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Celebrity Mastermind Season 24 Episode 5

Celebrity Mastermind
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Transcript
00:00Hello and welcome to Celebrity Mastermind with me Clive Myrie.
00:24In the spotlight tonight are Fire from the TV series Gladiators.
00:28She'll be answering questions on the music of Lauryn Hill.
00:32BBC Radio 1 presenter Matt Edmondson.
00:34His specialist subject is the history of board games.
00:37From the repair shop Sonaz Nooranvari,
00:40whose specialist subject is the Robert Langdon novels of Dan Brown.
00:44And journalist and broadcaster Lewis Goodall.
00:46His subject is the US President John Adams.
00:49A wise man once said, everyone's a winner baby, that's the truth.
00:59But not here at Mastermind Towers, not in my gaff, not on my turf.
01:03There can only be one celebrity Mastermind winner taking home this astonishingly stunning trophy.
01:09Which one of our fabulous friends will be boarding their private jet with a little extra carry-on.
01:14One and a half minutes on a specialist subject and two minutes on general knowledge will decide.
01:18And they'll be helping out their chosen charities too.
01:21What's not to like?
01:22So can I ask our first celebrity contender to please make their way to the black chair.
01:27Your name?
01:37Fire.
01:38Your occupation?
01:39Gladiator.
01:40Your chosen charity?
01:41London sport.
01:42And your specialist subject?
01:44The music of Lauryn Hill.
01:46Yes, the American singer and rapper who first found fame in the hip-hop group The Fugees in one and a half minutes.
01:52Here we go.
01:53Which breakup song?
01:54A UK hit single in 1999 taken from the solo album The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill features the lines,
02:01Tell me who I have to be to get some reciprocity.
02:07X Factor.
02:08Yes.
02:09The 1996 Fugees album The Score features a cover version of which song by Bob Marley and the Wailers?
02:14No Woman No Cry.
02:16Yes.
02:17Hill performed an acclaimed duet of the hymn His Eye is on the Sparrow with Tania Blunt in the 1993 sequel to what film?
02:24Sister Act.
02:25Yes.
02:26What's the first name of Hill's eldest son who was the subject of a track on the miseducation of Lauryn Hill which features the lyrics,
02:32See I know that a gift so great is only one God could create.
02:36Zion.
02:37Yes.
02:38Which Irish singer is credited on the UK number one single Ready or Not by the Fugees which uses a sample of her instrumental humming piece,
02:45Bodicea?
02:46Enya.
02:47Yes.
02:48On the front cover of the group's 1994 debut studio album Blunted on Reality, what previous name of the band appears directly beneath the name Fugees?
02:56Translator Crew.
02:57Yes.
02:58Which American author and educator provides the voice of the teacher who is heard speaking throughout the album,
03:02The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill?
03:04Rasparaka?
03:05Yes.
03:06In the video for which solo song by Hill does she appear split between 1960s and 90s incarnations of herself while singing,
03:13Don't be a hard rock when you really are a gem?
03:17Do what?
03:18That's it?
03:19At the Grammy Awards ceremony in 2000, Hill and Bob Dylan presented the Album of the Year award to which guitarist with whom she'd collaborated on his winning album?
03:29Carlos Santana.
03:30It was.
03:31Carlos Santana.
03:34Fire.
03:35You were on fire.
03:36No passes.
03:37You got them all right.
03:38Nine points.
03:39Okay.
03:49And our next contender please.
03:58Your name?
03:59Matt Edmondson.
04:00Your occupation?
04:01Radio DJ and TV presenter.
04:03Your chosen charity?
04:04Mind.
04:05And your specialist subject?
04:06The history of board games.
04:08From ancient times to the present day, in one and a half minutes, here we go.
04:13The early Indian game Chachuranga, in which two opponents each begin with 16 pieces, including a raja or king, is believed to be a forerunner of what modern game?
04:22Chess.
04:23Yes, the British company that specialised in selling imported board games in the 1970s and went on to create the hugely successful Warhammer in 1983 is called Games What?
