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00:31Well, good afternoon. Welcome to the Countdown Studio.
00:33It appears that many, many, many of us are very concerned about being spied on when we're online.
00:39But how many of us are doing something about it?
00:42This is more your territory.
00:44What do you think here?
00:45Recent survey, oh yes, revealed that 71% of Brits believe companies record our data without our consent via our
00:53phones and laptops.
00:55And the same study found that four in ten of those, I love this, with a webcam, cover it up
01:02with a bit of a lusterplast.
01:03So that, just to be sure, just to be sure.
01:06And interestingly, I think this is a surprising thing, that a quarter of the population do not use passwords or
01:13locking devices, codes to get into their devices.
01:16I think that's extraordinary, isn't it?
01:17We've got to be so careful.
01:19The lovely, my lovely employers here sent round a cyber security expert for me to look at all my stuff
01:25and kind of explain to me what the baddies want to do with all your information.
01:28And it's absolutely terrifying when they show you the kind of information they can get out of you.
01:33And how they can use your passwords and how they can go from one site where you might have bought
01:39something once that's got lax security to hacking your bank details.
01:42Hopefully I'm a bit more secure because once they've got one bit of information, you're a bit stuffed.
01:49Absolutely.
01:49But sometimes you're caught unawares.
01:52But I'm a trusting person who believes nobody now.
01:56Good, don't click on anything.
01:57You don't know where it's from.
01:59Absolutely right.
02:00We know where Ray Greenle comes from.
02:02He comes from Leighton Buzzard, a retired management consultant there.
02:05Had a good win yesterday.
02:06How are you feeling?
02:07Comfortable?
02:08A little more comfortable.
02:09Yeah.
02:10Well, you've got your teapot.
02:11But don't relax because there's more to go for.
02:14Now, you're joined by Ian Cadogan, a police constable from Livingston.
02:18Now, you're a pretty athletic sort of bloke because you've attempted the Everest stair climb twice.
02:24Now, I don't quite get this.
02:26Will you kindly explain what the Everest stair climb is?
02:30When it says sort of attempted, that means I didn't finish it.
02:32It's basically running up a staircase for 24 hours.
02:35And if you finish it, you run up the height of Everest and down.
02:39Which is what, 29,000 feet or something?
02:41It ends up, it's just under 40,000 steps up and down.
02:45Where is this staircase?
02:46It's just outside Dresden in southern Germany.
02:49Wow.
02:50And I understand that when we've finished with you, you're taking yourself off to Switzerland.
02:54Yeah.
02:55To do what?
02:56Another stair run.
02:57Amazing.
02:5811,000 steps up a hillside.
03:01And how long does all this take?
03:02Well, that one should take about two hours.
03:04Listen, good luck to you.
03:05Good luck over the weekend as well.
03:08Fantastic.
03:08Fantastic.
03:09Good luck to you both.
03:10Big round of applause for Ray and Ian.
03:18Amazing thing.
03:19Amazing thing.
03:20Over the corner, Susie.
03:22And a broadcaster and presenter.
03:24Sports reporter, too.
03:27Adrian Childs.
03:28Adrian, what about this Everest stair?
03:30Have you come across this?
03:31I haven't.
03:32And I'm very keen to hear more, actually.
03:34I'd like to examine him physiologically.
03:36He must have rock-hard buttocks.
03:39I want to throw cricket balls at them or something.
03:43Sorry to be so intimate, but there must be something special going on there.
03:46If you can run upstairs for that long.
03:48Well, it's his own, Adrian.
03:51But let's turn over to Ray for a second, shall we?
03:54Ray, have a letters game.
03:57Good afternoon, Rachel.
03:58Afternoon, Ray.
03:58Could I start with a consonant, please?
04:00Start with M.
04:02And a vowel.
04:04O.
04:05A consonant.
04:07R.
04:08Vowel.
04:09U.
04:11A consonant.
04:13V.
04:15A vowel.
04:16I.
04:18A consonant.
04:20T.
04:21A vowel.
04:23E.
04:26And a final consonant, please.
04:28Final N.
04:30Stand by.
04:31A vowel.
04:32A vowel.
04:34A vowel.
05:01Ray?
05:03I've had a brain freeze.
05:07Oh, Ian, how about you?
05:09I'll just stick with five then.
05:10Yep, you can relax.
05:12Five, what is your five?
05:14Unite.
05:15Unite.
05:16And over in the corner there?
