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00:11Hello and welcome to Do You Know Your Place? We Brits love nothing more than exploring our
00:16own country but how much do we actually know our own backyard? To put that to the test we've
00:22enlisted Paul, a tour guide who's extremely enthusiastic but not exactly reliable. So let's
00:29separate the fact from the fiction on Do You Know Your Place?
00:36Playing this week we have a woman who knows the UK like the back of her hand and
00:40she proved it yesterday. It's Annika Rice everyone. Next up we have a Northern
00:45Island comedian who despite being from County Down is on the up, up, up. It's
00:50Shane Todd everyone, sorry Shane. And hoping to stay in the mix today is Radio 1
00:57extra DJ. Remy Burghs everyone, welcome Remy. Now before we get started today let's take a look at the weekly
01:05leaderboard.
01:06Annika because of your victory yesterday you get three points and then Shane you get two, Remy you get one
01:12point.
01:13Today we're sorting fact from fiction in Cardiff. Yes we're going to Cardiff, we're going to Wales, let's kick things
01:18off by putting your geography skills to the test.
01:21Now earlier on each of you placed our famous pin on the map as to where you think Cardiff is
01:27located.
01:28First of all let's find out where Cardiff actually is.
01:32South Wales. South Wales. The sigh speaks a thousand words. Let's see where you've placed your pins.
01:43Wow. Wow. First of all Shane you were way off the mark.
01:49463 miles away in Scotland. You hit Dunkeld.
01:54Can I tell you something? They've moved up Cardiff because it used to be, I'm pretty sure the last time
01:59I checked it was up there.
02:01Definitely not. I don't know if it's a Brexit thing.
02:03And they've moved it, they've swapped it somewhere else.
02:06Remy you were 71 miles away but still not in Wales.
02:09You hit Bridgewater, the historic market town in Somerset, England.
02:13Right. Annika.
02:15Well I was actually born in Wales and I think I've more or less put that point on where I
02:21was born.
02:21I got confused.
02:23Well Annika you were the closest.
02:2542 miles to the west of Cardiff in the market village of Neith just outside Swansea.
02:31Lovely, charming.
02:33So well done. It means Annika you get the first point.
02:36Oh thanks.
02:37Yes.
02:39So it's time to say hello to our lovely friend Paul.
02:42He's our tour guide.
02:43His first stop today is a world class stadium that's hosted everything from rugby to rock concerts.
02:50So let's hope he knows his scrums from his drums.
02:55Welcome to Cardiff, the capital of Wales and its largest city with over 362,000 people.
03:02It's a vibrant young place many thanks to its four universities.
03:06That's right, four.
03:08But nothing defines Wales quite like rugby and there's no better place to celebrate the national sport than right here
03:15at the Principality Stadium.
03:18It was built for the millennium and it's the first stadium in the UK to have a fully retractable roof.
03:24This innovative design allows the venue to host events in all weather conditions, especially handy on those rainy days.
03:32As would you believe, according to Met Office figures, that Cardiff is the wettest city in the UK.
03:39Ah, makes a retractable roof make sense.
03:42Or does it?
03:45I think Paul is slowly becoming my latest man crush.
03:49He really is.
03:50Annika, would you believe Cardiff is the wettest city in the UK?
03:54You said you were brought up in Wales.
03:56I don't know the wettest place but I don't think it's Cardiff.
04:00I think of it as a joyful sunny place.
04:02I don't think it's the wettest city in the UK.
04:05No?
04:06Let's see if it is fact or fiction.
04:08You should have believed it, yes.
04:10Wow.
04:10Cardiff is, according to the Met Office, the wettest city in the UK.
04:15Enough rainfalls across the city of Cardiff to fill this stadium about twice a week.
04:21Wow.
04:22171 billion litres a year.
04:24So unlucky, you don't get a party.
04:26There's an opportunity here.
04:27It's my day.
04:28There is.
04:28Look at them.
04:29Look at Remy.
04:30Remy over the moon.
04:31He's like, yeah we are!
04:32Yes!
04:34Remy, brace yourself, it's not your turn.
04:36Shane, it's your turn.
04:37And Paul continues his tour through some of Cardiff's musical history.
04:45Cardiff is literally a selection box of cultural icons.
04:48Take Ivor Novello.
04:49Born here in 1893, he went on to be a West End superstar.
04:54And speaking of music, Cardiff has produced some powerhouse vocalists too.
04:58From voice of an angel, Charlotte Church, to the legendary Shirley Bassey.
