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Richard Osman's House of Games Season 9 Episode 36

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Transcript
00:00Hello everyone. How lovely to see you again. I'm Richard Osman.
00:07Welcome to the House of Games where four famous faces battled it out over a series of ridiculous quiz rounds to win a ridiculous trophy.
00:15Shall we meet this week's players? It's going to be a fun week, I think.
00:19They are Stevie Martin, Anna Hoare, Mark Ramprakash and Andrew Potter.
00:26Hello one, hello all. Stevie, welcome along.
00:31This is like Taskmaster, which you've done, but just much, much, much shorter.
00:35Better. Do you know what? I didn't like to say better, but I think it is.
00:40Yeah, it's better and it's more intense and I'm going to go hard.
00:43Let's put their amount of BAFTAs up against our amount of BAFTAs. Who's got more?
00:46I'm hearing it's them, but either way, lovely to have you here Stevie.
00:51Anna, are you a quizzer? We know you're an unbelievable chef,
00:54but the two things aren't always the same thing.
00:56Somehow I'm always on a team for quizzes and everybody thinks I'm going to be good
01:01and they never realise until I'm in the quiz that they realise you shouldn't have picked her.
01:05Do you ever get invited back?
01:06Surprisingly, yes. I bring the fun. I mightn't bring the answers.
01:10Oh, you bring the fun. That's a lot of pressure on you now for the rest of the week.
01:12Any time you get something wrong, you're going to have to entertain us.
01:14OK.
01:15Mark, now sports people on this show, they don't have a great record,
01:18but they bring at least some competitiveness. Can your competitiveness overcome any lack of knowledge?
01:24Well, I'll be doing my best, but I'm worried that I'm going to continue that trend of sports people not doing too well.
01:31But listen, imagine they all did brilliantly and then suddenly you came along and did badly.
01:35If you get like two or three points, they'll be the greatest sportsman we've ever had on the show.
01:39I'll settle for that. Yeah. Andrew. Hello. Andrew Cotter, nice to see you.
01:44Sports commentator, of course, which is an entirely different beast.
01:47Do we have a better track record than sports people?
01:50I'm not sure we've had a sport... We've had people like Steve Cram who do both.
01:54Oh, yeah. I'm not sure we've had, like, just a sports commentator.
01:57So you're very much carrying the flag. Yeah.
01:59At the end of the week, someone's winning a trophy, Andrew, but also there are daily prizes.
02:02Would you all like to take a look at today's daily prizes? Yes.
02:05OK, whoever wins today gets one of these.
02:08We start the week with the House of Games laptop case,
02:12the House of Games toolbox, the House of Games cards,
02:14the House of Games salt and pepper shakers,
02:16and the House of Games beeswax food wraps,
02:19which I honestly... I always have to take, like, a run-up at saying beeswax food wraps.
02:23I'm so pleased I got that out. Andrew, what do you fancy?
02:26Well, I was just going to buy some beeswax food wraps.
02:30He can say anything. They are. No, but I had to pause in this as well.
02:34Yes. Beeswax food wraps.
02:36I think I would take the playing cards, though.
02:38Take the playing cards. Mark?
02:40Yeah, a toolbox, you know, looked, like, handy.
02:42I could put a few cricket things in there.
02:44You could put a few cricket things in there.
02:46No-one uses a toolbox for tools, do they?
02:48It's always got something else in it. Anna?
02:50Same. I'm thinking toolbox for my knives.
02:52I think that would be a really good knife case.
02:54For your knives?
02:55Yeah, because the different layers for the different priorities that one used most.
02:58I'm so glad you're a chef, because otherwise that would be a terrifying answer.
03:02Stevie?
03:03Laptop case, so I can show off in the cafe.
03:05Oh, that's nice. Oh, this?
03:07Oh, gosh, yes, I suppose I did win House of Games.
03:09It's just often space. Oh, dear.
03:10Can I tell you, I don't want the cards any more at all.
03:13I don't know why I said that. I panicked slightly.
03:15So, I would have the... I'm going to have the salt and pepper grinders.
