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00:11Good afternoon and welcome to the countdown studio and to the second semi-final and the winner here today will
00:19find himself in the final tomorrow and who knows might even be crowned the series winner.
00:26So it's very appropriate, I guess, that 330 years ago to this very day, Dom Perignon, a monk, sold his
00:33first bottle of sparkling wine in the champagne region.
00:36Of course, Dom Perignon is now one of the great champagne brands.
00:39So, Rachel, tomorrow we've got the final. Do you think it's reasonable that we should crack a bottle of champagne
00:45and spray Formula One style champagne all over the winners? What do you think?
00:51I'm not sure. Our audience aren't allowed even orange juice with straws anymore because of health and safety reasons.
00:56So I'm not sure how spraying liquid near all this camera equipment will go down.
01:00Oh, it's the old health and safety again.
01:02Yeah, health and safety. You've got to be careful.
01:04And the accountant.
01:05Yes.
01:05And the accountant.
01:07When did you ever have a champagne reception in recognition of your achievements?
01:12Yeah, well, I've been sprayed with a lot of champagne. I think around finals time in Oxford, the whole of
01:17Oxford smells like mouldy old champagne because everyone gets covered.
01:20All right. Excellent stuff. Anyway, let's see who's going to be showered with champagne tomorrow.
01:25Will it be Peter Lee? Will it be Peter Lee from Dublin, the meteorological supremo from Dublin?
01:32Or will it be Jack Worsley who had such a cracking run earlier in the season?
01:38And what we've got here, just to prove that the seed system works, we've got our number three seed, Peter,
01:44and our number two seed, Jack, competing.
01:47And one of you is going through to the final. Yeah?
01:50Yes.
01:50How are you feeling about that?
01:51Fairly comfortable. I'm not overly confident, especially against Peter.
01:55Never, never good. And Peter, I know, is a man of great modesty and great talent too, which is a
02:00good combination.
02:01So, how are you feeling, Peter?
02:03I'm feeling happy enough. I'm happy enough to have got to the semi-finals and to the finals.
02:07Good for you.
02:07I'm happy enough.
02:08All right. Well, let's give our semi-finalists a great round of applause. Peter and Jack.
02:19Two terrific competitors.
02:22So, Susie, what do you reckon to this? We're going to have a steaming competition today, I think.
02:26I think so. I think Rachel and I are planning on not doing very much work today or tomorrow.
02:31I think that's really good.
02:32All right. And fortunately, we've got Dr. Phil with us to keep us all, you know, alive through this, I
02:37guess.
02:38The hearts will be beating today, Dr. Phil.
02:40They are indeed. I've got a little glass of vodka with me, which is sorting me out, doesn't it?
02:43Chief me, obviously I am an alcoholic.
02:46It's all that human misery and suffering.
02:47It's good to see you. And, well, let's see who's going to be, you know, on top form here today.
02:54Peter, you're going to kick off Letters Game.
02:57Hi, Rachel. A consonant, please.
02:58Thank you. Start today with J.
03:01A consonant, please.
03:03And a consonant.
03:04R.
03:06A consonant.
03:09G.
03:11Consonant.
03:13S.
03:14Vowel.
03:16U.
03:18Vowel.
03:20E.
03:21Vowel.
03:23I.
03:25Consonant.
03:27T.
03:28E.
03:31Vowel, please.
03:32And the last one.
03:33O.
03:34And here's the countdown clock.
03:36T.
03:37Vowel, please.
03:38T.
03:39D.
03:41D.
03:42D.
03:43D.
03:45D.
03:47D.
03:48D.
03:58D.