04:33Workshop.
04:34Yes.
04:35What code-breaking game which features rows of coloured pegs was invented by an Israeli postmaster named Mordecai Merovich and launched in the early 1970s?
04:43Mastermind.
04:44Yes.
04:45In backgammon, each player starts with how many pieces or checkers which they aim to remove from or bear off the board?
04:51Seven.
04:52No, 15.
04:53What game, launched by Ideal Toys in 1963, was inspired by the work of the cartoonist Rube Goldberg, who specialised in drawing machines that were ridiculously overcomplicated for the simple tasks they were designed to perform?
05:06Mousetrap.
05:07Yes.
05:08The playing area of the historic Indian game Pachisi is traditionally what shape?
05:12It's a cross.
05:13Yes.
05:14A picture is worth a thousand words.
05:15Is the strapline for which storytelling game launched in France in 2008?
05:19Dixit.
05:20Yes.
05:21What Japanese name is most commonly used in the West for the board game also known as Wei-Chi and Bardock, which is usually played on a grid measuring 19 squares by 19?
05:30Go?
05:31Yes.
05:32Which German designer, a former dental technician, created numerous award-winning games including Barbarossa and Settlers of Catan?
05:38Klaus Tuber?
05:39Yes.
05:40Klaus Toiber.
05:41What ancient board game, sometimes known as the game of passing, was so important to the Egyptians that a number of different sets were buried with the pharaoh Tutankamu?
05:49Senate.
05:50It is.
05:51Senate.
05:52Matt, at the end of that round you had no passes.
05:55You've got nine points.
05:57And our next contender, please.
06:14Your name.
06:15Sonaz Noronvari.
06:16Your occupation.
06:17Upholstery expert.
06:18Your chosen charity.
06:19Sammy's Foundation and Dorset Mind.
06:22Your specialist subject.
06:23The Robert Langdon novels of Dan Brown.
06:26The series of mystery thriller novels that includes the worldwide bestseller, The Da Vinci Code.
06:31In one and a half minutes.
06:32Here we go.
06:33The book's central character, Robert Langdon, is a professor of religious symbology at which American university?
06:39Harvard.
06:40Yes.
06:41In Angels and Demons, the first book in the series, Langdon is summoned to Switzerland to help solve the murder of a scientist that appears to have been carried out by which ancient secret brotherhood?
06:52The Illuminati.
06:53Yes.
06:54Langdon wears a wristwatch, a vintage collector's edition he received as a gift from his parents that features which cartoon character?
06:59Mickey Mouse.
07:00Yes.
07:01In The Da Vinci Code, Langdon is called to the Louvre to help in the investigation of the murder of the museum's curator, Jacques Saunière, whose body has been found in which wing of the building?
07:11Which wing?
07:16Not the Da Vinci ring?
07:22No, the Denon wing.
07:23What's the name of Langdon's long-time mentor, a senior figure in the Freemasons who is kidnapped in the lost symbol?
07:29Peter Solomon.
07:30Yes.
07:31In Inferno, Langdon is employed to solve a mystery by Dr Elizabeth Szynski, the director of what global institution?
07:37World Health Organisation.
07:38Yes.
07:39In Origin, when Langdon arrives at the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, he's given a headset with narration from an AI assistant, which introduces itself by what name?
07:49Winston.
07:50Yes.
07:51In the sixth novel, The Secret of Secrets, published in 2025, Langdon travels to which European capital city to attend a lecture by Catherine Solomon?
07:58Prague.
07:59Yes.
08:00In Angels and Demons, Langdon claims to have three loves in his life.
08:03Symbology?
08:04I've started, so I'll finish.
08:05In Angels and Demons, Langdon claims to have three loves in his life.
08:08Symbology?
08:09Bachelorhood?
08:10And which sport?
08:11An interest that proves useful when he's attacked in a fountain later in the novel?
08:16Swimming?
08:17No.
08:18Water polo.
08:19Oh.
08:20Sonaz, at the end of that round, you had no passes.
