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00:31Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio on semifinals day.
00:37The first semifinals of this series and my first ever semifinal.
00:42So you can imagine I'm sitting on the edge of my seat and promise to be attentive and on my
00:47very best behavior.
00:48But before we crack on with that, who would have thought that it's now 45 years ago since the first
00:55ATM, the first cash point machine, was introduced by Barclays, apparently, Rachel, in Enfield of all places.
01:03But what did we do before those? We went to the bank, I suppose.
01:06I don't know. I wasn't born.
01:09Let me tell you, we were all paid in cash or in my case, I seem to remember my first
01:14job was almost entirely paid within luncheon vouchers.
01:18I seem to remember the cash element was so small, but I was given a luncheon voucher every day, which
01:23I think was about 20 pence or something,
01:26which enabled me to go and have a bacon and mushroom sandwich at the ship and shovel in Craven Street
01:31in London's West End.
01:33Anyway, that's my contribution to the British. Smoked salmon and cream cheese. Much better pairing.
01:39All right. Now then, we've got a pairing here. We've got Nick Hall. Welcome back.
01:45Now then, number five seed, a total of nearly 700 points. Six, seven, four points, I think, yeah?
01:52Finished a six-win run at the start of May, and you won your quarterfinal game yesterday by spotting the
01:58crucial conundrum.
01:59You came from, you were behind all the way, and then suddenly you won the last two games and snapped
02:05up victory.
02:06Well, luck, you were very good. That's the truth of it.
02:08You were up against Susie, who was a pretty hot contender, I think, if I can put it that way.
02:13And you're joined by another extremely hot contender here, Jonathan Rawlinson, Jonathan the Kid, our number one seed, Nick.
02:21So you be careful, you know, watch this one. Won his first quarterfinal last Thursday.
02:28He has scored nearly 1,000 points, 961 points in all.
02:33Talented musician, off to study pure and applied maths at Cambridge in the autumn, yeah?
02:39That's right, yeah.
02:39Good luck to you. Good luck to you as well.
02:42I need it.
02:42Yeah? Well, let's see.
02:43So let's have a warm round of applause for Nick and the Kid.
02:52Nick and Jonathan, excellent stuff.
02:55So, Susie.
02:57Exciting, isn't it?
02:58Well, it is exciting, and I'm in a froth of anticipation here.
03:02And I'm sure that's something to do with the fact that you have beside you my personal physician,
03:08who looks after every aspect of my well-being, none other than Dr. Phil.
03:12How are you?
03:12I'm very well, thank you. I will sort out your frothing later.
03:15Fantastic. Well, you're certainly sheathed in a wonderful shirt there.
03:19I think they're rather nice.
03:20Actually, this is bird flu magnified 50,000 times.
03:24It's rather beautiful. We're frightened of it.
03:25I see, most microbes, if you magnify them, look beautiful.
03:28But I'm not going to carry on, you know, admiring your appalling dress sense.
03:33What I'm going to do is say to Nick, kick off this semi-final.
03:37Hi again, Rachel.
03:38Hi again, Nick.
03:39Let's start with a consonant, please.
03:40You can, thank you.
03:41We start today with T.
03:43And the second.
03:45V.
03:47And the third.
03:49S.
03:50And a vowel.
03:53U.
03:54And another vowel.
03:56E.
03:57And the third.
04:00A.
04:02And a consonant.
04:04And a consonant.
04:06Another consonant.
04:08C.
04:10And a final vowel, please.
04:12And a final O.
04:14And here's the countdown clock.
04:16And a consonant.
04:30And a consonant.
04:34And a consonant.
04:35And a consonant.
04:35And a consonant.
04:35And a consonant.
04:35And a consonant.
04:35And a consonant.
04:35And a consonant.
04:36And a consonant.
04:47Nick?
04:48Seven.
04:49Seven.
04:49Jonathan?
04:50I'll risk an eight.
04:52All right.
04:52Nick?
04:53Octaves.
04:54Yes, Jonathan?
04:55Outpaces.
04:56Outpaces?
04:57Why not?
04:58Yes, you can outpace if you go rise or improve faster than someone else.
05:02Okay.
05:03And anything else in the corner?
05:05Oh, Avocets.
05:06Avocets are beautiful wading birds.
05:08I've heard about Avocet, yes.
05:10Very good.
05:11Avocet and octaves.
05:12Excellent stuff.