03:17OK, this bodes well that he panicked on his first answer
03:20and it wasn't even for a point.
03:22I thought we'd started. Was that not it at all?
03:25Well, I'm not getting the toolbox.
03:27Listen, you may well, but there's an awful lot of ridiculous questions
03:30in between you and it currently.
03:32Shall we start with our very first one? Our very first round is...
03:37Sounds like fingers on buzzers, please, everybody.
03:40For the first time, just look at the techniques.
03:42All that's very... That's very demure, Stevie.
03:45I'm going to go double-handed.
03:46I would have thought so.
03:47Yeah, come on.
03:48Need a little bit of pressure on that.
03:49Your first category is...
03:50Mammals.
03:51I'm going to show you some pictures
03:52and if you tell me what's in the pictures,
03:54it will give you the name of a mammal.
03:55Here's your first one.
04:02Stevie.
04:03Bush baby.
04:04Bush baby.
04:05It is George Bush, a bay and a bee.
04:07Bush baby.
04:08Very good.
04:09Well played, Stevie.
04:11Nice technique as well.
04:12Are we done?
04:13Yes, we are done.
04:14Congratulations.
04:16You have won some beeswax food wraps.
04:17I absolutely...
04:18I did not even have to pause.
04:20It was very good.
04:21I'm getting so much better at this job.
04:22Next one.
04:28Yes, Andrew.
04:29Mandrill.
04:30Mandrill.
04:31Well done.
04:32A man and a drill.
04:33I mean, say what you see.
04:34These are two mammals I've never heard of.
04:35What's a mandrill?
04:36A mandrill.
04:37It's a mammal.
04:38Yes, a mammal.
04:39Like a bush baby.
04:40A mandrill.
04:41Is it like a baboon, a mandrill?
04:42Oh, yes.
04:43Sure.
04:44Next mammal.
04:49Yes, Anna.
04:50Platypus.
04:52That's great.
04:53You know what?
04:54It isn't, but I'm going to give you a point.
04:55That's a good answer.
04:56It's simpler than platypus, but that's a very, very good answer.
05:00Hair.
05:01I'm afraid Andrew buzzed in before.
05:03No!
05:04Can I just say, I was going to say hair.
05:07I bet he was.
05:08I bet he was.
05:09I'm sorry.
05:10Is it hair?
05:11I'm afraid it's platypus.
05:12I'm sorry, Andrew.
05:13It is hair.
05:14I have to give you platypus.
05:16I love Mondays.
05:17Next category.
05:19Which breakfast foods are these?
05:25Yes, Stevie.
05:28Black pudding.
05:29Black pudding.
05:30It is.
05:31Black and a pudding.
05:32Black pudding.
05:33I was like beard cake.
05:34Beard cake.
05:35Jack sponge.
05:36If you had Jack sponge or beard cake on your menu, I wouldn't be surprised.
05:40But, oh, that sounds nice.
05:41Maybe I'll go for the beard cake.
05:42That's called trust.
05:43I like it.
05:44Yeah.
05:45Next breakfast food.
05:50Yes, Anna.
05:51Yes.
05:52Hash brown.
05:53Hash browns.
05:54I'm getting hungry.
05:55Yeah, me too, actually.
05:56Next breakfast.
06:08Yes, that's Stevie.
06:09Pan au chocolat.
06:10Pan au chocolat.
06:11It is pan au chocolat.
06:14So pan au shock and that's Ola Jordan.
06:18I didn't know who that last lovely lady was.
06:20But by the time you got pan au shock.
06:21What else is pan au shock?
06:22New category.
06:24British football clubs.
06:26Which clubs are these?
06:32Yes, Andrew.
06:33It's Walsall.
06:34Walsall?
06:35It is a soul from Better Call Saul and a wall.
06:37I don't know wall.
06:38I saw a wall and I panicked.
06:40Next one.
06:45Whoa.
06:46Yeah, that's Andrew.
06:47I've made up a team.
06:49I was going to say Sheffield United, but it's...
06:51Sheffield United?
06:52I mean, it's not United.
