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00:11Hi everyone and welcome to Do You Know Your Place?
00:13Now it's pretty obvious we do live in a beautiful country but how much do we actually know about it?
00:19We'll soon find out as our trusty guide Paul takes us on a whistle-stop tour of another fabulous UK
00:25location.
00:26It's Thursday today so let's sort the right stuff from the right old guff on Do You Know Your Place?
00:37First up we have an EastEnders actor who's conquered Albert Square, dazzled on the stage darling.
00:45It's the brilliant Nathan Garnatra everyone.
00:50Hoping to be singing from the same hymn sheet as our unreliable tour guide, it's the Reverend Kate Botley.
00:59He was part of the England Rugby Sevens squad that travelled the world but how well does he know his
01:05local circuit?
01:05It's Alex Gray.
01:10Right now before we crack on let's take a look at the weekly lead board.
01:14Kate, Reverend Kate, a light shines upon thee at the top of the podium with nine points.
01:20Nathan you've got five. Alex, four points.
01:24It ain't over till it's over, Bernard.
01:26Very good. Very good, yes.
01:28Well today we're going to be sorting fact from fiction in...
01:31Good old Brizzle!
01:33Hey!
01:34Bristol! Love it!
01:36Right, let's kick things off by putting your geography skills to the test.
01:40Earlier each of you placed a pin on the map as to where you think Bristol is located.
01:46So let's take a look at the actual geographical location of Bristol.
01:50There it is.
01:52Let's find out where you think Bristol is located.
01:55Ooh!
01:57I'm in Bristol there.
01:58Nithin, you are furthest away today.
02:00Your pin landed 88 miles away near the village of Lower Ashton in Devon.
02:05More specifically, you landed on the Manor Inn.
02:08And here are some of their lovely staff at the Manor Inn.
02:12Much closer, landing in Portishead, just 11 miles away.
02:15That's you Kate.
02:15Not bad.
02:16However, would you look at this.
02:19He did say it's not over until...
02:21You drop your pin on Hotwell Road, right there in Bristol,
02:24just two miles from the city centre.
02:26Well done, Alex.
02:27Good stuff, it means the first point is yours.
02:29That's what we like.
02:30That's what we like.
02:31Well done.
02:33All right, so let's go over to Paul now,
02:35who's going to kick off his tour of the mighty city of Bristol.
02:38Paul, over to you, big fella.
02:43All right, me babba.
02:45Welcome to Bristol.
02:47Home to more than 470,000 proud Bristolians
02:51and famous for Blackbeard, Banksy murals
02:54and for giving us plenty of belly laughs
02:56thanks to its homegrown selection of comedians.
03:00And when it comes to landmarks,
03:01they don't get much more iconic than this.
03:06The Clifton's suspension bridge,
03:08designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel,
03:10spans the Avon Gorge in Bristol.
03:13One of Britain's greatest ever engineers, Brunel,
03:16built ships, tunnels and railways.
03:19He dreamed up this masterpiece back in the 1830s,
03:22but sadly never got to see it completed in his lifetime
03:25as it opened in 1864,
03:27five years after he passed away.
03:29But would you believe the world's first recognised bungee jump
03:33was from the Clifton's suspension bridge in 1979 on April Fool's Day?
03:39What would you?
03:43Right, Nithid, do you believe the world's first recognised bungee jump
03:49was from the Clifton's suspension bridge in 1979 on April Fool's Day?
03:55Oh, you see?
03:57I don't know where bungee jumping started.
03:59I thought it started in America.
04:03I have a soft spot for Bristol,
04:05and I think, yeah, they would have done it.
04:08I believe it.
04:09Let's see the answer.
04:12Yes!
04:13You were right to believe!
04:14Bristol!
04:15You were right to believe.
04:17Well done, Nithid.
04:17Yes, the stunt was performed by members
04:19of the Oxford University's Dangerous Sports Club.
04:22The first jumper did this in top hat and tails
04:25with a champagne bottle in his hand.
04:28Reverend Kate, Paul is stepping aboard the ground-breaking SS Great Britain,
04:32the iron ship that changed sea travel forever.
04:35I think he's looking at the wrong one, though.
04:41I mean, yeah, it's good, but I wish he was bigger.
04:44You can't really see any detail.
04:48Ah!