05:03The only artist ever to sing three James Bond themes.
05:07Now, I've got Diamonds in Forever and I've got Moonraker.
05:11But I need to find Goldfinger to complete my Shirley Bassey box set of Bond beats.
05:18And where better to track it down than here at Spillers Records.
05:22Established in 1894 and has been the go-to place for the discerning music lover ever since.
05:28But would you believe that this is the oldest record shop in the world?
05:34Can I have this for free please?
05:39Shane, would you believe Spillers Records is the oldest record shop in the world?
05:46You know what, I'm going to say yes.
05:48If that's true it was established in 1894, then...
05:51Yeah, I would say that's old, but maybe that's way too old.
05:55I can tell you that.
05:57You were right to believe it.
05:59Yes.
06:00Come on.
06:01Henry Spiller began selling records in his music store in 1894.
06:07And those first recordings were on phonographs.
06:09So you were right.
06:10Yes, well done.
06:11Right, Remi, we're going to swiftly move on to yourself and pause off to Cardiff Bear.
06:15Let's see what he gets up to over there.
06:20Cardiff Bay is the home to sci-fi powerhouse Doctor Who.
06:24Since its relaunch in 2005 with Welshman Russell T Davies at the helm,
06:29Cardiff has been at the centre of the Hooniverse.
06:31And here at Mermaid Quay there's an unlikely sci-fi monument
06:35that might even surprise the most seasoned of Time Traveller.
06:39It's a shrine to fan favourite Ianto Jones from the spin-off series Torchwood.
06:43Now from sci-fi to real space travel.
06:47As the two primary languages on the International Space Station are English and Russian,
06:52but would you believe that Welsh was the first language spoken aboard the International Space Station?
06:58Well, would you?
07:11I don't have a clue.
07:16I wish I could give you a point for your honesty, Remi, because you'd be way ahead of everyone else
07:21since yesterday.
07:22Can you name a Welsh astronaut?
07:25I cannot.
07:26But I can say Boradar in Welsh, which is good morning.
07:30Yeah?
07:31So, I'm going to go with yes.
07:34Right.
07:35Well, I can tell you...
07:38Oh!
07:39You should not have believed it.
07:41The first languages to be spoken in space were English and Russian.
07:45But Welsh has definitely been spoken in space.
07:48Canadian astronaut Dapheth Williams comes from a Welsh family and spoke Welsh in a live TV interview from space.
07:55I wanted them to be the first.
07:57So, at the end of round one, let's take a look at the scores.
08:02Remi, you've got no points.
08:03Yep.
08:04Shane, you've got one point.
08:05Good.
08:06And Annika, you two have one point so far.
08:08So, time for round two. Let's get back to the tour. Over to you, Paul.
08:15Cardiff Bay was once the busiest coal port in the world, exporting black diamonds across the globe.
08:20In 1913 alone, over 13 million tons were shipped, and at the height of that trade,
08:26the world's first £1 million deal was struck right here at the Coal Exchange.
08:32Wales has its fair share of nautical legends, like Captain Henry Morgan, born just outside Cardiff.
08:38A privateer turned politician, he even became Lieutenant Governor of Jamaica.
08:43And these days, probably better known for a particular brand of dark rum than cannonballs.
08:49Speaking of tipples, Cardiff once employed someone just to taste beer.
08:53The last man to hold this post was Edward Philpott, who had the terrible job of tasting beers and ales,
09:00just to make sure they're of good quality.
09:03Oh, poor Edward.
09:06But which of these items was invented in Cardiff by a man called Tom Parry Jones?
09:11The fruit machine, the electronic breathalyzer, or the cocktail shaker?
09:21Annika, what do you think?
09:22Which of these items was invented in Cardiff by Tom Parry Jones?
09:27Was it the fruit machine, the electronic breathalyzer, or the cocktail shaker?
09:33I'm going to go for the electronic breathalyzer.
09:35I felt that the cocktail shaker could have been invented anywhere.
09:39And the fruit machine, similar, but the electronic breathalyzer,
09:44Tom Parry Jones definitely invented it.
09:47Well done.
09:48It is the right answer.
09:49No!
09:49Yes, Annika, right.
09:51No!
09:51Yes, it was created by Tom Parry Jones in 1976, developed in Cardiff.
09:57Wow.
09:58His company still makes police equipment to this day.
10:01Fruit machines and the cocktail shaker were both invented in the United States of America in the 19th century.
10:07Well done, Annika, I should get another point.