05:13Strong start there, Jonathan.
05:15And it's your letters game now.
05:17Afternoon again, Rachel.
05:18Afternoon again, Jonathan.
05:18Can I start with a vowel, please?
05:20Start with U.
05:22And a consonant.
05:25R.
05:26Vowel.
05:27I.
05:29Consonant.
05:31W.
05:32Vowel.
05:34E.
05:36Consonants.
05:37C.
05:39Vowel.
05:41A.
05:42Vowel.
05:43Another vowel, please.
05:45E.
05:46And a final consonant.
05:48And a final X.
05:50Stand by.
05:50T.
05:51Vowel.
05:52Agh.
05:53And a manifold.
06:22Anything lengthy, Jonathan?
06:24Just a six.
06:25A six.
06:26And Nick?
06:26Six also.
06:27All right.
06:28Jonathan?
06:28Waxier.
06:29Waxier.
06:30Not bad.
06:31You're both waxy?
06:32Same with it.
06:32And in the corner...
06:34No, you've got Carex, which is nice.
06:37Waxy is interesting.
06:37You know when you go to the doctor and say you've got something wrong with your ear?
06:40Yes.
06:40And he puts his otoscope in there and he says there's always a little bit of wax in there.
06:43Yes.
06:43It's not your wax.
06:44It's because he doesn't wash his earpieces out.
06:47Whenever you go to the doctor, look in the earpieces and see if there's any wax stuck in there.
06:50There's a top tip.
06:51Keep your doctor clean.
06:54I feel queasy all of a sudden.
06:56Anyway.
06:58Fourteen to Nick's six.
07:00And Nick, it's your letters game.
07:02Consolant, please, Rachel.
07:03Thank you, Nick.
07:05S.
07:06And a second.
07:08T.
07:09And a third.
07:12G.
07:13And a fourth.
07:15T.
07:16Vowel.
07:17Vowel.
07:18U.
07:19Another vowel.
07:21O.
07:23Third.
07:25A.
07:26And a fourth.
07:29E.
07:31And a final consonant, please.
07:33And a final R.
07:35Here we go.
07:36ored.
07:38Secondrespons jóje.
07:38On a third.
07:45One o'
07:46And a third.
07:51Your letter.
07:51It's going to be right that way.
08:03Which is how you are going to go.
08:03The second one.
08:04When we're going to go to the next.
08:06Yes, Nick.
08:08Eight.
08:09Eight.
08:09Jonathan?
08:10Eight, two.
08:11All right.
08:11Nick?
08:12Garotts.
08:13Yes?
08:14Outrageous.
08:14Pretty good stuff, but can you do better?
08:17It seems like she's got a nine.
08:18What's that word?
08:20Tutorages.
08:21You can be under somebody's tutorage if they're teaching you.
08:25It doesn't say it's a mastermind in the dictionary, so technically we can put the S on and make a
08:28nine.
08:29Yeah.
08:29All right.
08:30Well, that's very good.
08:36Fourteen to twenty-two, Jonathan leads, and Jonathan, so let us go.
08:41Can I have a vowel, please, Rachel?
08:42Thank you, Jonathan.
08:44O.
08:45And a consonant.
08:47M.
08:48Vowel.
08:51U.
08:52Consonant.
08:54Z.
08:55Vowel.
08:57A.
08:59Consonant.
09:00L.
09:02Vowel.
09:04E.
09:06Consonant.
09:08T.
09:09And a final vowel, please.
09:13And a final I.
09:16Here's the clock.
09:30You know what?
09:33You know what?
09:37I.
09:38Bye.
09:39Bye.
09:42Bye.
09:42Bye.