04:07Peter, seven, and Jack, seven, all right, Peter, goiters, goiters, gutsier, gutsier, both good
04:15countdown words to start with, yes, how about that, Dr. Phil, I've never met a gustier jouster than
04:21Sir Lancelot, the gustier and jouster are both in there for seven, yeah, very good, excellent stuff,
04:25seven, all, Jack, off you go, hi again, Rachel, hi, Jack, let's start with a consonant, please,
04:30nay, thank you, start with D, and another, S, and another, F, one more, N, L, A, and another,
04:48O, and another, I, consonant, R, and another consonant, please, and the last one, D, stand
05:02by,
05:32now then, Jack, seven, and Peter, seven, Jack, ordains, ordains, same word, yes, yes, all
05:40right, now then, I'm feeling smug fairly early on in this, because I've come up with androids,
05:45which is eight, excellent, thank you very much, that's very good, androids, though, that's excellent
05:55stuff, 14 all, and Peter, letters game, constant, please, Rachel, thank you, Peter, tea,
06:01E, a consonant, L, consonant, R, consonant, S, vowel, E, vowel, A, vowel, U, consonant, P,
06:25and the vowel, please, and lastly, E, here we go,
06:30and lastly, E, here we go,
07:00now then peter eight jack and after risking eights peter prelates prelates
07:06jack replays replays oh why not okay she's so careful um as jack knows with
07:15these re words repeat replay but not replayed I'm afraid not replayed no not
07:22where sorry Jack I'm dashed and in the corner
07:26anything else now then dr. Phil I've got my favorite word pleasure pleasure is my
07:30favorite works I think to save ourselves and save the NHS we need to learn how to
07:34pleasure ourselves in a safe and sustainable way that's the strapline for
07:38my show I'm in Tewksbury on Friday dr. Phil Hammond.com for other dates good I'm
07:43very glad to hear about it 22 to 14 peter leads jack and constant place thank you
07:51jack m and another t and another n one more k about I and another a and another o and
08:12and again I and another vowel place and the last one a is the clock
08:26so
08:38so
08:54Now the jack only a four peter five very lean pickings here come on jack and main and peter amino
09:03Amino yes amino acid very good. Yeah, yeah, and dr. Phil sometimes when I perform on stage
09:09I do this and that's known as animato performing in an animated style
09:14Yeah, irritating actually
09:19Not as much as some of the other things you get up to
09:23Thank you. What else have we got? I know that was our best. That's it. Yes. I couldn't beat it
09:30I'm ready never
09:31Brilliant stuff, but what I see here emerging is a strong surge from peter 27 jack look out
09:39You're only on 14 and peter the first numbers game of the day one from the top rachel first from
09:45anywhere else
09:45Thank you peter one from the top and five little ones and for the first numbers game today. They are
09:52four
09:54six eight
09:56five
09:57Five another five and one hundred and your target eight hundred and eighty eight eight zero
10:04I'm
10:35Now then, Peter.
10:36Yes, 880.
10:37Alright, Jack.
10:38888.
10:39Okay, Peter.
10:40Yeah, 100 plus 4 plus 6.
10:43100 plus 4 plus 6, 110.
10:45And multiply by the 8.
10:47Nice and easy, 880.
10:48Okay, Jack.
10:50Added 100 plus 5 plus 5 times 8.
10:52Well done, both of you, excellent stuff.
10:5937 to Jack's 24.
11:02So, we brace ourselves to hear from Dr. Phil.
11:06Interesting.
11:07A lot of people say bring back the cottage hospital.
11:08Do you ever hear that?
11:09We have these great big impersonal buildings.
11:11They bring back the cottage hospital.
11:12I used to work in a little cottage hospital.
11:14It was lovely because the bloke who mowed the lawn
11:16also used to give the anaesthetic.
11:18The last time they used the defibrillator
11:20was to jumpstart the tractor.
11:22And I remember once a chap collapsed
11:23and I ran for the cardiac arrest trolley.
11:25I opened it up and it consisted of a bottle of port
11:28and the death certificate book.
11:31So, the thing that was nice about the cottage hospital
11:34was that everyone knew your name.
11:35It was very friendly.
11:36You knew the nurses.
11:36You knew the staff.
