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Only Connect - Season 21 Episode 24 -
Doctors Matthews v Worker Bees

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😹
Fun
Transcript
00:00Time, please. Time, ladies and gentlemen. It's time for the Only Connect pub quiz.
00:23Tonight we are having a lock-in. Knock on the back door three times, code word quadratic.
00:30I will be serving up some ice-cold questions in my role as barmaid who's somehow doing the pub quiz
00:37to some favourite old teams from Only Connect of yore, and they are on my right.
00:44Lee Knowles, a senior improvement advisor and West Bromwich Albion season ticket holder.
00:49Gareth Cottes, an online merchandising manager whose first concert was Meatloaf.
00:55And their captain, Ushwini Karmath, a solicitor who spent her 40th birthday on a frozen lake.
01:01United by brewed beers, they are the Hopsters.
01:05Welcome back, Hopsters. We last saw you last year.
01:08Now, Ushwini, back in the day, we always said on this show we didn't have enough women contestants
01:12because quizzing comes from pub culture. You are a one-woman symbol of changing times.
01:20But you told us on your last visit you're a one-pint quizzer.
01:23I mean, this is going to last all night.
01:25What happens on the second pint?
01:27We don't want to go there.
01:29Welcome back, all of you. Nice to see you. You are playing On My Left.
01:34Dean Riley, a software engineer who directs local amateur theatre.
01:40Simon Gibbons, a software engineer who featured in a documentary
01:44as the fastest pickled egg eater in England.
01:47And their captain, Mickey Alexander, a research fellow who took part
01:51in a pirate-themed rave in the Greenwich foot tunnel.
01:55United by their love of a traditional pub, they are the Taverners.
01:59Mickey, you're back all the way from 2016.
02:03So lovely to see you. Are you... I should have asked before, are you still a couple?
02:07We are still married, despite me overruling him on the last one.
02:11Do you still play together as a pub quiz team?
02:13Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
02:15Would you say that since you were last here, your quizzing skills have got sharper or weaker?
02:20Ooh.
02:23Age is catching up with us, I think.
02:25Yeah, maybe we'll touch weaker.
02:27Well, we are actually going to be playing a slightly different sort of quiz tonight
02:31because this is a pub quiz.
02:33We're not going to have buzzers or any of that high-tech TV jiggery-pokery.
02:37The teams have got pens and paper.
02:39They're going to be playing all the questions at the same time,
02:42just like in a standard old-school quiz.
02:45So, pens and paper at the ready teams.
02:48Your first question is going to be the two reads.
02:52I will tell you when the next clue is coming up.
02:55Here's the first.
03:01Next.
03:07Next.
03:13Next.
03:15Yes, sir.
03:18And....
03:19Your time is up.
03:21Hobsters and what have you got?
03:22PH levels.
03:23That is the right answer.
03:25Canvases, did you have that as well?
03:27We concur.
03:28We did.
03:29Let me see you're working.
03:31PH, very well done.
03:32That is the one point each.
03:34Your second question will be the lion.
03:38First clue coming up now.
03:51Next.
03:56Next.
04:01Next.
04:04And we'll stop there.
04:11I'll ask you this time, Taverners, do you have an answer?
04:14Things that you're not allowed to do during an election.
04:16Is the right answer.
04:18Hopsters, what have you got?
04:19Politicians can't do.
04:22I'll let you have it.
04:24These are electoral law offences.
04:26They changed the rules in 1985.
04:28You couldn't use a pub as an office.
04:31I don't really know why it wouldn't be allowed and then allowed.
04:35These two middle clues.
04:36You wouldn't think it was two different things, would you?
04:38There's two separate offences.
04:39So there's bribery in general,
04:41but then giving drinks which is considered treating.
04:44So politicians who want to be elected can't do that kind of thing.
04:48Time for the twisted flax.
04:51What is the connection?
04:52Ooh.
04:53It's a music question.
04:54Let me just reach for my old tinny tape recorder to play you the music clues.
04:59Here's the first.
05:00Next.
05:01Next.
05:02Next.
05:03Next.
05:04Next.
05:05Next.
05:07Next.
05:13I think Clyde is a bit up.
05:15Next.
05:27I know this one.
05:28Next.
05:29We're all going on a summer holiday.
05:33No more working for them.
05:36That's enough music.
05:37Hopsters, what do you think the answer is?
05:40We think that the surnames are also first names of the singers.
05:46Not it.
05:47Taverners, what have you got?
