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00:11Hi everyone and welcome to Do You Know Your Place? Now we know there's nothing
00:15quite like uncovering a hidden gem close to home but how well do we actually know
00:20our own country? Well that's what we're here to find out with a little bit of
00:25help from our resident tour guide Paul who'll be whisking us around the UK
00:29some of his knowledge is absolutely on point the rest complete duds and it's
00:34up to our three players to work out which is which. Let's separate the
00:38credible from the crazy as we play Do You Know Your Place?
00:46Playing this week of course he brings the sunshine to our screens rain or shine
00:51it's the fabulous Owen Wynnevans. Next up he's leapt his way into the record books
00:58and into our hearts Olympic champion and all-round jumping legend Greg Rutherford.
01:05And finally she's fun, fearless and fabulous it's Blue Peter presenter Abby Cook.
01:12Now before we start today let's take a look at our weekly leaderboard we saw last
01:17night that things are getting very tight at the top. Abby is in second place with six points however Greg
01:26and
01:26Owain share the top spot with seven. There's a tussle at the top as they say. Will Greg shine bright
01:32with
01:32another gold medal or will the others creep up and poke him from behind and steal victory? We'll find out.
01:38Now today you're sorting fact from fiction in Kirkby-Longsdale!
01:43Now let's kick things off as we always do by putting your geography skills to the test.
01:48Now the first thing we have to do is find out exactly where Kirkby-Longsdale is on the map.
01:54Yeah there it is Kirkby-Longsdale up there in Cumbria.
01:57Now here's the fun bit. Earlier each of you placed a pin on the map as to where you think
02:02Kirkby-Longsdale is located.
02:06All right. Greg you are way off the mark today. You are 105 miles away in Hope Valley in the
02:13Peak District.
02:14Lovely. Abby your second closest today. You landed 60 miles away in the village of Latham in Lancashire.
02:21Oh dear. However, Owain congratulations.
02:24Thank you. You take the point because you landed in Preston which is just down the road 45 miles away
02:30from
02:30Kirkby-Longsdale. Well played. Good pin action. You get a point?
02:34Thank you very much. Yes. We're up and running.
02:38So it's time to visit our dear friend Paul and he's going to kick off with centuries of history,
02:44breathtaking views and a surprising link to a childhood favourite.
02:51Welcome to Kirkby-Longsdale. Home to a picture-perfect population just shy of 2,000.
02:57This Cumbrian town is nestled between the Lake District, the Yorkshire Dales and Lancashire.
03:02It's famous for being one of the loveliest views in England, according to our critic John Ruskin.
03:08So let's get going.
03:13Standing here since the 1100, St. Mary's Church is a beautiful blend of Norman and Gothic architecture
03:19and has been at the heart of the town for almost a thousand years.
03:24It's former vicar, Reverend Llewellyn Davies, served here from 1889 to 1908.
03:31And Peter Pan author J.M. Barrie was a close family friend.
03:35Barrie was a frequent visitor to the vicarage and became enchanted by the Davies family.
03:40The vicar's son, Arthur, is said to have inspired Mr. Darling, while his grandsons became the models for the Lost
03:47Boys.
03:48But would you believe the girl's name Wendy was virtually unheard of until Peter Pan was published?
03:56Well, would you?
03:58There you go, Owen.
04:00Would you believe the girl's name Wendy was virtually unheard of until Peter Pan was published?
04:07Do you believe it or not?
04:08I believe it because I think that when Peter Pan came out, it was huge, I imagine.
04:13And then the name Wendy, I imagine, would have become popular.
04:16You see that in a lot of children's films and cartoons.
04:19So why not with Peter Pan?
04:21Yeah. Alright, so you believe it?
04:22Yeah.
04:22Are we right to believe it, though?
04:25Yes!
04:26Well done, Owen.
04:27First question, first point.
04:28Good stuff.
04:29The name exploded in popularity after Peter Pan was published.
04:32Before that, it was really, really rare.
04:36And the very few instances Wendy was documented were usually boys' names.
04:42Really?
04:42Interesting.
04:43Yeah, boys' names.
04:44Well done, you get a point.
04:45You're off the mark.