04:51Engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel makes another appearance
04:54on our Bristol tour right here in this historic dogyard,
04:58as it's home to another one of his brilliant creations,
05:02the SS Great Britain.
05:04As the first ocean-going ship built of iron
05:07and the first to be driven by a screw propeller,
05:10it completely revolutionised travel.
05:13After a lifetime of adventures and story in every port,
05:17the boat, not me, that is, the SS Great Britain made
05:21a heroic return to Bristol in 1970.
05:25Today, it's fully restored
05:26and one of the city's most loved attractions,
05:29and a real symbol of Brunel's genius.
05:32But would you believe the phrase ship-shape and Bristol fashion
05:36was coined when Brunel saw the ship for the first time?
05:40Or would you?
05:47Would you believe, Kate, that the phrase ship-shape and Bristol fashion
05:51was coined when Isambard Kingdom Brunel saw the ship for the very first time?
05:58I mean, it's a very impressive ship, right?
06:01And...
06:02You've got your arm...
06:03You do this to me...
06:03I'm sorry.
06:05...every round.
06:05I'm sorry.
06:06It gives me a look like it knows what the answer is.
06:08Mind games, yeah, yeah.
06:09No, it's just my thinking face.
06:12It's very much like you're trying to fool me face.
06:15I'm going to say I don't believe it.
06:18You don't believe it?
06:19No.
06:19All right.
06:19She doesn't believe it.
06:21Yes, you were right.
06:23You were right not to believe.
06:25The phrase actually came about in the 19th century
06:27because of Bristol's very strict standards for ship-building.
06:32Yeah, quality had to be of the highest order,
06:35with Bristol's variable tides.
06:38Fair enough.
06:39Right, Alex, you're next.
06:40Paul is heading to the harbour next
06:42to explore the pirate tales
06:44of Bristol's most notorious and most bearded export.
06:51I love taking a good walking tour,
06:54almost as much as I love giving one.
06:56And here in Bristol you'll find several
06:59dedicated to the city's most notorious bad boy,
07:03the pirate Blackbeard.
07:05Known to his mates as plain old Edward Teach,
07:08he's believed to have been born right here.
07:12He may not have been as violent as legends,
07:15just it turns out he relied more on his ferocious appearance
07:19rather than actual fighting,
07:21by tying burning tapers into his beard
07:23and waxing it up over his ears to look more monstrous.
07:27I mean, it's nice that he found a gluck and really committed to it.
07:31But would you believe, despite his fearsome reputation,
07:35Blackbeard got seasick?
07:37Well, would you?
07:43Wow.
07:45Right, Alex.
07:46Would you believe that despite his fearsome reputation,
07:49Blackbeard actually got seasick?
07:52One of the most notorious pirates of all time gets seasick.
07:56Wow.
07:57You can't believe that, surely.
07:59And maybe you couldn't tell the difference between being hungover
08:01and being seasick.
08:02They did like a rum, didn't they?
08:04Yeah.
08:04So I'm going to say...
08:07I do believe it.
08:08You do believe it?
08:09I do believe it.
08:10You do believe it.
08:11Right, well.
08:12Let's take a look.
08:13Alex believes.
08:14Is he right to believe?
08:16Oh!
08:16Oh!
08:17No.
08:19Blackbeard was, however, only a pirate for two years.
08:23The celebrated Admiral Horatio Nelson
08:26actually did suffer from seasickness throughout his entire life
08:30and his naval career.
08:32Wow.
08:32There you go. Interesting stuff.
08:34Right, at the end of that round, let's take a look at the scores.
08:38Oh, that's nice.
08:39Alex, you've got one point because you were nearest to Bristol on the map.
08:43Kate, you just scored a point, as have you.
08:45Nithin'.
08:46So, well done.
08:47Right, it's time for round two.
08:48Paul now is celebrating Bristol's Hollywood royalty.
08:55Bristol is bursting with acting talent.
08:57Game of Thrones fan favourite Maisie Williams was born right here.
09:01As was Tom Hollander.
09:03And the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School has produced some legends
09:07like Olivia Colman, a national treasure,
09:10and Sir Daniel Day-Lewis.
09:13Ho, ho, ho, ho, ho, ho.
09:17And right here is one of the defining figures of Hollywood's golden age,
09:20the great Cary Grant.
09:24Born here in Bristol, Cary starred in countless classics,
09:28including North by North West and To Catch a Thief.
09:32Cary Grant was asked to play James Bond.
