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00:00Thank you
00:31Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown Studio and I'm glad to tell you that our research department has been
00:38acid again and they have informed me that it was on this very day in 1498 that the bristle toothbrush
00:46was invented in China. Now it seems rather a long shot there. We should know that it was exactly this
00:51day in 1498.
00:52I've had it checked by Lara Routh, one of our hugely competent producers here and she says they're right. And
01:00how did it all happen? Well apparently the emperor of the day went hunting, shot a boar and plucked the
01:09neck hairs from this poor old boar, that'll be B-O-A-R,
01:15put them in an ivory stick and used it as a toothbrush and that's when the Chinese started brushing their
01:21teeth. Can you believe all this Rachel?
01:22That was absolutely fascinating Nick.
01:25Apparently you can go to the very palace where it was first used and indeed apparently there's a plaque on
01:33the wall. No groaning please.
01:36Pluck, toothbrush, get it? Alright, fine. So today is the last quarter final of the series and on Friday we'll
01:44be crowning a champion of the series, yeah? And I wonder whether it'll be one of our contestants today. I
01:49wonder whether it'll be Susie Purcell, our number four seed. Welcome back Susie.
01:55I've got you down here as the number four seed. You had an eight game run and you scored 686
02:02points. So, how's life been back in Market Harbour? I hear you're a bit of a celeb down there.
02:07Well, I had an article in the paper before I came on. I wouldn't say I'm a celeb.
02:12So, how's the painting coming on? Yeah, good. I've got a few commissions from these lovely people here.
02:18Excellent stuff. Excellent stuff. Well, I wish you good luck today. Quarter finals. I mean, you've got to be some
02:24great contenders to have reached the quarter finals, but you're up against Nick.
02:28Our number five seed who scored 588 points and since May you've been busy starting off a new side to
02:36your business because I think you're a therapist, but now you've got a new side to that business.
02:40Yeah, I'm expanding to look at bringing together various techniques, so with exercise, good diet, healthy nutrition, combined with hypnotherapy
02:50to help people with weight problems.
02:53So, that's been quite exciting, bringing that all together. I'm beginning to have a weight problem.
02:57Well, we'll talk about that later and you may well be able to discuss things with Dr. Phil too, because
03:03you're both, I guess, in the same sort of area.
03:04But before we get to Dr. Phil, I want to welcome Susie back to our corner, and she is, of
03:09course, twinned there. She's in harness with Dr. Phil. Good to see you, Doctor.
03:14Yes, good to be here. It's interesting talking about weight, because we're quite mean to people with weight problems. We
03:18call them morbidly obese, which is a horrible term.
03:21I much prefer morbidly voluptuous. You call people that, they'll be much happier, they start losing a bit of weight.
03:27Could a sort of an overweight man be called voluptuous? Yes. Really? Yes. You look pretty voluptuous from where I'm
03:33sitting there.
03:33Oh, you old charmer, you. You old charmer. Now then, let's give our contestants a warm round of applause. That's
03:42Nick and Susie.
03:47May we begin the day's proceedings, Nick, with the letters game.
03:51Can I start with a consonant, please? You can, thank you. Start today with S.
03:55And a second. N. And a third. Y. And a fourth. P. Vowel, please. E. And another. A. And a
04:15third. E. And a consonant. V.
04:24And a final. Vowel, please. And a final. A. And here's the countdown clock.
04:31Vowel, please.
05:00S.
05:03Now then, Nick.
05:04Just a five.
05:05A five.
05:06Susie?
05:06A risky seven.
05:08All right.
05:09So let's hear from Nick first.
05:11Pains.
05:12Pains, Susie?
05:14Pavanes.
05:15Yes.
05:16That's got a ring of truth about it.
05:18Pavanes, yes, they're dancers, very courtly dancers, I think.
05:21They were very popular in the 16th, 17th century.
05:23Can you do one, Susie?
05:24Can you do the Pavane?
05:25Give it a go, yeah.
05:27I think Susie would give it a go.
