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00:19University Challenge. Asking the questions, I'm all ready.
00:28Hello and welcome to University Challenge, where another two teams are about to face
00:32off for a place in the quarter-finals. Tonight's game is the penultimate match in round two
00:37of the competition and at this point in proceedings, the format leaves teams no room for error.
00:43The losing team this evening will be leaving the competition for good. Our first ever team
00:48from Lincoln made a big impression in their debut match, dispatching strong opposition
00:51from Lancaster. With three minutes to go, the scores were level, but Lincoln's knowledge
00:55of Gothic architecture, English geography and electrical engineering ultimately allowed
01:00them to secure a narrow victory. Lincoln were quick on the buzzer throughout that game, but
01:04had a more difficult time with bonuses, struggling through sets on classical music and British
01:09birds, though they did display an impressive knowledge of the main characters of Pixar films.
01:13Let's meet the team from the University of Lincoln once again.
01:17Hi, I'm Grace Blainfield. I'm from Buckingham and I study chemistry.
01:21Hello, I'm Laura Bruce. I'm from Perth and I study conservation and cultural heritage.
01:26And their captain.
01:27Hello, I'm Samuel Orman-Chan. I'm from Derbyshire and I study computer science.
01:32Hi, I'm John Clayworth. I live in Wigan and I study history.
01:39They're facing this year's team from UCL, who played fellow Londoners SOAS in their opening
01:43game. UCL took the first starter of that match and from that point on, they were never once
01:48behind, though SOAS did make sure that they were never ahead by a margin of more than a
01:53couple of questions. They converted more than three quarters of their bonuses, breezing
01:57through sets on fine art, the American War of Independence and the languages of Pakistan.
02:01European and African geography, however, proved a little less straightforward for them.
02:06Let's meet the team from UCL for the second time.
02:09Hi, I'm Zach Lakota-Baldwin. I'm from London and I'm doing a PhD in science and technology studies.
02:15Hi, I'm Alice Lee. I'm from Kendalyn, Cumbria and I'm studying for a Masters in Russian and post-Soviet politics.
02:22And their captain.
02:23Hi, I'm Michael Dougherty. I'm from Derry and I'm doing a PhD in optical communications.
02:28Hi, I'm Manny Campion-Dye. I'm from Bath and I'm studying for a PhD in philosophy.
02:36Welcome back. Very nice to see you all. How are you feeling? Feeling good?
02:40Oh, yeah.
02:42I think we'd better get on with it. All right, fingers or buzzers, here's your start for ten. Good luck.
02:45During a visit to an exhibition of JMW Turner's works at New York's Museum of Modern Art in 1966,
02:53which artist is reported to have said,
02:55This man, Turner, he learnt a lot from me.
02:58You sell Campion-Dye.
03:00Rothko?
03:01It is Mark Rothko. Well done.
03:03Three questions for you on bosses in the Diablo series of video games.
03:08Along with Diablo and Baal, which demon lord is one of the three prime evils
03:12and features as a major boss in several of the games?
03:16His name is derived from that of a devil who features in the Faust legend.
03:21Oh, Mephistopheles?
03:22Yeah, Mephistopheles.
03:23Mephistopheles.
03:24Oh, yeah? Okay.
03:25Mephistopheles?
03:26I'll accept that. The name of the boss is Mephisto. It's from Mephistopheles.
03:30A daughter of Mephisto, who is the primary antagonist of Diablo 4,
03:34she shares her name with a character in Jewish folklore,
03:36sometimes said to be the first wife of Adam.
03:38Lilith.
03:39Lilith.
03:40Yes.
03:41Sarat and Queen Aranei are among the bosses featured in the Diablo series
03:45that take the form of what arthropods?
03:50Could it just be like spiders, maybe?
03:52Because that's like a sort of freaky thing that you could have and do.
03:54Are they arthropods?
03:55Yeah, arthropods is just anything that includes like insects, arachnids, etc.
03:58Oh, okay.
03:59Yeah, okay.
04:00Spider?
04:01Yes, spiders is correct.
04:03Let's start with a question.
04:04Established by Edward III in 1348 in imitation of the legends of King Arthur.
04:10Lincoln Clayworth.
04:11The Order of the Garter.
04:12Well done.
04:13It is indeed.
04:15Your bonuses, Lincoln, are three questions on science in 1925.
04:19In a groundbreaking PhD thesis published in 1925,
04:23the Harvard researcher Cecilia Payne established that stars
04:26are primarily composed of what two chemical elements?