11:37But the trouble is surgery particularly has got so complex.
11:39We need to concentrate it in fewer centres.
11:41There's always a bigger political stink
11:43when you downgrade or you close a unit.
11:44But actually something complicated like child heart surgery
11:47needs to be done in fewer larger centres
11:49that have the resources and the expertise.
11:51But you go into these big hospitals and they are very impersonal.
11:53It's very hard to get people to notice you.
11:55So this is my top tip today for surviving in hospital
11:57is keep moving.
11:59Because we need the beds.
12:00Every year in the NHS about two people
12:02are discovered snoring in the mortuary
12:05because we've been a bit quick to shift them through.
12:07And you think doctors should be able to diagnose death.
12:09But actually, particularly the larger patients,
12:11the more morbidly voluptuous patients,
12:13when they're lying still,
12:15they have quite a bit of padding.
12:16It's quite hard to hear heart sounds and breath sounds.
12:18It's quite easy to misdiagnose them.
12:20And this happened to a friend of mine in a ward in Bath.
12:23A very large gentleman was having a nap after lunch
12:25and he couldn't hear any breath sounds
12:26and couldn't feel a pulse.
12:28So he diagnosed him dead.
12:30Told the nurses to call in the relatives.
12:32He was then fast bleak back to the ward
12:33to find this man sitting up in bed
12:35drinking a cup of tea and reading the sun.
12:38So technically, he was still dead.
12:44But by the time the relatives arrived,
12:46he was tucking into his lunch.
12:48And he thought, this is going to be cheeky.
12:49How am I going to explain this?
12:50Now, most doctors worth their salt
12:52would blame it on the nurses.
12:53They'd say, well, it was all the nurses' fault.
12:54They got it wrong.
12:55But this chap, we'll call him Dr. Jomond.
12:57He was Spanish.
12:59He was very good.
12:59He looked at the relatives and he said,
13:01well, you see, there are different stages of death.
13:04And I think that's a wonderful explanation.
13:06But actually, we talked about the high-tech stuff.
13:07What actually keeps you healthy more than anything
13:09is the community that you live in.
13:10We talked about Jon Snow previously
13:12and having clean water.
13:13Actually, it's having a circle of friends
13:15living in a lovely community.
13:16I live in this lovely community in the Chew Valley.
13:18It's just south of Bristol.
13:19And it's wonderful.
13:20It's beautiful.
13:21It's an area of outstanding natural beauty.
13:22I go and I walk my dogs up to the top of our valley.
13:24And then about a year ago, they announced
13:26that they were going to put a hazardous waste
13:28in asbestos landfill at the top of our valley.
13:30And that's caused a huge stink.
13:32But what's been really interesting is
13:33I've suddenly met these fantastically resourceful people
13:35in my village I'd never met before.
13:37So people who are environmental scientists
13:38and people who've done civil rights work
13:40have all come out.
13:41We've had this fantastic Stop Stoic Quarry campaign.
13:44And it's worked brilliantly.
13:45We've got about 5,000 people on our petition.
13:48We've got all the MPs have voted against it.
13:50We've got people from the Environment Agency
13:51voting against it.
13:52And I was thinking, what could the killer,
13:54the knockout blow be?
13:55And I was doing a gig, a charity gig
13:57near Shurston the other day.
13:58And this chap came up, a very posh man.
14:00And he said, we had a similar problem
14:01with the landfill in our quarry.
14:03And he said, lots of people,
14:04we had senior civil servants and judges on our side.
14:06But the thing that won it for us
14:07is that we got Prince Charles to sign the petition.
14:10Now, I don't know Prince Charles,
14:11but I've decided that you three are probably
14:13the three most famous people I know.
14:15So I think if I get you three
14:16to sign my Stop Stoic Quarry petition,
14:19do you think the three of you together
14:20count as one Prince Charles?
14:22There's one for you to sign.
14:23You have to come over and sign one too, please.
14:25I don't know if you're allowed off your chair.