05:29Oh, my word.
05:30Phil, what have you got?
05:31No, I'm stuck on Susie's Pavanes, I'm afraid.
05:33Yes.
05:33I can't get further than that.
05:34Performed in slow, duple time and elaborate clothing, apparently.
05:37Oh, my word.
05:38Really?
05:38What sort of, in Elizabethan times?
05:40In 16th, 17th centuries.
05:42All right, that'll do.
05:43That was made for us, Susie.
05:46Very good.
05:46Well done.
05:47Seven ahead, and it's your letters game.
05:50Hello again, Rachel.
05:50Hi, Susie.
05:51Can I have a consonant, please?
05:53Start with M.
05:55And a vowel.
05:58O.
05:58A consonant.
05:59N.
06:02A consonant.
06:04J.
06:06A vowel.
06:08E.
06:09A consonant.
06:11N.
06:13A consonant.
06:15R.
06:17A vowel.
06:20I.
06:21And a consonant, please.
06:24And the last one.
06:25P.
06:26Stand by.
06:27Oh, my.
06:58Susie?
06:59Five.
07:00A five, and Nick?
07:02Six.
07:03All right, Susie?
07:05Ripen.
07:06Ripen.
07:06Nick?
07:07Joyner.
07:08Joyner.
07:08Yes, well spotted.
07:09I think that brings you up to six points.
07:11Well done.
07:12Now then, in the corner.
07:13I can't beat Joyner.
07:14Can you beat Joyner?
07:15I can't beat Joyner, I'm afraid.
07:16It's a measly six.
07:18All right, we'll all join together and dance up a van.
07:20Very good.
07:21Six to Susie.
07:22Seven, and Nick, take it away.
07:24Consonant, please, Rachel.
07:26Thank you, Nick.
07:27L.
07:28And a second.
07:30S.
07:32And a vowel.
07:34U.
07:36And another vowel.
07:38A.
07:40Consonant.
07:42R.
07:43Another consonant.
07:45S.
07:47Another consonant.
07:50L.
07:50Vowel.
07:54O.
07:56And a final consonant, please.
07:59And a final G.
08:01Here we go.
08:03B.
08:03A.
08:03B.
08:06E.
08:06B.
08:33Yes, Nick?
08:34Just a five.
08:35A five, Susie?
08:36Five as well.
08:37All right, Nick?
08:38Glass.
08:39And Susie?
08:41Slags.
08:42Yes?
08:43Yes.
08:43We've got a couple of big sixes.
08:45Go on.
08:45You don't want to get sugars on your goulas.
08:48Sugars on your goulas.
08:49I'm not sure with goulas, it's something to do with the throat, isn't it?
08:51Yeah, it's a plate or scale on the throat of a reptile or fish.
08:54Yeah, they can have more than one.
08:56Very good.
08:57Twelve to Nick's eleven.
09:00Susie, one point ahead, and it's your letters game.
09:02Consonant, please.
09:03Thank you, Susie.
09:04And a vowel.
09:07A, consonant.
09:10B, consonant.
09:14D, a vowel.
09:17O, consonant.
09:21R, consonant.
09:26N, a vowel.
09:30E, and a consonant, please.
09:34And the last one.
09:35S.
09:37Lock time.
09:38Lock time.
09:40D,.asing.
10:00and a vowel. B,
10:02consonant. D,
10:02and a vowel. D,
10:02and a vowel. D,
10:09Susie?
10:10Eight.
10:11Nick?
10:11Eight, I think.
10:12Okay.
10:13So, Susie?
10:14Broadens.
10:15Broadens.
10:16And Nick?
10:18Padrones.
10:19Padrones?
10:20Yes.
10:21Padrones.
10:22Excellent.
10:22They are patrons or masters and also mafia bosses.
10:27Padrones.
10:28Very good.
10:29Very good.
10:33Excellent stuff.
10:34Excellent stuff.
10:36Anything else there?
10:37Phil, what have you got for us?
10:37I didn't make it past probes and bedpans.