04:29Hydrogen and helium.
04:30Yes.
04:31Austrian-born Richard Gigmundi won the 1925 Nobel Chemistry Prize
04:35for his work on what class of submicroscopic particles
04:39dispersed in another substance.
04:41Their name derives from the Greek for glue.
04:47Pass.
04:48The colloids.
04:50In 1925, which Austrian physicist proposed the exclusion principle,
04:54stating that no two electrons in an atom can have all four quantum numbers the same?
04:58Um, is it, um, is it the Alfval principle?
05:03Nominate Bloomfield?
05:05Alfval principle?
05:06No, it's Wolfgang Pauli.
05:08Let's start the question.
05:09On which modern wind instrument were Richard Mulfeldt, Heinrich Berman and Anton Stadler notable performers?
05:16The three inspired quintets by Brahms, Karl Maria von Weber and Mozart respectively,
05:21with Weber and Mozart also writing concertos.
05:23You can see a champion by clarinet.
05:25It is a clarinet.
05:26Yes, well done.
05:27Your three questions, three bonuses on public art found at London's Liverpool Street Station.
05:32Installed in 2024 and comprising dozens of metal spheres suspended in the air,
05:37Infinite Accumulation is the largest permanent public sculpture by which artist,
05:41in the same year both the Tate Britain and Victoria mirror galleries,
05:44exhibited some of this artist's infinity mirror rooms?
05:48Yeah, Kusama.
05:49Oh, it's Kusama.
05:50Yeah.
05:50Kusama?
05:50Yes.
05:51Situated at the station's Broadgate exit, Fulcrum is a 55-foot tall 1987 sculpture by which American artist,
05:59who died in 2024.
06:01It consists of five vertical-leaning sheets of Corten steel,
06:06one of this artist's signature materials.
06:09I can honestly talk about it.
06:10American sculptor.
06:13I mean, Gary did loads of stuff with steel, but it was...
06:16Maybe...
06:16Maybe Calder?
06:19Didn't Calder do more like mobiles and stuff?
06:20Yeah, but...
06:21Did he do stuff that big if it's like that tall?
06:23I think it's better than Gary.
06:24Yeah.
06:25I mean, Gary's more like an architect, but...
06:26Yeah.
06:27Uh, Calder?
06:28No, it's Richard Serra.
06:29Sculptures by Frank Meisler, Ari Ovedia and Floor Kent
06:33commemorate what government-authorised programme of the late 1930s
06:37in which thousands of unaccompanied children arrived in London at Liverpool Street?
06:41Kinder Transport.
06:41Kinder Transport, yeah.
06:42Kinder Transport.
06:43It is indeed, yeah.
06:44Now, let's start the question.
06:45In chemistry, what nine-letter term denotes a reagent added to a system
06:50to remove or bind particular trace components,
06:53usually with the aim of preventing unwanted reactions from occurring?
06:56An example being the sachets of iron powder and salt
07:00commonly added to packaged food...
07:03Desiccant.
07:04No, I'm afraid you lose five points, to absorb oxygen.
07:07In zoology, this word means an animal that principally feeds
07:10on decaying matter or carrion.
07:12Lincoln Bloomfield.
07:14Decomposer.
07:15No, scavenger.
07:16Bad luck.
07:16Let's start the question.
07:17Which film director's work includes a cycle of films following the character
07:21Antoine Douanel, who was, according to the director, a synthesis of himself
07:25and the actor who portrayed him, Jean-Pierre Léaude.
07:29Antoine appears as an adult in films such as Love on the Run, Bed and Board,
07:33Stolen Kisses and as a mischievous schoolboy in the...
07:36UCL champion die.
07:38Truffaut.
07:39It is Francois Truffaut.
07:40Well done.
07:41Your bonuses, UCL, are on some of the useful knots
07:43which every scout ought to know, described by Robert Baden-Powell
07:47in Scouting for Boys.
07:49Colloquially referred to as the King of Knots,
07:51which knot was described by Baden-Powell as for making a loop
07:55that will not slip, such as you tie round a man
07:57when you want to rescue him from fire?
08:02Do you know...
08:03I mean, reef knot is a knot, but I don't know if it's...
08:07Yeah, reef knot, I can't think of any others.
08:09What's...
08:09Something to rescue him?
08:10Double under or a triple or, yeah, reef.
08:12I'm sorry.
08:13Reef?
08:14Nope, it's the bowline.
08:15Described by Baden-Powell as for tying two rope ends together,
08:19the principal benefit of which knot is its usefulness
08:22in joining two ropes of different sizes.