08:23You've got seven points.
08:25And our final contender, please.
08:42Your name?
08:43Louis Goodall.
08:44Your occupation?
08:45Journalist and broadcaster.
08:46Your chosen charity?
08:47John Schofield Trust for young journalists.
08:49And your specialist subject?
08:50John Adams.
08:51The life and career of the American founding father who became the second US president.
08:56In one and a half minutes.
08:57Here we go.
08:58Adams won the US presidential election of 1796, standing as a candidate for what party?
09:03The Federalists.
09:04Yes.
09:05Which former two-term governor of South Carolina was chosen by the Federalists to be Adams'
09:09vice presidential running mate in the 1796 election?
09:12Thomas Pinkney.
09:13Yes.
09:14Adams was largely responsible for drafting the constitution of which US state in whose territory
09:19he was born in 1735?
09:20Massachusetts.
09:21Yes.
09:22Adams' first child with his wife Abigail was a daughter who was also named Abigail but more
09:26commonly known by what nickname?
09:27Nabby.
09:28Naby.
09:29Yes.
09:30After graduating from Harvard College, Adams began to train in law, studying for two years
09:33under which prominent lawyer in Worcester, Massachusetts?
09:36Samuel Adams.
09:37No.
09:38James Putnam.
09:39What's the usual three-word title of the influential 1776 text, an inspiration for several
09:44state constitutions, in which Adams outlined a system of divided powers?
09:48Thoughts on government?
09:49Yes.
09:50In 1780, Adams left a diplomatic post in France and travelled to which other European country
09:54where he successfully negotiated a sizeable loan for the United States?
09:58The Dutch Republic.
09:59The Netherlands.
10:00Yes, I'll take that.
10:01In July 1798, Adams reluctantly agreed to the appointment of which of his political rivals
10:05to the position of inspector general in the army that was being raised in anticipation
10:09of a war with revolutionary France?
10:11Hamilton.
10:12Yes.
10:13On the 4th of July 1826, shortly before his death, Adams is reported to have spoken
10:17what three-word phrase referring to a fellow founding father whom he greatly admired?
10:22Thomas Jefferson lives.
10:24No.
10:25Thomas Jefferson survives in one of his last acts as president.
10:29I've started so I'll finish in one of his last acts as president in January 1801.
10:33Adams replaced Oliver Ellsworth as Chief Justice of the United States with which of his
10:38cabinet colleagues?
10:39John Marshall.
10:40It was John Marshall.
10:42At the end of that round, Lewis, you had no passes.
10:45You've got eight points.
10:46That's great.
10:47At the end of the specialist subjects round, let's have a look at the scores.
10:59In fourth place with seven points, it's Sonaz.
11:02In third place with eight points, it's Lewis.
11:04And in joint first place with nine points each, Fire and Matt.
11:08So now it's general knowledge.
11:10And if there's a tie at the end, then the number of passes is taken into account and
11:14the person with the fewer passes is the winner.
11:16And if they're tied on passes as well, it's a tie break.
11:19So let's ask Sonaz to join us again, please.
11:28Sonaz, the resident upholstery expert on the repair shop.
11:32It's so popular.
11:33Why do you think that is?
11:34Well, I do feel that the repair shop has created a renaissance back into people considering
11:40restoration and getting into the crafts themselves.
11:43And it's so empowering to do it yourself as well.
11:47And not just that, to keep hold of these sort of precious belongings that hold so many
11:55memories is a lovely thing.
11:58And the less in landfill, the better.
12:00Well, we're going to have to talk about the black chair.
12:02Because, of course, on a recent episode, you restored the very first mastermind black chair.
12:07I did.
12:08A lot of pressure.
12:09Yes, I did feel the pressure, actually.
12:11Even more than this?
12:12Yeah.
12:13This feels kind of on par, to be honest.
12:15What did you have to do to it?
12:17I did like a bit of a restoration, but more of a conservation job than anything.
12:22Because I didn't want it to look totally different because it held all that history.