09:35But what was one of the reasons he gave for reportedly turning down the role?
09:40He thought he was too old.
09:43He wanted to play a villain.
09:45Or he thought Bond was a little too promiscuous.
09:49Well, which one is it, Moneypenny?
09:56Nithin, what do you think?
09:58What was one of the reasons Cary Grant reportedly gave
10:00for turning down the role of James Bond?
10:03Is it because he felt too old?
10:05He wanted to play a villain?
10:07Or he thought Bond was too promiscuous?
10:10Well, I think he was too old at the time.
10:13Erm...
10:14Yeah, but actors are really vain.
10:15I mean, they're not going to say they're too old for a role, are they?
10:17But they're also...
10:18Well, no.
10:19No, I can still play 30.
10:22You keep telling yourself that.
10:23Yeah, I can still play 30.
10:24I'm thinking he was too old.
10:27The promiscuous thing is a plausible thing
10:29because he comes from that era where it was all very clean cut.
10:34I'm going to try that one.
10:35All right.
10:36He thought Bond was too promiscuous.
10:39You had it right at the very start.
10:42He was too old, yeah.
10:42Cary Grant was 58 at the time.
10:45Roger Moore was the oldest Bond.
10:47He was 57 when he appeared in A View to a Kill.
10:49Three actresses who played Miss Moneypenny
10:51all trained at Bristol's Old Vic Theatre School.
10:55Caroline Bliss, Samantha Bond and Naomi Harris.
10:58Wow.
10:59There you go.
10:59Good fact.
11:00Good evening, sir.
11:01Right, next up, Paul is going back to the 80s
11:04with a supersonic icon that once outran the rest of the world.
11:12Ah, the 80s were mobile phones with the size of a fridge.
11:16Buy high, sell low.
11:18Haircuts were all party in the back, business in the front,
11:21and we could go supersonic from Britain to America in one of these.
11:27No ordinary plane, Concorde was a joint effort between Britain and France
11:32that brought luxury, speed and serious style to the skies.
11:37And capable of flying more than twice the speed of sound,
11:40it could travel from New York to London in under three hours.
11:44Only 20 Concordes were ever built, and after nearly three decades of service,
11:49the last commercial flight touched down at London Heathrow in 2003.
11:54And this retired Concorde at the Aerospace Bristol Museum stands proudly
12:00as a reminder of when we really could travel in comfort, class and 80s spandex.
12:06But which of the following is not true about Concorde?
12:11There have been more US astronauts than Concorde pilots,
12:14it was faster than a rifle bullet,
12:17or it grew by up to 10 inches in the air.
12:22Well, which one is it?
12:28So, Kate, here's your question.
12:31Which of the following is not true about Concorde?
12:34There are more US astronauts than Concorde pilots.
12:38It was faster than a rifle bullet.
12:41It grew by up to 10 inches in the air.
12:45Any of those could be true, right?
12:47I think there's been loads of US astronauts.
12:50There have only been 20 Concordes ever made, he said in that clip.
12:53So I think that's true.
12:55Er, rifle bullet.
12:57That's fast.
12:59It's fast, right?
13:00Yeah.
13:00But is it faster than the speed of sound?
13:03Expansion and contraction, things expand in heat and contracting cold, right?
13:07Yep.
13:08So, and it must be cold up there.
13:10Hmm, I don't know. Does the plane not heat up?
13:12Oh, yeah.
13:13It's going supersonic, remember?
13:15Yeah.
13:15Friction must be through the roof.
13:17I'm going to 10 inches.
13:19I think it expands, but I don't think it expands that much.
13:22Or it expands more.
13:23Let's see the answer.
13:25Oh!
13:27Concorde travelled at up to 1,350 miles per hour, but rifle bullets can travel over 2,700 miles per
13:36hour.
13:36Fair enough.
13:37Concorde did in fact expand by up to 10 inches in the air due to the intense heat generated during
13:43supersonic flight.
13:44You were right about that, Alex.
13:46You were right.
13:46Well done, Alex.
13:47There were 262 Concorde pilots in total across British Airways and Air France.
13:52To date, there have been 370 NASA pilots.
13:57Hmm.
13:57There you go.
13:58Right, Paul is once again diving into Bristol's sweet side.
14:02Very tasty, Paul.
14:03What have you got?