05:18There's no shame with having a brain freeze,
05:20because we, well, it'd be no surprise if I was struggling,
05:23but even Susie was struggling,
05:24but we got Venturi, Venturi?
05:28Venturi, yes.
05:29You might have found this in a laboratory.
05:30It's a short piece of narrow tube which measures flow rate
05:33or gives a bit of suction.
05:35You're OK.
05:36Thanks for that.
05:38All right, so Ian is blessed with an early lead,
05:41five points, and it's Ian's letters game.
05:43Yes, sir.
05:43Good afternoon, Rachel.
05:45Afternoon, Ian.
05:46Can I have a consonant, please?
05:47You can, indeed.
05:48Start with Z.
05:49And a second one.
05:51T.
05:52And another, please.
05:54R.
05:55Vowel.
05:57A.
05:58Vowel.
05:59U.
06:01Consonant.
06:02K.
06:04Consonant again, please.
06:06V.
06:07Vowel.
06:09I.
06:10And another consonant, please.
06:12And the last one.
06:14S.
06:16Stand by.
06:16As.
06:17Vowel.
06:20C.
06:21C.
06:24C.
06:25C.
06:26C.
06:27C.
06:27C.
06:47Ian.
06:48Just four.
06:49A four and Ray?
06:51I'll stick with the four.
06:54Ian.
06:55Vast.
06:56Now then, Ray.
06:57Salky.
06:59Saki.
07:00How are you spelling that?
07:01S-A-K-I.
07:03Oh, sake, yes.
07:04Oh, right.
07:04It's a tropical American monkey with coarse fur,
07:08or it's another spelling for sake, the Japanese drink.
07:11Yeah.
07:12Adrian, we haven't done much better than that.
07:14We've got vista for five and sars for five.
07:18Can you spell sars with an S as well as a z?
07:20You can, yeah.
07:21Third in this case, but, yeah.
07:23Slim pickings in there.
07:25Nine, four.
07:26Ian on nine, and it's Ray's numbers game.
07:29Ray.
07:30OK.
07:31Could I have one large and five small, please, Rachel?
07:34Can indeed.
07:35Thank you, Ray.
07:36First one of the day.
07:37One from the top and five from the bottoms.
07:39And they are five, eight, two, two, three, and the large one, 25.
07:46And the target, 673.
07:49Six, seven, three.
08:02Bye.
08:04Bye.
08:06Bye.
08:09Bye.
08:16Bye.
08:19Bye.
08:20Bye.
08:21Well, Ray?
08:22Nothing to declare. Can't get close enough.
08:25Ian?
08:26Poor Shuba, you mean nothing as well.
08:29Right. This has got to be a tricky one, then.
08:31Rachel, is it so difficult?
08:33You need to find 27.
08:34So if you say 3 times 8 is 24, 5 minus 2 is 3,
08:41add them together for 27, then you can times it by 25 for 675,
08:46and you have 2 left over for 6, 7, 3.
08:49That's wonderful.
08:49Wonderful.
08:53So Ian on 9, Ray on 4,
08:56as we turn to our first Tea Time teaser, which is Nigel Scanne.
09:00And the clue?
09:00Nigel scanned his skin and spent all morning dabbing it with lotions.
09:21Welcome back.
09:22I left with the clue.
09:23Nigel scanned his skin and spent all morning dabbing it with lotions.
09:27It was cleansing it, apparently cleansing is the answer.
09:32Ian on 9, Ray on 4.
09:35And it's Ian's letters game.
09:37Ian.
09:37Can I have a consonant, please?
09:39Thank you, Ian.
09:40N.
09:41N.
09:41And a second.
09:43T.
09:44And a third, please.
09:46N.
09:47And a fourth.
09:48G.
09:50Vowel, please.
09:51E.
09:52And a second one.
09:54O.
09:55And a third.
09:57E.
09:58Can I have a consonant?
10:00R.
10:01And one last consonant, please.
10:03And one last S.
10:06Stand by.
10:06E.
10:09And a second one.
10:37Ian, a seven.
10:39A seven, right?
10:40Six.
10:42And your six?
10:42Greens.
10:44Now then, Ian.
10:45Regents.
10:46Yeah.
10:48Regents, yes, absolutely fine.
10:49I got tenors for seven, which I was very pleased with,
10:52but then Susie tapped me excitedly on the arm.
10:55She's got a nine.
10:55It's a word I don't recognise and I can't even say.
10:58So over to you.
10:59No, it's named after a German,
11:01and it's quite complicated in its pronunciation,
11:04and it's Röntgen.