05:48We think maybe it's something to do with opening hours,
05:50with pubs being open on the holidays, Saturday night.
05:54Also wrong.
05:55Yeah.
05:56Who do you think we heard from?
05:58We had Elton John for the first one,
06:00and Cliff Richard for the last one.
06:03Was it Noel Coward at some point?
06:05It was Noel Coward at clue two.
06:07And I let that third clue run on a bit
06:09in the hope you'd recognise the voice.
06:11Can we listen to clue three again?
06:21Now imagine that voice saying,
06:22Nice to see you, to see you.
06:25Nice.
06:26Sir Bruce Forsythe,
06:27Sir Elton John,
06:28Sir Noel Coward and Sir Cliff at the end all nights.
06:33Here's a nice bit of triv about Noel Coward.
06:35He lived in a cottage next to the Star Inn,
06:39which was E. Nesbitt's local.
06:42You don't think of E. Nesbitt as a regular drinker in the pub.
06:45And Noel Coward was such a big fan of hers.
06:47As a child, he once stole a coral necklace belonging to his mother's friend,
06:52pawned it for five shillings and spent it on E. Nesbitt books.
06:56And in later years, he lived in a cottage right next to her local pub.
06:59And they were able to hang out, so that was nice.
07:02Now, before the next question, I can see you're getting low on drinks taverners,
07:05but that's all right, because it is that moment in any pub quiz
07:08where somebody has got to go to the bar to get a round in,
07:12even if they have to miss a question.
07:14So I'm going to have to ask for a volunteer from your team.
07:16Who's going to go to the bar?
07:18Well, I guess I'm closest, so I'll take the short straw for that.
07:21Simon, I'm going to ask you to leave the stage.
07:26Right, now, I'm sorry you're going to be a man down.
07:28I hear there's a big queue for the bar, but let's get on with it.
07:30It'll be the Horned Viper. Here's your first clue.
07:39Next.
07:45Next.
07:51And we'll stop there.
08:01Taverners, the two-man team, what's your answer?
08:04We believe these are, according to these people,
08:06these are the greatest Yorkshiremen.
08:08And what do you think, Hopsters?
08:10Greatest Yorkshiremen.
08:11They are nominated as the greatest living Yorkshiremen.
08:16Who do you think Dickie Bird nominated?
08:19I hope he said himself.
08:21Dickie Bird said William Wilberforce, quote,
08:26as they did a magnificent job for the slaves, but he's dead.
08:29So then he said, I'll go for Judi Dench if you want a lady.
08:34Surprising answers there.
08:36Oh, look, it's Simon coming back with the drinks.
08:39In you come, Simon.
08:40You help yourselves to drinks.
08:42You'll be glad to hear they managed the point without you, Simon.
08:45Excellent.
08:46Next question.
08:47Water.
08:48What is the connection between these clues?
08:50Here's the first.
08:51Here's the first.
08:53The coldest pump.
08:55The coldest pump.
08:57The coldest pump.
08:58Yes.
08:59Yeah, that's a great answer.
09:01Next.
09:02Next.
09:03Oh, yeah, they're not.
09:04They're, like, Neolithic chalk things, aren't they?
09:15Next.
09:16And that's the giveaway clue, so I'm going to stop you there.
09:21Yeah.
09:22Hopsters, what do you think?
09:24These are giant works of art in these places.
09:28What do you mean by giant works of art?
09:30Big things drawn on the ground.
09:31On the hillside.
09:32What would you have said, Taverners?
09:33We were also struggling for what they're called.
09:35I've written Neolithic earthworks, which I'm certain is wrong,
09:37but that's what we're thinking of.
09:39I will give you all a point each.
09:41You weren't fox, they're not pubs, they are hill figures.
09:44And, of course, common pub names as well.
09:47Let us move on to the next question.
09:50The Eye of Horus will be the last one of the round.
09:52The picture question.
09:53Your first picture clue coming in now.
10:02Next.
10:08Next.
10:14Next.
10:17Next.
10:19Time's up.
10:21Taverners, what can you tell me?
10:23They're all synonyms for fast.
10:26So you've got Pacey from Dawson's Creek, Taylor Swift,
10:29Speedy Gonzales.
10:31And I think he's called Fast Eddie something in the hustle.
10:35Fast Eddie Felsen.
10:36Nice.
10:37Fast Eddie Felsen.
10:38And we wrote fast.
10:39Very nice.
10:40You all get one point.
10:42Very good.
10:43Who is Speedy Gonzales?