09:48now then Jonathan a seven a seven and Nick I'll try seven as well then all right Jonathan atomize
09:56atomize Nick mail out oh it's hyphenated oh no cigar that is very very bad luck so um yeah it's
10:10in I wasn't sure if it would be in but it is but I have got the hyphen bad luck
10:13Nick bad luck 29 to 14
10:17and it's your numbers game Nick have one from the top and five from the bottom please thank you Nick
10:23one large one five little ones coming up for you and for the first time today the small ones are
10:30four ten eight seven and five and the large one twenty five and your target five hundred and eleven five
11:08one one
11:12how was it Nick 511 well done Jonathan 511 right so Nick take it away 4 times 5 times 25
11:214 times
11:225 20 times 25 500 and then 8 minus 7 is 1 yep plus the 10 plus 10 for the
11:2911 very good Jonathan
11:32the same way okay so Jonathan 39 Nick at 24 but remember what happened last time you were always
11:40behind Nick and then suddenly bang the comeback kid the comeback kid the comeback kid indeed but
11:47now it's time to talk to Dr. Phil is it me again it certainly is I'm terrified go on well
11:54I tried
11:54to update people about current happenings in the NHS when I come on here but it is actually very
11:57confusing that the health and social care bill was passed Andrew Lansley's baby having promised us
12:02no major top-down reorganization of the NHS they've given us one that's so big you can see it from
12:06space but basically we started off with the department of health at the top and then we
12:11had strategic health authorities primary care trusts and then hospitals and GP so four levels of
12:16bureaucracy we now still have a department of health we have a national commissioning board
12:19we have overarching clinical senates we have commissioning support groups we have clinical
12:25commissioning groups we have health and well-being boards we have health watch so we've replaced four
12:30levels of bureaucracy with eight I haven't got a clue what's going on so I asked a hospital manager
12:34and he said well basically what we're doing is we're benchmarking the diversity the bottom line
12:38is that risk management is a paradigm for the mindset to empower the modern matron that's very proactive
12:42and that's basically how managers speak in the old days doctors were the keepers of the power
12:47because we had the jargon now managers have all the jargon they give these words like additionality
12:51and contestability and apparently the new NHS is going to work on the matrix model of management
12:56you know what that is no idea no idea and you've worked in management all your life go on you
13:00know I've no idea what it is either I was going to ask you to show you how awful this
13:05shows you how
13:06awful the infection of jargon is in the NHS you know when you go to hospital the curtains never go
13:10around the bed do they there's always a two-foot cap for the voyeur in the bed opposite
13:14are you to think after a hundred years we designed curtains that go around the bed there's always
13:17someone there with his phone taking photos while you're having an intimate examination
13:20this wonderful student nurse I met she decided to use big coloured clothes pegs to close the gap
13:26absolutely wonderful and she checked it with infection control to make sure they were sterile
13:29she checked it with health and safety she closed the curtains with the clips absolutely brilliant
13:33the patients are really happy and then hospital management came down they allowed her to use
13:38the clothes pegs but they weren't allowed to call them clothes pegs they had to call them
13:42dignity clips and that just shows you what's happening in the NHS you just can't call anything
13:47off it so people don't understand what's happening because we're infected with jargon so I say
13:50plain speech that's my my carry-in call for today want plain speech in the NHS thank you very much
14:03absolutely we all drink to that great stuff but now it's time for a tea time teaser
14:07and it's I rule dim the dim ruler lives in this state the dim ruler lives in this state
14:34welcome back and I left you with the clue the dim ruler lives in this state what state was he
14:38in he was in the state of delirium I wonder how I could get into a state of delirium I'll
14:44ask Dr. Phil later
14:45anyway Jonathan in the lead 39 to 24 well done and it's your letters game off you go
14:52can I have a vowel please Rachel
14:54thank you Jonathan
14:54O
14:55and a consonant
14:59R
14:59vowel
15:01A
15:03consonants
15:04N
15:05vowel
15:07I
15:09consonants
15:10R
15:12vowel
15:14E
15:15another vowel
15:18I
15:19and a final consonant
15:20and a final
15:21N
15:22stand by
15:24T
15:24T
15:25T
15:25T
15:26T
15:26T
15:54Yes, Johnson.
15:55A seven.
15:56A seven.
15:57Nick?
15:58Seven as well.
15:59All right.
15:59Jonathan, kick off.
16:00Rainier.
16:01Rainier.
16:02Yes.
16:04Both Rainier.
16:05Anything else?
16:06Nothing else.
16:07Nothing else, Will?
16:08Just Rainier.
16:08Rainier.
16:09Good.
16:10Very good.
16:10Forty-six for thirty-one, and I call upon Nick for a letters game.
16:15Start with a consonant, please.
16:16Thank you, Nick.
16:17B.
16:18And a vowel, please.
16:20E.
16:21And another.
16:23O.
16:24And a third.
16:26E.
16:29Consonant.
16:30D.
16:32Another consonant.
16:34J.
16:36Another consonant.
16:38N.
16:40And another.
16:42C.
16:44And a final vowel, please.
16:47And a final I.