12:26You wanted to keep the character.
12:27The character.
12:28The character and the wear marks from where everybody's been gripping the handlebars.
12:31I wanted to keep that.
12:33I wonder how that chair is feeling now.
12:35Acceptable.
12:36Acceptable?
12:37Well, maybe we'll have to send it off to you at some point in the future.
12:40I am at your service.
12:41You never, never know.
12:42Well, we're going to check out your general knowledge now.
12:44Okay.
12:45Son has.
12:46You start with seven points.
12:47You've got two minutes on general knowledge.
12:49Okay.
12:50Here we go.
12:51In relation to the fuel consumption of vehicles, the letters MPG stand for miles per watt.
12:55Gallon.
12:56Yes.
12:57In central London, Wyndham's, the Ambassadors and the Royal Court are all what type of entertainment
13:01venue?
13:02Opera House?
13:03No, theatre.
13:04Postcodes beginning with the letters C-F cover addresses in and around which city in
13:09South Wales?
13:10Uh, C-F.
13:15Car...
13:17Path.
13:18The twin brothers John and Edward Grimes, who found fame on The X Factor and went on to
13:24represent Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest, are known collectively by what stage name?
13:29Um...
13:31Oh, what are they called?
13:33Yes, I can see them.
13:36Um...
13:39Oh, goodness.
13:41Not Anton Deck, but I'm going to say Anton Deck.
13:43No, Jedward.
13:44Jedward.
13:45The small East African state of Djibouti declared independence from which European country in 1977?
13:50East African...
13:51That is a pass.
13:53The 2024 Wallace and Gromit animation, which sees the return of the villainous penguin Feathers McGraw,
13:58is entitled Wallace and Gromit Vengeance Most...
14:01What?
14:03Wanted?
14:04No, foul.
14:05The first eleven men's team of Surrey County Cricket Club plays most of its home matches at
14:10which ground in Kennington, South London?
14:14Kensington?
14:15No, the oval.
14:16Ah.
14:17The nectarine is a smooth skinned variety of what fruit?
14:20Peach?
14:21Yes.
14:22Until her death in 2007, Princess Catherine of Greece, known in the UK as Lady Catherine Brandrum.
14:27Had been the last surviving great-granddaughter of which British Queen?
14:32Uh...
14:34Queen Victoria?
14:38Yes.
14:39What primary colour follows Sky, Royal and Midnight in the names of three shades of that colour?
14:44Sky...
14:45Blue?
14:46In March 2025, which American singer and actress topped the UK album's chart for the fifth time with Mayhem?
14:54Mayhem...
14:56Uh...
14:57Beyonce?
14:58No.
14:59No.
15:00Lady Gaga?
15:01Lady Gaga!
15:02Bad.
15:03Sanaz, you had two passes.
15:04The small East African state of Djibouti declared independence from France in 1977.
15:10And, you knew this one, CF covers addresses in South Wales. The city, Cardiff.
15:16Cardiff.
15:17Cardiff.
15:18And at the end of that round, Sanaz, you've got eleven points.
15:21Next up, it's Lewis.
15:37Here we are again.
15:38Lewis, one-third of the award-winning podcast and newsagents, of course, alongside Emily Maitlis and John Sopel.
15:43It's been a huge hit. Why do you think that is?
15:47I think people just like the kind of, ah, the informality of it, maybe. Sort of getting away behind the desk.
15:53No offence. Getting away behind the desk of traditional news stuff. So, it's that kind of level of immediacy, I think.
15:58People sort of take you in with podcasts in a really kind of intimate way.
16:03And what's interesting is that the three of you, you take the show on the road. What kind of audiences do you see in front of you?
16:10It's a real mix. And the really, really nice thing about it is precisely that it isn't the kind of traditional news sort of programme mix.
16:17So, you get loads and loads of younger people, loads of people, I mean, I'm actually slightly disturbed sometimes,
16:21the number of young people who message in or come to those sort of events and they say, Lewis, I use you to prepare for my A-level politics exam.
