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00:11Hello and welcome to Do You Know Your Place? Now there's nothing better than discovering a
00:16new spot on your doorstep but how much do we really know about our own country? Well
00:21that's what we're here to discover with the help of Paul, our ever helpful tour guide who'll be
00:26taking us all over the United Kingdom. So let's sort the likely from the ludicrous
00:31as we play Do You Know Your Place? Right playing this week we have a man who's
00:39completed a 24-hour drumming marathon and now horse, Radio 2 early breakfast, he gets
00:46us all going with a 1, 2, 3, 4 in the morning. Owen Wynnevins everyone and I've got a lot
00:53in
00:53common with our next guest because when I asked if I could have an MBE they told me
00:57to take a running jump. It's Greg Rutherford, MBE! Now we really wanted a Blue Peter
01:04presenter on the show so here's one we made earlier, Abbey Cook everyone. First of all
01:12Owen, being a weather person you must know the UK like the back of your hand. The thing is
01:18then when you're doing the weather the map is always behind you so you know you can
01:22just turn around and look at it and all the place names are there but I don't know I haven't
01:26done the weather for a couple of years now so I might be a bit rusty. Oh come on it's
01:31just
01:31like drumming. I'm getting the excuses in earlier. Definitely an advantage, definitely an advantage.
01:35Alright well good luck on the show Owen. Thank you. Greg welcome. Thank you for having me.
01:40Because you're an athlete Greg does it mean you're extremely competitive? I switch it on and off so I know
01:44I'm good at in life but if it's something that I think I'm good at I'll be quite competitive with.
01:48I will not be good at this. I will try very hard. I'm a try hard but I will have
01:53a lot of fun.
01:54Alright it might be a lot of work putting in an athletics track but in your back garden do you
01:57have a sandpit?
02:00Yeah don't do it. Anybody considering it, don't put one in your back. It's a complete waste of time.
02:04Greg welcome, good luck. Thank you.
02:07Abbey welcome to the show. I'm so happy to be here, thank you.
02:10You're the 42nd presenter of Blue Peter. Yes.
02:14The longest running children's TV programme in the UK if not the world.
02:18The world. The whole world.
02:20We're going to talk about the UK and as a Blue Peter presenter you get sent out on various missions.
02:26Do you think your knowledge of the UK is up to scratch?
02:29So I have travelled the length of the UK but I never look at the map.
02:35So I don't think I'm going to do well.
02:37Alright, well this is going to be fun.
02:38Yeah.
02:39We'll see how we get on. Today you're sorting facts from fiction in...
02:44Belfast!
02:45Yes, looking forward to this one.
02:47Now earlier on you placed a pin on the map where you think Belfast actually is.
02:52Now before we find out where you think it is, let's find out where Belfast actually is.
02:58Let's find out where you put your pins.
03:02Ooh, this is close.
03:05That's pretty good.
03:06Greg, you were furthest away, I'm afraid.
03:08You were 30 miles off and you hit the village of Portovoge.
03:12You landed on a fawn and electronics repair business.
03:17And there's Adam at work in the office.
03:21He looks pleased that I've popped in to say hello.
03:24Right, next up, very close between Owain and Abbey.
03:27Oh, and you landed 12 miles away up the Antrim coast in Carrickfergus.
03:32Lovely.
03:33Yeah, Abbey, you were a smidge closer.
03:36Ooh.
03:36You hit the posh village of Helens Bay in North County Down,
03:4011 miles away from Belfast.
03:43So Abbey, you get the first point of the show, well done.
03:46Yeah, one mile, one mile.
03:49It's time to say hello to our resident tour guide, Paul.
03:52Now he's kicking things off in Belfast with a crash course on the crack.
03:56Another local slang.
04:01Bouchy, welcome to Belfast.
04:04Home to almost 350,000 people all enjoying a wee bit of crack,
04:08even when it's Baltic.
04:10And if this lingo is a bit of a melter and leaving your brain a bit banjacks,
04:14then fear not as I'm here to explain a few choice Belfast expressions,
04:18so please do try and keep up.