04:46Next up, Paul is getting into the swing of things with bells and boy bands.
04:51Go on, Paul.
04:55Who doesn't love a good bell?
04:57My fays have to be bottomed trousers and Isimo.
05:02And I'm not the only fan of a good Ding Dong, as bells have been used for centuries in different
05:08countries, cultures and religions to communicate, worship, celebrate and make music.
05:14Bellissimo.
05:15Ah, one of my favourites.
05:17And Kirby Lonsdale has some real belebrity status, as local legend Audrey Phillips was Britain's oldest
05:25handbell ringer until she recently retired at the age of 97.
05:29Shall we begin?
05:40We're very good.
05:41Speaking of carrying a tune together, after pop royalty Take That split up in 1996, a 24-year-old
05:49Mark Owen swapped stadiums for the countryside when he bought Lech Hill House near Kirby Lonsdale.
05:55But would you believe Take That's Mark Owen took bell ringing lessons from Audrey?
06:02Well, would you?
06:06Greg, would you believe that Take That's Mark Owen took bell ringing lessons from Audrey?
06:12I'm going to go with yes, actually, because I just thought it was with Mark Owen, because
06:16with music, he knows how to play lots of instruments and things, doesn't he?
06:19And he loves learning all that sort of stuff.
06:21And I think most people, if you're into music, you love learning different things about it.
06:25If you're going to learn from anybody, it has to be Audrey, surely.
06:28Yes.
06:28I feel like people would travel all over the country to see Audrey.
06:30Yeah.
06:31So, I'm going to say, yeah, why not?
06:33Let's see.
06:34Could it be magic?
06:35Could you have the right answer?
06:39Don't believe it.
06:40No.
06:42John Lennon did, however, take bell ringing lessons from the church in Woolton, the same
06:47church where he met Sir Paul McCartney.
06:51Ah.
06:52There you go.
06:53Fabulous stuff.
06:54All right, Abby, you ready?
06:55Yeah.
06:55Let's see if you can grab a point.
06:56Let's get back to the tour now.
06:58Over to you, Paul.
07:02This isn't just a sunning, three-arched medieval bridge over the River Loon, as this is said
07:07to have been built by the devil himself.
07:11Who, like any good egomaniac, decided to name it after himself.
07:15As you do.
07:19But would you believe that to ward off bad spirits, local tradition requires you to shout,
07:24get stuffed, devil, as you cross?
07:28Sounds plausible.
07:30Or does it?
07:35Devil's Bridge.
07:37Would you believe that to ward off bad spirits, local tradition requires you to shout,
07:42get stuffed, devil, as you cross?
07:45I feel like get stuffed is quite a new phrase, surely?
07:50I'm going to say, I actually, I don't believe it, because I don't think that's the phrase.
07:55I get what you're saying.
07:56You're more like, be gone, oh devil ye.
07:59Oh, stuff thyself.
08:00Yes.
08:01Stuffeth thyselfeth, oh devil.
08:03All right, we don't believe it.
08:05Yeah, well done, you get a point.
08:07You get a point.
08:08My goodness.
08:09Awesome stuff.
08:10That's the end of round one, so let's take a look at the scores.
08:13Owain and Abi were the only ones to score during that round,
08:15which means Owain's in the lead with two points.
08:17Well done.
08:18Ooh, thank you.
08:20Time for round two.
08:21Next up, Paul is feeling his sweet tooth in the local chocolate shop.
08:26Serve some for me, Greedy Guts Paul.
08:31Here at Chocolat in Kirby Lonsdale, they've been keeping local sweet with handmade chocolates,
08:37farmhouse ice cream and luxurious hot chocolates for years.
08:41So, er, it's chocolate, isn't it?
08:42I mean, it's brilliant.
08:43I love it.
08:44Not really anything more I can say about it.
08:47All right, all right.
08:48I'm a tour guide, I suppose, so I should throw in a few cocoa facts.
08:52Hold on to your truffles, gang.
08:54White chocolate isn't really chocolate.
08:56The first mass-produced chocolate bar was made in 1847.
09:00Chocolate is toxic to dogs.
09:02Chocolate was once prescribed as medicine in 2014.