10:40Well, only seven for bedpans.
10:43Very nice, though.
10:44So, one point behind Nick.
10:46It's a numbers game.
10:47Chance to take the lead.
10:48Off you go.
10:49Two large and four small, please.
10:50You can indeed.
10:51Thank you, Nick.
10:52Two from the top and four little ones coming up.
10:55And for the first time in this quarterfinal, the little ones are eight, ten, another eight
11:01and five.
11:02And the large two, twenty-five and seventy-five.
11:06And your target, seven hundred and thirty-four.
11:08Seven, three, four.
11:09deux, Ford.
11:39Four, three, four.
11:39The honk and ten-by four is a cup of water.
11:40How was it, Nick?
11:42Yes, 7-3-4.
11:43Well done, Susie.
11:447-3-4.
11:45All right, Nick.
11:4610 times 75.
11:4810, 75, so 750.
11:50Minus 8 to minus 8.
11:51Yep.
11:52Too easy for you, too.
11:54Okay.
11:547-3-4.
11:54Same way.
11:55Same way.
11:56All right, very good.
11:58Very good.
12:02Very good.
12:03Still one point in it.
12:04Susie in the lead.
12:0630 to 29.
12:07But now it's time to turn our attention to Dr. Phil.
12:11Thank you very much, Nick.
12:12Now, a lot of people think I just make these stories up as I go along.
12:15But in fact, my anecdotes are finally polished.
12:17And I do need a bit of time on my own to polish my anecdotes.
12:20And I was trying to do this this morning.
12:22I get a knock on my door.
12:24Dr. Phil, Dr. Phil, it's Nick.
12:26It's Nick.
12:26You've got to come out now, you blunderer.
12:28I said, Nick, not now.
12:29I'm in the bath.
12:30He said, leave the water in for me.
12:33I said, what's the problem?
12:34And he pushes the Daily Express under the door,
12:36calling me a blunderer.
12:37It says, one in six patients at risk from blunders from their GP.
12:41I said, Nick, you don't have to believe this.
12:43This is the Daily Express.
12:44And he said, what I read in the Daily Express is the gospel.
12:47And it's a story that shows that actually,
12:49the more pills you are, the more likely you are to make a mistake.
12:51But doctors actually in our 10-minute consultations
12:53don't have much time to figure out whether you're on the right pills.
12:56So Nick takes me outside.
12:57He said, you gave me these pills last night.
12:58You could have killed me.
12:59Let's look at my pills.
13:00He's on his Dolly Parton's.
13:03He's also on low-tech, which is low-sec,
13:05which is something for your indigestion.
13:06He's also on Viagra.
13:07I said, why are you on Viagra, Nick?
13:09He said, it stops you falling out of bed.
13:11I said, that's a very old gag.
13:12But Nick is only on four tablets.
13:14I have a woman on 28 tablets a day.
13:16She's 82 years old.
13:17And that's the trouble with medicine these days,
13:18is we try and shave a bit of risk of something nasty happening to you.
13:21And the older you get, the more tablets you get on.
13:23And it turns out she gets so confused taking 28 tablets a day
13:26that at the beginning of the month,
13:28she empties them all into a pick-and-mix bowl
13:29and she takes a couple of tablets every time she feeds a cat.
13:32A couple of cat biscuits, a couple of tablets, a couple of cat biscuits.
13:35She's got the two mixed up.
13:36She now has a cat with a cholesterol of zero.
13:39And she smells suspiciously of tuna.
13:43But the point I would make about this study,
13:44it's said to try and reassure you,
13:46only one in 500 of our blunders are potentially fatal.
13:48Most of them are sort of less than fatal.
13:50But the point is that you have to take ownership of your tablets.
13:52We prescribe the tablets, but it's up to you to read the leaflet.
13:55I often have patients who've been on tablets for 20 years
13:57and you say to them, well, what are they for then?
13:58They haven't got a clue.
13:59So it's up to you to be slightly more proactive
14:01and to know what's in your Dolly Pardons.