14:26You may have to sign it later.
14:27If you can pass that down to Nick
14:28and sign it on the way, please.
14:32What I've learnt, a bit like I tell people
14:34to stand up to the NHS,
14:35is for big planning decisions,
14:37you can't just let the experts make the decision
14:38on your behalf.
14:39You have to challenge it.
14:40So you have to get the best law you can
14:41and you have to get the best independent evidence you can
14:44and you actually have to plonk it on the lap
14:45of the people in the Environment Age
14:46in the planning office and say,
14:47look at this.
14:48You know, a leaky limestone quarry
14:50is not a very good place to put asbestos
14:52and hazardous waste when it sits over
14:53Bristol's largest drinking water reservoir.
14:55And we've finally got people on our side,
14:57but if we hadn't made a stink,
14:58nothing would have happened.
14:59So whatever it is,
15:00whether it's the health service,
15:01whether it's planning,
15:02stand up for your rights,
15:03get together as a community
15:04and you really can change the system.
15:06So go get them.
15:07That's my message today.
15:08Thank you very much.
15:08Good deal.
15:11Thank you very much indeed.
15:15And we will sign the petition.
15:17Thank you very much.
15:17That'll look all the difference.
15:18I'm sure it will.
15:19All right.
15:20But now it's time for a Tea Time teaser,
15:22which is Ripe fled and the clue,
15:25took a ripe banana and fled without pain.
15:43Welcome back.
15:44And I left you with the clue,
15:45took a ripe banana and fled without pain.
15:49In other words, it was pilfered.
15:51Pilfered.
15:52Pilfered.
15:53Now then, what's going on here?
15:55Peter 37 to Jack's 24.
15:57Letters again.
15:59Come on.
15:59Consonant plays.
16:00Thank you, Jack.
16:02D.
16:03And another.
16:05V.
16:06And another.
16:09R.
16:10And another.
16:12F.
16:13And another.
16:15E.
16:16And another.
16:18A.
16:19And another.
16:21Another E.
16:22And consonant.
16:24G.
16:26And...
16:27Vowel, please.
16:28And the last one.
16:30A.
16:31And here's the clock.
16:32A.
16:33They fought.
16:34And two.
16:56Buh.
16:56They fought.
16:59In this.
16:59It's all year ago.
17:00Now then a.
17:00One was bells.
17:00A.
17:02C.
17:03Yes, Jack?
17:04Eight.
17:04And Peter?
17:05Eight.
17:06All right, Jack?
17:07Averaged.
17:08Averaged?
17:09Same.
17:09Peter?
17:09Yes.
17:10Averaged out between you.
17:12Now then, in the corner, Dr. Phil.
17:14Well, we got averaged, but nothing better.
17:16There we go.
17:17All right.
17:18Now, what's going on here?
17:19Peter, 45, and Jack at 32.
17:23Peter?
17:24Consonant, please, Rachel.
17:25Thank you, Peter.
17:27D.
17:28And a consonant.
17:30B.
17:30Consonant.
17:33H.
17:35Vowel.
17:36E.
17:38Vowel.
17:39U.
17:41Vowel.
17:42O.
17:44Consonant.
17:45L.
17:47Consonant.
17:49S.
17:51And a consonant, please.
17:53And lastly, R.
17:55Done by him.
17:57And a consonant.
18:13And a consonant.
18:14And a consonant.
18:16And a consonant.
18:17And across all the city.
18:18And a consonant.
18:18All right.
18:20And a consonant.
18:25And aè“®cier.
18:27Peter?
18:28Eight.
18:29Jack?
18:29Eight.
18:30All right.
18:31Peter?
18:32Doublers.
18:33Yes.
18:33Doublers.
18:34And Jack?
18:35Shoulder.
18:36Shoulder.
18:37Yeah, absolutely.
18:38Just checking doublers.
18:39I'm pretty sure it'll be fine.
18:41Yeah, that's 30.