06:53It is not.
06:54It's United.
06:55Everyone else is United.
06:56It says you and United.
06:57Yeah.
06:58It says you and United.
06:59Yeah.
07:00OK, have you got this at home?
07:01Are we being stupid?
07:02Pew.
07:04Is that Karl Marx?
07:05Mark's Pugh United?
07:06Yeah.
07:07What's in between the pews and the church?
07:08Space.
07:09What do you walk down when you get married?
07:10Mark.
07:11Carlisle United.
07:12Yeah.
07:13Carlisle United we were looking for.
07:14Absolutely.
07:15Very well done.
07:16Karl Marx.
07:17We got there.
07:18We got there in the end.
07:19How?
07:20Final question in this round.
07:21Which football club is this?
07:22Yes, Andrew.
07:23I'm going to say Queen Spark.
07:24It's right.
07:25It is.
07:26Queen and Spark.
07:27Queen Spark.
07:28Well done.
07:29I'm going to say Queen Spark.
07:30Well done.
07:31I'm going to say Queen Spark.
07:32It's right.
07:33Queen and Spark.
07:34Queen Spark.
07:35Well done.
07:36I'm going to say Queen Spark.
07:37It's right.
07:38It is.
07:39Queen and Spark.
07:40Queen Spark.
07:41Well done.
07:42That's the end of our first round.
07:43That wasn't too scary, was it?
07:44It's OK?
07:45It's OK.
07:46Everyone seems friendly.
07:47For now.
07:48Let's take a look at our first leaderboard of the week, though.
07:51Everybody is off the mark.
07:53Mark with one.
07:54Anna, you've got two.
07:55Stevie's got three.
07:56Andrew Cotter, early leader with four.
07:58Do you like your avatar?
07:59Well, no.
08:00I mean, it's wildly optimistic is what it is.
08:03I'd recognise you there.
08:04Yeah.
08:05Is that Andrew Cotter or is that Mr T?
08:06That's exactly right.
08:07I know it's one or the other.
08:08Shall we play our first pairs game of the week?
08:09Yeah.
08:10Let's do it, shall we?
08:11It is going to be...
08:12Distinctly average.
08:13Mark, you're in fourth place.
08:14You get to choose your partner for this round.
08:15Who would you like to play with?
08:16I'd better go with the top of the leaderboard, haven't I?
08:17I think so, yeah.
08:18Of course.
08:19Sport.
08:20Professional.
08:21Flexible.
08:22Sexist.
08:23Sexist.
08:24If you take your tablets out, please, everyone.
08:25I'm going to ask you a series of questions.
08:26I need you to write down a number as your answer and I will take the average of each pair.
08:39The first number I want is the answer to this.
08:42How many named parties received votes at the 2024 UK general election?
08:51That's in any constituency.
08:53You know sometimes when there was all the smaller parties.
08:56But how many were there?
08:58What do you reckon at home?
08:59It doesn't include anyone who's just called independent.
09:03They have to have a party name.
09:07OK, everyone is in.
09:09Stevie, what was your thinking here?
09:11My thinking was I panicked and thought,
09:14don't put 100,000.
09:16Yes, yes.
09:17Put 20.
09:1820, OK.
09:19I mean, there's lots of numbers in between 20 and 100,000.
09:22Right.
09:23But who's to say that 20 isn't the answer?
09:24Yeah.
09:25Anna, where did you go?
09:26I probably could name about six parties.
09:30That's OK.
09:31I went with 30 because I'd imagine there's probably lots of good people in small parties
09:36trying to make a difference.
09:37OK, so your average.
09:38I can work out your average and it's 25.
09:40Wow.
09:41That's what you've gone for there.
09:42Mark, what have you gone for?
09:43For some reason, 17 came to mind.
09:4617 came to mind.
09:48I was thinking it through.
09:49I was counting them out.
09:51Andrew, what are you saying?
09:52This is what I'm talking about.
09:53You can look stupid in this.
09:54I went slightly higher because there's always a putting the bins out on Tuesday party or
09:59something like that.