14:03So that's your homework, Nick.
14:05I want you to go home tonight and I want you to actually read
14:06actually what's in all those tablets you're taking
14:08and what the side effects are.
14:09And I'll quiz you tomorrow.
14:10How does that sound?
14:11That sounds terrifying.
14:12Excellent.
14:13But I'll do it.
14:13I'll do it.
14:16Well done.
14:20Actually, I'm terribly disciplined.
14:21I'm really very good.
14:22Are you?
14:23You never miss your tablets?
14:24No, never.
14:24I'm terrified about missing them.
14:26When did you last fall out of bed?
14:29Passing swiftly on to a tea time teaser,
14:33which is boot fear and the clue,
14:35no boots, no shoes and no socks,
14:38no boots, no shoes and no socks.
14:57Welcome back.
14:59I left you with the clue,
14:59no boots, no shoes and no socks.
15:02So that leaves them barefoot.
15:05Barefoot.
15:06So, we've got a couple of Titans here
15:09fighting it out for a place in the semis.
15:11Nick on 29, Susie on 30.
15:14And Susie, it's your letters game.
15:16Consonant, please, Rachel.
15:18Thank you, Susie.
15:19T.
15:20And a vowel.
15:22O.
15:23Consonant.
15:24S.
15:27Consonant.
15:29L.
15:30Vowel.
15:31I.
15:33Consonant.
15:35T.
15:36Consonant.
15:38R.
15:40Vowel.
15:42U.
15:44And another vowel, please.
15:45And lastly, A.
15:48Stand by.
15:49A.
16:20Yes, Susie.
16:21Seven.
16:22Seven.
16:23Nick.
16:23Seven as well.
16:24Right, Susie.
16:25Out to last.
16:27Out to last.
16:28And Nick.
16:28Taylors.
16:29Happy there.
16:30Very, yes.
16:31All right, and Phil.
16:33I've got rituals.
16:34Yes.
16:35How many's in that?
16:35Seven.
16:36Seven, very good.
16:37What have you got?
16:37Tourist.
16:38Tourist.
16:38Another seven.
16:39Tourist.
16:40Not the seven.
16:40Tourist.
16:42So, Nick, let us go.
16:43Consonant, please, Rachel.
16:44Thank you, Nick.
16:46D.
16:48Vowel.
16:50U.
16:51And another vowel.
16:52Vowel.
16:53E.
16:54Consonant.
16:56Z.
16:58Another consonant.
17:00M.
17:02Another consonant.
17:05N.
17:06Vowel.
17:09O.
17:10Another vowel.
17:13I.
17:15And a final consonant, please.
17:17And a final R.
17:19And it's clock time.
17:28So, thanks for having us.
17:29I'll see you next time.
17:31Bye.
17:34Bye.
17:36Bye.
17:46Bye.
17:47Bye.
17:48Bye.
17:49Bye.
17:50Bye.
17:51yes Nick seven and Susie seven right Nick mourned mourned same mourned you're both
17:59mourning they're both mourned and they've beaten us yeah I think yes I got remind
18:07which is a measly six yeah minder same here so well no they're good they're in
18:13this they're in the quarterfinals well done but it's still a point between them
18:1844 Susie one point ahead and it's your letters game Susie consonant please thank
18:24you Susie m a vowel a a consonant n a consonant t a vowel you a consonant n a
18:44consonant d a vowel e and another vowel please and the last one oh stand by
19:00so
19:27so
19:29so Susie I think have a nine well Nick just a seven and your seven mounted mounted
19:37come on Susie out manned yes if you are out manned excellent well done Susie well done so 43 to
19:54Susie
19:5462 so Nick let us go constant please Rachel thank you Nick L and another G and a third D
20:08and a fourth S the
20:13vowel I another vowel E and another U and a consonant F and final vowel please and a final A
20:33and they're off
20:38so
20:47so
20:49so
20:49so
21:06Nick?
21:07Eight, not written down.
21:09All right, and Susie?
21:10Just a six.