04:21Come on.
04:25Let's start with the basics.
04:27Crack.
04:28Essentially, it's a term to describe fun, banter and good times with friends,
04:33or even just having a laugh.
04:35For example, Vernon's good crack.
04:38And here in Belfast City Centre,
04:40a good night's crack often starts right here at Belfast City Hall,
04:44as it's a popular rendezvous spot to kick things off any day of the week.
04:49Designed by Alfred Brumwell Thomas, it first opened its doors in 1906.
04:54But would you believe there is an exact replica of Belfast City Hall in South Africa?
05:00Well, would you?
05:05Would you believe it, though?
05:06Oh, aye.
05:07There is an exact replica of Belfast City Hall in South Africa.
05:13It's a gorgeous building.
05:14And I spotted a nice velvet rope.
05:17And I do like a velvet rope.
05:19You're always behind them.
05:20That's why.
05:20Always behind them, darling.
05:21Always behind them.
05:23So I'm thinking, I've never heard of an exact replica of a building before,
05:28which I think might make this special.
05:30So I'm going to say yes.
05:32I believe it.
05:33Are you right to believe it?
05:35Yay!
05:36Yes!
05:37Well done.
05:37You get a point, Owen.
05:38Yes, architect Stanley G. Hudson was so inspired by Belfast City Hall
05:43that when the city of Durban in South Africa was looking for a design for its own City Hall,
05:48he submitted a design that was exactly the same as the Belfast City Hall.
05:53Oh, thanks Stanley.
05:55Yeah, there you go.
05:56Right, Greg, it's your turn.
05:57Are you ready?
05:57Let's go for it.
05:58All right.
05:58Paul is wandering into the magical world of lions, witches and wardrobes.
06:05Right here in East Belfast is CS Lewis Square, named after the world famous author who gave
06:12us the Chronicles of Narnia.
06:14Yeah.
06:15In his most famous book, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, a group of children discover
06:20a mystical world hidden at the back of a wardrobe, where they meet all sorts of creatures,
06:27from a talking lion to a half man, half goat.
06:32And here in Belfast, his legacy proudly lives on in stone story and a sprinkle of magic.
06:39I'll talk to you in a minute.
06:40That's my ex.
06:42And would you believe CS Lewis was inspired to write the Chronicles of Narnia when he saw
06:47a wardrobe with no back on it?
06:49Well, would you?
06:54Greg, what do you think?
06:55Would you believe CS Lewis was inspired to write the Chronicles of Narnia when he saw
07:00a wardrobe with no back on it?
07:03I don't know.
07:03I feel like CS Lewis was such a bright, intelligent man.
07:07It was something else, something wonderful.
07:09I'm going to say no.
07:10All right.
07:10You don't believe it?
07:11No, I don't believe it.
07:12Is that the right answer?
07:14Yes!
07:15Well done, Greg.
07:16Yes.
07:17Very good.
07:18He was actually inspired by his grandfather's hand-carved wardrobe.
07:23I'm going to assume there was lots of lovely things carved into it and that's what's done it.
07:27Probably lions, witches and other stuff.
07:29Abi, your turn.
07:31Paul is up next to tell us about Belfast's most recognisable French silhouette.
07:40Imagine having a hill named after you.
07:42Not bad, eh?
07:43Well, that's exactly what the good people of Belfast did, because this little mound right
07:47here is called Napoleon's Nose.
07:49And if you look closely, you'll see why it got the name, as the distinctive outline just
07:55looks like the profile of Napoleon Bonaparte himself.
07:59This hill offers some of the best views of all of Belfast and, on a clear day, you can
08:04stand on this giant version of Napoleon's Nose and see all the way to Scotland.
08:09Now, Napoleon was famously small, but Napoleon's Nose here is massive.
08:14Little people, giants, sounds like a fantasy world, right?
08:19But would you believe that Belfast Hills inspired Gulliver's Travels?
