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00:11Yes, hello and welcome to Do You Know Your Place?
00:14Now here in Britain we are mad for a holiday at home, but how well do we truly know these
00:18isles of ours?
00:19Well, we're about to find out because we've found ourselves a rather unconventional tour guide.
00:24He's called Paul. He's going to lead us on a grand tour of the UK.
00:27I guess something's absolutely right, the rest, but a cod's wallet.
00:31So let's sort the facts from the fabrications on Do You Know Your Place?
00:38Now playing this week we've already established she's a true treasure and she's always on the hunt for a win.
00:45It's Annika Rice! Hi!
00:47Welcome Annika. He's a comedian who's so funny he thinks Cardiff is in Scotland!
00:54Shane Todd everyone!
00:57She's someone who always goes the extra mile. It's Radio One Extra Mile DJ, Remy Burgs everyone!
01:06Alright, well before we get started let's take a look at the weekly leaderboard.
01:11Annika's got five points. Shane's got five points. Remy, you've got two points.
01:15Two points.
01:16Remy, we are hoping that this one is yours.
01:18I hope so as well to be honest.
01:20So do I, I mean I think we do too, don't we?
01:23It's mad when your competition wants you to win.
01:26We really want, this is Remy's game.
01:28Now today you are sorting fact from fiction...
01:34...in Bolton!
01:35Yeah!
01:37Yes!
01:38Yes!
01:39Bolton!
01:39Yes!
01:40So let's kick things off by putting your geography skills to the test.
01:44Earlier on you placed a pin on the map where you think Bolton is located.
01:50Let's find out where Bolton is first.
01:52There it is.
01:54Let's drop the pins.
01:55Okay.
01:55Let's drop the pins.
01:57Oi!
01:58Oh!
01:58Oh!
01:59I am buzzing with that!
02:00Everyone!
02:01I'm in the right country!
02:02Come on!
02:03In the right country!
02:07I am absolutely delighted with that.
02:09Shane, you were farthest away on the map.
02:12You hit Dockr, just north of Kendal in Cumbria.
02:1568 miles away from God's country.
02:17Sorry, from Bolton.
02:18And more specifically, this eco-friendly campsite operated by Angela and Maurice.
02:24Oh!
02:26That's lovely!
02:27That's nice.
02:27Remy, you were 46 miles away in Crewe in Cheshire.
02:31And then Annika, once again, you were the closest.
02:35You were 20 miles away from Bolton.
02:38Oh!
02:38Well done, Annika Rice.
02:40The first point is yours.
02:43Time to say hello to our resident tour guide, Paul.
02:46Not sure how I feel about him being in my hometown.
02:50He better be of himself.
02:54Welcome to Bolton!
02:57A proud northern town with a population of around 300,000,
03:01took between Manchester and the West Pennine Moors.
03:04Bolton's produced some very special people,
03:06from musical virtuosos like Badly Drawn Boy and Nick Fly's Danny Jones
03:11to TV visionaries like Maxine Peake and champion boxer Amir Khan.
03:16Bolton has also given us plenty of belly laughs thanks to comedy legend Peter Kaye.
03:22And here at St Gregory's Social Club in Farnworth, it's a proper community hub.
03:27But to eagle-eyed comedy fans, it's sacred ground.
03:31Because this is the real-life setting for the Phoenix Club from Phoenix Knights.
03:38This very spot, bouncers Max and Paddy stood, played by Peter Kaye and Paddy McGuinness.
03:45But would you believe Peter Kaye and Paddy McGuinness met as welders in Bolton?
04:03Well, I cannot see Peter Kaye in charge of some welding equipment on the health and safety front.
04:13I don't think they did.
04:14We don't believe it. Let's see if you're right.
04:18Yes, you're right not to believe it. No, they actually met at school.
04:22I'm very relieved for the construction business in Bolton.
04:25They were in charge at any shape or form.
04:27It's actually comedy double act Cannon and Ball who met as welders.
04:32Ah. Yeah, there you go. Rock on, Tommy.
04:35Right, next up, Paul is rewinding to simpler times, when phones stayed in boxes.
04:44Before phones could fit in your pocket, take photos, tell you the weather and help you doom scroll into the
04:51early hours,
04:52phones were, er, phones.
04:55And these beautiful red boxes were some of the first public phones to appear in the UK.
05:03And I know a man who might be able to give these bad boys a good clean,
05:07because Bolton's own Vernon Kaye used to clean them for a living,
05:11before TV fame quite literally called.