14:07J.S. Fry & Sons first started making chocolate right here in Bristol way back in 1761.
14:14And they didn't just make sweet treats as they also made history.
14:18In 1847, they did something that changed the world forever.
14:22They created what's believed to be the first mass-produced solid chocolate bar.
14:28You're welcome, planet Earth.
14:31The bar was called Chocolat Delicieux à Manger.
14:35And it was revolutionary because before that, chocolate was, and get ready to lift your chocolate-eating mouths off the
14:42ground, usually drunk, not eaten.
14:46After merging with Cadbury in 1919, Fry's products gained worldwide success.
14:52In fact, Fry's chocolate cream is still going strong today.
14:55But would you believe the world's first hollow chocolate Easter egg was made right here in Bristol?
15:03Well, would you?
15:07Alex, it's your turn. Here's your question.
15:10Would you believe the world's first hollow chocolate Easter egg was made in Bristol?
15:16See, before that video, chocolate wouldn't have been something I would have thought about when I think about Bristol.
15:22I would have thought of Belgian chocolate.
15:26Swiss do chocolates.
15:28I'm going to say I do believe.
15:29In the hollow Easter egg race, I think Bristol won it.
15:32All right. Well, you do believe.
15:34Mm.
15:34Is he right?
15:37Yes!
15:38Come on, Bristol.
15:39Well done.
15:39Alex has got a point.
15:40Well done.
15:41Yes.
15:41Now, before Fry's manufactured the hollow chocolate egg in 1873, people across Europe gave each other chocolate eggs that were
15:49small and solid all the way through.
15:52Right, it's no time for a bonus question, so please grab your white boards.
15:58As well as the first chocolate Easter egg, 1873 is widely considered the birth year of which of these clothing
16:06items?
16:08Is it blue jeans?
16:11The bikini?
16:13Or the beanie hat?
16:16Oh.
16:17Ooh.
16:18What are you thinking, Alex?
16:20I am thinking of what materials were able to be used in 1873.
16:26I really have no idea.
16:26Did they have denim?
16:30Gone for it.
16:31I've gone for it.
16:32Lovely.
16:32Mithin, what's your answer?
16:33OK, I've changed my answer.
16:35I've gone from the beanie hat.
16:37Yeah?
16:38And I convinced myself...
16:40Denim jeans.
16:41All right.
16:41I think they find them down mine still in the collector's items.
16:44I think it's blue jeans.
16:45Blue jeans.
16:46Mm.
16:47Alex?
16:47Well, I was just hopeful for the people of 1873 that they might have discovered the bikini.
16:52The answer is...
16:54Blue jeans.
16:55Oh, blue jeans.
16:55It's blue jeans.
16:56Yes, the iconic blue jeans were patented by Levi Strauss and Jacob Davies in 1873.
17:03The bikini was introduced by French designer Louis Rayard in 1946.
17:08Ah.
17:08Beanie hats have been traced as far back as 12th century Wales.
17:13There you go.
17:14Right, that's the end of their own, so let's take a look at the scores.
17:18No!
17:18Oh, look at that!
17:20Look at that!
17:22It's two points apiece.
17:23Well done.
17:24Now we're going to take a little bit of a break.
17:25Paul's putting his feet up.
17:26He's having a rest from all that tour guiding.
17:28It's pretty exhausting stuff.
17:29We're going to play Do You Know This Face.
17:31We're going to show you a series of faces.
17:34Famous Bristolians.
17:35They were either born or raised in Bristol.
17:38Let's see if we can get some points on this one.
17:39Here's your first slice of someone who was born or raised in Bristol.
17:52Ah.
17:53Who's this?
17:58One more.
18:00Come on.
18:01Alex?
18:02Maya Jama?
18:03Yes!
18:04Well done.
18:05It is.
18:06Maya Jama, well done.
18:07TV presenter of Love Island at the moment, Maya Jama.
18:11Right, next up.
18:12Who's this?
18:15Hmm.
18:18Oh.
18:22Kate?
18:23Is that James May?
18:24It is James May.
18:25She's quick.
18:26She's so quick.
18:27It is James May.
18:28Right, next up.
18:29Who is this?
18:30The last one.
18:31You'll get this straight away after this.
18:36Nithin?
18:37Stephen Merchant.
18:38It is Stephen Merchant.
18:39Yes.
18:40I know.
18:40Yes.
18:41Of course it is.