08:23Well, would you?
08:29So, Abi, would you believe the Belfast Hills inspired Gulliver's Travels?
08:36Who wrote Gulliver's Travels?
08:38He's probably not from Northern Ireland, is he?
08:41Jonathan Swift was the writer.
08:43Swift sounds...
08:44Not a relation of Taylor Swift, probably.
08:47It's...
08:47It sounds English.
08:50Maybe he went for a little holiday.
08:52I feel like it's quite a tenuous link.
08:54I'm going to say, I don't believe it.
08:57You don't believe it?
08:57I don't believe it.
08:58Let's take a look.
09:01Oh.
09:01Oh.
09:02It's a true fact.
09:03Good fun fact, though.
09:04The silhouette of Cave Hill resembles a sleeping giant.
09:08And in fact, the studio that we're in right now, where we're recorded, is on Gulliver's
09:11Drive in Belfast.
09:13Should have looked up the address.
09:15There you go.
09:16Alright, that's the end of Rome 1, so let's take a look at the scores.
09:20Abi, Greg and Owen, you all have one point.
09:23This could be competitive.
09:24Time for Rome 2.
09:25Now, Paul is dodging the Belfast rain in very colourful style.
09:32I've brought us to Belfast Cathedral Quarter,
09:35where they've come up with the perfect all-in-one rain-proof solution.
09:4121 illuminated umbrellas hanging overhead.
09:47The umbrella installation, officially titled No Rain No Rainbows, is located above Commercial
09:53Courts, the cobbled alleyway beside the Duke of York pub.
10:00It's perfect for enjoying a pint of stout beneath the canopy.
10:04And speaking of the black stuff, which of these countries drinks more Guinness than the Republic of Ireland?
10:09Is it the UK, the USA or Nigeria?
10:15Sorry, I don't work here.
10:20Oh, he's ever so work shy, he's our poor.
10:22Oi, what do you think?
10:24Which of these countries drinks more Guinness than the Republic of Ireland?
10:29Is it the UK, the USA or Nigeria?
10:33I've never tried Guinness.
10:34What?
10:35I know.
10:35I'm going to say the USA, only because I think that a lot of people who live in North America
10:42seem proud of their Irish or Northern Irish heritage.
10:47So I think that, you know, maybe the Guinness thing would buy into that,
10:52or they would buy into that as a product to raise a little glass to.
10:57Let's see if you are right. Is the USA the right answer?
11:01No.
11:02It's the United Kingdom.
11:03No way.
11:04Yes.
11:04The UK drinks an estimated 2.2 million pints of Guinness per year,
11:08more than any other country, though Guinness is very, very popular in Nigeria as well.
11:14Well, I wasn't expecting that.
11:16Right, Greg, your question is coming up next,
11:18and Paul is having a trip around Queen's University next,
11:21brushing up on his Belfast forecast,
11:23whilst trying his very, very best to blend in with the
11:26University students.
11:30Founded in 1845 by Queen Victoria,
11:34this is Queen's University,
11:36one of the oldest in the UK,
11:38and a brilliant spot in Belfast for a wee dander.
11:42A dander, you say?
11:47And now you have had a crash course in the Belfast Brogue,
11:52so it's time for a test.
11:53We are in a university, after all.
11:55Pens at the ready.
11:57Which of these is not a local slang word?
12:01Hoke, which means to look.
12:03Poke, which means an ice cream.
12:05Or joke, which means five pound note.
12:09Vernon K, are you chewing?
12:12Can I have one?
12:18No?
12:19Right, Greg, what do you reckon?
12:21Which of these is not a local slang word?
12:24Is it hoke, to look?
12:25Poke, an ice cream.
12:27Or joke, a five pound note.
12:30Have you heard any of those?
12:31I've heard the original of them.
12:34A joke, obviously telling a joke.
12:35Yeah.
12:36Poke someone and, of course, the famous hoke.
12:38Yeah.
12:41I'm going to go with a joke, not being a five pound note.