16:29Don't blame us. You know, don't blame us. Obviously, if it goes well, then you can sort of credit us.
16:33But if it, you know, let's not write to the exam board.
16:36Lewis, you start with eight points. The score to beat as it stands is eleven points.
16:39And you've got two minutes on general knowledge. Here we go.
16:42The word Oz, spelt O-Z, is an informal name for which Commonwealth country?
16:46Australia.
16:47Yes. The 2019 film Judy, starring Renee Zellweger in the title role, is about the life of which actress?
16:53Judy Garland.
16:54Yes. What telephone number for the emergency services was introduced in London in 1937 and by 1976 had been extended to the whole of the UK?
17:02999.
17:03Yes. What was the surname of the Wild West Outlaws, Frank and Jesse, who from the 1860s to the early 1880s became notorious robbers of banks, trains and stagecoaches?
17:12Hancock?
17:13No, James. Whatever people say I am. That's what I'm not, is the title of the chart-topping 2006 debut album by which British rock group?
17:24The Killers?
17:25No. Arctic Monkeys. When describing a sports person who has performed best for their team during a season or championship, the letters MVP stand for what?
17:35Pass.
17:36In geometry, each of the internal angles of a square measures how many degrees?
17:4190 degrees.
17:42Yes. The opening theme song to what television sitcom begins with the lyrics,
17:46Stick a pony in me pocket, I'll fetch the suitcase from the van?
17:50Only Fools and Horses.
17:51Yes. Ginza is an upmarket shopping district of which far eastern capital city?
17:56Tokyo.
17:57Yes. The title of the best-selling 2024 novel by Richard Osman is We Solve What?
18:02Murders.
18:03What term for a post-mortem examination is derived from Greek words commonly translated as seeing with one's own eyes?
18:11Autopsy.
18:12Yeah.
18:13The annual mid-winter fire festival of Upheliar is celebrated in various communities in which group of Scottish islands?
18:20Hemadies.
18:21No, Shetland.
18:22What Broadway and West End jukebox musical is set on Hollywood's Sunset Strip in the 1980s and features songs such as
18:29Come on, feel the noise. We built this city and the final countdown.
18:33Pass.
18:34In 2017, which British Olympic diving champion married the Oscar-winning screenwriter Dustin Lance Black?
18:40Tom Daley.
18:41Yes. What's the common name? I've started so I'll finish.
18:44What's the common name for the paste widely used in Middle Eastern cooking that's made from ground sesame seeds?
18:50Ah.
18:51Um.
18:55Zata, it's not.
18:56No, it's tahini.
18:57Of course, yes.
18:58Lewis, you had two passes.
19:00The Broadway and West End jukebox musical Rock of Ages.
19:04An MVP describing a sports person who's performed their best for their team during a seasonal championship.
19:09Most valuable player.
19:11Mm.
19:12So, at the end of that round, Lewis, you've got 17 points.
19:24Next up, it's fire.
19:26Or should I say Montel Douglas, one of the gladiators, of course, from the hugely popular BBC One show.
19:41Tell us about fire.
19:42Fire.
19:43Well, apart from the red lip.
19:45Very sassy.
19:46Fierce.
19:47But fair.
19:48A little bit like you Clive, I think.
19:50Fierce.
19:51The chair fit.
19:52Indeed.
19:53I mean, were you a massive fan of the show before you joined it?
19:56Oh, huge, huge fan.
19:57I was, I think, six when I first came out on, like, night two.
20:01And I was just in awe.
20:02I think everyone was.
20:03I wanted to be one.
20:04I was running around, you know, my house and probably breaking things.
20:07Gladiators didn't make you famous, though.
20:09I mean, you were actually a former Team GB sprinter and you held the British 100 metre record.
20:14I couldn't believe it.
20:15Made the Olympic Games at 22.
20:17And it was a 27-year-old record.
20:18So, it was well before I was born that it came up.
20:20And then it was beaten about almost eight years later by amazing Dean Asher Smith.
20:25So, I was like, she can have it.
20:27She deserves it.