10:00Yeah.
10:01And how many constituencies?
10:02650 odd constituencies.
10:04I've gone for 120.
10:05120.
10:06I think even that's too low.
10:07I think that's low.
10:08Oh.
10:09Oh.
10:10Oh.
10:11Wait, hang on.
10:12I can't add a contract.
10:13I don't know though.
10:14I'll say that.
10:15So your average gentleman is 68.5.
10:18What did you think at home on this?
10:20Let's find out.
10:21How many named parties received votes at the 2024 UK general election?
10:24Who scored the points?
10:25Oh.
10:2697.
10:27Andrew and Mark, you get yourself a point.
10:29Well done, Andrew.
10:30That's the lovely thing about teaming up, Mark.
10:33You're going to be so far up and still get a point.
10:34I love that.
10:35Can we do that for the rest of the team?
10:36Exactly.
10:37It's like having a great opening partner or something in cricket.
10:39You'd say, I'll just stand here.
10:40Yes.
10:41Here's your next one.
10:42During the 2023-24 financial year, how many times were rail bridges struck by lorries
10:49in Britain?
10:50This is sat-nav, isn't it?
10:53Just taking people down.
10:54Yes.
10:55The sat-nav says, oh, you can go down there.
10:57It's fine.
10:58Yeah, yeah.
10:59It'll be fine.
11:00Just scooch under it.
11:01Everyone is locked in.
11:03Now, this might be the most random question we have ever had.
11:06Mark, I don't think there's any way of working this out.
11:08Did you just pluck a number out of the air?
11:10Yeah.
11:11What have you gone for?
11:12Completely.
11:13I went for 1,700.
11:141,700?
11:15Which I thought, what was I averaging about, what?
11:18Five a day?
11:19Yeah.
11:20I thought five a day.
11:21Actually, five a day feels like quite a lot.
11:22Now you say it.
11:23I don't know.
11:24Andrew, up or down?
11:25Down on that, 403.
11:26403.
11:27Yeah.
11:28Pretty high.
11:29I don't think that's happening.
11:30Stevie, what have you gone for?
11:31I've really screwed up in both senses.
11:32So, I tried to draw a lorry and then I abandoned it.
11:33And I've also put 10?
11:34Surely not 10.
11:35You don't think?
11:36I don't know.
11:37Everyone's putting, like, 400.
11:38But it can't be happening all the time.
11:39I mean, lorry drivers know their business.
11:40True.
11:41True.
11:42But they have made signs specifically because of it, which makes me think it's more than
11:4610.
11:47I suppose so.
11:48Anna, up or down from 10?
11:49Up.
11:50200.
11:51200, says Anna.
11:52Your average is 105.
11:53So, a difference of opinion, I would say here, by a factor of 10.
11:55We have 1,000 and we have 100.
11:56What do you think at home?
11:57Are you a lorry driver?
11:58Do you work for Network Rail?
11:59What is the answer?
12:00Who scored the point?
12:01Oh!
12:021,534.
12:03Oh!
12:04Oh!
12:05Oh!
12:06Oh!
12:07Oh!
12:08Oh!
12:09Oh!
12:10Oh!
12:11Oh!
12:12Oh!
12:13Oh!
12:14Oh!
12:15Oh!
12:16Oh!
12:17Oh!
12:18Oh!
12:19Oh!
12:20Oh!
12:21Oh!
12:22Oh!
12:23What's going on?
12:24I don't know about that.
12:25What's going on with the sound of lorry drivers now?
12:27Wow.
12:28Well done, Mark.
12:29I can't say so.
12:30Wow.
12:31Who knew you had that skill?
12:34Final question in this round so far.
12:36The boys have got both the points.
12:46Wow.
12:47I guess it's how many children do spiders have.
12:51A lot.
12:58OK, everyone is in.
12:59Anna, what have you gone with for this?
13:001,000.
13:011,000.
13:02Why not?
13:031,000 babies.
13:04Loads of them.
13:05Just loads of them, isn't there?
13:06Exactly.
13:07Stevie, up or down?