12:46Is that the right answer?
12:48Yes, it is.
12:49Well done, Greg Rutherford, MBE.
12:51You get a point.
12:52Thank you very much.
12:53Excellent stuff.
12:54Right, Abi, you ready?
12:55Yeah.
12:56Don't be nervous.
12:57It's fine.
12:58Everything's fine.
12:58It's only Paul.
12:59All right, and he's taking us back to the future.
13:11With its ambitious design, stainless steel body and futuristic flair,
13:15the DeLorean was manufactured right here in Belfast.
13:25The DeLorean Motor Company was founded by American engineer John DeLorean,
13:30who dreamed of building a revolutionary sports car.
13:34The car, with its gallwing doors and brushed stainless steel finish,
13:38looked like something straight out of the future.
13:41Ooh.
13:44The DeLorean gained iconic status from the Back to the Future films,
13:48so the car remains one of Belfast's most famous and sought-after creations.
13:53But which of these was invented by a vet in Belfast to help his young son?
13:58Was it the pneumatic tyre, the automatic indicator, or the wing mirror?
14:05Well, which one do you think it is?
14:06Where we're going, we don't need answers.
14:08I've never seen Ghostbusters, mate.
14:19All right, Abi.
14:20Which of these was invented by a vet in Belfast to help out his young son?
14:27Was it the pneumatic tyre, the automatic indicator, or the wing mirror?
14:34Ooh, how interesting.
14:35Mm.
14:36I mean, I have pneumatic tyres.
14:38So those are the tyres that got some air in them.
14:40So I have a set of them here.
14:42Uh, automatic indicator, is that when you just, like, pop it up and it keeps...
14:45Yeah.
14:45Just go...
14:46Yeah.
14:47Surely they had wing mirrors before.
14:49I wonder about automatic indicator to just, I guess, keep it up.
14:52Pneumatic tyres, you would think they already had them.
14:56I'm going to go with automatic indicator, because I feel like it solves a problem that you wouldn't have to
14:59just keep pushing it up.
15:02All right, we're going automatic indicator.
15:03Is it the right answer?
15:06No!
15:07Oh!
15:08You were so close.
15:09I'm so close.
15:09You're literally on top of the answer.
15:11I'm literally sitting on them.
15:12You are.
15:13Oh, that's upsetting.
15:14You are.
15:14I wonder what problem it is, though.
15:16You are.
15:16Well, they were invented in 1887 by John Boyd Dunlop, hence the Dunlop Tire Company.
15:23He created it for his son's tricycle, so he could safely ride on Belfast's bumpy streets.
15:29Oh, interesting.
15:29Yeah, there you go.
15:30That's a good fact.
15:32We're learning school.
15:32Learning's so much.
15:33Yeah, we are.
15:34I feel like we're in school with the little desks as well.
15:37Right, time now for a bonus question.
15:38It's for you all, so grab your whiteboards, please.
15:42Which of these Northern Ireland innovations came along in 1890?
15:47Was it the aircraft ejector seat, the football penalty kick, or the portable defibrillator?
15:56Ooh, tough one, this.
15:57It is really tough, though, isn't it?
16:00Yeah.
16:01OK.
16:03Oh, Ian, we'll start with you. What have you put?
16:05I've gone for the ejection seat.
16:08OK. Gregory?
16:09So I've gone with the penalty kick and I've attempted to draw a goal.
16:12And finally, Abi, what have you chosen?
16:14YOLO. I don't know.
16:15We have one of each.
16:17Oh, yeah.
16:17You've gone for the defibrillator.
16:18So at least one person will get a point.
16:19And that one person with the correct answer is...
16:23Greg!
16:24Yay!
16:25What's the penalty kick?
16:25Well done.
16:27Bravo, you.
16:27The penalty kick was proposed by William McCrum, a goalkeeper from County Armagh in 1890.
16:33Oh.
16:34The ejector seat was developed by James Martin in the 1940s.