21:11And your six?
21:13Glides.
21:14Yours, Nick?
21:15Fuselage.
21:16Fuselage.
21:17Oh, I like that.
21:17I think you might need two E's.
21:19He's funny, Fusi.
21:20Yeah.
21:21Yeah.
21:21I'm pretty sure it's Fuselage.
21:25It is, I'm afraid.
21:27Bad luck.
21:28Very bad luck.
21:28Very bad luck.
21:30Now then, Dr. Phil.
21:32I've got gadflies.
21:34They don't have itch.
21:36Gadflies.
21:37They sting.
21:38Yes.
21:38But gadflies are also a person.
21:39Isn't that a funny annoying person who flitters about it?
21:42A lovely figurative sense.
21:43Yes, a person who annoys or criticizes others in order to provoke them into action.
21:47Ah.
21:47That's absolutely right.
21:49Now then, Susie.
21:51I'm carrying on with my visits to pubs and exploring their names.
21:57And today's one that, actually, you might know, Phil.
21:59It's the Bag of Nails.
22:01In Brazil?
22:01Yeah, well, many pubs across the country.
22:04In London's Victoria, Bristol, Wolverhampton.
22:06It sounds like a very perfunctory name for a pub.
22:09And in fact, there is one near Buckingham Palace, which claims to be converted from an ironmonger.
22:13So that's a very plausible explanation.
22:15But there is also a much more colourful one, because it's thought to be a corruption of bacchanals, which were
22:20the celebrations of the Roman god of wine.
22:22And Bacchus was also the god who presided over rituals of madness, which was characterised by this hysterical frenzied dancing
22:31and lots of drinking.
22:32And the goal was to achieve a state of delirious ecstasy in which souls were said to be freed from
22:39their earthly body and able to commune with Bacchus.
22:43The rites that were included here were ever-increasing feats of strength, such as tackling an animal, a very fierce
22:50animal, unarmed, or uproaching trees with your bare hands.
22:54So all of these things were said to have gone on in the bacchanals.
22:58The Bag of Nails, it sounds like a very fun pub to go to.
22:59That does sound like the Bag of Nails on a Friday night, I tell you.
23:02Wrestling a wild boar.
23:03My football can go down there, down the Bag of Nails.
23:05I must go.
23:05You must go.
23:06Well, they go.
23:07Sounds excellent.
23:07It all goes back to Bacchus.
23:09Absolutely.
23:10Absolutely.
23:14And they're striving to be in a state of what?
23:16Well, in those days, in classical mythology, they were striving to be in a state of ecstasy, so their bodies
23:21would be freed from their temporal chains and they could get up to all sorts of things.
23:26You've cut out the saucy bits, haven't you?
23:28That's what you're saying, is you've cut out the saucy bits, Susie.
23:30Sounds very good to me.
23:3168 to 43, Susie Leeds.
23:34And now, Susie, it's your numbers game.
23:37Two from the top, please, Rachel, and any other four.
23:39Thank you, Susie.
23:39So we'll go for two large ones and four small ones again.
23:44And for this round, the numbers are 3, 5, 8, 10, and then the two large, 25 and 100.
23:54And your target?
23:56878.
23:578, 7, 8.
23:588, 8, 9, 9, 10, 12, 3, 5, and 6, 6, 6, 26, 7, 8, 9, 10.
24:058, 10, 12, and 7, 9, 20, 12, and 10, 11, certainly.
24:209, 10, inexpergunt prose.
24:247, 12, and're it.