13:08I went 150 and then I drew spider with a lorry, driving a lorry.
13:11Oh, that's really good.
13:12Spider driving a lorry.
13:13Yeah.
13:14Your average is 575 children.
13:18Andrew Cotter, how many spider babies are there here?
13:21Anna and I are on there.
13:23Ooh.
13:241,000 as well.
13:25Is it a...
13:26If it's a children's book, there'll be some sort of...
13:28Like a cute number.
13:29Yeah, a cute number.
13:301,000 children.
13:31Mark, where have you gone on this?
13:33I'm just slightly down on that.
13:35OK.
13:36Uh-oh.
13:37I thought it might be a lot of names to remember, so I just don't remember.
13:41The force fighter going, you know, after eight, I am shattered.
13:44Exactly.
13:46So, your average is 504.
13:49Ooh.
13:50So, very close averages.
13:51What have you got at home on this one?
13:52Let's find out who scored the last point of the round.
13:54How many offspring were there?
13:56514.
13:57Get out of here.
13:59How about that?
14:00Both of your answers, terrible.
14:03Your average, absolutely terrific.
14:07Gentlemen, three out of three.
14:08Very well done.
14:09Tab this away, please.
14:12Our leaderboard looks like this.
14:14Anna, you have got two.
14:16Stevie's got three.
14:17Mark has got four.
14:18Andrew Cotter, Mr T, is out there in the lead there with seven.
14:21Well done, Andrew.
14:22Let's play round three, shall we?
14:24It is...
14:26Well done if you said that at home.
14:29It's the round that you helped us with at home.
14:31Fingers on buzzers, please, everybody.
14:33I need you to name a film.
14:36And what I'm going to do, I'm going to show you a word cloud.
14:38And everyone at home who helped us out, we sent them the names of some films.
14:42They sent us back three words they would associate with that film.
14:45OK, we're now going to show you all the words that they said,
14:47starting with the more obscure words,
14:49and then at the end of the word cloud, some of the bigger words.
14:52So, buzz in when you think you know what this film is.
14:57Love Horse.
14:59Love Horse Vigilante, I want to see it, whatever it is.
15:02Song, green, taxes, tree.
15:05Medieval, nobleman.
15:08Nineties.
15:12That is Andrew.
15:13I see Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves.
15:15Surely. Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves.
15:17There's all our words, it is.
15:20Very good.
15:22Nottingham Forest right in the middle there.
15:25Next film.
15:31Exciting and entertaining comedy.
15:35Epic loot island monkey.
15:38Undead, gold.
15:41Yes, that is Stevie.
15:45Is it Pirates of the Caribbean?
15:46Is it Pirates of the Caribbean?
15:48It is Pirates of the Caribbean.
15:50Oh, yeah.
15:51There's a swashbuckling and rum at the end.
15:53Next film described by our viewers.
16:01Cookie feud.
16:02Bakery.
16:06Chaos puppies.
16:07Stove.
16:08Rivalry.
16:10Toilet.
16:11Aeroplane.
16:14Friends.
16:16That is Andrew.
16:17Is it Bridesmaids?
16:19Is it Bridesmaids?
16:21Oh, well done.
16:23All you need to see is wedding diarrhoea.
16:26Yeah.
16:27The next thing we asked our viewers to describe were TV programmes.
16:30Which TV programmes are these?
16:36Exhausted.
16:37Marriage London.
16:39Realistic Kitchen.
16:41Stress.
16:43Unequal, blimey, dysfunctional.
16:47That is Anna.
16:48Boiling Point?
16:49Boiling Point.
16:51It's not.
16:52It's not.
16:56Sitcom.
16:59That is Andrew.
17:01Outnumbered.
17:02Outnumbered.
17:03It is Outnumbered.
17:04Well done.
17:05Children's Family.
17:06Improvised Comedy.
17:07Outnumbered.
17:08Written by the great Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin.
17:10Next TV programme.
17:16Music and wealth.
17:19Chair knowledge.
17:20Nerves.
17:24Andrew.
17:25I was going to say Mastermind, but I saw Cash.