10:45He's the quickest mouse in Mexico.
10:47He's the fastest mouse in Mexico.
10:49Exactly.
10:50Well, they're all doing very well.
10:51That means at the end of round one,
10:53the Taverners have five points,
10:54the Hopsters have five points.
10:59Round two.
11:00The sequence is round.
11:02I might actually have a little scratching.
11:04I'll be telling you the clues in sequence again.
11:09You'll all be playing together.
11:10First one is going to be the two reeds.
11:12Here's your first clue.
11:19Next.
11:20And we'll stop there.
11:21Hopsters, what have you got for me as fourth in the sequence?
11:35Clacton, tick, brackets...
11:502024.
11:52The last election.
11:53Is the right answer.
11:54Taverners?
11:55Clacton, tick, 2024.
11:56You've got the same thing.
11:57Very well done.
11:58What is the reason, Hopsters?
12:00So the first three are where Nigel Farage lost in the elections
12:05and the last one is where he won.
12:07It is successive elections for Nigel Farage leading up to Clacton.
12:12And what's it doing in this show?
12:14He famously likes being pictured in pubs.
12:16He's often pictured in the pub, isn't he?
12:18And there was actually a poll which said he was the leader
12:22that people would most want to have a pint with.
12:24But you obviously have to factor in that if you have to have a pint
12:27in a pub with a political leader.
12:29I think they have to ask people of everybody in the world
12:33who would you want to have a pint with
12:35and see how long it took before they got to any politician,
12:37I think would be the thing.
12:39Next question is going to be the lion.
12:43What would come fourth in this sequence?
12:45Here's the first.
12:48Next.
12:52There are two pubs at Altsveed.
12:55Next.
12:57Is it where the pub is?
12:59That was the Brentford Brown,
13:01so there was a pub in every corner, I thought.
13:03What's the name of the last name?
13:07It's the...
13:09And time's up.
13:13Taverners, what can you tell me?
13:16We can tell you little to nothing.
13:19Yeah, this one stumped us.
13:20Are you stumped hopsters?
13:21The village I grew up in...
13:22For what reason?
13:23It had four pubs.
13:24That would be an acceptable answer.
13:26We had the Arctic Monkey song Cornerstone.
13:29So talk us through the sequence, please.
13:31Well, Albert Square is EastEnders.
13:33And there's one pub, of course, which is the...
13:35Queen Vic.
13:36That's it.
13:37Hogsmeade, the names of the pubs are...
13:40Is it the Leaky Cauldron?
13:41And the Three Broomsticks?
13:42Yeah, but the Leaky Cauldron is not in Hogsmeade, I don't think.
13:46That's in Diagon Alley, but the Three Broomsticks is right,
13:49and the Hogshead Harry Potter pubs, of course.
13:52And what's going on at clue three?
13:54So, Griffin Park is the former home of Brentford,
13:57and they used to have three pubs on the corner of the ground.
14:01On these dates, they did.
14:02And until 2015, there was a pub on each corner, one closed,
14:06so for four years there were just three.
14:08Sadly, Brentford don't play there any more.
14:10It's been demolished.
14:11So, well done, Hopsters, you get two points there.
14:14But the bad news is...
14:16I think it's time someone went to the bar.
14:18Who's volunteering?
14:20I'll take the hit.
14:22Off you go, Lee.
14:23You go and get the drinks in.
14:25We'll play the next question.
14:27It's going to be the Twisted Flax.
14:29We'll wait until Lee has left...
14:31No, he's having his...
14:33Fine, that's it.
14:34Get it down.
14:35What comes fourth in this sequence?
14:37Here's the first.
14:39We'll need more, huh?
14:42Next.
14:43Next.
14:44Next.
14:45Oh.
14:46Are these the years they got released?
14:47Yes, yes, yes, yes.
14:48So, what's...
14:49Isn't it a triangle?
14:50That was the next one, was it?
14:51Yeah.
14:52And it was his equals.
14:53Yeah.
14:54And let's stop there.
14:55Nastily Hopsters, you're the two-man team now.
14:57Someone ask you?
14:58So, we think it's the equal sign.
15:00Yeah.
15:01And it was his equals.
15:02Yeah.
15:03And it was his equals.
15:04Yeah.
15:05And let's stop there.
15:06Nastily Hopsters, you're the two-man team now.
15:09Someone ask you?
15:10So, we think it's the equal sign followed by the number 30.
15:13And what do you think it is?
15:15We didn't really get to it.
15:16We've got triangle 25.