24:29how was it Susie 878 well done and Nick no 875 right take it away Susie 100 minus
24:4110 plus 3 minus 7 sorry 10 plus 3 plus 3 10 plus 3 87 times 10 you would use
24:50the 10 oh
24:51bad luck Susie now then Nick 875 just 8 times 100 plus 3 times 25 8 times 100 800 and
25:013 times 25
25:02yeah for the 75 all right so Rachel can you take us there yes if you say 10 minus 8
25:10is 2 times 100
25:13200 less the 25 is 175 times that by 5 or 875 and add on the 3 well done excellent
25:24well done
25:30very good so it's up to 50 but he's still fighting Susie who's at 68 but now it's time for
25:37tea time
25:37teaser which is begin sum and the clue begin to work out the sum but it's too difficult for you
25:44begin to work out the sum but it's too difficult for you
26:05welcome back I left you with the clue begin to work out the sum but it's too difficult for you
26:11why because it is bemusing bemusing 68 to 50 Susie leads Nick off you go
26:20consonant please Rachel thank you Nick T and the second W and the third S vowel E another vowel
26:35U and the third A consonant C another consonant T and the final vowel please and final E
26:53tick tock
26:53tick tock
26:54tick tock
27:24Yes, Nick.
27:25Six.
27:26And Susie?
27:28Six.
27:28All right.
27:29And your six, Nick?
27:31Tweets.
27:32Tweets, yes.
27:33Susie?
27:34Cutest.
27:34The cutest tweet.
27:36And the girls there?
27:37I can't find anything better.
27:39It's a measly six.
27:40So, Susie, 74 to 56, still in the lead, but, you know, anything can happen.
27:47Off you go.
27:48Continent, please.
27:49Thank you, Susie.
27:50C.
27:52And a vowel.
27:53I.
27:55Consonant.
27:56C.
27:58Consonant.
28:00N.
28:01A vowel.
28:03O.
28:04Consonant.
28:06K.
28:08Consonant.
28:10W.
28:12A vowel.
28:15A.
28:16And a consonant, please.
28:18And the last one.
28:20T.
28:21Stand by.
28:33Yeah.
28:40So.
28:45Close.
28:49And then, another one.
28:49You can read it.
28:49Okay?
28:51You can read it.
28:51You can read it.
28:52Suzie? Six. And Nick? Six, not written down. So we'll hear from you, Nick, first. Action. Action. And Suzie? Thwack.
29:02Thwack. Thwack. Thwack, yes. About a thwack. A thwack of leather on willow, for instance. For instance, yes, it's a
29:13very good word. Okay. I like a bit of thwack.
29:16Well, enough of that, Nick. Anything else you've got? Not really. I've got cation. Yes, cation. Anion is a cation.
29:22That's a six. Really? What is this? It's a negatively charged particle. Absolutely right. Oh, yes, yes. Of course, of
29:28course, of course. Positively. Actually, it's positively charged. It goes to the negative electric. Anion is negative, yeah. All right.
29:32Very good. All right. 80 to 62, as I turn to you, Nick, for a letters game. Consonant, please. Thank
29:41you, Nick. R. And a second.
29:45B. And a third. Q. And a vowel. E. And another vowel. O. And a third. A. Consonant. M. Vowel.
30:09U. And finish with a consonant, please.
30:13And finish with D. Stand by.
30:18A. Consonant. M. Vowel. U. And finish with a consonant, please.
30:23A. Consonant. M. Vowel. U. And finish with a consonant, please.
30:32A. Consonant. M. Vowel. U. And finish with a consonant, please.
30:33A. Consonant. M. Vowel. U. And finish with a consonant, please.
30:33A. Consonant. M. Vowel. U. And finish with a consonant, please.
30:34A. Consonant. M. Vowel. U. And finish with a consonant, please.
30:34A. Consonant. M. Vowel. U. And finish with a consonant, please.
30:36A. Consonant. M. Vowel. U. And finish with a consonant, please.
30:41A. Consonant. M. Vowel. U. And finish with a consonant, please.
30:49Now the Nick? Seven. And Susie? Just five. And your five? Adore. Adore. Nick? Baroque. Yeah. Excellent. Very good. Very
31:00good indeed. Phil? Yes, well after Baroque we'll have a bit of rumbered. Rumbered. Yes, to do the rumber, yes.
31:08R-U-M-B-A-E-D. Looks rather strange on the paper but it's a good dance. Rumbered. Can
31:14you rumber? Can I?