18:42Doublers.
18:42All right, very good.
18:43Dr. Phil?
18:44We've got boulders for eight.
18:46Yes.
18:47But I like your seven.
18:48I like your rosebud.
18:49Oh, rosebud, yes.
18:50I'm thinking Citizen Kane.
18:52Rosebud.
18:52Rosebud is there for seven.
18:53And rubles as well.
18:54And rubles.
18:56Fifty-three to forty.
18:58Jack, you're still adrift here.
19:00I'm beginning to worry for you.
19:01It's a letters game.
19:03Off you go.
19:04Consonant place.
19:05Thank you, Jack.
19:06L.
19:07And another?
19:09G.
19:10And another?
19:13W.
19:14And one more?
19:16L.
19:18Val.
19:19A.
19:20And another?
19:22E.
19:26A.
19:27Consonant.
19:29M.
19:32And a vowel place.
19:34And the last one.
19:36I.
19:38Tick-tock.
19:38A.
19:39More warning.
19:51Yeah.
20:05And now, thank youne々.
20:07You can convince him.
20:07Maybe not.
20:07Yeah, you're looking good.
20:08Many more?
20:10Jack, no, just a six.
20:11A six, Peter?
20:13No, it's always a six.
20:14Jack?
20:15Mileage.
20:16Peter?
20:16Wally.
20:17I don't know you.
20:18Um, yes, Peter, it is a Y rather than an IE, sorry.
20:24So, Dr. Phil?
20:26No, that stumped me.
20:26I couldn't get past mileage.
20:28No, and it still looks strange written without that middle E.
20:31It doesn't do, though, yeah.
20:32Yeah, but you can write it that way.
20:33Is that the American way, I think?
20:35It may have started so, but it's not specifically American now.
20:38Mm.
20:3953 to 46, you've closed up a little bit there, and, uh, Peter, let us go.
20:45Consonant, please, Rachel.
20:46Thank you, Peter.
20:47N.
20:48Consonant.
20:51T.
20:52Consonant.
20:54M.
20:55Consonant.
20:58Q.
20:59Thouel.
21:00O.
21:01Thouel.
21:03I.
21:04Thouel.
21:07Another O.
21:08Consonant.
21:10S.
21:12And a consonant, please.
21:14And the last one.
21:15L.
21:17Here's the clock.
21:18Here's the clock.
21:49Peter.
21:51Peter.
21:51Seven.
21:51Jack.
21:52Seven.
21:53All right.
21:54So, Peter.
21:55Motions.
21:56Motions.
21:57Motions.
21:58Both motion there?
22:00All right.
22:02How about a motion from Dr. Phil?
22:04Uh, tonsils are in there as well.
22:06Uh, alongside motions are moist and stool, which is lovely.
22:10They go well together, don't they?
22:11Well, I'm just playing word association here, because I can't beat motions.
22:14But I do like moist.
22:15You don't like moist, do you?
22:16It's my least favourite word.
22:17I love moist.
22:18What's wrong with moist?
22:20Moist is just, it just sounds awful.
22:22It's like gusset.
22:23It sounds awful.
22:25Moist gusset sounds in words, actually.
22:29I think moist, lovely, her lips are moist.
22:32That's fantastic.
22:33Who wants to kiss a girl with dry lips?
22:36Not with moist lips, though, definitely not.
22:39Each to his own.
22:40Jack, 53 to Peter's 60.
22:43Now then, Susie.
22:45I'm carrying on with my pub names.
22:47Good.
22:47There is a spread eagle pub in Stourhead, in Wiltshire, Croydon, Camden, Berries and Edmonds.
22:53There are many more.
22:54And I was quite fascinated by this, because you think about people being spread eagles,
22:58but you may not know where it comes from.
22:59Well, it does come from, quite literally, the representation of an eagle with its body and legs and wings displayed.
23:04And it's the emblem of various states and rulers, including the German Empire.