18:43I know.
18:44Awful.
18:45So, at the end of round three, let's take a look at the scores.
18:50Ooh!
18:53It's good.
18:54It's all.
18:54It's good.
18:55You've all got three points.
18:57We like it.
18:58Let's go back to Paul now.
18:59He's rested.
19:00He's recovered.
19:00He's also uncovering Bristol's link to a galaxy far, far away.
19:08Speaking of a galaxy far, far away, Bristolian bodybuilder Dave Prowse
19:13played the big baddie of the Star Wars movies, Darth Vader, in the original film trilogy.
19:18He embodied the physical presence of one of cinema's best known villains.
19:23But all of Dave's speaking parts were removed and later replaced with the legendary voice
19:29and screen actor, James Earl Jones.
19:32I mean, imagine having someone else speak your lines.
19:35Ha!
19:35Not on my watch, pal.
19:40Standing at six feet six, Dave Prowse had a formidable screen presence.
19:44As well as playing a dark ward of the Sith in the Star Wars saga, he was also a hero
19:50in
19:50real life because Prowse became the Green Cross Code Man, teaching kids of the 80s how
19:56to safely stop, look and listen before crossing the road.
20:02But would you believe that Bristol has a robotic lollipop man named Dave in tribute to Dave Prowse?
20:09Well, would you?
20:15He's having a lot of fun at work, that lad, isn't he?
20:18Yeah.
20:19Yeah, he really is embracing his role.
20:22Would you believe that Bristol has a robotic lollipop man named Dave in tribute to Dave Prowse?
20:30Nothing.
20:31I mean, it's completely plausible.
20:33I mean, the green lights are robotic, so to speak.
20:36You have those things as well that deliver your shopping these days.
20:39But also, is it an insurance risk?
20:42Yeah.
20:43I don't know.
20:44I think yes.
20:45I think David Prowse was a good guy.
20:48I think yes.
20:49Are we right to believe it?
20:52Oh!
20:53I wished it was true.
20:54I really wished it was true as well.
20:56I think he deserves one now.
20:57Singapore, however, did try a robotic crossing assistant in 2021, but it didn't catch on.
21:05Right, Kate, it's your turn, actually.
21:06Next up, Paul is celebrating Bristol's claymation superstars.
21:10Ah!
21:15Right here in Bristol, two school friends, Peter Lord and David Sproxton, started making
21:20stop-motion films back in the 70s.
21:22They called their company Aardman, and their first big star was Morph, a small, poseable
21:29clayfella who lived on TV artist Tony Hart's desk and somehow managed to steal the show every time.
21:35But when animator Nick Park joined Aardman in the 80s, the team went from Morph to mega-hits,
21:43as Aardman became home to some of the biggest clay characters on TV and on film, from Wallace
21:49and Gromit and Shaun the Sheep to Chicken Run, which is the highest-grossing stop-motion film of all time.
21:57But you're still my favourite Morph.
22:00Wallace loves his inventions, and one of the most famous ones tips him out of bed in the morning.
22:06But would you believe that a similar alarm clock bed was invented over a century ago?
22:12What do you think, lads? Do you believe it?
22:18Kate, would you believe that a similar alarm clock bed to the one in Wallace and Gromit was invented over
22:24a century ago?
22:27We're talking about the bed that tips him out of bed, dresses him, makes his brew, his breakfast, all that
22:33kind of stuff.
22:33Yeah. Pretty impressive.
22:35Brilliant. I mean, you want to believe that's true, right?
22:38Love Wallace and Gromit, and sounds like something like Leonardo da Vinci would invent, right?
22:42So I want to believe it's true. I am believing that with all my heart.
22:47All right, we're going to believe that. We're locking it in. We're believing.
22:50Yes!
22:52If you believe, you receive. Excellent stuff. You've received a point.
22:57Alarm clock beds were exhibited at the Great Exhibition in 1851,
23:02including a silent design that tipped the sleeper onto the floor at a predetermined hour.
23:09Love that.
23:09Just like one of Wallace's gadgets.
23:11That is superb.
23:13All right, Alex, it's your turn.
23:14And this time, Paul is out exploring the colourful houses inspired by a local's bold paint job.
23:24You can't talk about Bristol's creative side without mentioning its most mysterious export, Banksy.
23:31Starting out here in the early 90s, tagging walls with the dry bread Z crew.