16:50Tick-tock.
16:51Tick-tock.
16:55Tick-tock.
17:22Well, Nick, just six, and Jonathan, just six as well.
17:26Right, Nick?
17:27Joined.
17:28Joined.
17:28Jonathan?
17:29Opened.
17:30Very nice.
17:30Nothing too controversial?
17:31Nothing at all.
17:32What use?
17:33I'm feeling smug.
17:34I've beaten Jonathan for the first time.
17:36Go on.
17:36I have codeine.
17:38Really?
17:39You certainly fucked up, didn't you?
17:40But codeine linked us, which you often give for coughs, makes you constipated.
17:43And we give people codeine to get some light heads so they fall over when they get out
17:46of bed and they get terribly constipated.
17:47So use codeine with care.
17:49You shall have one of these jewels.
17:51Very good.
17:52Good.
17:5252 to 37.
17:54And Jonathan?
17:55I'll start with the vowel, please, Rachel.
17:57Thank you, Jonathan.
17:58E.
17:59And a consonant.
18:01T.
18:03Vowel.
18:05A.
18:06Consonant.
18:08W.
18:10Vowel.
18:12E.
18:13A consonant.
18:15M.
18:17Vowel.
18:19E.
18:21A consonant.
18:21E.
18:23Another vowel, please.
18:26O.
18:27And a final consonant.
18:29And a final N.
18:31Here we go.
18:33moving up.
18:33He's gonna beat him.
18:50He's got to lift him up.
18:52He has to lift up.
18:52But when using the vowel to be cricket, that's called St packaging.
18:54He's on the top I mean?
18:55And then you'll be like, man, full of Wives, the John.
18:56Okay, excellent.
18:56And as to come up, we must have come up with that.
18:57and he's Ooo like, man.
19:02not so easy Jonathan seven right Nick probably an invented seven all right
19:09well let's hear about Jonathan amniote Nick emation okay that doesn't necessarily
19:18mean anything and it's not there though dr. Phil I think amniote we got any
19:24which is fascinating because it's an animal that develops from an amnion but
19:27it has an allantois not a lot of people know that so I pump for matinee instead
19:31which is much easier to understand yeah and you can do it in the afternoon I
19:34can indeed very good 59 to 37 Johnson leads Nick it's a letters game constantly
19:42Rachel thank you Nick s and another P and the third H and the fourth V and the
19:56vowel I and consonant K vowel a and another vowel e and a final consonant please and a final n
20:14stand by
20:25so
20:46Well, now, Nick.
20:48Just six.
20:49Jonathan.
20:50A seven.
20:50Right, Nick.
20:51Shaven.
20:52Jonathan.
20:53Hankies.
20:54We happy about hankies?
20:55Very happy about hankies, yes, a good seven.
20:58Dr. Phil.
20:59I can't beat shaven hankies, but we've got havens.
21:02Yes.
21:02This is nice, and shaken.
21:04Yes.
21:05But only sixes.
21:05Hankies were the only seven we could find.
21:07Very good.
21:08All right, hankies.
21:09Hanky-panky.
21:10Very good.
21:11But now it's time for Susie and her origins of words.
21:17Highlight of the day.
21:18The origin of pubs names this week.
21:21I mentioned Ian Jack quite recently.
21:23He's done a dictionary of nursery rhymes.
21:24He's also done a lot of research into the history of pubs, including my old local pub
21:28in Broadbuck Street in Soho, which is called the John Snow.
21:32And it goes back to the mid-19th century when London had a vast population but no proper
21:38sanitation.
21:39And they often had people in houses who had brimming cesspits beneath their floorboards.
21:45Thames was like a vast open sewer, all very, very unsavoury.
21:49But Thames is where most people got, at least the poorer people, got their water from.
21:53The rich would have, you know, water brought to their houses.
21:57And in August 1854, there was a major outbreak of cholera in Soho.
22:02Within three days, 127 people had died.
22:06And Dr John Snow, who was tending the sick, was very sceptical about the cause being bad
22:10air, which is what people thought cholera, as you will know, Phil, came from in those
22:13days.
22:14And that is, in fact, the literal meaning of malaria, bad air.
22:18And he marked on a map the victims that he knew about.
22:21And he saw that 87 of the 89 victims that he'd looked after had drunk water from a pump
22:26in Broad Street, which was Broadbuck Street then.