16:37And the portable defibrillator was invented in the 1960s by Professor Frank Pantridge.
16:44Well done, Greg.
16:45That's an extra point for you.
16:46And that is, of course, the end of that round.
16:48So let's take a look at the scores.
16:51Wow!
16:51Greg has crept into the lead with three points.
16:55There's a long way to go, though, Greg.
16:56I've maxed out early.
16:57That'd be it.
16:58That'd be it.
16:59All right, gang.
17:00It's round three.
17:01This is where we take a break from our tour with Paul.
17:04And today we're taking a detour to the souvenir shop.
17:07You're going to like this.
17:08You've each got a selection of souvenirs.
17:10All you need to do is work out how much they cost.
17:14Oh.
17:15Whoever's closest gets the point.
17:18First up is the candle.
17:20That's the yellow item with the black lid.
17:22Unscrew the lid.
17:23Inhale.
17:24I can tell you that this is a cheese and onion scented candle.
17:27That's grim.
17:27That's horrendous.
17:28Why would you want your house to smell like that?
17:30What?
17:31I mean, I love a cheese pasty.
17:33Don't get me wrong.
17:35It's a bit like somebody that's eaten too many cheese and onion crisps.
17:38It literally sort of punches you in the face and burns.
17:45Abi, what are your initial thoughts of the cheese and onion scented candles?
17:48Your eyes are actually watering.
17:51It's so grim.
17:52Who is buying that?
17:54Because I want to have a talk to them.
17:56Someone with friends they don't like.
17:58But I will say it's a very, very, very popular souvenir.
18:03Please, write down how much you think that cheese and onion scented candle costs.
18:12All right, Owen, how much you think the cheese and onion scented candle is worth?
18:15I'm going to go as low as I possibly can and I'm going to say one panda.
18:18All right, a pound.
18:19Fair enough. Greg?
18:20It's worth a lot less than this, but I've gone for a random 12.99.
18:23A stinky 12.99.
18:24A stinky 12.99.
18:25A stinky 12.99. Abi?
18:26It's very niche, so we're going £14.
18:29£14.
18:30Account for inflation.
18:31Right, okay.
18:32Well, I can tell you that the actual price of the cheese and onion scented candle is...
18:41£15.
18:42Abi, you're the closest thing.
18:43I spent too much time a gift shop.
18:45Maybe you did.
18:46Well done.
18:47All right, item number two is a melter mug.
18:51Write down how much you think it costs.
18:55Good weight on it.
18:56The melter is a local slang word for someone who is annoying or irritating.
19:02You don't want to be getting this mug.
19:04No.
19:09All right, Owen, what do you think?
19:10I think, you know, it is a souvenir.
19:12You would find it in a shop and therefore the markup is going to be a little bit higher.
19:16I'm going to say £6.99.
19:18All right, Greg?
19:19I've gone off for the fact that that is incredibly overpriced and gone towards a tenner.
19:24Right, £9.99.
19:25Yeah.
19:25Okay.
19:26Abi?
19:27I've gone along the same lines.
19:28I've gone £10 exactly.
19:30All right, well, I can tell you that the actual price of the melter mug in our gift shop is...
19:36£7.
19:37Well done, Owen.
19:38One penny off.
19:39You're a penny away.
19:40Yes.
19:41Very good.
19:42Very good.
19:43Finally, we have the Aunt Sandra's milk chocolate, the Belfast bar.
19:48Open it, have a look, maybe have a taste.
19:50All right, yeah.
19:51How much do you think it costs?
19:53I used to have an Aunt Sandra.
19:54Did you?
19:55Yeah.
19:56She didn't make chocolate though, unfortunately.
19:58That's all right.
19:58Is it good?
19:59Yeah, it's a good chocolate.
20:01Aunt Sandra knows what she's doing.
20:02All right, how much do you think Aunt Sandra's chocolate bar, the Belfast chocolate bar, is actually worth?
20:09Okay.
20:10How much do you reckon, Aline?
20:11I think eight quid.
20:12Eight pound?