31:15It takes two to tango. How many to rumber? I think you probably need more than one to rumber as
31:21well. I often rumber on my head. Do you? Right, we'll pass swiftly on. I don't like to sound that
31:27at all. 80 to 69, so 11 points in it. And Susie, last numbers game of the day. Two from
31:35the top please, Rachel. Thank you, Susie. And I bet you're hoping for a nice and easy one. We shall
31:39see. So, for the last time today, the numbers are four, one.
31:45Eight, nine, and the large two. Fifty, and one hundred. And the target? Seven hundred and twenty-four. Seven, two,
31:54four.
31:54Eight, nine, and the large two.
32:25How was it, Susie?
32:27No.
32:27No? Nothing?
32:29No.
32:30Right, this is getting tense then.
32:32Nick?
32:337 to 8.
32:357 to 8.
32:36All right, off you go.
32:398 minus 1 is 7.
32:418 minus 1 is 7.
32:43And 100 plus 4 is 104.
32:46100 plus 4, 104.
32:48And multiply them together for 7 to 8.
32:49And you're still in the game, well done.
32:51You are still in the game, very much so.
32:534 adrift, 80 to 76.
32:56But Rachel, take us there, show us how it's done.
32:59If you say 100 minus 9 is 91, times by 8 is 728.
33:06And then take away the 4.
33:08Very good, well done.
33:13So, two very good contestants fighting for a place in tomorrow's semi-final.
33:18Against young Jonathan, who is some contender, I can tell you.
33:24So, fingers on buzzers please, final round.
33:27Countdown conundrum time.
33:29Please reveal today's countdown conundrum.
33:35Nick?
33:36Dromedary.
33:38Dromedary.
33:39Dromedary.
33:39Let's see whether you're right.
33:50Well, well, well, well, well.
33:53And Susie led all the way through, last two rounds, and he snatched it.
33:58Well done.
33:58This is good stuff.
34:00You were a great contender, Susie.
34:02And just pipped at the post by neck over there.
34:04Well done.
34:05So, we'll see you tomorrow.
34:06We'll see you tomorrow.
34:07And I tell you what, you get an early night tonight, because you're up against some dazzling
34:12kid, I can tell you.
34:13In the meantime, we're going to say cheerio to you.
34:15It's been great having you.
34:17Thank you for your pictures that you provided for us all.
34:21It's really great.
34:22They're all pride of place, I can tell you, with a slight wink.
34:27We're sending you home with an enormous diamond, and our best wishes back to Market Harborough.
34:33And thank you very much for being here.
34:35Great player.
34:36Great player.
34:37Now then, Susie, that was close, wasn't it?
34:39Very, very close.
34:40Isn't that good?
34:40Excellent.
34:41That's what countdown's all about.
34:42Yeah, excellent stuff.
34:44See you tomorrow.
34:45And Dr. Phil.
34:46I think Nick, Nick was hypnotising Susie on the way through.
34:48I was a bit, I'd noticed him doing that.
34:50He was doing that, looking at my eyes, looking at my eyes.
34:51Took her out the last two rounds.
34:53He did, he did.
34:54Not sure it was legal, but it was very clever.
34:55It was very clever.
34:56Very clever.
34:57We'll see you later.
34:58I shall have my consultation, as usual, later on tonight.
35:02Now then, because poor Rachel's not great, you know.
35:05She's had this tickly throat, haven't you?
35:07Well, she doesn't whine about it all the time.
35:09She mans up and just gets on with it.
35:11I've been assured by Dr. Phil that I'm not going to die today, so.
35:14That's right.
35:15Yeah.
35:15No.
35:16Hey!
35:18That's good news.
35:19It's going to be tremendous tomorrow.
35:20You be sure to be with us, same time, same place.
35:23We'll be waiting for you.
35:35Baking cupcakes at Brixton Prison, making prisoners pay their way in brand new.
35:41Gordon behind bars tonight at nine.
35:44Next today, behind boxes, someone's trying to break out a sizable sum in deal or no deal.
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