05:14These days, the humble phone box is a rare sight, and so too is the trusty household landline.
05:20But would you believe the majority of UK homes no longer have a landline?
05:27Well, would you?
05:32Good question, Shane.
05:33Would you believe the majority of UK homes no longer have a landline?
05:39A lot of people don't use them, but they still have them for backup.
05:43Yes.
05:43But you used to want to get one because of the internet.
05:47Yes.
05:47But you don't need it for the internet anymore, so...
05:49Mmm.
05:51Do you know what?
05:52I'm feeling good about this.
05:53Like the postman.
05:54I'm about to deliver here.
05:55Ooh.
05:56I believe it.
05:57All right, you believe it.
05:58Let's see if you're right.
06:00He's up and running.
06:02You're getting the gist of this.
06:03Yeah.
06:03According to Ofcom data, only 47% of UK households had a landline form in 2024.
06:11It was 84% a decade ago.
06:14Wow.
06:15Amazing stuff.
06:16Right, Remy, you ready?
06:17I am.
06:17So, back to Paul now in Bolton, and he's found a stage to perform on.
06:22Darling, over to you.
06:27Right in the heart of Bolton's town centre, you'll find the Octagon.
06:31The Octagon first opened in 1967 and quickly became one of the North West's leading theatres.
06:38Over the years, it's hosted performances by some of Britain's best-loved actors, from
06:44Sarah Ian McKellen to Sue Johnston, who was Barbara Royal in TV's Royal Family.
06:50But it's not just stars in front of the camera that have graced the venue.
06:54As before, train spotting and the London 2012 Olympics opening ceremony, director Danny Boyle worked right here at the Octagon
07:02as an usher.
07:04But would you believe he included five of his favourite Bolton hangouts in the 2012 London Olympics opening ceremony?
07:12Well, would you?
07:17Remy, what do you think?
07:18Would you believe Danny Boyle included five of his favourite Bolton hangouts in the 2012 London Olympics opening ceremony?
07:26I feel like it's a challenge.
07:28Maybe it was just five very nice fun boxes of running a clean.
07:33I'm going to go with, I do believe it.
07:36Wait, I do believe it.
07:37I don't believe it.
07:37Right.
07:38Good!
07:39Because it's the right answer!
07:44Wow!
07:45Imagine if there was a scene where, at the London Olympics opening ceremony, there's a few people coming out of
07:51Ritzy, the local nightclub, going down to Cars Pasties.
07:55You've done this gracious me.
07:57No, you're right.
07:57That is the correct answer.
08:00Let's take a look at the scores after the first round.
08:04Remy got a point, Shane got a point, Annika's got two because she was closest to putting the pin nearest
08:09Bolton on the map.
08:10So let's move swiftly on to round two and this time Paul fancies himself as a DJ.
08:19Music streamers?
08:20Playing me the same old three songs over and over again thanks to their algorithm.
08:26No, not for me, no thanks.
08:28For my ears it's radio all the way.
08:30The only place I go to for a mix of new and classic beats.
08:34The latest news, traffic reports, maybe the odd occasional rant about the price of pineapples.
08:39This town has some serious vocal talent.
08:42And here at Bolton FM there are even more DJs from, er, well, Bolton.
08:47The accent sounds lovely on the airwaves but don't be surprised if local phrases leave you a bit baffled.
08:53As around here if someone were to say, I'm really pow fagged, they're saying they're really tired.
08:59And if it's cracking flags outside, it means it's a hot day.
09:03But if someone from Bolton asks you to put wood in thole, what should you do?
09:08Light the fire, shut the door or stop talking?
09:11Well, which one is it?
09:17Annika, if someone from Bolton asks you to put wood in thole, what should you do?
09:24Should you light the fire, shut the door or stop talking?
09:30Oh, all of them are excellent answers, can I just say.
09:34Erm, I'm not going to say light the fire because that seems too obvious.
09:38Do you know Vernon?
09:39I do.
09:41Do you know what, I don't know why but I'm going to say stop talking.
09:44Though the more logical ones probably shut the door but I'm going to say stop talking.
09:47We're going to say stop talking.
09:49Is it the right answer?
09:51Is it it?
09:52No!
09:54It shut the door!
09:56Annika Rice didn't get a point, wow.
09:58Look at the smiles on Remy and Shane there.
10:02Interesting stuff.
10:03Next up, Shane, it's time to use your loaf as Paul takes us through Bolton's doughy past.
10:13Warburton's has been baking bread in Bolton since 1876 and today they're Britain's biggest bakery, producing over 2 million products
10:21daily.