22:28And he harangued the local authority.
22:32And the truth finally came out that the well under the pump had been dug only three feet
22:37from the old cesspit that had begun to leak.
22:39So thanks to John Snow, it was eventually accepted that cholera was transmitted by bad
22:44water and not by bad air.
22:46And John Snow was celebrated in a pub, not just in Soho, actually, there's one in all
22:50Thumberland as well.
22:51He rose to great prominence as a doctor and apparently even personally administered chloroform
22:56to Queen Victoria when she was giving birth.
22:59What's really interesting about this is, you know, we're now 160, 170 years on, there
23:02are still billions of people on this planet who don't have access to clean water.
23:05Yes.
23:06There's a fantastic charity called WaterAid that takes out toilets and clean running
23:09water.
23:10It's the basic human right, clean water.
23:12Quite right.
23:13Okay.
23:13So, 66 to 37.
23:17Jonathan, numbers game, off we go.
23:19I'll just have one from the top this time, Dean's Rachel.
23:22Thank you, Jonathan.
23:23One large one and five small ones for you.
23:26And for this next numbers game, the five small are 10, 9, 4, 1 and 6.
23:34And the large one, 100.
23:35And your target, 246.
23:392, 4, 6.
23:395, 4, 6, 1 and 6.
23:405, 6, 5, 4, 1.風ïs,
23:524, 1. They're good.
23:56I do it.
24:081, 2,
24:10so johnson had two four six and nick two four six all right jonathan off you go ten times four
24:19ten times four forty add one forty one and times by six and that's perfect two four six very good
24:27nick i did 100 divided by four is 25 yep minus one is 24 24 times 10 240 plus six
24:39well done
24:39again 246 excellent stuff but now it's time for tea time teaser which is ear pilot and the clue it
24:46plays an important role in the removals business it plays an important role in the removals business
25:09welcome back and the clue it plays an important role in the removals business what does why an
25:17epilator does epilator 76 to 47 nick letters game let's start with a consonant please rachel thank
25:26you nick t and the second s and a third y and a fourth n a vowel o another vowel
25:44e a third vowel
25:50a consonant d and a final vowel please and a final e and here's the clock
26:06so
26:16so
26:31Yes, Nick, just a six and Jonathan a seven Nick stoned Jonathan
26:38No yards or no aides? No aides? Yes, drownings is a noiard and it's absolutely fine, very good. Yeah, an
26:50execution carried out by drowning. Not nice, no aides to drown. Now they're Dr. Phil. Donates, I can give you.
26:58You happy with that? Yes, denotes, donates. D-notes, donates. 83 to 47 and Jonathan, off you go.
27:06Can I have a vowel please, Rachel? Thank you, Jonathan. I. And a consonant. Q. Vow. E. Consonants. S. Vow.
27:21I. Consonants. B. Vow. O. Consonants. L.
27:33And a final consonant please. And a final M. Stand by.
27:40Okay.
27:40Okay.
27:41I.
27:57I.
28:00I.
28:01I.
28:02I.
28:03I.
28:03I.
28:04I.
28:11Jonathan?
28:12Eight.
28:13Nick?
28:14Just a seven.
28:15And your seven?
28:16Mobiles.
28:17Mobiles.
28:18Jonathan?
28:19Mobilise.
28:19Well, yes, mobilise is very good.
28:22All right.
28:24Well done.
28:27What else have we got?
28:28Dr. Phil, what have you got?
28:29Well, I've got a little six.
28:30Emboli, which is the plural of embolus, which is what you don't want breaking off from your leg cloth.
28:35So when you've been on a long-haul flight, you've had an operation or something, you get a clot in
28:39your vein.
28:39And if it breaks off into your lung, you get an embolus.
28:41It can also happen from a clot that can go to your brain and cause a stroke as well.
28:45So they're nasty things, emboli.
28:47Yeah, horrible.
28:49Ninety-one to forty-seven.
28:51Nick?
28:52Consonant, please, Rachel.
28:53Thank you, Nick.
28:54L.
28:55And another?
28:58S.
28:59And a third?
29:01R.
29:02And a fourth?
29:04G.
29:05And a vowel?
29:07E.
29:08Another vowel?
29:09O.
29:11A third?
29:13A.
29:15Consonant?
29:17L.
29:19And a final vowel, please.
29:21And a final?
29:22O.
29:25Tick-tock.
29:25Tick-tock.