09:04Pope Francis was once gifted life-sized chocolate sculpture of himself.
09:08A single cacao pod contains about 20 to 60 beans.
09:12Napoleon carried chocolate on military campaigns.
09:14Chocolate melts at 34 degrees near body temperature.
09:20But which country consumes the most chocolate per capita?
09:23Is it the UK, the USA or Switzerland?
09:28Well, which one is it?
09:32Ooh!
09:34Just divine.
09:35Yum.
09:36So, Owen, here's your question.
09:37According to Statista, which country consumes the most chocolate per capita?
09:44Is it the UK, the USA or Switzerland?
09:49We think Switzerland because Swiss chocolate, you know, chocolate from there.
09:54Oh, divine.
09:55Chocolate from the States.
09:57I don't think it tastes the same.
09:58No, it's not the best.
09:59It's no good.
09:59Now, I want to say the UK because we love chocolate and we've got a couple of brands that I
10:05think originated here.
10:07All right, Owen, you're locking in the UK.
10:09I've locked it in, babes.
10:11All right, let's see if it's the right answer.
10:13Oh, it's Switzerland.
10:15No.
10:16It's actually Switzerland.
10:18Wow.
10:18Switzerland consumes over 11 kilos of chocolate per person per year.
10:22Wow!
10:23The USA, nine kilos per person per year.
10:27Here we go.
10:28Brace yourselves, United Kingdom.
10:29We consume almost three kilos of chocolate per person per year.
10:35Wow.
10:36Unlucky, you don't get a point.
10:37Oh, what a shame.
10:38So we'll move swiftly on to Greg.
10:39Let's see if you can get a point.
10:40Paul's showing off his intellectual side now with the local bookstore.
10:47Just when you thought Kirby Lonsdale couldn't get cosier, the Book and Jigsaw Lounge is a bookshop where you can
10:54relax and read, solve puzzles, browse the shelves and even meet a celebrity or two doing their first ever book
11:02signing.
11:02The author of Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte went to school just down the road from Kirby Lonsdale at Cowan Bridge.
11:09Well, she didn't enjoy her time there.
11:12So much so, it inspired Lowood School in Jane Eyre, the book's cold and punishing boarding school.
11:22Her talent is pretty obvious now, though if you'd asked her teachers back in the day, you might have got
11:28a different answer.
11:29They weren't exactly convinced of her academic skills at the time, as which of these statements was written on her
11:36school register?
11:38Read tolerably.
11:40Write indifferently.
11:42Read dreadfully.
11:44Writes prettily.
11:45Read little.
11:46Or reads little.
11:47Writes if she must.
11:49Well, which one is it?
11:52Greg, your question is this.
11:54Which of these statements was written on Charlotte Bronte's school report?
11:59Is it reads tolerably.
12:01Writes indifferently.
12:03Reads dreadfully.
12:04Writes prettily.
12:06Reads little.
12:07Writes if she must.
12:09I'm glad to try and get my first point, you're giving me a nice easy one.
12:13Really, like, yeah.
12:15OK.
12:16See, I like the reads tolerably and writes indifferently.
12:19I quite like that as a...
12:21I feel like that's a good burn from the teacher there.
12:24It sounds punchy.
12:25Writes indifferently.
12:26Like, I'm going to go with that one, just because I like it.
12:29I have no idea, as we've found on this show.
12:31Let's have a look.
12:32You've locked it in.
12:32Reads tolerably.
12:33Writes indifferently.
12:34Is it the right answer, though?
12:36It is.
12:37Greg's got a point.
12:38We're back in the game.
12:39Well done.
12:40Right, Abi, are you ready?
12:41Yeah.
12:42All right, here we go.
12:43Paul talks rail, romance and hopefully not rubbish.
12:46Go on, Paul, what have you got this time?
12:50What's a tour without a little romance, heartbreak and a touch of steam?
12:57Preferably in that order.
12:58This is Carnforth Station, and fans of classic cinema might recognise it
13:04as the filming location for 1945 film Brief Encounter,
13:09now home to a beautifully restored heritage centre.
13:14The characters in the film met by chance.
13:17But these days, where is the most commonplace British people meet their partner?