11:05So it's R-O-E-N-T-G-E-N.
11:08You can put an S on that for the plural,
11:10and it's a unit of ionising radiation.
11:14Oh, come on.
11:16APPLAUSE
11:21Actually, I've seen that word somewhere.
11:24Yeah.
11:24Yeah, I have seen it.
11:25Physics textbook or something.
11:27I don't know, but I have seen it.
11:29Well, well.
11:30Good.
11:31Good.
11:31Sixteen plays four.
11:33Ian doing well.
11:34Ray, what are we going to do about this?
11:37It's your letters game.
11:38Can I start with a consonant, please?
11:40Thank you, Ray.
11:41N.
11:42And a vowel.
11:44I.
11:45And a consonant.
11:47C.
11:48And a vowel.
11:50A.
11:51And a consonant.
11:53S.
11:54A vowel.
11:55E.
11:57A consonant.
11:58L.
11:59A vowel.
12:02I.
12:03And a final consonant, please.
12:06A final X.
12:09Stand by.
12:10A vowel.
12:12A vowel.
12:14A vowel.
12:18A vowel.
12:20A vowel.
12:25A vowel.
12:26A vowel.
12:27A vowel.
12:27A vowel.
12:27A vowel.
12:27A vowel.
12:27A vowel.
12:41Ray, just a five.
12:44Ian.
12:44A six.
12:46Ray, slain.
12:48And cleans.
12:51Yes.
12:52Absolutely fine.
12:53Great minds.
12:53I got cleans.
12:54You obviously did better.
12:56You got a seven.
12:57Yeah, there is a seven there.
12:59Sanical, which is a plant of the parsley family,
13:03once used in lots of medicinal remedies a long time ago.
13:06Very good.
13:07Thank you for that.
13:0822 to 4.
13:10And Ian, playing strongly, it's your numbers game.
13:13Can I have two from the top and four from the bottom, please?
13:16You can indeed.
13:17Thank you, Ian.
13:17Two large, four little.
13:19And the second numbers game of the day is 6, 4, 8, 9,
13:2675 and 100.
13:28And the target?
13:30Oh, dear.
13:31I'm going to sit down by this.
13:32900.
13:34Oh, 9-0-0.
13:35I'll see you around.
14:05I'll see you around.
14:08Yes, Ian?
14:10Managed 900.
14:12And Ray?
14:12900.
14:13Off we go.
14:14We've just got to do it, I suppose.
14:15Ian?
14:16100 times 9.
14:18And Ray?
14:19Exactly the same one.
14:20I love Adrian was sitting there saying, you think that one's easy?
14:24You think that one's easy?
14:24He made the classic mistake of thinking you need to use all the numbers.
14:28I was trying to get the 9, 8 and the 4, 6 to come back to the 900.
14:33Stupid.
14:36You're not the first, Adrian.
14:38Not the first by a long shot.
14:39Now then, Adrian, you're on.
14:42Oh, right.
14:43What have you got for us today?
14:45Um, I just...
14:48As I've got older, I'm starting to panic that I'm going to miss out on things.
14:51And if I find something that even remotely interests me...
14:54Yeah.
14:55I'll just, as a random act of curiosity, I'll just go and do it.
14:59So there's a stop at the end of one of the tube lines in London.
15:01I've been looking at, since I first went to London,
15:04one of my parents from about 1982, at the end of the Piccadilly line, Cockfosters.
15:09It's a name to conjure with.
15:11Never been.
15:12The other day, I had a couple of hours, I went, no, I'm going to Cockfosters.
15:15And I just went, had a cup of tea and came back.
15:18Another random act of curiosity.
15:19Don't look at me like that.
15:21Another random act of curiosity.
15:22I got a letter from a column I write for, from a woman who happened to be a dermatologist.
15:30And in a big hospital.
15:31So, can I just come and have a look at a clinic?
15:33I've never been in a clinic with a doctor.
15:34So, one patient after the other was coming in.
15:37I'd just go around and just see how they, just see, from an NHS doctor's point of view,
15:41just how little time you get and how brilliant you've got to be to deal with that variety of complaints.
15:48Sure.
15:48And, arguably, the most serious complaints in dermatology tend to go to the NHS rather than the private sector.
15:54I mean, a number of, well, a couple of fascinating facts.
15:57Acne, for example.
15:58There's one message to get out there.
15:59Nobody ever needs to suffer from acne anymore at all.