20:28But you've competed in the Winter Olympics as well.
20:30I'm just greedy, Clive.
20:31I'm very, very greedy.
20:33I did bobsleigh.
20:34So, I do two-woman bobsleigh.
20:36And I went to the 2018 and 2022 Games.
20:39Massive experience, but something that I would cherish forever.
20:42Fierce.
20:43You start with nine points.
20:44The score to beat as it stands is 17 points.
20:46You've got two minutes on general knowledge.
20:49Here we go.
20:50The face of a standard dart board is what geometric shape?
20:53Circle.
20:54Yes.
20:55The term dorm for a large room with numerous beds is an informal abbreviation of what word?
21:00Dormatory.
21:01Yes.
21:02The late 19th-century artwork by Francis Barraud, commonly known as his master's voice, features a gramophone and what animal?
21:09Horse.
21:10No, dog.
21:11In cookery, portobello, morel and lion's mane are varieties of what foodstuff?
21:19Mushroom.
21:20Yes.
21:21During her acting career, Meghan Markle, later the Duchess of Sussex, played a character called Rachel Zane in what American television drama series?
21:27Suits.
21:28Yes.
21:29The Strait of Gibraltar lies between the south of Spain and which country in North Africa?
21:33Morocco.
21:34Yes.
21:35A type of large toy house for children to play in is named after which Peter Pan character?
21:43Think about.
21:44No.
21:45Wendy.
21:46In the original Star Wars film trilogy and the sequel trilogy, Luke Skywalker is played by which actor?
21:51Oh, my gosh.
21:52Blank.
21:54Path.
21:55A water-damaged menu dated 11th April 1912, which was sold at auction for £84,000 in November 2023, was printed for use on which ill-fated ship?
22:06Titanic.
22:07Yes.
22:08What's the professional name of the doctor-turned-stand-up comedian and presenter, born Matthew Hall in 1964, who's noted for his characteristic black-rimmed glasses, dark suits and oversized shirt collars?
22:18Fast.
22:19The Portuguese football manager, Ruben Amorim, was appointed head coach of which English Premier League club in 2024?
22:29Liverpool.
22:30No.
22:31Manchester United.
22:32Which element has the atomic number 15 and the chemical symbol P?
22:35Tathium?
22:36No.
22:37No.
22:38Phosphorus.
22:3913.
22:40Yes.
22:41York Cottage, where the future King George VI was born in 1895, is in the grounds of which royal estate?
22:57Buckner Palace?
22:58No.
22:59Sandringham.
23:00Fire, you had two passes.
23:02The professional name of the doctor-turned-stand-up comedian, born Matthew Hall, oversized shirt collars, dark suits, black-rimmed garcy, Harry Hill.
23:11Ah, I can see it.
23:12And Luke Skywalker played in the first three films and the sequel trilogy, Mark Hamill.
23:18At the end of that round, Fire, you've got 16 points.
23:21Yeah.
23:30And finally, let's have Matt again, please.
23:37Clive.
23:39Matt, currently co-host of Radio One's Early Afternoon, slot with Molly King, and it's build fun and games with Matt and Molly.
23:48What do you mean build, Clive? Have you not been listening?
23:51No, well, that's quite a good description of it.
23:53That sums it up, right?
23:54Me and Molly are there, so we do lots of, like, quizzy, fun, gamey things on the show.
23:58Ah, right. Okay, so you like challenging your listeners?
24:01Well, mainly I like challenging Molly King, because she's the most competitive person I've ever met.
24:06You've got to get her in this chair, Clive. I'll put in a good word.
24:10We are so genuinely, upsettingly, embarrassingly competitive with each other that sometimes we forget we're on the radio.
24:19The wee-day afternoon slot on Radio One, I mean, that's a nice time, isn't it?
24:22It's an absolute dream, Clive. Yeah, yeah, I can't lie.
24:24Not too late, not too early.
24:25Not too late, not too early.
24:26Slight problem with when to eat your lunch.
