
12:39And the target, that one would come up there.
12:41With all the a lot of data.
12:42And the target here, the target.
12:44And the수� grunds of the target.
12:44And look at the target here, that sales é of the target medio�am.
12:45And there is an um.
12:45And the target here, that belly, which is kind and that sen on
12:47it.
12:47And there is one of Noah else.
12:49And there is none.
12:50Are you nada.
12:51All right.
12:52And then we are on Doyle.
12:53Well, Jane?
13:00No, 5, 6, 8.
13:025, 6, 8.
13:03Annie?
13:045, 6, 8.
13:05So it's 5, 6, 8 then.
13:07Jane, you're just in.
13:09Oh, um, 7 by 7 by 2.
13:127 by 7 is 49.
13:15By 2, 98.
13:16By 2 is 98.
13:17By 6.
13:18By 6 is 588.
13:205, 4 is a 20 and take them off.
13:22And then 5, 4 is 20, 5, 6, 8.
13:26Yep, 9 away.
13:27Well done.
13:27Well done.
13:27You've broken away.
13:31You've sprinted into a 5-point lead,
13:34but, you know, it's not over yet by a long shot.
13:36Now, Rachel, 5, 5, 9.
13:39How can you help us on this?
13:41Leave it with me for a few seconds.
13:43Let me do that.
13:44So, well done, Jane.
13:455 points ahead.
13:46And it's over to Charlie to let our contestants have a little breather.
13:50And Charlie, you've interviewed lots and lots and lots of people, famous people.
13:55Any who are not perhaps quite what you'd expected?
13:58Well, the story I wanted to share with you is what I love is I love meeting people from, like, a different era.
14:05So, Liza Minnelli, for example, who is kind of famously unreconstructed.
14:11She is exactly as she always has been.
14:14And, of course, comes from this extraordinary show business background, her mum being Judy Garland.
14:19And so I interviewed her in quite a fancy Soho hotel in London.
14:26And she came down and she was smoking.
14:28And this was relatively recently.
14:29So, of course, the band had come in longer.
14:31She's just smoking a cigarette.
14:32And a couple of people say to her, Liza, you can't smoke.
14:35And she ignores them completely and just carries on regardless, which very few people do nowadays.
14:40And, you know, it's clearly reprehensible.
14:42But it's Liza Minnelli.
14:43She just does whatever she wants to do.
14:46So we start the interview.
14:47And I was curious about life as a child, you know, when mum was Judy Garland and all these stories, which are amazing.
14:53And in one of these exchanges, I can't remember what she was saying, all of a sudden she stops mid-sentence and looks up above my forehead and says, you have fantastic hair.
15:05In that wonderful voice of hers.
15:06And I said, well, thank you very much.
15:08And she said, but is it real?
15:12Which others have suggested in the past.
15:14It has been.
15:14I've been accused of that before.
15:16And I said, well, you know, by all means, do you want to just give it a little tug and see?
15:21She said, you know, I'd love to.
15:23And so she reached over and just yanked at my hair, tested the wig theory.
15:28It is my own.
15:29And she was happy.
15:31She was really lovely.
15:32But, you know, she's just one of those people.
15:33Just does whatever she wants to do at any moment in time.
15:36I like that.
15:37And what does she do now, Charlie?
15:39Well, she was a singer.
15:40She was a singer.
15:41Yeah, she still does live performances occasionally.
15:43She was in London, I think, on that occasion to do a kind of one-off gig.
15:47Okay.
15:48But, yeah, she is just one of those.
15:50You couldn't make Liza Minnelli up now.
15:53Her life story is so extraordinary.
15:56But a real character.
15:57You know, you need characters in this world.
15:59Her mum was the same.
16:00They're stars.
16:01That's the point.
16:02And therefore they act like those Hollywood stars of old, I guess.
16:05Thanks, Charlie.
16:05It's a great story.
16:07Now, Rachel, what have you been up to?
16:08Five, five, nine.
16:09Have you done this?
16:10Yes, well, the crew take the mick out of me for enjoying these, because it's a product of two primes.
16:14If you say seven plus six is 13, and then the other seven times five is 35, four times two is eight, add them together for 43, and times them together, you get five, five, five.
16:26Fantastic.
16:27Just a job.
16:28Well done.
16:31Well done indeed.
16:33Now, Annie, this is a bit of a turn up for the books.
16:37Off you go.
16:38Letters go.
16:39Consonant, please, Rachel.
16:41Thank you, Annie.
16:42T.
16:44Consonant.
16:46G.
16:48Consonant.
16:50H.