17:27Is it Mastermind?
17:29Is not.
17:30Unless someone had Pat Cash as their specialist.
17:33Trivia.
17:34Rich.
17:35Safety.
17:3650-50.
17:37That is Stevie.
17:38So he wants to be a millionaire.
17:39He wants to be a millionaire.
17:40It's absolutely what it is.
17:43Isn't it amazing that you make a show like that for years and years and years,
17:45won all those awards and you ask people what they remember about it in coughing is the biggest word.
17:50Yeah.
17:52Final question in this round.
17:53Final TV programme.
17:58Original babies.
17:59Stressful original babies.
18:02Ambitious stressful original babies.
18:05Posh inspirational caravan.
18:08Overspend.
18:10Pregnant.
18:11Winter.
18:13Renovation.
18:15Yes, Andrew.
18:17I was going to say Grand Designs.
18:18Grand Designs?
18:19It is Grand Designs.
18:21Absolutely.
18:23Yeah, it's got everything in there.
18:24Overspend.
18:25Every time you go back after three months someone is pregnant.
18:28Oh, that's the babies thing.
18:29Right, that really threw me.
18:30Yeah, it really threw me.
18:31Yeah.
18:32But as soon as I saw Buildings, House, Architecture and Budget, I was back on call.
18:36You've forgotten the babies.
18:37That's the end of the round.
18:38Well played, Andrew.
18:39A nice one for you.
18:40Might have built up an unassailable lead on Monday's House of Games, but still two rounds.
18:43So who knows?
18:44The leaderboard looks like this.
18:46Anna with two.
18:47Mark with four.
18:48Stevie, you've got five.
18:49Six-point lead there for Mr C at the end.
18:52Andrew Cotter.
18:53Nicely done.
18:54Listen, you commentated on bigger losses, though.
18:56Oh, no, absolutely.
18:57I mean, I commentated on Scotland quite a lot, so...
19:01Our next round is...
19:06I'm terrible at dating.
19:08If you'd all take your tablets out, please.
19:10Mm-hmm.
19:11I'm going to give you a series of events from history.
19:13You need to write down the year you think they might have happened.
19:15And whoever is closest will get themselves a point.
19:18Your first one is...
19:21Louisa May Alcott, author of Little Women, is born.
19:24What year did that happen?
19:32What do you think at home on this one?
19:33Little Women?
19:34When was that written?
19:35How old was she when she wrote it?
19:37Take the two numbers off each other.
19:39Something like that.
19:40OK, everyone is in.
19:42Stevie, any idea on this?
19:43I went for 1890, cos I figured it was in the early 1900s that it was written?
19:52Yeah, and that feels like a year that an author would have been born.
19:55Yeah, I think most authors have been born in this year.
19:58Yeah, I think almost all.
20:00Bret Easton Ellis, 1890.
20:01Yeah, was born in that year.
20:02Mark Billingham, the crime writer, who's 1890.
20:03You?
20:04Yeah, me.
20:08Anna, where have you gone?
20:09I think 1880 sounds more like a year that an author was born.
20:14It also does sound like the year that an author is born.
20:16Mark, have you written down a year that sounds like an author was born?
20:19I...
20:20Yeah, I think I went for the sort of, the reprint.
20:24Slightly newer version.
20:27The second edition.
20:28It's not a book I've read, I've got to be honest.
20:301940, says Mark, and Andrew?
20:33See, I haven't read it, and I know I should have, but...
20:36That's OK.
20:37I thought late 19th century was what I pictured it happening,
20:40so I put 1862 for her being born.
20:431862, so we're about 80 years between all of us.
20:45We're all fairly close to each other.
20:47What have you got at home?
20:48Might have you written down.
20:49I wonder, when was Louisa May Alcott born?
20:51Who scored a point?
20:541832.
20:55Wow.
20:56Blimey.
20:57This is outrageous.
20:58Andrew, you get yourself a point.
20:59OK.
21:00How about that?
21:011832.
21:02Isn't it funny, like, 200 years ago,
21:04and now she's been mentioned on a quiz show?