10:21But the history of bread goes back much further and it's been used for some surprisingly inventive purposes over the
10:29centuries.
10:30In fact, breadcrumbs accidentally helped lead to the invention of which everyday item?
10:35Rubber erasers, sticky tape or wallpaper paste?
10:40Which one is it?
10:43Shane, what do you think?
10:45Breadcrumbs accidentally helped lead to the invention of which everyday item?
10:50Rubber erasers, sticky tape or wallpaper paste?
10:56I'm thinking sticky tape.
10:59I think breadcrumbs would be difficult to pick up.
11:02Wallpaper paste, I don't see a link between anything, but I could just see sticky tape.
11:09Do you do DIY?
11:10Look at me, Remy.
11:11No.
11:13What I will do, like, because for the kids and stuff I want them to think like Daddy does do
11:18DIY, so I'll stick up like, you know, those wee hooks for like pictures on the wall.
11:23Yeah, yeah.
11:24But as long as they're stick on, I'll do that level of DIY.
11:28I'm gonna go, I'm gonna go sticky tape.
11:31You're gonna go sticky tape?
11:32Alright, so is sticky tape the right answer?
11:36No.
11:37The actual answer is rubber erasers.
11:40Breadcrumbs were once used to erase pencil markings.
11:43Yeah, I can imagine that.
11:44Before it was discovered that rubber did the better job.
11:47Can we get me some breadcrumbs to erase that answer and let me pick rubber erasers, please?
11:52Remy, you're up next and Paul's at the home of the mighty Bolton Wanderers.
11:59Built in 1997, the tough sheet.
12:03Careful how you say that, friends.
12:04Community Stadium is home of the mighty Bolton Wanderers Football Club.
12:09As one of the 12 founding members of the Football League created in 1888,
12:13Bolton Wanderers are true football pioneers.
12:16They've lifted the FA Cup four times and have seen a long line of world-class players grace this pitch.
12:24Come on, lads, what was all that about?
12:26It's Vernon K, you know what he's gonna do?
12:28He's the danger man!
12:30Pick him up!
12:31Come on!
12:34But how did Bolton Wanderers get their name?
12:38Regularly moving their ground?
12:40Winning in Europe?
12:41Or originally, they were based in central Manchester?
12:45Well, which one is it?
12:47Oh!
12:52Is Paul all right?
12:54Can we just check he's all right?
12:55Yeah, he's all right. Thank you. Thank you.
12:58All right.
12:58What do you think, Remy?
12:59How did Bolton Wanderers get their name?
13:02How did Bolton Wanderers get their name?
13:02Is it because they were regularly moving their ground?
13:05The Wanderers.
13:06Winning in Europe?
13:07The Wanderers.
13:08Or originally based in Manchester, so they did a wander?
13:12I don't think winning in Europe is the answer.
13:17Regularly moving their ground.
13:20Is this your team, by the way?
13:22It is my team.
13:23What's your earliest memory of Bolton Wanderers?
13:26All my uncles go in on a regular basis, Saturday, to the Wanderers.
13:30Go in the match.
13:31Where was that?
13:32In Bolton.
13:33Yeah, okay.
13:34I tried.
13:36I tried.
13:36Well done.
13:37I think you did well.
13:40I'm going to go with regularly moving their ground.
13:45Because why would Bolton Wanderers have been in Manchester?
13:52Like, you seem like your own town.
13:54Like, you seem like you've always, you know, been an original.
13:57Is it the right answer?
14:00Yeah!
14:01You got a point!
14:03You got a right!
14:04Yes, well done.
14:05Yeah, it's true.
14:06The Bolton Wanderers didn't have a regular ground when they were formed.
14:09They would move from one field to another around the town
14:11until they had a regular stadium.
14:14Amazing.
14:14There you go.
14:15All right, gang.
14:16Time for a bonus question.
14:17So this one is for every single one of you.
14:19You need your whiteboards.
14:20Here is your question.
14:24Bolton won the 1923 FA Cup Final,
14:28the first to be held at Wembley,
14:30which is known by what nickname?
14:33Is it the Buzzing Bee Final,
14:36because a swarm of bees delayed kick-off for an hour?
14:40Is it the Black Sheep Final,
14:42because both teams were thought of as outsiders?
14:45Or the White Horse Final,
14:47because a policeman on a white horse controlled the large crowd?
14:53Erm...
14:53The 1923 FA Cup Final.
14:57The team Bolton were playing was West Ham United.