16:52Foul.
16:53E.
16:55Foul.
16:56O.
16:58Vowel.
16:59I.
17:01Consonant.
17:02C.
17:04Vowel.
17:05U.
17:07Consonant.
17:08And the last one, N.
17:10Stand by.
17:26Annie.
17:43Annie.
17:44Eight.
17:46Jane.
17:47Six.
17:48And your six?
17:49Outing.
17:50Outing.
17:51Now then, Annie.
17:52Touching.
17:54Very good.
17:55Well done.
17:57APPLAUSE
17:57Well done.
18:01And in the corner, combine Charlie and Susie.
18:05Well, I had tough and gout.
18:09Good.
18:10Try to avoid that, Charlie.
18:12Susie?
18:13I just added an IE to Charlie's tough, so you'd have toughy.
18:18Yeah.
18:19Enough is there as well.
18:20Enough.
18:21Well done.
18:22All right, so Annie snatch the lead back by three points, 43 to 40, as we turn to Jane.
18:28Jane, let us go.
18:30A consonant, please, Rachel.
18:32Thank you, Jane.
18:32S.
18:33And another one.
18:34And lastly, S.
19:01Countdown.
19:33Yes, Jane?
19:34Eight.
19:34And eight, Annie?
19:36Eight.
19:38Jane?
19:39Pronate.
19:40And?
19:40God prevents.
19:45Eights.
19:46Can we match eight?
19:47Yes.
19:48Can we beat eight?
19:50Well, for eight, we had senators and treasons.
19:53Yes.
19:54And there is a nine there.
19:56Patron S.
19:57Patron S.
19:58Very good.
19:59APPLAUSE
20:00Patron S.
20:05Patron S.
20:06Very good.
20:0751 plays.
20:0748.
20:08Still that three-point difference as we turn to Annie for a numbers game.
20:12Annie.
20:13One for the top and five for the ones, please.
20:16Thank you, Annie.
20:16One large, five.
20:17Little back to the comfort zone.
20:19And these five little ones are 10, 2, 10, 3, 9, and 50.
20:27And the target, 663.
20:30Six, six, three.
20:31One large, five.
21:02Annie?
21:04Um, I've got 6-6-2.
21:07One away. How about Jane?
21:096-6-3.
21:106-6-3.
21:12Jane?
21:1450 plus 10.
21:1650 plus 10 is 60.
21:17Minus 9.
21:18Minus 9, 51.
21:2010 plus 3 is 30.
21:21Yep, times them together.
21:23Perfect. Well done, 6-6-3.
21:25Well done.
21:25APPLAUSE
21:27Well done, Jane.
21:29APPLAUSE
21:30Seven ahead now.
21:32Ooh, touch and go here.
21:34Very good indeed.
21:3551 plays James, 58.
21:38As we turn to our second tea-time teaser,
21:40which is Sail View.
21:42And the clue.
21:42Do these fish have partners who are always at the pub?
21:46Do these fish have partners who are always at the pub?
21:49APPLAUSE
21:58Welcome back, welcome back.
22:05I left you with the clue.
22:06Do these fish have partners who are always at the pub?
22:11Are they alewives?
22:13Alewives is the answer.
22:15What's an alewife?
22:16Well, it was, as you might think originally,
22:19somebody who, a woman who kept an ale house or a tavern.
22:22But because this particular fish has a large belly,
22:26it was transferred to a north-west Atlantic fish
22:29of the herring family,
22:31which swims up the river to spawn.
22:34But apparently it was all to do with this belly.
22:36Very large belly.
22:37It's full of ale.
22:38All right.
22:39Thank you very much.
22:4058 plays 51.
22:41And it's Jane's letters now.
22:44Well done, Jane.
22:44A consonant, please.
22:45Thank you, Jane.
22:47M.
22:48And another one?
22:50X.
22:51Oh, and another one, please.
22:54R.
22:54And a vowel?
22:56A.
22:57And another one?
22:58E.
22:59And a consonant?
23:02M.
23:03And another one?
23:04T.
23:05And a vowel, please.
23:07O.
23:08Oh, and another vowel, please.
23:12And lastly, I.
23:14Countdown.
23:15And now, we've got both a vowel.
23:17We've got both a vowel.
23:18We've got the vowel.
23:18And a vowel, please.
23:19So often, we've got there to force onto the vowel.
23:22We've got both a vowel and a vowel.
23:23And we've got each EEH in our мі亲.
23:24Things are not quite already.
23:25We've got Football on.
23:26And today, we've got the vowel.
23:27We've got to start tomorrow.