10:08Right, here we go.
10:09Paul is now tracing the footsteps of a literary giant.
10:16Watlings, Cardiff,
10:18a Norwegian church,
10:20and an over-friendly giant.
10:24Well, it's author Roald Dahl,
10:27the writer of much-loved children's books like
10:29The BFG, Fantastic Mr Fox,
10:32and The Witches was born here,
10:34and Dahl and his family attended this Norwegian church.
10:39As well as sparking children's imaginations with his writing,
10:43Roald Dahl's books have also been adapted into films and musicals,
10:48including Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and Matilda.
10:51And when he died in 1990,
10:53he was buried with some of his favourite things.
10:56But which of these items was included?
10:58A whisky flask,
11:00a whistle,
11:01or a power tool?
11:04Which one?
11:08What do you think, Shane?
11:11Which of these items was Roald Dahl buried with?
11:15Was it the flask of whisky?
11:17Was it the whistle?
11:19Or was it the power tool?
11:21Are you a big fan of Roald Dahl?
11:23I'm currently reading the BFG to my kids.
11:25Right, very good.
11:25Which gives me no advantage in this question.
11:28Right.
11:28See, I know he used to write his books in his shade.
11:31In the back of his garden.
11:32I could see him having a wee flask of whisky in there, you know?
11:34Or a power tool?
11:35I think he's decided it's a writing shade.
11:38Okay.
11:39I'm assuming he had a separate power tool shade.
11:42Okay.
11:44And maybe he had a whistle shade.
11:47He's a big fan of DIY.
11:49Yeah.
11:50I'm gonna say a flask of whisky with no confidence in my answer whatsoever.
11:56So is flask of whisky the right answer?
11:59No!
12:01It was a power tool.
12:02Yes, Remy.
12:03In the shed.
12:04You were right.
12:05He was buried with a circular saw.
12:08Roald Dahl was also buried with chocolate, snooker cues and HB pencils for obvious reasons.
12:13Why a circular saw?
12:15In case he's in there by mistake and he needs to go there.
12:20Fizz!
12:22Fizz!
12:23Paul's off to meet sheep, talk money and squeeze into a coin-covered car.
12:29It'll make sense.
12:29Just watch this.
12:30Go on, Paul.
12:33Just 20 minutes outside Cardiff is the Royal Mint, where UK coins are made.
12:39Are you coming in?
12:41I'm hilarious.
12:43You can see first-hand how coins are made here,
12:45showcasing expert craftsmanship right down to the inscription on the edge of a £2 coin.
12:52I love reading the inscriptions on these things,
12:55although this one says Wales are better than England at rugby.
12:59Excuse me, this one's broke.
13:02And I'm not the only one who likes them,
13:04as the band Oasis took inspiration from a coin,
13:07and this was way before the long-awaited reunion tour,
13:11which kicked off right here in Cardiff.
13:14But which Oasis album did Noel Gallagher name after an inscription he found on a £2 coin?
13:32Remy, what do you think?
13:34Which Oasis album did Noel Gallagher name after an inscription he found on a £2 coin?
13:40Was it Be Here Now, Don't Believe The Truth, or Standing On The Shoulder Of Giants?
13:47So they're all great album titles, to be honest with you.
13:49OK, Standing On The Shoulders.
13:53Oh, that's too long for a £2 coin.
13:55So I'm not going to go with that.
13:57It's a big coin.
13:58I mean, even on a buzzer.
13:59Oh, it is a big coin.
14:00Be here now.
14:01Pay the £2.
14:02Be here now.
14:04OK, Don't Believe The Truth.
14:05I'm going to go with Don't Believe The Truth.
14:06I'm going to go with what I, yeah, don't believe in,
14:09because that's probably the right answer.
14:11All right, let's see if you are correct.
14:17It's Standing On The Shoulder Of Giants!
14:20Yes!
14:21It's the Isaac Newton quote, Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants.
14:26That's what's inscribed on the edge of a £2 coin,
14:28but Noel read it and forgot that it was shoulders.
14:31So he put shoulder.
14:34You nearly had it. It was right there, Remy.
14:37I need a bigger sigh, to be honest.
14:39That was right there. You need more £2 coins.
14:41Yeah.
14:41That's what you need.
14:42It's no time for a bonus question.
14:45So this one is for you all.
14:46Get your whiteboards out.
14:47Here's your bonus question.
15:05We spent maybe 20 minutes talking about salmon.
15:08Salmon, yes.