15:00West Ham.
15:01Mm.
15:02All right, let's see what you put.
15:03Annika, you've gone for the White Horse.
15:05Shane, you've gone for the Black Sheep.
15:08Remy, you've gone for the White Horse.
15:10Well, I can tell you that the answer is...
15:13The White Horse.
15:15Yes!
15:15Yes!
15:16It's one of the most iconic FA Cup Final photographs of all time.
15:201923, some of the crowd entered the playing area
15:24and they were controlled by a policeman on a white horse.
15:27So, congrats, Annika and Remy.
15:29Well done, you both get a point.
15:31Let's see how that's affected the scores after that round.
15:35It's Wednesday, everyone.
15:37And Remy has entered the chat.
15:39Yes!
15:40Yes!
15:41Yes!
15:42Yes!
15:43Amazing.
15:43Neck and neck with Annika Rice.
15:45Shane, what's going on?
15:46I don't know.
15:46I'm just... I need to get it back.
15:48You do have history so far on the show of coming back from behind.
15:51Yes.
15:52Right, it's time to take a break from our tour.
15:54We're going to hear some lingo from proper Bolton folk.
15:56All you have to do is tell me what you think they mean.
16:00We're going to hear three clips.
16:01The sooner you get it, the more points you score.
16:04So, Annika, you're up first.
16:06Here is Joanne, a right proper Northern lass.
16:10Hi, Annika.
16:12I think most people are jiggered at least once a week.
16:16Jiggered is the word you're trying to figure out.
16:19Immediately, I want to say knackered.
16:21Right.
16:22And even if it doesn't mean that, I'm going to adopt that word.
16:25It's good.
16:25Because I'm feeling quite jiggered right now.
16:27Yeah, yeah, yeah.
16:28What would you like to do?
16:29Would you like the three points now and go for it with knackered?
16:31Yeah, yeah.
16:32All right, OK, we're going to stick with knackered.
16:33Joanne, what does jiggered mean, please?
16:37If something is jiggered, it's worn out.
16:40Oh, we'll give you that!
16:41Yes!
16:42We'll give you that!
16:43All right, yeah, tired.
16:45Fatigued.
16:46Well done.
16:46Now, that's Joanne.
16:47Joanne was in the year below me at school.
16:49Oh, shut up!
16:50I'm serious.
16:51And I used to write love letters to Joanne.
16:55Did she get jiggered of that in the year?
16:56Yeah!
16:58Right, Shane, it's your turn.
17:00And here is my former English teacher, Miss Kimberlin, with your phrase.
17:06Hello, Shane.
17:07Do you know, every time I'm off the bus, there's always someone mithering me.
17:12What does mithering mean?
17:15So it seems like she's given off about it, so I wonder, is it like, like we would say
17:19here, like bending your ear?
17:20I'm not sure though, so I think I'd rather have one more clue.
17:23All right, Miss Kimberlin, give us another clue, please.
17:26Instead of just getting on with washing the pots, you spent ten minutes mithering me about
17:32the best way to do it.
17:34It's like talking in your ear.
17:35Bothering you, annoying you, just giving it all that.
17:38Miss Kimberlin, please, is it right?
17:41Mithering someone means pestering them.
17:44Yes!
17:45Well done, Shane.
17:46Well done.
17:47Thank you, Lorraine, or Miss Kimberlin, as she'll always be known to me.
17:50Right, Remy, it's your turn.
17:52And to deliver this clip is one of my former dearest friends from school.
17:57This is Christopher Walton, who is probably the most intelligent man I know.
18:02Chris, over to you, big guy.
18:04Hi, Remy.
18:05Don't know about you, but I'm always proper clempt in the morning.
18:10Clempt.
18:11Proper clempt.
18:12Proper clempt.
18:13Proper clempt.
18:14I know what proper means.
18:16It's giving me, like, pumped, because I feel like you have to be pumped, you know.
18:20Psyched.
18:21You know, for life.
18:23All right.
18:23You can go for that, for three points, or you can have another clip for two.
18:27I'll take another clip.
18:28We're going to take another clip.
18:29All right, Chris, go on.
18:30My best mates are always playing sports.
18:33That's probably why he's so clempt all the time.
18:36Tight is coming to me, for some reason.
18:39Like, a bit tight.
18:40Like, football, you need to stretch.
18:42You don't want to be too tight in the morning.
18:45But I'm going to go for clip number three.
18:48Right.
18:49Go on, Chris.
18:50She missed lunch today and were proper clempt by the time she got home.