15:17Not it, I'm afraid.
15:19Equals 30 is the right answer.
15:21Talk me through it, please.
15:23So, the mathematical symbols are the Ed Sheeran albums,
15:26I think, in succession, and the numbers are Adele albums,
15:31again, in succession.
15:32Ah.
15:33That's right.
15:34So, Ed Sheeran's albums go plus, multiply, divide,
15:38and then there's another one I would have taken,
15:40but equals is the next maths one.
15:42And the Adele, 19, 21, 25, 30.
15:45Does he have a pub in his back garden, Ed Sheeran?
15:47Oh, he's very wealthy.
15:48That's what I would have.
15:49Oh, but look, Lee's coming back with a celebratory round of drinks.
15:55You see, when I'm doing a pub quiz, I always deliberately go
15:58the music round, because I wouldn't be able to answer it anyway,
16:01so then I can come back and go, oh, I would have got that.
16:04It is the albums of Ed Sheeran and Adele successively.
16:08But good news, your team got two points.
16:11Next question is going to be The Horned Viper.
16:14Picture clues.
16:15Here's the first.
16:20Next.
16:25And we'll stop there.
16:41Is there a more revolting snack than the pork scratching?
16:44I mean, genuinely, is there a more... I mean, I'm eating them,
16:46but is there anything more disgusting?
16:48Some of them have hair on.
16:50If anything was going to make me go vegan, it would be that.
16:53OK.
16:54Taverners.
16:55What do you think comes next?
16:56We lost.
16:57Pint.
16:58Yeah, no.
16:59No.
17:00Hopsters?
17:01No.
17:02Sorry.
17:03I love this one.
17:04It's staring you in the face.
17:05Look at the word pint.
17:06Four letters.
17:07Red lion.
17:08Three, then four.
17:10Ho Chi Minh.
17:11Two, then three, then four.
17:13I want to hear one, two, three, four letters.
17:16For example, tea in the park.
17:19Why is Ho Chi Minh in this question?
17:22I'll throw pork scratching at anyone who gets this right.
17:24I mean that in a positive way.
17:25Is there a pub called the Ho Chi Minh?
17:27No.
17:28Ho Chi Minh, apparently, worked in the kitchen at the Drayton Court
17:33in West Ealing, which apparently has the largest beer garden in London.
17:36And Ho Chi Minh worked there.
17:37I mean, how can that be right?
17:39Apparently it is.
17:40Let's go on with the next question.
17:42Water.
17:43What would come forth in this sequence?
17:45Here's the first.
17:47Just a second.
17:49Succeeded.
17:50Next.
17:51Next.
17:53Henry the fourth.
17:54So it's going to be changes.
17:55Reginald.
17:56And there's one.
17:57If he was before Henry the fourth.
17:58Richard Grumwell.
17:59Yeah, they're all following Richard's.
18:00They're all following Richard's.
18:01So who followed Richard's third?
18:02Time's up.
18:03Popsters, can you give me an answer?
18:06Stephen and nothing in the bracket.
18:22One in brackets?
18:23Because there's only been one King Stephen?
18:26Not it I'm afraid.
18:28Taverners, what do you think?
18:29Well we think it's the same thing for a different reason.
18:32What? You think it's Stephen.
18:33I think it's Stephen who followed Richard I.
18:36Oh, no, you got the rhyme wrong.
18:39It's Willy Willy Harry Steve.
18:40Damn it!
18:41Harry Dick John.
18:42Don't you worry.
18:44I'm going to give you the points,
18:47because I think you've done some brilliant quizzing.
18:49This is really tough.
18:51Tell your opponents what the sequence is.
18:53So these are the people who succeeded Richards in brackets.
18:57So Charles II on the restoration replaced Richard Cromwell.
19:01That's it, because Oliver Cromwell died his son Richard.
19:04So follow Richard Cromwell.
19:05Henry VII followed...
19:07Richard III.
19:09That's it.
19:10Henry IV followed Richard II.
19:11So I want to know who followed Richard I.
19:14And it was John.
19:15And even though you didn't give me that answer immediately,
19:18I'm so impressed that you solved this difficult puzzle.
19:20You can have two points.
19:21Thank you, we'll take it.
19:23Last question of the round is the Eye of Horus.
19:26First in a sequence is this.
19:31But why number four?
19:33Is it the fourth?
19:35We need to do that.
19:37No.
19:38Also it's hard to do Beatles.
19:39Next.
19:40Swept away.