21:06Yeah.
21:07Next one.
21:08Brian Jones and Bertrand Piccard complete the first non-stop flight
21:12around the world in a balloon.
21:23Everyone's in.
21:24Anna, when was the first around the world balloon trip?
21:27I was thinking 1905.
21:311905, says Anna.
21:33Mark, where have you gone?
21:35Just slightly earlier.
21:371902.
21:38A lot of agreement here.
21:39Andrew Cotter.
21:40Andrew Cotter.
21:41Richard Branson and Pearl Lindstrad.
21:43They tried to go across the...
21:45Atlantic.
21:46Atlantic in about 87.
21:48Ended up in Irvine.
21:50So, so surely it'll be after that.
21:53But I don't know, I'd put 1993.
21:55Do you know what, Anna and Mark, I've done exactly what you did,
21:58was I'm thinking about the first time someone, like, went up in a balloon.
22:01But actually, he's right.
22:02Around the world.
22:03No, it's a long way, isn't it?
22:05Yeah, yeah, yeah.
22:06Yeah.
22:07Do you know what, as soon as he said it, I was like,
22:09yep, yep, yep, around the world in a balloon.
22:11I was thinking, before airplanes,
22:12they probably just travelled and had air balloons
22:14and they were really good at it.
22:15Around the...
22:16Yeah, come on, it's so easy.
22:17Nailed it.
22:18Stevie, what are you saying?
22:19I had the same thought as not Andrew, obviously.
22:22This feels like it's going to be a point to Andrew.
22:25Let's find out, shall we?
22:26What year did that happen?
22:28Oh, brilliant.
22:30There you go.
22:31The Year of the Matrix.
22:33We all...
22:34The Year of the Matrix, exactly.
22:35We all fell into a trap apart from Andrew.
22:37Well played, Andrew.
22:38Final question in this round.
22:40In what year did this happen?
22:49Hmm.
22:50I mean, we know it's pre-Steven Hendry.
22:52We know that.
23:00Everyone's in.
23:01Mark, what have you gone with here?
23:02Gone with 1925.
23:031925, says Mark Ramprakash.
23:06Andrew.
23:07I've gone too early here.
23:09I've gone 1868, but I'm pretty sure it's not.
23:111868.
23:12Not early.
23:13But when Andrew says he's pretty sure it's not...
23:15OK, he's got a point.
23:16We all hear something different now.
23:17Stevie, what have you said?
23:20I went 1929.
23:221929, says Stevie.
23:24And Anna?
23:25I just like the ring of 1880, so I'm in for that.
23:271880, says Anna.
23:29So we've got a couple of 20th centuries and a couple of 19th centuries.
23:32What have you said at home?
23:34He was a lieutenant in the British Army in India, Neville Chamberlain.
23:37So let's see.
23:38The answer it was...
23:401875.
23:41Anna gets the point.
23:43Well done, Anna.
23:44That is so sweet.
23:45That's so sweet.
23:46I know you've got...
23:47You're now immune to the point, Buzz, but I want more of them.
23:52Let's have this away, please, everyone.
23:54Our leaderboard looks like this.
23:56I think we're going to have to regroup for tomorrow.
23:58Hannah, you have three.
24:00Mark, you've got four.
24:01Steve, you've got five.
24:03Andrew Cotter, 13 points.
24:05How about that?
24:06How about that?
24:07Add everyone else together and you've got one point more than them.
24:12For the first time this week, we play our final round, which is...
24:18Fingers on buzzers, please, everyone.
24:20Point for a correct answer, point off for an incorrect answer.
24:22So if Andrew buzzes in every single time and gets it wrong,
24:25we're still in with a chance.
24:26OK.
24:27Your first category is...
24:32Accessories.
24:33Those will be the pictures.
24:34There will be a clue above.
24:35Smash the answer to the clue into the picture.
24:45Andrew.
24:46Thumbrella.
24:47Thumbrella.
24:48It is a thumb, an umbrella.
24:49Thumbrella.
24:50Next one.
24:52Next clue.