13:22Is it in a bar?
13:24Is it on a dating app?
13:25Or through work?
13:32Wow.
13:48I almost think in a bar is so rare.
13:51I never hear of anyone meeting someone.
13:53And I actually think it might be through work.
13:55It's where most people are face to face with folk.
13:58I'm actually not going to say on a dating app.
14:00I think it might be a bit of a toss up between dating app and through work.
14:04I met my partner through work.
14:06Ah.
14:06Ben, what was yours?
14:08Work.
14:08Work as well.
14:09I'm going to go through work.
14:10Go through work.
14:11Lock it in.
14:12Through work.
14:13Is it the right answer?
14:15Yay!
14:18There you go.
14:20I'm happy.
14:20Well done.
14:21Yeah.
14:2115% of British people meet their partners through work.
14:2511% in passing, just like a brief encounter.
14:29And 8% of couples meet on applications.
14:32I thought it would be more than that.
14:33Yeah, I would.
14:34Well done.
14:35It's time for your bonus questions.
14:36So come on.
14:37Get your whiteboards out, please.
14:38Because you're going to do some scribbling.
14:40Got a big question for you.
14:41Which of these celebrity couples went on an awkward double date
14:46with other partners before getting together?
14:50So is it Meghan Markle and Prince Harry,
14:53Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds,
14:56or Taylor Swift and Travis Kelsey?
14:59Oh.
15:00Which one do you think?
15:02Meghan and Prince Harry,
15:04Ryan and Blake,
15:06or Taylor and number 87 Travis Kelsey?
15:11So, Owen, we'll start with you.
15:12I think it's Meghan and Harry.
15:14Right, you've got Meghan and Harry.
15:15I've gone with Ryan and Blake.
15:17You've got Ryan and Blake.
15:18And I've gone with Blake and Ryan.
15:20And you've gone with Blake and Ryan as well.
15:22All right.
15:23Well, I can tell you that the answer is...
15:25It is Blake and Ryan.
15:27It is Ryan and Blake.
15:28Yes, well done.
15:29You both get a point.
15:30Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds first met
15:31whilst filming Green Lantern.
15:33About a year later,
15:34they went on a double date with other people.
15:37Reynolds later said it was the most awkward date
15:40for the people they were with
15:41because fireworks were going on between him and Blake.
15:46So, at the end of that round,
15:47let's take a look at the scores.
15:50Owen and Greg, you've got two.
15:52Abi, you're in the lead with three.
15:54This is exciting.
15:55Come on, Abi.
15:56You can do this.
15:57Right, next up, it's round three.
15:58We like this one.
15:59All three of you have a lunchbox in front of you.
16:02There are three separate meals.
16:04All we want you to tell us is whether it is or it isn't.
16:09A delicacy of Kirby Lonsdale.
16:10The first one we're going to try is the Bronte pasta.
16:14Ooh.
16:14It's the Bronte pasta.
16:15I've got a lunchbox as well.
16:17Beautiful presentation.
16:18It's lovely.
16:19Yeah, have a look.
16:20Very strong smell of pesto there.
16:22It's a vibrant green pasta ribbon
16:24coated in a silky sauce, pistachio sauce.
16:27Elegant, brilliantly coloured.
16:29Key ingredients represent the Bronte assistance.
16:32Oh!
16:33Owen, you've absolutely scraped the sheen off the ball.
16:38I've smashed it.
16:39You really have.
16:40Do you like it?
16:41Loved it.
16:42Yeah?
16:42Gorgeous.
16:43Greg?
16:43It's very nice.
16:44The first one only tasted pesto.
16:46The next one was very nutty.
16:48So it's a great mix.
16:50All right, good stuff.
16:50Sweet pasta.
16:52So grab your paddles.
16:53I want to know whether you think this is a delicacy of Kirby Lonsdale.
16:56Please, Owen.
16:57I don't know.
16:58I think it tastes more continental than Kirby Lonsdale.
17:03So I'm going to say that I don't believe it.
17:05Don't believe it.
17:06Greg?
17:06I'm going to follow suit with that because I just think pasta and...
17:10Yeah, it's not particularly Kirby for me.