19:42That was the Madonna film where she was like,
19:44you should feel sorry for these taxes.
19:45Next.
19:46Two snaps by Richard.
19:48Yeah.
19:49It's Lockstock.
19:51And we'll stop there.
19:55Taverners, do you have an answer?
19:57Dean would like to give us sure.
19:59We think it's Lockstock, one, colon.
20:01And what do you think, Hopsters?
20:03One, colon, Lockstock and two smoking barrels.
20:06Is the right answer?
20:07You all get the points.
20:08And what is the sequence?
20:10The Guy Ritchie films going backwards in order.
20:14And why is Guy Ritchie in this show?
20:17He has a pub.
20:19He has a pub, doesn't he?
20:20He likes a bit of pub culture.
20:21Has anybody seen Swept Away?
20:23Yeah, it's not good.
20:24People were very mean about that film,
20:26but I reckon everyone on it was trying their best
20:28to do an entertaining thing.
20:30What more can you ask?
20:31Trying their best to do an entertaining thing.
20:33You do it if you think it's so easy.
20:36Lockstock and two smoking barrels is the right answer.
20:38Two points all round.
20:40That means at the end of round two,
20:42the Taverners have 11 points,
20:44the Hopsters have 13.
20:49Time for the connecting wall.
20:51Amazing burst of high-tech play in this particular pub.
20:54Would you like Lion or water?
20:57I think it's time for a hydration break,
20:59so we will take the water wall.
21:00But, aha!
21:02You're both going to get the same wall.
21:05Two and a half minutes, starting now.
21:10OK, so, what do we see?
21:12Words for pub, local, tavern, bar, pub, saloon, inn.
21:16So there are plenty of those.
21:17A clef means, like, key.
21:19That's a music term, but...
21:21A clef rest, tie, and bar.
21:25We've also got habitant, native, local.
21:27OK, so I'm going to start with the music ones.
21:30Yes.
21:31Yes.
21:32So, resident, native, inhabitant, local.
21:35Wow.
21:36We and ing we've not talked about.
21:38So, we said saloon, pub.
21:41Yeah.
21:42Shall we try it?
21:43No, no, no.
21:44We need to hold off, don't we?
21:45Yeah.
21:46No, no, no.
21:47No, no.
21:49No, no, no.
21:50No, no, no.
21:51Can we take the pub off for a moment?
21:53Because maybe speakeasines happen.
21:54Yeah.
21:55Anything go in front of them?
21:57Yeah.
21:58Erm.
21:59Yeah. Anything go in front of them, hopefully?
22:03Yeah. Erm...
22:06We're fairly confident that it's either pub or in with this,
22:09so we should hopefully be able to get it.
22:11What's the connection to, like, engineering, English...
22:16Publish, relish, demolish. Yes.
22:21You've solved the wall. Very well done.
22:24Tell me about the connections, bar, rest and so on.
22:27So the first group are musical...
22:30It's musical terminology. It's musical notation.
22:33And the next group, local, resident, native and inhabitant.
22:37They're all sort of synonyms to describe somebody who lives somewhere.
22:40People from round here.
22:43In, tavern, saloon and speakeasy. Drinking establishments.
22:47Those are the four drinking establishments.
22:49And the last group, pub, eng and so on.
22:52So it can be followed by lish, to make a word.
22:55Yes, it can. So that is all four groups, all four connections,
22:59and the bonus that is the maximum of ten points.
23:02Very well done.
23:03Let's bring in their opponents now and give them the exact same wall.
23:07Let's see how much you remember.
23:09I bet you still can't solve it.
23:11Hello, taverners. You will be getting the water wall.
23:14And your time starts... now.
23:18Oh, right. What have we got?
23:20Tavern.
23:22Oh, yeah.
23:23Tavern.
23:24Tavern.
23:25Where's tavern?
23:26Tavern bottom.
23:27Okay, in.
23:28Okay, that's going to be quite a lot.
23:30What else have we got here?
23:32So, we've got...
23:33Local as well.
23:34Yeah.
23:35Do, re, mi, fa...
23:37Inhabitant, native...
23:39Yes.
23:40Local.
23:41Resident.
23:42Resident, thank you.
23:44Ray, clef, that's a musical thing, yes?
23:47Yeah.
23:48Demo...
23:49There's something that you add to the end of these.
23:51Yeah.
23:52England...
23:53Or ing... something.
23:54Okay, let's...
23:55I'm going to do this for a bit.
23:56Leave out bar.
23:57Leave out pub.
23:58Leave out saloon.