18:55Starving.
18:56So, you're going to go a bit peckish, bit hungry?
18:58Yeah, yeah.
18:59All right.
18:59Let's see.
19:00Chris, is she right?
19:02If you're clempt, you're starving.
19:05Yay!
19:07Yes!
19:08Well done, Remy.
19:10Thank you, Christopher.
19:11Speak to you soon, my friend.
19:12That's the end of round three.
19:14Let's take a look at the scores.
19:17Wow, look at that.
19:18Shane lagging behind with three points.
19:20Remy, well done.
19:21Second place with four.
19:22But in the lead, Annika Rice with six.
19:24Right, let's get back on tour.
19:27Over to Paul.
19:31Right in the heart of Bolton, love is in the air.
19:34Quite literally.
19:36As while most people come to the town hall clock tower for weddings,
19:40council meetings or even a quick selfie on the steps,
19:43a pair of real lovebirds have made their home up top
19:47in their very own penthouse suite.
19:50And when I say lovebirds, I literally mean birds who are in love.
19:56Bolton Town Hall is home to a special pair of peregrine falcons
20:00who have been returning to their nest overlooking the town
20:04for the past few years.
20:06Rather romantically, peregrine falcons mate for life.
20:10But would you believe they've been caught having affairs?
20:14Naughty.
20:15Naughty.
20:18Naughty.
20:19Naughty.
20:19Naughty.
20:19So, Annika.
20:21Would you believe peregrine falcons have been caught having affairs?
20:27I don't know, they can travel very fast,
20:30so they've got options to whizz off, haven't they?
20:32No-one would ever know.
20:33Get back without anyone realising.
20:35Just popping out for a few little scraps.
20:40Up to Whitby.
20:43Well, I feel quite old-fashioned about it.
20:46I would like to think they're life partners,
20:48so they don't have affairs.
20:50So you don't believe it?
20:51No.
20:52All right, let's have a look.
20:54Oh, you should have believed it, yes.
20:56DNA studies show that even though they mate for life,
21:00there are occasional extra pair copulations.
21:04Even the fastest bird alive sometimes has a fling.
21:07Right, Shane, it's your turn,
21:09and Paul is stepping into the ring
21:11at the Amir Khan Boxing Academy.
21:13Let's hope this one is a knockout.
21:20Here in Bolton, you don't have to look far
21:22to find a true hometown hero.
21:25It's a town that punches well above its weight.
21:27Take Olympic boxer Amir Khan,
21:30he was born and raised right here
21:32and first stepped into the ring at the age of eight.
21:38At 17 years old, Amir became Britain's
21:41youngest ever boxing medallist,
21:43winning silver at the 2004 Athens Games
21:47in the lightweight boxing category.
21:49Overnight, he went from local lad to national superstar,
21:53all before he could legally get his first mortgage.
21:58But would you believe Amir Khan always gives an autograph
22:02when asked?
22:15Yeah, he seems very affable on shows I've seen him on.
22:23Yeah, nice guy.
22:23He seems very, like, very friendly and sociable and stuff.
22:27But then autographs are a bit old school.
22:29Like, so really if he says that,
22:30how many autographs have you been asked for?
22:32Selfies a lot.
22:33Mmm.
22:33But you're maybe, you know,
22:35he's maybe doing half a dozen autographs a year,
22:37so it's not that much of a commitment.
22:40So I'm going to say, yeah,
22:42I'm going to say Amir Khan always gives an autograph when he's asked.
22:46All right, let's take a look.
22:51You're having a shocker.
22:52My head's gone.
22:53He's cheekered!
22:54Oh!
22:55There she is!
22:56She's Alicca Rice, everyone!
22:58The national treasure!
22:59Shut up!
23:00So good!
23:01So good!
23:02It was actually Muhammad Ali who made and kept that promise,
23:06never to refuse an autograph,
23:08because he was refused an autograph in his early days
23:12from his idol, Sugar Ray Robinson.
23:14I've actually, I've never turned down a request for an autograph.
23:17I've never been asked to get one,
23:18but I've never, ever turned one down.
23:20Time now for our final stop with Paul,
23:22and he really does take this one in his stride.
23:29When it comes to being a sporty town,
23:32Bolton's always been ahead of the pack,
23:34and one local cobbler really ran away with it.
23:37Back in 1895, a young Joseph William Foster
23:41began hand-making running shoes in his Bolton workshop,
23:45adding spikes not for fashion, but for speed.