16:03You know, my daughter's doing them messing around with bits of cream,
16:05but there's stuff you can be given that will sort out acne.
16:08Another one is the idea of a sun tan.
16:11You know, there is basically, depending on your skin type,
16:14there is really no such thing as a healthy tan.
16:17You know, I hate to be a killjoy on this, but you get a tan,
16:20you're causing some kind of DNA damage to get that tan.
16:25Now, I'm a sort of type 3 skin.
16:26If you're very pale, you're type 1.
16:28And then you probably are risking serious damage.
16:31So, that business, when you get back from holiday and somebody says,
16:33oh, you're not very brown.
16:35Well, you know, that's actually a good thing.
16:37Although, we're so used to just wanting a tan to look a bit browner,
16:42that it's just inbuilt into us.
16:45And ageing as well.
16:46I mean, nobody wants to age.
16:48And the quickest way to ageing, as far as I can see, is too much sun exposure.
16:51Exactly.
16:51So, I'm going to...
16:52This summer, I'll be sporting a parasol.
16:55Well done.
16:55Or you can just keep taking the tube to cockfust you.
16:59Yes, exactly.
16:59You'll not get any sunburned down there.
17:01All right.
17:02Thank you very much.
17:02Thanks, Adrian.
17:08So, Ian on 32, Ray on 14.
17:12And it's Ray's letters game.
17:15Could I start with a consonant, please, Rachel?
17:17Thank you, Ray.
17:22And the last one.
17:43Stand by.
18:15Yes, Ray?
18:17Just a five.
18:18And Ian?
18:19I'll try six.
18:21Ray?
18:22Toad.
18:23The W.
18:24Yes.
18:25Ian?
18:26Pooted.
18:27Pooted.
18:29Is...
18:29Yes.
18:31It's to break wind, to poot.
18:33Did you know about it?
18:34No.
18:35All right.
18:35What do you know now?
18:37Six teapoy.
18:39What's a teapoy?
18:40Yes.
18:40A small three-legged teap stand.
18:43Well, well.
18:45So, 38 plays 14.
18:46Ian, your letters game.
18:48Can I have a consonant, please?
18:50Thank you, Ian.
18:51C.
18:52And the second one.
18:54R.
18:54And the third, please.
18:56G.
18:57And the fourth.
18:59T.
19:00Vowel, please.
19:02E.
19:03And the second one.
19:04I.
19:05And the third.
19:07E.
19:08A consonant.
19:10B.
19:11And a vowel, please.
19:13And the last one.
19:14I.
19:16Stand by.
19:17G.
19:18I.
19:29I.
19:30I.
19:33I.
19:34I.
19:35I.
19:45I.
19:48Ian?
19:49Just five.
19:50A five. Ray?
19:52That's better than me. I've just got a four.
19:54And your four is?
19:55Bit.
19:56Thank you, Ray. Ian?
19:58Just biter.
20:00Biter, yes.
20:02The biter bit.
20:04And the corner?
20:06Seven letters iceberg.
20:08Pretty good.
20:10That's a hum of approval from the audience for that.
20:13Excellent.
20:14Mainly driven by your mother, I think.
20:17Now, Susie, what else have we got?
20:19Yes, no, that was it. Tricky ones today.
20:21Well done. Thank you.
20:2243 plays 14.
20:24And Ray, it's your numbers game.
20:26Thank you. Could I have one large and five little, please?
20:30Thank you, Ray.
20:31One from the top and five little ones.
20:33See if we can find some points hidden in here.
20:37And they are three, six, seven, seven, two.
20:42And the large one, 50.
20:43And the target, 606.
20:466-06.
20:49And the target.
21:176-06.
21:17How is it?
21:18Yes, Ray.
21:19Just 6-0-7.
21:22Ian?
21:236-0-6.
21:24Yes, Ian?
21:267 plus 7 is 14.
21:287 plus 7 is 14.
21:30Minus 2 is 12.
21:31Yep.
21:32Times 50 is 600.
21:34It is indeed.
21:35And add the 6.
21:36Well done, 6-0-6.
21:37There we go.
21:40Well done.
21:41Building a good score.
21:43Building a good score.
21:4453 to 14 as we turn to our second.
21:46Tea Time Teaser, which is Ruin Games.
21:49And the clue.
21:50If they can get six hours of sun a day,
21:52they'll be blooming marvellous.
21:54If they can get six hours of sun a day,
21:57they'll be blooming marvellous.
22:01Marvellous.
22:16Welcome back.
22:17Welcome back.