20:13Yeah.
20:13Oh, it's a good quality chocolate, is it?
20:14I think Aunt Sandra goes after quality.
20:16She's gone for the nice gold wrapper as well.
20:19All of these things cost money.
20:20Yeah.
20:20Eight quid.
20:21Nice.
20:21Greg, I think it should be in and around what others cost.
20:25About four pounds.
20:26Okay.
20:27Abi.
20:27I've actually gone with 3.99.
20:29Ooh.
20:30Well, I can tell you that Aunt Sandra's chocolate, the big Belfast bar, is actually worth...
20:36Three pounds!
20:38Which means, Ami, you beat Greg by a penny!
20:40Wow!
20:43Right, that's the end of round three.
20:44Let's take a look at the scores.
20:47Abi and Greg, neck and neck at the front.
20:50Oh, aye.
20:51Behind.
20:51By just one point, still all to play for.
20:54Here we go.
20:54Paul is now diving into Titanic history next.
20:58A ship that was definitely fine when it left Belfast.
21:05Okay, so by now you've all seen the movie Titanic, right?
21:09It's grossed billions and still ranks amongst the highest earning films of all time.
21:13But if you want the full Titanic experience, then Belfast is the place to be.
21:18As here in the Titanic quarter you get insights to the facts that the movie just can't give you.
21:24You'll discover stories of the people who built her, sailed on her and the city that still takes pride in
21:30her legacy.
21:30It's an experience that's part history, part heartbreak and 100% Belfast.
21:38The building's design is shaped like four interlocking ship hulls with a shimmering facade that mirrors the hull of the
21:45original Titanic.
21:46But would you believe a story about the unsinkable titan hitting an iceberg in the North Atlantic was published more
21:53than ten years before the disaster?
21:57Spooky.
21:59If it's true.
22:16It almost seems too creepy to be real with the name titan, Titanic.
22:23But Vernon, I'm going to say yeah, I do believe this one.
22:25I quite like a spooky story like this.
22:27Because it's so out there... Yeah.
22:30..that it has to be true. It has to be true, surely.
22:33All right, well, should we believe it?
22:36Yes! Well done. Yes. Thank you.
22:39In early 1898, there was a novella called Futility.
22:44It's about a ship named Titan that sinks in the Atlantic Ocean
22:48after striking an iceberg. Wow.
22:51Greg, your turn. Are you ready? Let's go for it.
22:53Let's find what Paul is up to.
22:55He's feeling small while standing beneath Belfast's giants.
23:02These are the Harland and Wolf cranes,
23:05known locally as Samson and Goliath,
23:07named after biblical strong men.
23:09They've dominated the Belfast skyline for over 50 years,
23:12and they now dominate mugs, hats and T-shirts.
23:16You name it, if it stands still long enough in Belfast,
23:19someone's probably printed these cranes on it.
23:22The cranes' combined lifting capacity is over 1,700 tonnes.
23:27That's enough to lift the International Space Station.
23:31But which of these objects are the cranes also capable of lifting?
23:36The Statue of Liberty or the Eiffel Tower?
23:40Or which one is it?
23:50The Eiffel Tower?
23:52The Eiffel Tower, lots of gaps and everything else through it.
23:55The Statue of Liberty is a relatively dense copper structure.
23:58And I'm going to say...
24:01The Statue of Liberty.
24:01Here's the right answer!
24:03Yeah!
24:04Yeah!
24:04Well done.
24:06Samson and Goliath can lift well over 800 tonnes each
24:09for a combined total of 1,740 tonnes.
24:13The Statue of Liberty is 225 tonnes, one crane.
24:17Could easily lift that.
24:18The Eiffel Tower is 10,100 tonnes.
24:21Ooh!
24:22Right.
24:22Let's say au revoir to the Eiffel Tower and the Statue of Liberty.
24:26It's time to go to our Paul for another stop,
24:28who's discovering how Belfast is shaping the future.
24:31Paul.