23:59Leave out speakeasy.
24:00Have I done all of them?
24:01Leave out tavern.
24:02Oh, interesting.
24:03In.
24:04Okay, there's too many options.
24:05Uh...
24:06Tavern.
24:07Restaurant.
24:08Uh...
24:09Uh...
24:10Democracy.
24:11Demo...
24:12Graphics.
24:13In...
24:14Dem...
24:15Demosthenes.
24:16D-mob.
24:17Come on, say things.
24:18Keep talking.
24:19Engineering.
24:20Land.
24:21Uh...
24:22No.
24:23No.
24:24No.
24:25No.
24:26No.
24:27No.
24:28No.
24:29No.
24:30No.
24:31No.
24:32No.
24:33No.
24:34No.
24:35No.
24:36No.
24:37No.
24:38English.
24:39Uh...
24:40Grealish.
24:41No.
24:42Demolish.
24:43English.
24:44Publish.
24:45Ah, yes.
24:46Very good.
24:47Relish.
24:48And then we've got tie, clef, bar and rest.
24:50Oh, all musical.
24:51Those are all musical things.
24:52Yeah.
24:53Yeah.
24:54Yeah.
24:55They're all things.
24:56You've solved the wall.
24:57Very well done.
24:58But do you know why?
24:59Tell me about local, resident and so on.
25:01They are synonyms from people who are...
25:04They are synonyms from people who are from around here.
25:08Quite right.
25:09The next group, in tavern and so on.
25:12Drinking holes.
25:14Of the many drinking holes, those are the four.
25:17Next group, pub, eng and so on.
25:20Things that end with lish.
25:22Or that you can follow with lish.
25:23Yeah.
25:24You can put lish after all of them.
25:25And the final one, bar, rest, clef and tie.
25:28All from musical notation.
25:30That is musical notation.
25:32You get the maximum of ten points.
25:35What did you get?
25:36I thought so.
25:37Let's have a look at the scores going into the final round.
25:41The taverners have 21 points.
25:44The hopsters have 23.
25:48Time now for the missing vowels round.
25:50Unfortunately, a kindly benefactor has donated to the pub some buzzers.
25:54Because I have no idea how we'd have done this round otherwise.
25:57Fingers on buzzers, teams.
25:59I can tell you that the first group of disguised clues
26:02are all good topics to memorise for a pub quiz.
26:11Taverners.
26:12Football World Cup winners.
26:13Well done.
26:14Hopsters.
26:15Chemical elements.
26:16Yes, it is.
26:17Taverners.
26:18Best picture Oscar winners.
26:19Correct.
26:20And keep all of that in mind when I tell you that the next group are all examples within
26:37the aforementioned topics.
26:39Off we go.
26:40Taverners.
26:42Queen Anne.
26:43Yes, she is.
26:48Hopsters.
26:49Argentina.
26:50It's Argentina.
26:53Taverners.
26:54Argon.
26:55Chemical elements.
26:59Hopsters.
27:00Argo.
27:01A Best Picture Oscar winner.
27:02Next group, bar snacks.
27:07Taverners.
27:08Pork scratching.
27:09Two.
27:13Hopsters.
27:14Dry roasted peanuts.
27:15With that faint tang of urine.
27:20Taverners.
27:21Bickered onions.
27:22Correct.
27:25Hopsters.
27:26Scotch eggs.
27:27Yes, indeed.
27:28I agree.
27:29TV pubs and bars.
27:30And the shows they're in.
27:34Taverners.
27:35The Woolpack and Emmerdale.
27:36Correct.
27:39Oh, the landlord has rung the bell.
27:41No time to tell me.
27:43Moe's Tavern and the Simpsons.
27:44Moe's Tavern and the Simpsons.
27:46Why the landlord's ringing your bell.
27:47I thought we were having a lock-in.
27:49But TV scheduling is a cruel mistress.
27:51They've had a word with the landlord.
27:53And by landlord, I mean our head of production's husband, Phil.
27:56Thanks for that, Phil.
27:57It's the end of the quiz and looking at the final scores.
28:01Finishing with 28 points, it's the Hopsters.
28:04The Taverners have 29.
28:06You've just squeaked it.
28:08Very well done.
28:09What a lovely evening it's been.
28:11Really nice to see you all again.
28:13Cheers.
28:14And thanks very much for watching the Only Connect pub special.
28:18Please do be quiet when leaving as we're in a residential area.
28:22Good night.
28:44Bye.
28:46Bye.
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