22:17I left with the clue.
22:19If they can get six hours of sun a day,
22:21they'll be blooming marvellous.
22:22What will?
22:23Why?
22:24Geraniums will.
22:25That's the answer.
22:27Geraniums.
22:28So, Ian, built up a good lead.
22:31And it's your letters game now.
22:34Can I have a consonant, please?
22:35Thank you, Ian.
22:37D.
22:37And a second.
22:39R.
22:40And a third one, please.
22:42R.
22:43One more.
22:45M.
22:46A vowel.
22:47O.
22:48A second one.
22:50E.
22:51A third one.
22:52I.
22:54A consonant.
22:55S.
22:56And one more consonant, please.
22:59Lastly, L.
23:01Stand by.
23:02BELL RINGS
23:32Yes, Ian?
23:33A seven.
23:34A seven.
23:35Ray?
23:36I have a seven, but I didn't write it down.
23:38Don't worry.
23:39You can tell us about it.
23:40Lories.
23:42And Ian?
23:43Maldia.
23:46I think you might be spelling it the American way, which means I would sadly have to disallow
23:52it.
23:53Yes.
23:54Only in the US can you spell it without the U. Sorry about that.
23:58There we go.
23:58Lories, take it.
23:59Yeah.
24:00Now, Adrian, Susie?
24:02There's a word here, lorimers.
24:04Lorimers, OK.
24:05A lorimer, or loriner, was a maker of stirrups and saddles, that kind of thing.
24:10Mm.
24:11Yeah.
24:12Yeah.
24:13Yeah.
24:15APPLAUSE
24:1721 plays 53.
24:19Ian on 53.
24:21Ray, it's your letters game now.
24:23Can I start with a consonant, please, Rachel?
24:25Thank you, Ray.
24:26W.
24:27And a vowel.
24:28E.
24:29And a consonant.
24:31H.
24:32And a vowel.
24:34O.
24:35A consonant.
24:36S.
24:38A consonant.
24:40T.
24:42A vowel.
24:44A.
24:46A consonant.
24:48N.
24:49And a final vowel, please.
24:52A final U.
24:54Done by.
24:56h.
24:58A consonant.
25:00A饱.
25:25A consonant.
25:25A consonant.
25:25A�ulen
25:25A consonant.
25:25A bo
25:27Yes, Ray.
25:29Risky seven.
25:30Ian?
25:31I'll just stick with six.
25:33And your six is?
25:34Wheats.
25:36Ray?
25:37Unwist.
25:41Not there.
25:42Sorry about that.
25:44Now, Adrian, what have we got?
25:46We've got heysen for six and outwash.
25:50Yeah, geological term outwash,
25:52which is the material carried away from a glacier by meltwater.
25:57That is the outwash.
25:58Oh, OK.
25:59So you get stones and things.
26:00Yes, exactly.
26:01Carrying on into the valley.
26:02Deposited there, yeah.
26:03Interesting.
26:0459 to 21.
26:06Susie, we're back with you.
26:08It's your origins of words.
26:10Oh, joy.
26:11What have you got for us?
26:13I have body parts for you today, parts of the body,
26:16because English is awash with them,
26:18and we're not always entirely sure.
26:22Or aware of the fact that we're using them all the time.
26:25There are some that are very, very obvious.
26:26So you might describe something as heartwarming,
26:29hair-raising, blood-curdling, mouth-watering,
26:32eye-popping, stomach-churning, toe-curling,
26:36you know, and on it goes.
26:37So those are the ones that we know about.
26:40We can be gobsmacked, of course, as well.
26:42And more recently, you can say you've face-palmed.
26:46So just many, many words that, as I say,
26:49have that explicit origin to a part of the body.
26:52But some of them are quite opaque now.
26:54So if you're talking about somebody being plucky,
26:56full of courage, full of daring,
26:58you may not know that it goes back to the plucks of a body.
27:02Originally, the heart, the liver, and lungs of an animal.
27:04So it's the entrails of an animal that were used in recipes and cookery back,
27:09as far as Henry VIII's time.
27:11It's linked to vitals, actually,
27:12because vitals also meant the entrails of a human or an animal.
27:17And from that, we get vital, of course,
27:19that kind of ingredient of life, if you like.
27:22But many, many others.
27:23So supercilious, which you'll probably remember, Nick,
27:25one of my favourite origins.
27:27Supercilious comes from super, meaning above,
27:30and sil, which meant an eyebrow.