08:24It likely derives its name from its use in fixing a rope
08:27to the corners of a sail.
08:29Is that a reef knot?
08:30This could be a reef knot.
08:31A reef?
08:32Or could it be like boat or boatsman or something?
08:35Corner of a sail.
08:35Yeah.
08:36Sailors?
08:37Sailors knot?
08:38No.
08:38No, that's not sailor, no.
08:40Reef, okay.
08:40Reef knot?
08:41Nope, that's the sheet bend.
08:43The first knot described by Baden-Powell,
08:45which knot is used to tie two similar ropes together?
08:48Its fastening may be described as left over right and under,
08:52then right over left and under, or the reverse.
08:54Yes.
08:55I don't know if I think there's such an ugly roof knot.
08:57Yeah.
08:58Reef.
08:59Got there in the end.
08:59Well done.
09:01Yes.
09:02Picture round now.
09:03And for your picture starter, you will see a national flag.
09:05For ten points, name the country it represents.
09:09.
09:09.
09:10.
09:11.
09:11.
09:11.
09:11Senegal?
09:12No.
09:15.
09:16.
09:16.
09:16That was the flag of Togo, which is the only flag where the
09:20proportions of its length and height match the golden ratio.
09:24For your picture bonuses, UCL, you will see three more national
09:27flags with unique aspect ratios.
09:30Name the country in each case.
09:32First, this flag with an aspect ratio of 189 to 335.
09:38Helpful wording has been covered.
09:40It's either El Salvador or Nicaragua, I think, is the other one.
09:45I think it's more likely to be El Salvador.
09:47I think it's El Salvador.
09:48Yeah.
09:49El Salvador?
09:50Correct.
09:51Next, this flag with an aspect ratio of 10 to 17.
09:56That's Cape Verde.
09:57Cape Verde?
09:58Correct.
09:59And finally, this flag with an aspect ratio of 11 to 28.
10:04Oh, wait.
10:05It's either Qatar or Bahrain.
10:06I think it's Qatar because it has lots more...
10:08Is Qatar the more stretched out one?
10:10Yeah.
10:10Okay.
10:11Qatar?
10:11It is indeed.
10:12Yes, well done.
10:12I'll start with the question.
10:14What word in the singular or plural links all of the following?
10:18The nickname given to the English parliament that sat from 1661 to 1679,
10:23the longest in English and British history.
10:25The title of a 1624 portrait located in the Wallace Collection
10:29and painted by Franz Harles.
10:31And the name of a professional basketball team based in Cleveland, Ohio.
10:36Lincoln Clayworth.
10:37Cavalier.
10:37Yes.
10:38Well done.
10:38Your bonuses, Lincoln, are on a literary movement and an associated concept.
10:43Quote,
10:44The enemy of false sensibility and objective description.
10:47It seeks to clothe the idea with a sensory form which should not exist as an end in itself,
10:53but as a form which must remain subjective.
10:55Taken from an essay of 1886, those words of French poet Jean Morayas referred to which literary movement?
11:03Other poets associated with this movement include Stéphane Mallarmé.
11:09Pass.
11:10Symbolism.
11:11Which poet did Morayas credit with being the precursor of the symbolism movement?
11:15His poem Correspondences, notable for its use of synesthesia as a poetic device,
11:21is often cited as anticipating the symbolist movement.
11:26Pass.
11:27Charles Baudelaire.
11:28The sonnet Voyel or Vowels is a work by which symbolist poet?
11:32In it he assigns different colours, sounds and images to particular letters.
11:38Pass.
11:39That was Arthur Rambo.
11:40Let's start the question.
11:41The first OED citation of what word dates to a British patent of 1861,
11:47in which a French inventor describes an aerostatic apparatus,
11:52which I intend denominating Aeronef.
11:55Numerous experimental versions of this device appeared in the early 20th century,
11:59but mass production did not begin until the 1940s with the R4 made in the USA by Sikorsky.
12:07USEL Doherty.
12:08Jet engine.
12:09No.
12:10Anyone want to buzz?
12:11You may not confer.
12:16Airplane.
12:17No, it's a helicopter.
12:18Right, things are buzzers.
12:19This is another starter for ten.
12:20The preface to the first edition of which novel of the 1760s presented its contents as an English translation of
12:27a recently discovered manuscript written around the time of the Crusades and later printed in Naples in 1529.
12:34Lincoln Ormond Chan.
12:35House of Othello.