23:09And in the 18th century, it was actually applied to a person who was bound with his arms and legs
23:13stretched out before he was flogged.
23:15So, not a very nice thing to be.
23:17And in the US, thanks to the figure of the eagle, a spread eagle style was a very boastful, bombastic
23:23one.
23:24So, it's been applied to lots of different things.
23:26For most of us, of course, to be spread eagled is to be somehow lying on the ground with arms
23:29and legs outstretched,
23:30usually after we fall over, which is hopefully not what you will do when you visit the spread eagle pub.
23:35And that was so named to indicate in the olden days that German wines were available there.
23:40So, that's a bit of Dom Perignon as well.
23:42Very, very interesting.
23:4860 to 53.
23:49Jack, it's a numbers game.
23:52Can I try six more, please?
23:53Six small ones, you can indeed.
23:55Thank you, Jack.
23:56And we will see what we have.
23:59So, these six little ones are 3, 10, 7, 4, 5, and 9.
24:07And your target?
24:09611.
24:10611.
24:39611.
24:42yes Jack six one one Peter six ten right Jack and ten times nine times seven ten
24:49times nine times seven six hundred and thirty five times three five times three
24:55is fifteen now take it away take it away for yet six on five and take away before
25:00well done six one one well done so this is a close run thing sees number two and
25:14three at each other's throats here but now it's time for tea time teaser and the
25:19teaser is flat lips blue the old Prime Minister takes a tumble beware of these
25:24the old Prime Minister takes a tumble beware of these
25:44welcome back I left you with the clue the old Prime Minister takes a tumble beware of
25:49these beware of pitfalls pitfalls so sixty to sixty three Jack in the lead there
25:58but Peter is a formidable contender off you go Peter constant please Rachel thank you
26:04Peter Peter P consonant P consonant N consonant D vowel E vowel A vowel U vowel E and a consonant
26:33please and lastly
26:34see stand by
27:08What news, Peter?
27:09Five.
27:11Jack?
27:11Yeah, five.
27:12All right, and Peter's five?
27:14Paste.
27:15Paste.
27:15You're both pacing at the same pace.
27:19Paste.
27:20Dr. Phil?
27:21The ubiquitous bedpan is there.
27:24When Nye Bevan founded the NHS, his vision was that a bedpan falling in a hospital would be heard in
27:29Whitehall.
27:30He's actually wrong.
27:31You don't actually want politicians to micromanage the NHS.
27:33Yes, so it's a slightly outdated thing that you should hear everything that goes on in your company.
27:38You should get the right people to do the job and let them do it.
27:41Exactly, yeah.
27:42Anyway, bedpan.
27:43Well done, bedpan.
27:4565 to Jack 68.
27:47As we move towards the conclusion of this semi-final, Jack, it's the letters game.
27:52Constant place.
27:53Thank you, Jack.
27:54S.
27:55And another.
27:57T.
27:58And another.
28:00G.
28:02And again.
28:04R.
28:06Vowel.
28:07E.
28:08And another.
28:09A.
28:11And another.
28:13I.
28:15Consonant.
28:17T.
28:19And vowel place.
28:21And the last one.
28:23U.
28:24And hedge down.
28:25machine.
28:26And.
28:37Bye-bye.
28:47Bye.
28:48Bye-bye.
28:50Bye-bye.
28:51Bye-bye.
28:51Bye-bye.
28:53Bye-bye.
28:54Bye-bye.
28:57Jack? A seven. A seven, and Peter? Yes, seven. All right, Jack? Triages. Triages, and Peter?