15:09When we first met each other yesterday.
15:10Yes.
15:10I don't know how we got on to it, but we love salmon.
15:12Yeah, we do.
15:13I feel like we know about this coin.
15:18All right, you've all written down an answer?
15:20Yeah.
15:21All right, Annika, we'll start with you.
15:22Which one do you think?
15:23I literally...
15:23You've gone with the hedgehog.
15:24Shane?
15:26I've gone with salmon.
15:27You've gone with the salmon.
15:28All right.
15:28Remy?
15:29With the 50p.
15:30You've gone with the 50p, the salmon.
15:31All right, so we have two salmon and one hedgehog.
15:35I can tell you that the coin that isn't real is...
15:39The hedgehog.
15:40Oh!
15:41Annika Rice has won another point.
15:43Oh, I mean, he'll guess, I have to say.
15:45The 10p piece actually depicts the capochaylee, a Scottish species of grouse, not a hedgehog.
15:53Well, there you go.
15:53That's the end of round two.
15:54Well done, Annika.
15:55You picked up the bonus point.
15:56Congrats.
15:57And at the end of the round, let's take a look at the scores.
16:01Remy, you've got nothing.
16:03Shane, you've got a point.
16:04Annika Rice got three, everyone.
16:05Yes!
16:06I'm not biased.
16:07I'm just happy.
16:09I'm just happy.
16:10Right, we're going to take a break now from the tour to see how well you know some famous faces
16:14from
16:15Cardiff.
16:16And again, we call Do You Know This Face?
16:19We're going to reveal a famous face from Cardiff, one puzzle piece at a time.
16:24Now, if you're buzzing and get it right, you get the point.
16:26If you're buzzing and get it wrong, it means you're frozen out for the rest of that picture.
16:30Alright, so good luck.
16:31Fingers on buzzers.
16:32Who's this?
16:38Nothing.
16:39No?
16:40No.
16:42Who do you think it is from Cardiff?
16:47No.
16:49I am stumped by this.
16:52Who's that?
16:53Come on.
16:54Yes, Shane.
16:56Gethan Jones.
16:57Yes!
16:58Is that right?
16:58I just guessed a Welsh name.
17:00It is.
17:01Well done.
17:02Yes.
17:02Right, here we go.
17:03Another one.
17:04Who is this famous person from Cardiff?
17:08Easy.
17:11I've got an idea, but I don't want to get frozen out.
17:13Oh, that's the game.
17:17Shane.
17:18Colin Jackson.
17:19Yeah!
17:21You're on a roll.
17:23Yeah.
17:23Yes, Olympic hurdler.
17:24No sports pundit.
17:25The mighty Colin Jackson.
17:27Lovely fellow Colin Jackson.
17:28Right, here we go again.
17:29Here's your third and final mystery person from Cardiff.
17:33Who's this?
17:36Wow.
17:37Annika Rice.
17:38Out on a limb here.
17:39Shirley Bassey.
17:40No.
17:41It's not Shirley Bassey.
17:43Who is it?
17:43Shane.
17:44That hair is from a certain era.
17:46Yeah.
17:47And I feel like it belongs on the head.
17:49Yeah.
17:49Of Tom Jones.
17:51No!
17:54Wow!
17:56Remi, it's all yours.
17:57Okay.
17:57Stick up all the pieces.
17:59Let's see if she can get this.
18:00Who's that?
18:03Right, who is it?
18:04Mr Bean.
18:05It's not Mr Bean.
18:06It's the one and only fellow who lives behind the green door.
18:09It's Shaky Stevens.
18:11Okay.
18:12Not a clue.
18:13Not a clue.
18:14Absolutely no idea, Remi, who Shaky Stevens is.
18:17Shout out to him though.
18:18Right, that's the end of round three.
18:19Let's take a look at the scores.
18:21Remi, you are yet to score.
18:23I am.
18:23However, look at this.
18:24It's game on.
18:26Shane and Annika, you both have three points.
18:30Love it.
18:31Right, so Paul's off to bend his brain
18:34in one of the best science centres in Wales.
18:37Just look how much fun our Paul is having in this clip.
18:46Wales helped make maths easier with the invention of the equal sign.
18:51First scribbled down in 1557 by mathematician Robert Record,
18:55who chose two parallel lines because no two things could be more equal.
19:04First try.
19:07Which brings us to Techniquest, Cardiff's hands-on science discovery centre.