12:36No one afraid to lose five points.
12:38In 1529, opening with Prince Manfred impatiently awaiting the marriage of his sickly son to the Princess Isabella.
12:45The novel is often considered to be the foundation of the horror story as a literary form, and the first
12:50English language Gothic novel, and it was written by Horace Walpole.
12:55UCL champion.
12:56The castle of Otranto.
12:57It is the castle of Otranto.
12:58Well done.
13:00Your bonuses, UCL, are three questions on limestone.
13:03What city in Normandy gives its name to the fine-grained limestone used to build Canterbury Cathedral?
13:10Associated with William the Conqueror, who was buried there, it is close to the site of the 1944 D-Day
13:15landings.
13:18Is it like LiĂšge or Les Manges?
13:21No, there's one up there called, like, Death Something.
13:26Death Something?
13:27Le...
13:28Le...
13:29Le Mans?
13:30No.
13:30Is Le Mans or the...
13:31Come on.
13:32I don't know, I think I need something...
13:34Le Mans?
13:34Le Mans?
13:35No, it's Cannes.
13:36The Empire State Building is faced with limestone from which US state?
13:39It is largely quarried around Bloomington and Bedford in a triangle formed by the state capital, Evansville and Louisville, Kentucky.
13:48Which state?
13:51Bloomington is in...
13:54Is it like Ohio?
13:58is it massachusetts maybe oh maybe no well no ohio no it's indiana honey-colored limestone from
14:06coombe down came to prominence during the 18th century for its use in the palladian buildings
14:11of which city known to the romans as aquisulis bath bath that is bath well let's start the
14:17question containing 11 conjugated and two unconjugated carbon-carbon double bonds the
14:25long-chain polyalkene responsible for producing the red color in tomatoes is known by what common
14:31name beta carotene no anyone from you may not confer anyone from lincoln lincoln bloomfield
14:41alpha carotene no bad luck it's lycopene that's not a question fingers on buzzers
14:47though not used in english until the early 18th century writings of joseph rafson and john
14:52toland what term denoting the belief that a supreme deity and nature are one and the same
14:58is most commonly associated with the 17th century works of baruch spinova
15:03use your campion by monism no one afraid you'll lose five points it is derived from greek roots
15:08meaning all and god lincoln clayworth omnipotent no it's pantheism bad luck let's start the question
15:16researcher and political advisor stafford beer pioneered a subset of management theory
15:22that drew primarily upon which field you seem like an abaldron cybernetics it is indeed yes
15:28your bonuses are on textiles associated with africa in the production of ankara fabric what
15:36substance is applied to a textile in order to block dye from penetrating the fibers and thus create a
15:41pattern the technique originated in the production of batik cloth in indonesia and was brought to the
15:47african continent by dutch colonizers where it has since evolved just just wax wax yes created by
15:54weaving thin strips of brightly colored cloth before cutting and sewing to create pattern fabric kente
16:00cloth is a textile originating in which west african country the cloth was traditionally reserved for
16:07asante royalty yes ghana ghana yes aso okay is a traditional hand woven cloth produced by members
16:14of which major west african ethnic group concentrated in the southwestern part of nigeria southwestern part
16:21of nigeria i think is yoruba i think it is yoruba yoruba it is music round now and for your
16:27music
16:28starter you'll hear a piece of popular music for 10 points name the artist
16:54anyone want to have a guess
16:57now i'll tell you that was young fathers we'll take your music bonuses when we get the next starter
17:02right so named because of the resemblance of its party's colors to that of the u.s state's flag
17:10the arizona coalition agreed in early 2025 to form a government in which european country its leader
17:17bart de weaver has previously argued in favor of devolution for some of this country's regions
17:21at the behest of his party the new flemish alliance lincoln or mention belgium it is belgium yes
17:28for your music starter lincoln you heard get up from young fathers mercury prize winning debut album
17:33dead for your music bonuses you're going to hear tracks from three more debut albums
17:37that won the mercury prize and again i want you to name the band or artist in each case first
17:43from 1994
17:50nominate bruce fortis head yes that's sour times from the winning album dummy next this song from 2017
17:58when i was three years old
18:08no one knows me like the piano from the winning album process finally this song from 2002
18:30pass i'll tell you that was miss dynamite with dynamite which is very much the anthem of my
18:37first term at university sadly a very long time ago right fingers on buzzers here's another starter
18:42question a single word answer is enough here which tissue of the body contains networks of small tubes