29:04Quarters. Any arguments? None at all, no. I like triages, that's how the NHS is run these days,
29:09you phone up and they find out whether you've got central crushing chest pain going down your
29:12left arm, or whether it's probably a virus, and they send you to the emergency room or back to
29:16your GP accordingly. That's it? It's all done by phone these days, yeah. You phone the new 111
29:21number, they will triage you. Right. Have you tried that yet? 111? I have not, and I hope
29:27that actually sometime before I find it necessary to do so, and whilst I've got your phone number,
29:33that moment is delayed. Any time, day or night, you're welcome to call me, Nick. Thank you. Even
29:37the most trivial problem, I'm dying to hear from you. Stand by. Stand by. Now then, what have you
29:42got for us, Dr. Phil? I can't beat triages, actually. Can you beat it? Gutsier, gustier,
29:47to go with gutters, but nothing better than seven. No. Triage, that's good, yeah. That's very good.
29:53It means hastening to the biggest wound or the most serious thing in a car accident. Triage is when
30:00you go for the person who's... Prioritise. Prioritise. That chap's about to die, so we need to get to him
30:04quickly. That's got a tickly tummy. We can leave him till later. Thank you for putting it so succinctly.
30:09Brilliant. 72 to 75, Jackson on the lead, and Peter, letters game. Cancel, please, Rachel. Thank you, Peter.
30:15X. And a consonant. C. Consonant. W. Consonant. R. Vel. A. Vel. E. Vel. I. Consonant. Y. And a consonant,
30:43please. And the last one. D. Here's the clock.
30:47D. Here's the clock.
30:48D. Here's the clock.
30:49D. Here's the clock.
30:57D. Here's the clock.
31:03D. Here's the clock.
31:04D. Here's the clock.
31:06D. Here's the clock.
31:07D. Here's the clock.
31:19Peter six Jack six right Peter wax your wax here wax here yeah I'm sticking together you two very
31:28nice good so Jack ahead 81 to 78 has breath in it and it's a numbers game Jack and try
31:35six more
31:35again place it worked well for you last time thank you Jack six little ones for the final
31:40numbers game of this contest and this time they are five four seven two another two and six fairly
31:51small on the target 388 three eight eight
32:26now then Jack I think I've got 388 yes and Peter 384 384 right Jack okay let's hear from you
32:35five plus
32:35four five plus four is nine times seven times seven is sixty three plus two plus two sixty five times
32:44six times six yet 390 and take away if you have a take and well done 388 well done Jack
32:59brave stuff
33:00well 91 to Peter 78 as we come into the final round of this semi-final it's conundrum time so
33:09fingers on
33:10us please let's reveal today's countdown conundrum hey ho Peter anonymize anonymize let's see whether you're
33:36right well done Peter well done yeah great storming finish there 88 but to Jack's 91 what a shame you
33:43did so well great to see you here and thank you for being such a good competitor that's very much
33:48thank you for them too great to see you so Jack what does all this mean means the final yes
33:55he gave
33:56you a run didn't he yes certainly gave you a run for the money yes brilliant anyway we'll see you
34:00tomorrow with we're sending you back to Dublin back to the Met Office there with little chap here some
34:07people wear them others just put them on the mantelpiece I leave that choice to you I leave that choice
34:12to
34:13you but thank you very much for coming very much thank you wow that was close wasn't it good stuff
34:18they've all been close thank god we have the doctor with us to keep us all as sedated as it
34:22were or at
34:23least be prepared to sedate us great stuff dr. Phil yeah no I thoroughly enjoyed it in fact they've all
34:29been close haven't they I chose actually the whole seeding thing works very well yeah that's that's
34:34tremendously competitive games very exciting yeah very good talented people proud to have you with
34:39this very proud now then Rachel Helen Nick wow tomorrow's the day yeah number one seed versus
34:47number two seed yeah it's gonna be a good one it's gonna be a cracker two young people two young
34:52lads
34:52great stuff let's see what happens tomorrow you'll be with us tomorrow to see what happens it's the final
34:58tomorrow same time same place a big day you'll be sure of it
35:14finishing off the place tonight on four with the outside transforming the humble garden with the house
35:19the 50s built that's in nine o'clock Nexus afternoon deal or no deal I would deal but then again
35:26I I am a wimp

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