24:35Here in Belfast Harbour, innovation is literally powering the future.
24:39As Artemis Technologies, a local company with big ideas,
24:43is leading the charge towards zero-emission marine technology.
24:50Their electric-powered EF-12 workboat is built right here in Belfast
24:55and proof that the city that built one of the greatest ships in the world
24:59is now building one of the greenest ones.
25:01From shipbuilding to sustainability, Belfast continues to lead the way
25:06and proving once again that this city doesn't just build boats,
25:10it builds the future.
25:13But would you believe that this boat can fly?
25:19Abi, would you believe that that boat can fly?
25:23I mean, you get a green badge for that, a green-blue Peter badge.
25:27Very eco-friendly, love this.
25:30What do you mean by fly?
25:31I guess, like, you have hovercrafts that kind of go on the water.
25:35Is that classed as flying, though?
25:38Can the boat fly?
25:40I mean, if it's like a plane, probably not.
25:44But the fly is in quotations, which makes me think
25:47the flying isn't the traditional flight of, like, this.
25:51You know what?
25:52I'm not going to believe that the boat can fly.
25:56You're saying you don't believe it?
25:58I don't believe it.
25:58No.
26:01Oh!
26:02Oh!
26:02Wow!
26:03Yes, you should have believed it.
26:06The foil, which is a wing-like structure underneath the boat,
26:10elevates the hull out of the water, making it fly.
26:14It's some kind of flying.
26:15It's just not touching the water anymore.
26:17Right, that's the end of the round, so let's have a look at the scores.
26:21Oh!
26:22Oh!
26:22And Abbey, you are tied on three,
26:25but right in the middle, at the top of the podium,
26:27no surprise, it's Greg Rutherford with four points.
26:30Big surprise over here.
26:31Wow!
26:33Good stuff.
26:33Now, the scores could all change in this final round of quick-fire questions.
26:36All you've got to do is fill in the blanks, gang.
26:38Fingers by your buzzers.
26:39Here's your first question about Belfast.
26:44Legendary Belfast footballer.
26:49Greg?
26:50It's George Best.
26:51It is George Best.
26:52Yes, well done.
26:53Next question.
27:00Abbey?
27:00Seahorse.
27:01It is a seahorse.
27:02Well done, Abbey.
27:03Yes, point for you.
27:04Here we go.
27:05Belfast, Roy Walker hosted this game show.
27:11Greg?
27:12Catchphrase.
27:12Say what you see.
27:13Catchphrase.
27:15Well done, it is catchphrase, yes.
27:18Belfast was once famous for this fabric.
27:23Greg?
27:24Linen.
27:24Yes, it is linen.
27:26Well done.
27:28Time is up.
27:29That's the end of the round.
27:30Let's take a look at the final scores for the first day of the week, Monday.
27:35Owain, you've got three points.
27:36Abbey, you've got four.
27:37But there he is, top of the podium.
27:39Greg's got seven.
27:40Well done.
27:41Well done, guys.
27:42Good show, good show.
27:43Good game, good game, good game.
27:44So, Greg, you get three points for winning today.
27:46Abbey, you get two points.
27:48And Owain, you get one point.
27:50But, Greg, that means you get the much sought-after postcard from Paul.
27:54Ah, fantastic.
27:55That's going in the downstairs toilet.
27:57Yeah.
27:57And not only that, we're going to give you your own DeLorean.
28:00Ah, amazing!
28:01Albeit one that you can put on the mantelpiece.
28:03But it lights up.
28:04Well, my kids are going to love that.
28:07Congratulations.
28:07Right, that's it for today.
28:08Join us on our travels next time when we might be somewhere near you.
28:12We'll see you then.
28:12Goodbye.
28:12Bye.
28:13APPLAUSE
28:16Bye.
28:18Bye.
28:29Maybe you'll see you next time,
28:31Bye.
28:34Bye.
28:36Bye.
28:36Bye.
28:37Bye.
28:38Bye.
28:39Bye.
28:40Bye.
28:40You
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