17:12So I'm going to say no.
17:14I also don't believe it.
17:16Cumbria, pasta.
17:17I don't think the two go hand in hand, do they?
17:19No.
17:19Let's find out.
17:21You were right.
17:22Not to believe it.
17:23All three of you get a point.
17:24Well done.
17:25Lovely.
17:26Yes.
17:27The tone of Bronte in Italy hosts an annual pistachio festival
17:31with dishes such as pasta alla Brontese,
17:35which is what you've just eaten.
17:37Very nice.
17:38Right, dive back into your boxes.
17:40Next up, we've got the fruit mustard chutney.
17:43This is a chutney with unexpected depth.
17:45I'm happy with that.
17:47Are you?
17:47It is alright.
17:48I'm happy with that, yeah.
17:49It's frank.
17:50It is.
17:51It's so bad.
17:52Why is the texture like that?
17:53Why is it like that?
17:57I'm so sorry to anyone who likes this.
17:59It's really bad.
17:59I like it.
18:00Oh, wow!
18:02Greg's absolutely walloped his tone.
18:04Wow.
18:05Look at you.
18:09Why doesn't it taste like wasabi?
18:11Yes.
18:12Well, it's mustard.
18:12What a week you're having.
18:14It's all the senses.
18:15Alright, so, Paddles, please.
18:17Do you or do you not believe that the fruit mustard chutney
18:20is a delicacy of Kirby Lonsdale or wine?
18:24I think that I do believe it.
18:27Greg?
18:27If it's not, it should be.
18:29There we are.
18:29My asmi is my answer for everything.
18:31Abi?
18:32I think there's something in like a chutney
18:34slash marble lady kind of thing.
18:36I'm going to go with I do believe it.
18:38Right.
18:39But I'm not going there.
18:40Okay.
18:41All three of you do believe that the fruit mustard chutney
18:44is a delicacy of Kirby Lonsdale.
18:47It's not.
18:48It's not.
18:49You fell for it.
18:49Thank goodness.
18:50It is mostarda di frutta.
18:53It's a northern Italian condiment.
18:55Mmm.
18:56Wow.
18:56There you go.
18:57Right, your third and final delicacy in your lunchbox
19:01is a rum nicki.
19:03It's a traditional tart filled with dark rum-soaked
19:06dried fruits and fragrant spices.
19:09It is actually quite savoury.
19:11Very crunchy.
19:12It is good.
19:13You like it?
19:14Finally.
19:15That pastry's lovely.
19:16Mmm.
19:17I love a pastry.
19:19Right, well grab your paddles.
19:20Do you or do you not believe that the rum nicki
19:24is actually a delicacy from Kirby Lonsdale?
19:28Or wine?
19:29I believe it.
19:29I want to get the train there now and have some more.
19:32I also believe it.
19:33It just to me seems the sort of thing that would be from Kirkby.
19:37It feels quite northern.
19:39It feels quite northern.
19:39I'm also going to go with I believe it is phenomenal.
19:42Oh, wow.
19:43All right.
19:43Well, double thumbs up for the rum nicki.
19:46It's the right answer.
19:47Yeah!
19:49Oh, that was so good.
19:51So, at the end of that round, let's take a look at the scores.
19:56Oh, Ian and Greg, you've got four points.
19:58But still indeed, just one point ahead.
19:59Abi has got five points with two rounds of play.
20:02Well done.
20:02Yes.
20:03Oh, could all go wrong.
20:05Yes.
20:06As we've come to know, tour guiding can be a filthy job, according to Paul.
20:09So, just as well, Kirby Lonsdale has a lovely bath shop.
20:12Let's hope he keeps his clothes on.
20:16Here at the bath house in Kirby Lonsdale,
20:18they've mastered the art of the most relaxing of bath times.
20:22They're not only vegan friendly,
20:24but all products are crafted right here in Cumbria.
20:27Fun fact, the biggest certified bath bomb ever weighed around 90 kilos
20:32and was dropped in a swimming pool for charity.
20:35That is one serious soak.
20:37You'd almost need a bath just to recover from it.
20:41But would you believe the first bath bomb
20:43was invented in ancient China during the Qing dynasty?