18:48known as haversion canals which themselves contain small blood vessels responsible for the blood
18:54supply to osteocytes use your ability bone yes bone is great your bonuses are on sites outside of mecca
19:04and medina that may be visited on ziarat a form of pilgrimage associated with significant figures
19:10in islam in each case i need you to give me the site's location first containing the tombs of a
19:16number
19:16of early sufis as well as that of emperor aurangzeb the valley of the saints can be found in which
19:21indian state it is located near the city of kuldabad
19:33i think punjab is more likely yeah i think it's reasonable yeah punjab maharashtra secondly first built by caliph haroun
19:41al-rasheed the mosque containing the tomb of ali can be found in which iraqi city
19:46i think it's karbala maybe if you think it's like yeah karbala no it's najaf lastly said to contain the
19:53head of john the baptist as well as a shrine to hussein ibn ali the umayyad mosque can be found
19:58in which capital city
19:59i think it's damascus yeah damascus it is damascus well done
20:04another starter question the short epistolary novel lady susan is an early work by which english novelist
20:11it was written around 1794 but not published before her death in 1817
20:17lincoln clayworth jane austen it is jane austen well done
20:20the approach is linked to three questions on eponymous facial hairstyles
20:24for five points name the style from the description first a moustache named after a fictional criminal mastermind
20:30from a series of stories by sax roma the moustache is long thin and styled downwards
20:41well done i think you're wearing one yeah next a beard named after a 19th century italian revolutionary
20:46the beard is wide and rounded at the bottom
20:51i'll be annoyed at myself for that one
20:53pass garibaldi finally a style obliquely named after a union general and arms manufacturer of the
20:59american civil war who also served as governor of rhode island this term describes thick strips
21:04of facial hair at the sides of the face with a clean shaven chin
21:12sideburns it is sideburns from ambrose burnside
21:14okay let's start a question in physics which greek letter is used in lowercase to represent
21:20angular velocity and in uppercase
21:22ucldoity
21:24omega it is omega well done three questions for ucl on plays
21:28the 1898 collection plays pleasant and unpleasant comprises works by which dramatist
21:34among the so-called unpleasant group are widowers houses and mrs warren's profession
21:45could be yeah it's his time i don't think i had to go for it okay wild no it's george
21:50burnishaw which of shaw's pleasant plays featured the characters reina petkoff and a mercerine named
21:56blutschley known as the chocolate soldier
22:00the only clown i know by burnishaw is pygmalion
22:06would it need to be burnishaw again yeah okay yeah pygmalion definitely not pygmalion
22:13it's arms and the man which of the other pleasant plays has as its title the name of the wife
22:17of the
22:18reverend james morrell the same word is also used for a genus of yeasts that causes a common fungal
22:23infection
22:25thrush
22:29wait what did you say about the line there's a one person called
22:32oh okay nominate campion day
22:35otterline
22:35no it's candida which is the yeast that causes thrush
22:40right another starter round and it's a picture round
22:43for your picture starter you're going to see a photograph of an american writer
22:46who died in 2023
22:48for 10 points give me the writer's name
22:54cormac mccarthy that is cormac mccarthy well done
22:57for your picture starter you saw a photograph of cormac mccarthy and for your picture bonuses
23:01you're now going to see stills from three film adaptations of mccarthy's novels
23:05i want you to name the film in each case first this film
23:10that's the road i think the road certainly is the road secondly this film based on one part of mccarthy's
23:15border trilogy
23:17is that a really young matt damon yeah it's matt damon and that's from penelope cruz as well
23:21oh
23:21um what are the bloodshed no country for old man he did blood meridian that's another this is a no
23:25country for old man
23:26could it be blood meridian
23:27it could be yeah okay that's the only other one i know blood meridian
23:30that one's all the pretty horses and finally this film
23:35that's no country for old man
23:36no country for old man it is indeed
23:39now let's start the question
23:40what animal appears on the badges of all of the following football clubs
23:45fc copenhagen
23:47lincoln clayworth
23:49lion
23:49well done
23:50yeah your bonuses are on objects within a constellation
23:54which constellation one of the 48 identified by ptolemy
23:57contains the closest star to earth's sun
24:00would it be yeah yeah maybe
24:03different
24:06nominate bloomfield
24:07andromeda
24:08no centaurus initially thought to be a star and later classified as a nebula
24:12omega centauri is now regarded as the largest example in the milky way
24:17of what specific type of astronomical object