24:53Next accessory.
25:05That is Andrew.
25:06Nobel.
25:07Nobel?
25:08Alfred Nobel.
25:09It is Alfred Nobel.
25:10It is Alfred Nobel.
25:11And belt, Alfred Nobel.
25:13And that's why his trousers kept falling down.
25:17Next one.
25:20Emerald and Big Heart are varieties of which vegetable?
25:27Nobody.
25:29Looking for artichoker.
25:31Artichoke and choker, artichoker.
25:34Next category.
25:36Cooking ingredients will be the pictures.
25:38June Pitney had a UK top ten hit in 1963 with the song 24 hours from where?
25:49Andrew.
25:51Tulsa.
25:52Tulsa cabbage.
25:54No, I'm going to time you out, Andrew.
25:55If you buzz in, you've got to answer immediately, I'm afraid, so you lose a point.
25:59I mean, it is Tulsa.
26:01What is that, Anna?
26:03Yes, Anna.
26:04It's Savoy.
26:06So...
26:07Tulsa boy.
26:08Tulsa boy.
26:09It is.
26:10Well done.
26:11Tulsa and Savoy cabbage.
26:13Next clue.
26:14Next cooking ingredient.
26:17Which Hans Christian Andersen story about a young royal and a vegetable inspired the musical Once Upon a Mattress?
26:26Yes, Andrew.
26:27Princess and the Peanuts.
26:28The Princess and the Peanuts?
26:29It is The Princess and the Peanuts.
26:31Another book I would read.
26:34Next one.
26:47Yes, Andrew.
26:48Jubileak.
26:49Jubileak?
26:50It is Jubileak.
26:54Anna, if you had to make something with us, avoid cabbage, a leek and some peanuts, could you rustle something up?
26:58Not really.
26:59Not really.
27:00Not really.
27:01Not really.
27:02Not with the Peanuts, that wouldn't be in my repertoire.
27:03Like a little side dish?
27:04Yeah, a little side dish, yeah.
27:05I don't know.
27:06But are we done?
27:07We are done indeed.
27:08I wonder who's won.
27:09He did lose a point and maybe that made all the difference.
27:13Our winner on Monday's House of Games by a country mile.
27:17He's commentated on wins, now he's got one of his own, is Andrew Cotter.
27:20Well done, Andrew.
27:21And you've won a prize.
27:24Which of these would you like to take back to Scotland?
27:27You say salt and pepper, didn't I?
27:28Yeah, I'll take the salt and pepper.
27:30You're taking the salt and pepper shakers.
27:31Andrew Cotter, congratulations.
27:32Our weekly leaderboard.
27:33Looks like this.
27:34Every day you'll get four points for a win, three for second and so on.
27:37So, Andrew was at the top of that for now.
27:40Thank you all so much.
27:41Should we do the same thing again tomorrow, but perhaps with fewer points from Andrew?
27:44Andrew, of course, you wish for the opposite.
27:48I entirely wish for the opposite.
27:50No, no, it's about the taking part and making new friends.
27:55Andrew, about that.
27:58See you all tomorrow.
27:59See you tomorrow as well on the House of Games.
28:01APPLAUSE
28:02You feel the quality?
28:03I didn't realise they're electric.
28:04Look at that.
28:05Electric.
28:06Oh!
28:07Someone will clean that up.
28:08You have people to clean that up.
28:09Don't you?
28:10They're good.
28:11They're good.
28:12.
28:13I didn't realise they're electric.
28:14Look at that.
28:15Electric.
28:16Oh!
28:17Someone will clean that up.
28:18You have people to clean that up.
28:19They're good.
28:20.
28:21.
28:22.
28:23.
28:24.
28:25.
28:26.
28:27.
28:28.
28:30.
28:31.
28:38.
28:39.
28:40.
28:41.
28:42.
28:43.
28:44.
28:45.
28:46.
28:47.
28:48.
28:49.
28:50.
28:51.
28:52.
28:53.
28:54.
28:55.
28:56.
28:57.
28:58.
28:59.
29:00.
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