27:32So when you are feeling supercilious and a bit hoarsely and arrogant,
27:35you have one eyebrow raised, perhaps in disdain.
27:39The bras that we wear, brasieres, that goes back to arm in French,
27:44bras, because they were originally protective arm,
27:47sort of pieces of armour for the arm that protected knights in action.
27:52We have caprice and capricious,
27:55which goes back to the Latin for head of a hedgehog,
27:57because the idea is that when we're feeling a bit capricious,
28:00originally it was sort of quite startled, so quite flighty,
28:03your hair would stand on end,
28:05and you might look a little bit like a hedgehog.
28:07And finally, gorgeous.
28:09You might not associate that with the throat,
28:11that's the gorge,
28:13but actually it probably referred to very beautiful
28:15and elaborate neckerchiefs,
28:18so sort of quite elaborate scarves that were worn around the throat
28:21and were so gorgeous that they actually gave us
28:23the general adjective for something wonderful.
28:26Amazing.
28:27Absolutely.
28:30Thank you for that.
28:3259 to 21.
28:34Ian, your letters game.
28:35Can I have a consonant, please?
28:37Thank you, Ian.
28:38C.
28:39And the second one?
28:41L.
28:42And the third?
28:44F.
28:45A fourth one?
28:47M.
28:48Vowel?
28:49I.
28:50Vowel.
28:51E.
28:53Another vowel, please.
28:55O.
28:56Consonant.
28:58B.
28:59And a vowel, please.
29:02And the last one?
29:03I.
29:04Stand by.
29:05A.
29:24A sound.
29:25But now we'll see you next time.
29:29Hi.
29:29Bye.
29:30Bye.
29:30Bye.
29:31Bye.
29:31Bye.
29:33Bye.
29:37Just five and Ray justify off we go in just claim and Ray
29:44Sorry, word same word. Just there we are
29:49now
29:49Susie and Adrian I got mobile and
29:54Foyable where does foible come from French fairly meaning weak. It's a weakness
30:00But there is a seven there as well, which is embolic, which is the adjective relating to embolus and embolism
30:07So it's the sort of blood clot a piece of fatty deposit, etc. You don't want it basically
30:12Thank you for that now Ray
30:16Final letters game good luck
30:17Could I start with a consonant please Rachel. Thank you, Ray. S and a vowel
30:24a and a consonant
30:27H another consonant
30:29R a vowel you
30:33Consonant P
30:37Consonant
30:39D a vowel
30:43I and one more vowel please and the last one oh
30:48Stand by
31:21I have a seven not written down
31:23A seven in a seven or so
31:27So Ray
31:28Prudish
31:29You
31:31hairdos both excellent yeah any more sevens in the corner Adrian have we no
31:38hairdos we had so yeah that's it enjoyed those yes well done 71 to 33 into the
31:45final numbers game Ian can I have two from the top and two from the second
31:51row please oh two from the top two from the second and two from the one two from
31:55the bottom there we go final one of the day is three one two seven seventy five
32:03and fifty and the target four hundred and fifty five four five five
32:39in four five five thank you ray four five five off we go in seven minus one is six yep
32:49times 75 is 450
32:52it is plus three plus two four five five lovely and ray exactly the same one there we go
33:05okay 81 to 43 into the final round gentlemen you know how it works fingers on buzzers
33:12let's roll today's countdown conundrum
33:23ray is it messaging messaging let's see whether you're right here we go messaging it is well
33:38well done well done well done ray getting a conundrum eases the pain a little bit I'm sure it does
33:44I'm sure it does well played I'll come back to you in a second good 81 fine first score we'll
33:50see you
33:50tomorrow congratulations well this goodie bag joins your teapot and uh and you're winning the
33:57conundrum too so safe journey back to late buzzard and uh good luck with the golf another hole in one
34:01perhaps thank you thank you very much for coming all right now then adrian tomorrow if selected I'll
34:08be here I'll take nothing for granted I'm from Birmingham you never take anything for granted
34:11you're coming you're coming it's all written susie see you tomorrow yeah all right and rachel too of
34:18course now adrian knows the rules you don't have to use all the numbers he's getting the maths games
34:22and he's celebrating like a proper football fan I've only got one the baby steps all right see you
34:28tomorrow see you tomorrow join us then same time same place you be sure of it a very good afternoon
34:32you can contact the program by email at countdown at channel 4.com by twitter at c4 countdown or
34:40write to us at countdown leads lf3 1js you can also find our webpage at channel 4.com
34:47forward slash countdown
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