23:32We've got to start tomorrow.
23:33So we've got one.
23:34A vowel.
23:35Jane.
23:47Six.
23:49A six for Jane. Annie?
23:50A seven.
23:52A seven. Jane?
23:53Ration.
23:54Ration and?
23:55Moraine.
23:57Moraine.
23:58Yes, that's the sediment carried down by a glacier, for example.
24:02Geological term. Very good.
24:04Excellent.
24:04And, Charlie and Susie?
24:07I was down to fours, I'm afraid.
24:09Not so good for me.
24:10You can have romaine, if you turn Moraine round, romaine lettuce.
24:15Yes.
24:15And a minaret is also there for seven.
24:17And a minaret.
24:18Yes.
24:18Well done.
24:19So we're back to where we were.
24:2158 apiece.
24:22Terrific contest.
24:23Terrific stuff.
24:24Annie, it's lettuce time now.
24:28Consonant, please.
24:29Thank you, Annie.
24:30D.
24:32Consonant.
24:33And the last one.
25:02O.
25:03Stand by.
25:04Stand by.
25:34Annie? A six. A six. Jane? Seven. Annie? Sounds. Jane Ashton? Sounded. Yes. That was really fine. Just added those extra letters. Well done. Well done, Jane. Well done. And the corner? I had disuse. Yeah. That's a good six. It says oddness for seven.
26:04Yeah. As well. Otherwise down to sixes. Not easy that one actually. Terrific competition we've got here. Jane's now up to 65. But Annie's there. She's there all right. 58. As we turn to you Susie. Let's give them a bit of a rest.
26:34It's actually linked to nausea. And in fact it comes from that very word. Nausea started off. It's linked to nautical as well. Started off meaning seasickness. Then it gradually developed over time.
26:48And sort of broke off to become noise. To mean some sort of upset or malaise. Particularly one that's caused by an offence to the ears.
26:55But one of my favourite is Ballyhoo. If you can make a right Ballyhoo again you make a right fuss and commotion. And not completely sure about this one but a lot points towards the town of Ballyhooly east of Mallow in Cork County in Ireland.
27:13And there's a congressional record of March 1934. That gives you a pretty good clue as to why Ballyhoo entered the English language as it did.
27:22The residents engage in the most strenuous debate. A debate that is without equal in the annals of parliamentary or ordinary discussion.
27:30And from the violence of these debates has sprung forth a word known in the English language as Ballyhoo.
27:36So it's very rare that a word actually does come from a particular place like that. And you can pinpoint it exactly. As I say we're not completely sure.
27:44But for me the residents and parliamentarians of Ballyhoo in County Cork in Ireland we probably got that word for a right tumult. Or as I say a right fuss and commotion and bother.
27:55Ballyhoo. Brilliant. Well done. Thank you. Lovely.
28:02Very good. Ballyhoo. 58 plays. 65. Jane on 65. And it's Jane's Letters Game.
28:11Consonant please. Thank you Jane. G.
28:14And another one. R. And a third. F. And a vowel. E. And another vowel. A. And a consonant. T. And a vowel. U.
28:34And a consonant. R. And a final vowel please. And a final. E.
28:41And here's the countdown clock.
28:44B'REUS
29:07Jane?
29:16Seven.
29:17Seven and?
29:18Seven.
29:19Jane?
29:20Feature.
29:21Well, that's a surprise.
29:23There we are.
29:24All right.
29:25Can we go beyond feature?
29:28Just with another seven for greater.
29:30Greater.
29:30But, yeah, it was hard.
29:32It was kind of blindsided by that one.
29:33It was hard to find anything else.
29:35Quite.
29:35All right, it's demanding to be picked.
29:38All right, 72, play 65.
29:41Oh, Annie.
29:43Annie.
29:44Final letters game.
29:46Off you go.
29:47Let's start with consonant.
29:49Thank you, Annie.
29:50L.
29:52A vowel.
29:54A.
29:55Vowel.
29:57E.
29:59Vowel.
30:01I.
30:02Consonant.
30:04N.
30:05Vowel.
30:07O.
30:09Consonant.
30:11T.
30:13Consonant.
30:15V.
30:17Vowel.
30:18And the last one.
30:20E.
30:21Stand by.
30:22Vowel.
30:23Vowel.
30:24Vowel.
30:24Vowel.
30:24Vowel.
30:24Vowel.
30:25Vowel.
30:25Vowel.
30:26Vowel.
30:26Vowel.
30:26Vowel.
30:26Vowel.
30:27Vowel.
30:27Vowel.
30:28Vowel.
30:28Vowel.