29:27Tick-tock.
29:30Tick-tock.
29:56Yes, Nick?
29:58Seven.
29:59And Jonathan?
29:59Seven.
30:00Nick?
30:01Allegro.
30:02Jonathan?
30:03Er, Janus, as in the archaic spell.
30:05Yes, G-A-O-L-E-R-S, so that's fine.
30:08Any issues there?
30:09We think you can stick an S on Allegro and have Allegro's.
30:12You can, yes.
30:13It's a noun as well as an adjective.
30:15It's a movement, passage, or composition marked to be performed in a lively manner or at a brisk speed.
30:21Right.
30:23Very good.
30:26Unlike the British Leyland Allegro, of course, we've never driven at a brisk speed.
30:3198 to 54.
30:33Last numbers game, Jonathan.
30:35Speak to Rachel.
30:37Can I have one from the top, please?
30:38You can, indeed.
30:40Thank you, Jonathan.
30:41One large one and five little ones.
30:44And for the last numbers game of this competition, they are three, eight, seven, ten, two, and the
30:51large one this time, 75.
30:53And your target, a very small, 124.
30:56124.
30:57haradons.
30:58And your target.
31:03Five most powerful.
31:05One large one.
31:09errera.
31:25Now again, we need to mark the top.
31:29Jonathan one two four yeah Nick no I've lost it right so Jonathan ten take three is seven
31:38ten minus three seven times the other seven forty-nine and add 75 well done one two four
31:45okay well done well done well done well done good performance there Jonathan over the hundred again
31:55108 and we find ourselves in the final round conundrum time so things on buzzers
32:03please let's reveal today's countdown conundrum
32:19yes Nick itinerants but it's wrong itinerants
32:25no not quite there so remaining time to you Jonathan
32:48wow well stumped here audience no no hello I see something waving out of my right eye yes doctor I've
32:58I've I've I've been
32:59there is someone in the audience we might as well give them the glory I have plenty of glory just
33:02give
33:02you a clue it's a medical term yes madam enteritis let's see whether you're right enteritis very good
33:17I really thought of that Nick because you kept talking about that restaurant you went to that played havoc with
33:21your insides
33:21with all our insides more Suzy and Suzy late blow as well I was fine don't drag me into this
33:28you've got iron intestines haven't you she's got a uh she's got a steel tummy
33:32steel tummy although actually I think she's been incredibly brave today because actually she's not terribly well
33:37she's not big sore throat okay so why she's got a terribly husky voice today which I personally find very
33:43attractive anyway
33:44there we go 108 to 54 Jonathan cracking performance a bravura performance well done thank you well done
33:52I guess you're in the final yeah yeah well done well done Nick you couldn't quite pull it off that
33:58time
33:58no mean score 54 but you're up against the kid yeah he's a very good player he's a great player
34:03so we're sending you back to Stratford to your therapy course and your new uh business yes that's right
34:10because of course you're looking after quite a lot of the Stratford players Royal Shakespeare Theatre
34:15that's right yeah that's good you see you meet some interesting people very much so yes excellent stuff
34:20but in the meantime take this huge diamond with you this jewel wear it with pride and go with our
34:27best wishes
34:27and bless you very much well done well done wasn't he good excellent very good tremendous I'll be sad to
34:33see Nick I think
34:33it's fascinating using hypnotherapy treating chronic diseases because most of the money in the NHS
34:37goes on people with chronic diseases if people are overweight it's pointless telling them to eat less
34:43and move more they need love and emotional support and that's what gets them to sort of change their
34:47behavior so I'm really interested in that I will look you out with interest in the future thank you very
34:52good now the Rachel Nick I'm sorry you've had a sore throat all day but you've handled it manfully
34:59it's not your fault I was just I was just curious actually keep telling contestants to wear their diamond
35:03with pride or honor how would you imagine that they wear that can you just model it for it on
35:08you pin it on like that with a vanity with a dignity clip whatever it is definitely a niche market
35:17in
35:17oversized badges with a little chain through what's wrong with that anyway there we are brilliant stuff
35:24hope you feel better tomorrow thank you lovely and tomorrow we expect to see you here same time same
35:30place we're counting on it and you'll be sure of it good afternoon
35:46Robert Ince and Andy Osho join the regulars for a short history of everything else tonight at 10 a
35:53short history of deal or no deal you choose boxes and try to win big it's next