20:47Well, would you?
20:51Right then, here we go, Owen. Here is your question.
20:54Would you believe the first bath bomb
20:55was invented in China during the Qing dynasty?
21:00I don't know.
21:01I just think they're quite modern.
21:04As in, in the last hundred years, modern.
21:06Well, I'm not going to swear you, but, you know, the Chinese,
21:08they do have all the kind of Chinese medicine,
21:11which is made out of all kinds of stuff.
21:13So, I would imagine a little bit of fizz.
21:15Invented gunpowder as well.
21:15Would have been that difficult to find.
21:17Gunpowder?
21:18Yeah, gunpowder as well.
21:19In the bath?
21:19Yeah, fireworks.
21:21Wow.
21:21So, maybe, the original bath bomb,
21:23I mean, I'm not influenced,
21:24a bath bomb could have actually been a bomb.
21:26A grenade?
21:27Yeah.
21:29That's a good point, you know?
21:32Maybe I'm swaying more the other way.
21:33Maybe I do believe it.
21:35Yeah, I'm going to believe it.
21:36Let's have a look.
21:38Oh!
21:39No!
21:40He sold you down the river!
21:42It's your fault!
21:44I was doing so well.
21:45You were!
21:46You would have won a point there,
21:47if old Rutherford hadn't piled in.
21:49Exactly.
21:50Unlucky.
21:51The bath bomb was created in a shed in Dorset in 1989
21:54by Moore Constantine,
21:55inspired by Alka-Salsa tablets.
21:58Oh.
21:59Yeah.
21:59Right, Greg, here we go.
22:00It's your turn, Owen and Abi,
22:02to throw the big fella under the bus.
22:04Come on.
22:04Paul is exploring Britain's longest shore cave.
22:08Hope he's packed his torch.
22:12If you thought Kirby Lonsdale had hidden gems above ground,
22:16then wait till you see what's lurking below,
22:18as beneath Ingleborough Hill lies White Scar Cave,
22:22the longest shore cave in Britain.
22:25White Scar Cave was first explored in 1923
22:29by Cambridge undergraduate Christopher Long,
22:32who, just like me, definitely didn't find it
22:34by getting his tour guide lost.
22:36Today, it's one of the UK's most popular underground attractions,
22:40and visitors can admire the rock formations,
22:43with names like The Judge's Head and The Witch's Fingers.
22:49The Witch's Greater,
22:51the height of Mount Everest,
22:53or the depths of the world's deepest known cave.
22:57Well, which one is it?
23:02It really is.
23:05It really is.
23:07Greg, your question is this.
23:08Which is greater,
23:09the height of Mount Everest,
23:11or the depth of the world's deepest known cave?
23:16Good question, Paul.
23:18Mount Everest is pretty high though, isn't it?
23:20Allegedly.
23:20Yeah.
23:21Crikey.
23:21Where have you been?
23:24The depth of the world's deepest known cave.
23:27Oh, this is difficult, isn't it?
23:2950-50, isn't it?
23:30I feel like this is the problem with these 50-50s.
23:31I feel like the obvious answer is to go Mount Everest.
23:35Do you know what?
23:35I'm going to go against my gut for once,
23:37because I want to say go with the deepest known cave,
23:40but I'm going to go with Mount Everest,
23:42because I want to say the other one,
23:43so I know I'm now going to get it wrong again,
23:45because I've now changed my mind.
23:46Let's have a look at the answer.
23:46I know it's wrong already.
23:48It's wrong!
23:50Oh, that's bad.
23:52Yes, you got a point.
23:54Everest is in fact 8,848 metres high.
23:59Depth of the world's deepest cave is around 2,200 metres deep
24:03and keeps changing,
24:05because cavers keep finding new passages
24:08that then allow them to go a little bit deeper each time.
24:11There you go.
24:12Right, Abi, are you ready?
24:13Yes.
24:13Right then, let's hit the road again.
24:14Paul, over to you.
24:19Every town has a local hero,
24:21and here in Kirby Lonsdale,
24:23it's thriller writer Lee Child.
24:25He wrote his first Jack Reacher novel
24:27whilst living here for a few years.