19:18Celebrating its 40th anniversary, it's packed with over 100 displays covering science,
19:23technology, engineering and maths, all designed to spark curiosity, fun and facts.
19:29Techniquest, even as a hurricane simulator, the largest hurricane was Typhoon Tip.
19:36I was 183 times the size of Wales.
19:44But which of these is 316 times bigger than Wales?
19:49The Amazon Rainforest, the Great Barrier Reef or the Sahara Desert?
20:01Annika, which of these is 316 times bigger than Wales?
20:06Is it the Amazon Rainforest, the Great Barrier Reef or the Sahara Desert?
20:12Have you flown over any of those?
20:14I've snorkelled in the Great Barrier Reef, I've been in a canoe up the Amazon Rainforest
20:20and I have indeed slept in a Bedouin tent in the Sahara Desert.
20:24Annika Rice, everyone.
20:27But I didn't, when I was there, I didn't think of Wales in any sort of context.
20:32No.
20:34I don't think it's the Sahara Desert because I'm just sort of picturing a map of the world
20:38and I'm just not sure it's that big.
20:40Great Barrier Reef.
20:42I think it's the Amazon Rainforest.
20:44All right, let's light it up.
20:46Is it the right answer?
20:49Yes! Annika Rice!
20:51Well done, it is.
20:52The Sahara Desert is 405 times the size of Wales,
20:56whilst the Great Barrier Reef is a mere 16.5 times the size of Wales.
21:01It's tiddly.
21:02It's tiddly.
21:02Well done, you get a point.
21:04Superb stuff.
21:05Next up, Paul is back at TechniQuest where he'll try to convince us
21:08that he knows a thing or two about science.
21:14At TechniQuest you can explore all sorts of science,
21:18including Bernoulli's principle.
21:22It shows how strong, fast-moving air stream creates lower air pressure around an object,
21:27while the slower air outside keeps the pressure higher,
21:29the result the object stays suspended in the air flow.
21:33Basically, air makes ball do keepy-uppy.
21:36It's clever.
21:39Football freestyler Ash Randall is from Cardiff,
21:42and has smashed dozens of world records using footballs.
21:45In 2014, he sets a new record playing keepy-uppy football across Cardiff without dropping it.
21:51But how much distance did he cover?
21:53Was it one mile, six miles, or 13 miles?
22:03Right, Shane.
22:04How much distance did Ash Randall cover while playing keepy-uppy football?
22:11Was it one mile, six miles, or 13 miles?
22:17Is a marathon 26 miles?
22:19Yes.
22:19Right.
22:20So I have a feeling he might have been doing a half marathon there.
22:23I don't know what.
22:24And 26 divided by two equals, which was invented in Wales, 13 miles.
22:29Oh, there he is!
22:31Come on.
22:32Yes!
22:33Let's see if it's the right answer.
22:35Yes!
22:37Well done!
22:38Finally!
22:40Finally!
22:40A show and a half in.
22:42You're trying to figure it out.
22:43You know what.
22:44Well done.
22:44The Cardiff half marathon, he completed it in four hours and 14 minutes.
22:48Ash has 25 football trick-related records.
22:54Damn.
22:54Well done, Ash.
22:55Nice.
22:55Right, it's time for our final check-in with Paul,
22:57who's taking stargazing to new heights as he goes hunting for planets
23:00and dimensional doppelgangers.
23:04The planetarium has a 360-degree dome that is perfect for stargazing.
23:10And for me to look out there, are the galaxies and planets far away?
23:14I wonder if there's a Paul out there.
23:16That won the traitors.
23:21Hands-on activities include launching rockets to experiencing simulated earthquakes
23:26and even trying your hand at virtual surgery.
23:28Where I found out...
23:30The resting heart rate for a healthy human adult is between 60 and 100 beats per minute.
23:35Or higher if it's my girlfriend and she's watching David Beckham.
23:41But the heartbeat of which of these animals most closely resembles ours?
23:46A chicken?
23:47A pony?
23:48Or a sheep?
23:50Hmm.
23:53What do you think, Remy?
23:55The heartbeat of which of these animals most closely resembles ours?
23:59Hmm.
24:00Is it the chicken?
24:01The pony?
24:02Or the sheep?
24:04Well, I'm a six-foot-one-and-a-half human being.
24:07Right.
24:08Chickens are not that big, so I'm going to rule that out.
24:12I've never compared myself to a sheep before.
24:15I'm going to stay away from that.
24:17So you've compared yourself to a pony in the pool?