23:49His small business soon had athletes sprinting
23:52around the world in Bolton-made shoes.
23:54Years later, his grandsons gave the brand
23:57a snappier name, Reebok,
23:59and suddenly a family firm from Bolton
24:02was known all over the world.
24:05The shoes have been worn by Olympic champions,
24:08movie icons and pop stars alike.
24:11Names like Victoria Beckham, Shaquille O'Neal,
24:14Ariana Grande, and Venus Williams.
24:17All big shoes to fill.
24:19Whether chasing gold or a chart-topping hit,
24:22millions have taken their steps in a story
24:25that began right here in Bolton.
24:30Would you believe Reebok shoes were inspired by chickens
24:33that Joseph William Foster observed running around?
24:38Maybe they were crossing a road?
24:44All right, Paul, you go and sit down and take a rest, my friend.
24:47Remy, here's your question.
24:49Would you believe Reebok shoes were inspired by chickens
24:52that founder Joseph William Foster observed running around?
24:56So, like, that running, I believe you must have saw it,
25:01was looking down and watching the chickens run
25:04and he was like, well, it got from there to there really quickly
25:07because you're running after chickens and they're really fast.
25:09If you're trying to catch a chicken, it's quite fast.
25:11You know what I mean?
25:12So he's probably wondering, wow, why can't I catch this chicken?
25:16Well, it's probably because they've got, like, claws.
25:18And if I can replicate that, we're moving, you know?
25:21So I'm going to go with yes.
25:24So you believe it?
25:25I believe it.
25:26All right, let's take a look.
25:29You shouldn't have believed it.
25:31You should not have believed it.
25:34Remy.
25:35It made sense in my head.
25:36Your logic was great.
25:37It made sense in my head.
25:38Your logic was absolutely fantastic.
25:40Reebok shoes were invented in Bolton.
25:44However, New Balance trainers were actually inspired by chickens,
25:48by the way their three clawed feet helped them balance.
25:51So, right story.
25:52Your right story.
25:53Wrong brand.
25:54Wrong brand, yeah.
25:55Different brand.
25:56There you go.
25:57And that is the end of that round.
25:58So, you know what we've got to do?
25:59We've got to look at the scores.
26:02Remy, still on four.
26:04Shane, still on three.
26:05Annika with six points.
26:07Well done, Annika.
26:08Yes.
26:09Yes.
26:09The scores could all change in this final quick-fire round.
26:12Remember, all you've got to do is fill in the blanks in the word that you see up on the
26:15screen.
26:16All the questions are about Bolton.
26:18All right, here we go.
26:18Good luck.
26:20Motor Racing City twinned with Bolton.
26:25Annika.
26:26Le Mans.
26:26Yes!
26:27Well done.
26:29Bolton comedy actress.
26:33Chen.
26:34Diane Morgan.
26:35Diane Morgan.
26:37Diane Morgan.
26:37Yes, well done.
26:38Perfect.
26:38Next up.
26:40Bolton Man rescued over 700 survivors from...
26:46Remy.
26:47The Titanic.
26:47Yes!
26:48Yes!
26:49Yeah, it was Arthur Rostron.
26:50He was the captain of the Carpathia that picked up 700 survivors from the Titanic.
26:55Wow.
26:56Here's your next one.
26:58Popular local dish.
27:00Remy.
27:02Liquor...
27:02No.
27:06Not licorice.
27:08You're frozen out.
27:10Annika.
27:11Lancashire hotpot.
27:12Yes!
27:12Well done.
27:14Oh, that's it as well.
27:16Time's up and that's the end of the round.
27:19Let's take a look at the final scores.
27:21I think you know what's coming, gang.
27:24Shane, you've got four points.
27:26Remy, you've got five.
27:27But Annika is once again today's winner with eight points.
27:32Well done, Annika.
27:35And Annika, that means you've won the very much sought after postcard from Paul.
27:39Your second of the week and it's only Wednesday.
27:42Congratulations.
27:43But he also sent you a little gift from Bolton Town Hall.
27:46A peregrine falcon.
27:48Oh.
27:48Bravo.
27:49Well done you.
27:50So with three shows complete, let's take a look at who's on top of the leaderboard.
27:54Annika has got eight points.
27:56Shane has got six points.
27:58Remy, you've got four points.
27:59And with two days remaining, it's still all to play for.
28:03Annika is not running away with it just yet.
28:06Well that's it for today.
28:07Join us on our travels next time when we might be in your neck of the woods.
28:11We'll see you then.
28:34We'll see you then.
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