24:32This pub, the Snooty Fox,
24:34was one of Lee Child's favourite hangouts,
24:36and locals say his wife and friends
24:38were regulars on the pub quiz team.
24:41In the novels, Reacher is 6ft 5 inches tall,
24:44250 pounds,
24:45and famously travels with no luggage,
24:47but despite being a foot shorter,
24:50Tom Cruise played him in two films.
24:52Which, I mean,
24:53if they wanted someone 6'5 with no baggage,
24:55they should have come to this guy.
24:57But would you believe Lee Child came up with the name Jack Reacher
25:01after customers routinely asked him to get high items
25:04from shelves in a nearby supermarket?
25:30I'd never... I always have to ask someone else to get some things
25:34on the high shelves in the supermarkets.
25:36So, I'm on the other end of Lee Child,
25:39and I feel like the only thing I know about him
25:40is Jack Reacher's toothbrush.
25:43He brings a toothbrush.
25:44Never read the books.
25:45Never read about the backstory.
25:48I'm going to say that I believe it.
25:50Should we believe?
25:52Yes!
25:53Yes!
25:53And as they say, if you believe, you receive.
25:56You get a point.
25:56Well done.
25:57And that is the end of that round.
25:59So, let's have a look at the scores.
26:02Ooh!
26:03Ooh, look at that.
26:04Wow!
26:05Wow.
26:06So, Owain has four.
26:07Greg has five.
26:08Abi, you're still in the lead with six.
26:10Yes!
26:12This might be the one.
26:13However, the scores could all change
26:15at the end of the quick-fire round.
26:18You know the deal by now.
26:19Fingers on your buzzers.
26:21Good luck.
26:24Kirby means village with a...
26:28Owain.
26:29Church.
26:29Yes.
26:31Next question.
26:38Abi.
26:39Glamping.
26:40Ooh, yeah.
26:41Yes!
26:42Well done.
26:42Two points ahead.
26:44Next question.
26:46Kirby Lonsdale's weekly market is held on this day.
26:50Abi.
26:51Thursday.
26:52Yes!
26:54Yes!
26:54Well done.
26:55Three points ahead.
26:56You're in.
26:56Another question.
26:59Popular local airborne leisure activity.
27:03Abi.
27:04Hot air ballooning.
27:05Yes!
27:05It is hot air ballooning.
27:07Points ahead.
27:08And that's it!
27:09Yes!
27:10Absolutely nailed it, Abi Cook.
27:12Locked in.
27:12Incredible.
27:13Incredible.
27:14Right, time's up.
27:15That means at the end of the round, the scores look like this.
27:18Abi, I think we know what's coming.
27:19You absolutely smashed the quick-fire round.
27:23Owain and Greg, you're in second with five, but way out in the front.
27:27A phenomenal quick-fire round.
27:29Abi, your today's winner with nine points.
27:30Yay!
27:31Thank you!
27:32Well done.
27:32So, Abi, well done.
27:33You get three points for winning today.
27:35Owain and Greg, you get two points each because you both came second.
27:38Which means with four shows done and dusted, let's see who's atop of the weekly leaderboard.
27:43So far, you've accumulated...
27:46Oh!
27:48Nine points each.
27:51And also, Abi, you walk away today with the very sought-after postcard from Paul.
27:56And a little prize.
27:58Oh!
27:59I love it!
28:00Your very own bell.
28:01So, you can take that all the way from Kirby Lonsdale.
28:04Congratulations.
28:05Thank you very much.
28:06Well done.
28:08Right, that's it for today.
28:09Join us on our travels next time.
28:11We might even pass through your place.
28:13Bye for now.
28:15Thank you very much.
28:16Thank you very much.
28:17Thank you very much.
28:19Thank you very much.
28:21Thank you very much.
28:22Thank you very much.
28:22Thank you very much.
28:23Thank you very much.
28:24Thank you very much.
28:25Thank you very much.
28:26Thank you very much.
28:26Thank you very much.
28:28Thank you very much.
28:29Thank you very much.
28:29Thank you very much.
28:30Thank you very much.
28:33Thank you very much.
28:37Thank you very much.
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