24:21It seems to be the closest one to, you know, my stature.
24:27I'm tossing the turn in between pony and sheep.
24:31I'm going to go with a sheep.
24:33Let's lock it in.
24:34Sheep, if you're right, it's your first point of the show today.
24:38Here we go.
24:38Is sheep, for the first point, the right answer?
24:43Yeah!
24:45Yeah!
24:48Thank you!
24:50Thank you!
24:51Yes, Remy!
24:51Woo!
24:52Yes!
24:52A sheep's heartbeat is around 60 to 80 beats per minute, just like ours.
24:58A pony's heartbeat is 28 to 44 beats per minute, a lot slower.
25:03A chicken's heartbeat is 250 to 300 beats per minute.
25:09Wow.
25:09They are pretty stressed.
25:11And that's the end of that round, so let's take a look at the scores.
25:14Ladies and gentlemen, Remy has a point.
25:16Yes, there it is.
25:18There it is.
25:18Well done, Remy.
25:19You've got a point.
25:20It's still neck and neck at the front, though.
25:21Shane and Annika, you're both on four points.
25:24It's all to play for going into our quick-fire final round.
25:29So fingers by your buzzers.
25:31All you've got to do is fill in the blanks on these questions about Cardiff.
25:34Here's your first question.
25:38BBC drama film in Cardiff.
25:42Shane.
25:44Vernon, can I be honest?
25:45Yep.
25:45Because honesty is the best policy.
25:46Just panic and hit the button.
25:48Fair enough.
25:48No answer.
25:49All right, Shane, you're frozen out.
25:51Annika, Remy.
25:54Annika.
25:54Casualty.
25:55It is casualty.
25:56Yes, well done.
25:57Well done, Annika.
25:58You get a point.
25:58Next question.
26:00Cardiff MP and UK Prime Minister.
26:05Shane.
26:06Done it again.
26:07No!
26:08Shane!
26:09Do you know when I saw the two L's in my head?
26:12I just said Churchill in my head and I know he's not a Cardiff MP or anything, so I'm just
26:16going to leave the button for a while.
26:17You're frozen out.
26:19Annika.
26:20Callaghan.
26:21Callaghan.
26:21It is.
26:21Callaghan.
26:22Yes.
26:23Well done.
26:24Here we go.
26:25Shane, calm the nerves.
26:27Yeah.
26:27All right.
26:27My heart's beating like a chicken's heartbeat.
26:30Concentrate.
26:32Shirley Bassey Bond theme.
26:36Yes, Shane.
26:36Goldfinger.
26:37Yes, sir.
26:38Right.
26:38We've crawled one back.
26:40Here we go.
26:41Next up.
26:43Gareth Bale's European Club.
26:47Remy.
26:48Real Madrid.
26:48Yes, it was Real Madrid.
26:50Yes!
26:50Of course it was Real Madrid.
26:51Yeah.
26:51Next up.
26:53Cardiff's Voice of an Angel.
26:57Shane.
26:58Charlotte Church.
26:59It is Charlotte Church.
27:00Yes.
27:01Well done.
27:02Next question.
27:04Cardiff ice hockey team.
27:08Shane.
27:08Cardiff Devils.
27:10Yes.
27:11It is the Devils.
27:12Oh, there you go.
27:14There's the klaxon.
27:15Time's up and that's the end of the round.
27:17Let's take a look at the final scores.
27:20Remy, you managed to claw one point back.
27:23Yes!
27:23You've got two points.
27:25Annika, you've got six.
27:26But today's winner with seven points.
27:29Well done, Shane.
27:30Clawing it back.
27:31Yes.
27:31You are today's winner.
27:34Congratulations.
27:35And Shane, that of course means you've won the much sought after postcard from Paul.
27:41Congratulations, my friend.
27:43That is yours.
27:43And you also get today's prize, which is an official Cardiff poncho.
27:48Excellent.
27:48To protect you from the rain next time you are actually in Cardiff.
27:52As we know, it's the UK's wettest city.
27:54So, bravo you.
27:55With two shows complete, let's take a look at who's at the top of the leaderboard.
28:00Remy, you've got two points.
28:01But in joint first, Shane and Annika both have five points.
28:05Congratulations to you both.
28:06It's going to be good this week.
28:08Well, there you go.
28:08That's it for today.
28:09Join us on our travels next time when we might be in your neck of the woods.
28:12We'll see you then.
28:12Goodbye.
28:14APPLAUSE
28:42Bye.
28:42Bye.
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