24:28That's the only problem I have, because we're forbidden from having it in the studio.
24:32I don't know if it's the same at the news desk, but you have to sneak outside for a sandwich.
24:36Yeah, quick grab.
24:37Yeah.
24:38Well, let's check out your general knowledge.
24:39Okay.
24:40Because, Matt.
24:41You have nine points.
24:43The score to beat to become a celebrity mastermind is Lewis's 17 points.
24:47You've got two minutes on general knowledge.
24:49Here we go.
24:50In the NATO phonetic alphabet, the letter H is represented by what word for a building used to accommodate tourists and travellers?
24:57Hotel.
24:58The coronation of King Charles III and Queen Camilla took place at which church in London?
25:03Westminster Abbey.
25:04Yes.
25:05The medical term hypertension is used to refer to what property of the human circulatory system being consistently higher than normal?
25:12Temperature.
25:13No.
25:14Blood pressure.
25:15In The Tale of Mr Todd by Beatrix Potter, the much disliked title character is what type of animal?
25:20A badger.
25:21No.
25:22A fox.
25:23In 2002, Tony Blackburn was crowned king of the jungle in the first series of what reality television contest?
25:27I'm a celebrity to get me out of here.
25:28Yes.
25:29Which seaside resort on the east coast of England is often referred to informally as skeggy?
25:33Skegness.
25:34Yes.
25:35The Webb Ellis Cup is presented to the winning team of the Men's World Cup in what sport?
25:39Football.
25:40No.
25:41Rugby Union.
25:42What 2005 animated film, the first in a franchise, features a group of animals including Alex the Lion, Melman the Giraffe and Gloria the Hippo who break out from Central Park Zoo in New York?
25:52Madagascar.
25:53Yes.
25:54Belgrade is the capital city of which modern day country?
25:57Pass.
25:58Claw clips.
25:59Scrunchies and slides are accessories normally used to hold in place what feature of the human body?
26:04Hair.
26:05Between 2006 and 2011, which British band had UK number one albums entitled Empire, West Rider, Pawper, Lunatic Asylum and Velociraptor?
26:17Um...
26:18Uh...
26:19Wet Leg.
26:20No.
26:21Kasabian.
26:22In July 2024, John Healy was appointed as the Secretary of State for which UK government department?
26:28Energy.
26:29No.
26:30Defence.
26:31What's the name of the fitness trainer and broadcaster known as the Body Coach who was made an MBE in the 2020 Queen's Birthday Honours List?
26:38Joe Wicks.
26:39Yes.
26:40What French term, often translated as Step Four Two, is used in ballet for a dance for two performers?
26:50Pirouette.
26:51Oh!
26:52You hadn't started so you can't finish.
26:54It was pas de deux.
26:55Well, pardon me.
26:57Matt, you had just the one pass.
26:59Belgrade is the capital city of Serbia, which means at the end of that round you've got 16 points.
27:06Thank you, Clive.
27:16Let's have a look at the final scores.
27:18In fourth place with 11 points, Sonaz Nooranvari.
27:21In joint second place with 16 points each, Faya and Matt Edmondson, which means in first place with 17 points, is Lewis Goodall.
27:29So he takes home the trophy and is tonight's Celebrity Mastermind winner.
27:36Many congratulations.
27:40Thank you, Clive.
27:41This is worth its weight in gold to me for at least the next six months, so thank you very much in bragging rights alone.
27:45Wonderful.
27:46You don't have to be a celebrity to take part in the regular Mastermind program.
27:50If you'd like to appear in the next series, you can apply online at bbc.co.uk slash mastermind and you can follow us at Mastermind Quiz.
27:58Join us again next time for more Masterminds.
28:01Thanks for watching.
28:02Bye for now.
28:03As soon as you're told that you're up against a gladiator, you instantly leave the Coliseum, right?
28:12But they wouldn't let me because they said I already come all the way here.
28:15So to actually beat a gladiator, well, not everybody can say that, can they?
28:22We'll be on top.
28:32You're trasndad.
28:35In the next series.
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