24:19defined as a stable tightly bound and roughly spherical group of stars
24:24globular cluster
24:25yes centaurus a is a notable example of a galaxy that is a particularly powerful emitter
24:30of what type of electromagnetic radiation with frequencies below 300 gigahertz
24:35uh would be uh is that radio waves
24:39uh radio waves yes correct well done let's start the question i need two answers promptly here
24:44in addition to bangor belfast and derry northern ireland has three other places with city status name two of them
24:56no you can have a bit more time but not very much
24:59uh ucl duety
25:14increment by one yes we take that well done your bonus is then a three questions on the most recent
25:19first-time winners of european football leagues as of the start of the 2024-25 season
25:24the most recent occasion that a team became champions of the dutch area divisi for the first time was in
25:29the 2009-10 season
25:31when which club managed by an englishman won the title
25:34i think it's groningen
25:36nominate clayworth
25:37groningen
25:38no it was fc20 managed by steve mclaren
25:40the 1990-91 season was the last in which a team won italy's serie r for the first time
25:45which club based in genoa claimed their first scudetto with striker gianluca vialli the league's top scorer
25:56pass
25:57that's sampdoria
25:58germany's bundesliga saw a first-time champion crowned in 2024 with the league title going to which club managed by
26:04xavi alonso
26:06nominate clayworth
26:07by laverkusen
26:08yes it is
26:09let's start the question
26:09in which constellation are the super giant star deneb the north american nebula and the pelican nebula
26:16the constellation in question is itself named after another water bird
26:21do you feel like it a baldwin
26:22cygnus
26:23yes it is cygnus or the swan well done
26:25your bonuses are on the name of a pigment
26:27the name of which bright scarlet pigment a form of red crystalline mercuric sulfide is ultimately derived from the latin
26:34for worm
26:35crimson
26:37crimson
26:39crimson
26:39no it's vermilion
26:40the title figure of which poem by john keats is described as vermilion spotted golden green and blue
26:45she is a sorceress discovered by hermes in the form of a snake
26:49nominate campion die
26:50lamia
26:50yes the gulf of california was once named the vermilion sea because of its red plankton
26:54it is also known by the name of which spanish conquistador who explored it in 1532
27:01maybe cortez
27:02cortez oh yeah i see cortez
27:04cortez
27:04yes
27:05let's start a question
27:06derided by dr johnson admired by tennyson
27:09which of shakespeare's plays begins in the garden of a palace and ends in a tent
27:13other locations include a public place in rome
27:16a british prison
27:17lincoln cleworth
27:18julius caesar
27:19i'm afraid to lose five points
27:20and country near milford haven
27:23ucl champion
27:24cymbeline
27:24it is cymbeline yes
27:26your bonuses are on george orwell's 1984
27:28in each case identify the character who speaks or writes or is reported to have said the following
27:32first the two aims of the party are to conquer the whole surface of the earth and to extinguish once
27:37and for all
27:37the possibility of independent thought
27:40um
27:41isn't that winston smith
27:42no that's the guy
27:43oh it's um
27:44what's his name
27:46come on
27:46the one played by rich burn
27:47um i don't know
27:49just say
27:49winston smith
27:50winston smith
27:51definitely not winston smith
27:52and at the goal
27:53lincoln of 85
27:54a new sale of 190
27:58well the answer to the last one was emmanuel goldstein
28:00uh not winston smith
28:02um lincoln that's such bad luck because
28:04the fact is
28:05not only were you a fraction late on
28:07so many of the starters which you clearly knew
28:09but then you had to sit there while they got all your bonuses
28:11which you also clearly knew
28:12and i could see your mounting frustration thinking
28:14if you'd buzzed in a second earlier you'd have had all those bonuses
28:17but um we've loved getting to know you
28:18thank you so much for playing
28:19so fantastic you were up against a brilliant team
28:21you see 190 at this stage the competition is absolutely terrific
28:24and it means we'll see you and your very very extraordinary mascot again
28:27which i should remind our wonderful viewers was made by you was it not michael
28:32that is correct
28:33and that is
28:34jeremy bentham
28:35it is in a different form
28:37with a head that does a 360
28:39and is currently on a kebab stick
28:41is that right
28:41his spirit lives on
28:42wow well we should see you
28:44and some form of jeremy bentham
28:46in the next round as well
28:46well done
28:47uh you got through
28:48and i hope you can join us next time
28:49for the last of the second round matches
28:51but until then
28:52it is goodbye from lincoln university
28:53goodbye
28:54it's goodbye from ucl
28:56goodbye
28:56and it's goodbye from me
28:58goodbye
28:58thank you
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