30:28Vowel.
30:28Vowel.
30:28Vowel.
30:28Vowel.
30:28Vowel.
30:28Vowel.
30:29Vowel.
30:29Vowel.
30:29Vowel.
30:30Vowel.
30:30Vowel.
30:30Vowel.
30:30Vowel.
30:30Vowel.
30:31Vowel.
30:32Vowel.
30:32Vowel.
30:32Vowel.
30:32Vowel.
30:33Vowel.
30:34Vowel.
30:52Annie?
30:55And nine.
30:56And?
30:57Seven.
30:58And seven.
30:59Yours is?
31:00Elation.
31:01And?
31:02Elevation.
31:03Brilliant.
31:04That's extraordinary.
31:05Well done.
31:09My word.
31:10And that propels Annie into her accustomed place in the lead.
31:1483.
31:15Jane, bad luck there.
31:1672.
31:17But in the corner, what have you got?
31:19Well, we had elevation and sevens otherwise.
31:25Violate violence, that kind of thing.
31:27Very good.
31:27All right.
31:28There we go.
31:29So 83 plays 72 and it's into the final numbers game.
31:35Jane, good luck.
31:36Six more ones, please.
31:37Thank you, Jane.
31:38And the numbers have worked well for you so far.
31:40So we'll see if we have a crucial conundrum on our hands.
31:42Last one of the week is three, nine, five, eight, ten.
31:49And two.
31:50And the target to reach 905.
31:53Nine-oh-five.
31:54And the target to reach 905.
31:55And the target to reach 905.
31:56And the target to reach 905.
31:57And the target to reach 905.
31:58And the target to reach 905.
31:59And the target to reach 905.
32:00And the target to reach 905.
32:01And the target to reach 905.
32:02And the target to reach 905.
32:03And the target to reach 905.
32:04And the target to reach 905.
32:05And the target to reach 905.
32:06And the target to reach 905.
32:07And the target to reach 905.
32:08And the target to reach 905.
32:09And the target to reach 905.
32:10And the target to reach 905.
32:11And the target to reach 905.
32:12And the target to reach 905.
32:13And the target to reach 905.
32:14And the target to reach 905.
32:15And the target to reach 905.
32:16Jane.
32:269.05.
32:279.05.
32:28Annie.
32:309.05.
32:32Jane.
32:338 plus 2 is 10.
32:358 plus 2, 10 times 10.
32:37100.
32:38Times 9.
32:38900 plus 5.
32:409.05.
32:40Well done.
32:41There we go.
32:42Annie Humphries.
32:43Same way.
32:44Same way.
32:44There we go.
32:46And so, we go through to the final round, conundrum time.
32:55Annie and Jane, fingers on buzzers, let's reveal today's Countdown Conundrum.
33:31My word, neither Annie nor Jane can crack that one.
33:34Who in the audience will have a shy at it?
33:37Anybody there?
33:39Nobody there?
33:40All right.
33:41That must be a tricky one.
33:43Let's roll it and see how difficult it was.
33:45Telegraph.
33:47Telegraph.
33:48There you go.
33:49Telegraph.
33:52So, there we are.
33:5393 played 82.
33:5493 played 82.
33:55Jane, you did brilliantly.
33:57You held her right up until the very end, actually.
34:00So, congratulations to you.
34:01And I'm sure that Jade, Rosie and Bella, who are glued to their television set, will be very proud of you.
34:07Jane, you take this back to Macclesfield with you.
34:10With our very best wishes.
34:12Thank you very much.
34:12Thank you for coming.
34:13And we shall see you.
34:14We'll see you on Monday.
34:15Have a peaceful weekend, Annie.
34:17Well done.
34:18Well done, indeed.
34:19And we shall see you both on Monday.
34:21Have a peaceful weekend, Susie and Charlie.
34:24You too, Nick.
34:24See you then.
34:25Have a good weekend.
34:26See you then.
34:27Join us on Monday.
34:28Same time, same place.
34:29You be sure of it.
34:30A very good afternoon.
34:32You can contact the programme by email at countdown at channel4.com, by Twitter at C4Countdown,
34:38or write to us at countdownleadsLS31JS.
34:43You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
34:49And Countdown is back tonight with a furry twist.
34:52When Roisin Conaty and Adam Buxton join the Cats for 8 out of 10.
34:56That's at 9 o'clock.
34:58And in case you didn't know, this Sunday is Bart Day.
35:00Watch the baddest, bartiest bits of The Simpsons back-to-back, starting in the afternoon from 12.30.
35:06Threena Pett is next on 4.
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