23:37Banksy later switched to stencils. Lazy.
23:40A move that took his graffiti from local to global fame.
23:43His artworks have popped up across the globe on ships, walls and houses, and often turning homeowners into accidental art
23:52investors.
23:55Bristol clearly loves its paint as much as its art. And nowhere shows that better than these bright, bold, colourful
24:03houses on Clifton Wood Crescent, a rainbow of colour that's become one of the city's most iconic sights.
24:10The story goes that these colourful houses started taking shape when architect and late mayor of Bristol, George Ferguson, painted
24:18his home red.
24:20A friend then painted theirs blue. And before long, the whole street was absolutely covered in colour.
24:27Seems even back then Bristol knew a thing or two about keeping up with the Joneses in full Technicolour.
24:34But would you believe they were painted black during World War II to avoid being bombed?
24:42Alex, sounds pretty sensible. But would you believe the colourful houses in Bristol were painted black during World War II
24:50to avoid being bombed?
24:53That is something I would believe. I mean, it does seem sensible to do, as you said.
24:58Or would they, you know, keep them colourful out of defiance?
25:01A big ship-building place, that kind of thing. Yeah.
25:05Would be a big target for sure.
25:07I think they're an ingenious lot down there, so I'm going to say I think I believe it.
25:12Alright, we believe it. Do we get a point for believing?
25:16No!
25:17Oh, unlucky.
25:18No, we don't.
25:19Unlucky.
25:20There was, however, a so-called starfish site in Bristol, well, just outside Bristol,
25:27which was designed to look like a burning city, which would confuse the Luftwaffe.
25:32And then it would encourage them to drop their bombs on the burning city.
25:36Clever stuff.
25:37So, at the end of that round, let's take a look at the scores.
25:40Going into the quickfire round.
25:42There's nothing in it.
25:43There's literally nothing in it.
25:43There's nothing in it.
25:45There's one point in it.
25:45Reverend Kate Botley is in the lead with four points, sitting causally behind Alex Anithid.
25:51It's all to play for.
25:53The scores could all change in this final round.
25:56Here is your first question about Bristol.
26:01A classic BBC comedy series filmed in Bristol.
26:07Kate.
26:08Only Fools and Horses.
26:09It is Only Fools and Horses.
26:11She's now two in front.
26:1480s female pop group with Bristol founding members.
26:19Bananarama.
26:20It is Bananarama.
26:21She's now three in front.
26:24Famous writer who got married in Bristol.
26:29Alex.
26:30Agatha Christie.
26:31Yes.
26:32Come on.
26:33Next question.
26:3490s trip-hop band formed in Bristol.
26:41Nitin.
26:41Oh, no.
26:45Oh, you're frozen out.
26:46It's frozen out.
26:47Kate.
26:48Portisette.
26:48Yes, it is Portisette.
26:51That's where you put your pin earlier on in the show.
26:56Alex.
27:01Formula One.
27:01It is Formula One, yes.
27:04Oh, there's the buzzer.
27:06There's the buzzer.
27:07Time's up and that's the end of the round.
27:09Let's take a look at the final scores.
27:13You did it.
27:14Oh!
27:15There she is.
27:16Time I'm back.
27:17Nithin, you've got three.
27:18Alex, you've got five.
27:20Today's winner with seven points is the Reverend Kate Botley again.
27:26Well done, Kate.
27:29Four days in a row.
27:31So, Kate, you get three points for winning today.
27:34Alex, you get two points.
27:36Nithin, you get one point.
27:38Let's put those scores on the weekly leaderboard.
27:41With 12 points sat at the top, the Reverend Alex and Nithin, you've got six points.
27:47So, tomorrow we're going to go into the show to decide second place because she's had a phenomenal week.
27:53Everyone, I think you'll agree.
27:54Reverend Kate, congratulations.
27:56You're the winner of the week with a day to go.
27:59But not only that, for the fourth day in a row, you've won the postcard from Paul.
28:04You've got quite the collection.
28:05And, as a gift from Paul, you've won a little prize.
28:08It's a Bristolian quiz book.
28:10I've never wanted anything more than...
28:13Hey, well, there you go.
28:14That's it for today.
28:15Join us again when, you never know, we might be up your street.
28:18We'll see you then.
28:18Goodbye.
28:19Well done, Kate.
28:20Well done.
28:34We'll see you then.
28:37Bye.
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