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00:11Hi and welcome to do you know your place now there's always something amazing to
00:16see and do in our four fabulous nations but how well do we really know them well
00:21that's what we're here to find out with help of Paul our somewhat unreliable
00:24tour guide who'll be taking us all over the UK finding out what makes it so
00:29great. It's Monday so let's sort the credible from the crackers on do you
00:34know your place up first he played Masood Ahmed on EastEnders for nine years
00:43and he knows his Walford like the back of his arm but will he know the rest of the
00:46UK it's Nitin Ganatra! Next we have a rugby-loving Reverend who not only plays the game but has also
00:56been a commentator for the Women's Rugby World Cup it's Reverend Kate Botley
01:01he's gone from taking on rugby opponents to facing down contenders on gladiators but how will he
01:07handle today's questions? Contenders ready! It's Apollo Alex Gray!
01:12Yay! Yes! Nice! Right then Nitin we mentioned there Albert Square obviously it's a staple within Walford but how well
01:21do you know the rest of the United Kingdom do you think?
01:23So I'm not well travelled in the UK. Are you one of those people that like once you get past
01:28Watford Gap you think you're in the north?
01:29Is that what's happening to you? It's so cold! Once you get on the M1 once you go past yeah
01:34the Watford Gap after that you have to put on a jumper.
01:36Yeah exactly all right well good luck! That's all I can say!
01:41Yeah yeah I'm not well travelled and I admit it now. Kate welcome to the shore!
01:47Thank you I'm excited to be here! Yeah no you're well travelled in the UK aren't you?
01:51Yeah I present songs of praise so we're always popping up in various places around the UK but that doesn't
01:56necessarily mean I always pay attention to where I am I'm afraid.
02:00You're sat there like the actual roars between two thorns I'll be honest with you. Alex welcome! Thanks for having
02:07me!
02:07Professional athlete Alex of everything that you've done within the sporting realm what's your proudest achievement?
02:13I captained England as an underage player which was you know that was a big thing for me. That's so
02:18cool!
02:18Yeah it was amazing! I moved to the NFL played in the NFL which was at the time I thought
02:22that was the craziest thing I was going to do
02:23and so I put on the shiny spandex onesie for the gladiators.
02:26Yes the shore has been a huge success so congratulations to you and your fellow gladiators for that.
02:32Alex all the best of luck. Thank you.
02:34Right today we are sorting fact from fiction in...
02:38Derry Londonderry! Beautiful part of the world!
02:41Let's kick things off by finding out where Derry Londonderry actually is.
02:47Now we're going to test your geography gang.
02:50Earlier each of you placed a pin on the map as to where you think Londonderry is located.
02:55Let's see where you actually dropped your pin. So there is Derry on the map.
02:59Oh! How interesting stuff!
03:01Sorry.
03:01Right this is good.
03:03Alex you were furthest away.
03:04Landed 97 miles off the mark you hit the village of Klock in County Down.
03:09And more specifically you hit this family run tile and bathroom supplier.
03:14There they are.
03:14Absolutely.
03:15For all your tiling and bathroom needs.
03:18Lovely stuff.
03:19Kate, you're next.
03:21You dropped your pin 54 miles away from Londonderry in the town of Enniskilling, County Fermanagh.
03:26However, Nitin, you were the closest.
03:29You were 42 miles away in Sheephaven Bay in County Donegal in the Republic of Ireland.
03:35Derry is right on the border.
03:37So you get the point to kick off the show.
03:40OK, well he's downhill for me.
03:42Yeah.
03:43Right, the first question today, Nitin, is for your good self.
03:46So let's go over to our resident tour guide, Paul, who's giving us a quick rundown of all the names
03:51you can give this vibrant city.
03:54Paul, over to you.
03:57Welcome to Londonderry.
04:00Or Derry.
04:03A city with many names.
04:04So let's unpack that right away.
04:06I'm your tour guide and as the locals say, I'll keep you right, so I will.
04:10So here goes.
04:11Some call it Derry, others call it Londonderry.
04:14I'll use either today because it's often called Derry Stroke.
04:18Londonderry.
04:18It's affectionately known as Stroke City.
04:21Historical nicknames include the Maiden City, the Walled City and the parliamentary constituency is called Oil after the river it
04:30sits on.
04:31Perfect.
04:32Derry is the only completely walled off city on the island of Ireland, built by the city of London livery
04:38companies in the 1600s.
04:40That's where the London comes from.
04:42I'm told you have to walk single file on some of these narrowest spots of the city.
04:47And word on the street is that the term catwalk was coined here.
04:52But would you believe the saying, the walls have ears, also comes from here?
04:57Can you hear me?
05:00Well, would you?
05:03Stone cold silence.
05:07Get used to him.
05:09That's all I'm saying.
05:10Right, Nitin, you've got the first question and it is this.
05:14Would you believe the saying, the walls have ears, comes from Londonderry, the Walled City?
05:20I don't know where it comes from.
05:21So I would imagine, given that he did a little bit of shouting through a little hole somewhere, I'd go
05:27for it.
05:28I believe him.
05:28I'm going to go with a yes, because he's got a nice face and I believe him when he says
05:32things.
05:32Oh, don't fall for that.
05:33Yeah.
05:33Oh, no, no, no, no, no.
05:35That's not how to play the game, Nitin.
05:36I'd have a curry with him.
05:37Well, yeah, we all would, but then we'd check our wallets afterwards.
05:40Yeah.
05:41Do you know what I mean?
05:42OK, I'll say yes.
05:45All right, Nitin believes it.
05:46Let's have a look.
05:48Oh, no, you shouldn't believe it.
05:50No, no, no, no, no.
05:51Some link the phrase to the ancient Greek tyrant Dionysus of Syracuse,
05:55who supposedly built an ear-shaped cave to eavesdrop on prisoners.
06:01Some link the expression to Queen Catherine de' Medici,
06:03who allegedly used listing tubes in the Louvre Palace to gather political secrets.
06:09Mmm.
06:10There we go.
06:10There you go.
06:11Right, next up, Kate.
06:12OK, we go.
06:13Are you ready?
06:14Born ready.
06:14Paul is off to the harbourside.
06:18The 18th and 19th centuries were busy times for migration from here.
06:22From these very docks, families boarded ships bound for America, Canada and even Australia.
06:28But if you thought Australia had a bit of Irish in them, then here comes America saying,
06:33Hey Australia, hold my dark Irish stout.
06:36Because a staggering 30 million people in the USA claim to have Irish heritage.
06:4230 million?
06:43That's about as many likes as Taylor Swift got when she announced her engagement.
06:49I wonder how many of those were from Irish-American Swifties.
06:53As would you believe Taylor Swift's great-great-great-grandparents met in Derry in 1836.
06:59That'd be a nice love story, if it was true.
07:06What do you think?
07:07Would you believe Taylor Swift's great-great-great-grandparents met in Derry in 1836?
07:16I should know this as well.
07:18Are you a Swifty, Kate?
07:19Yeah, massive.
07:19Well, I went to the tour.
07:21Everybody who went to the tour ended up being a Swifty.
07:23It was an incredible gig.
07:24It's funny that, because a lot of people who went to the era's tour who weren't Swifties
07:27came out full-on Swifties.
07:29It was a proper conversion experience.
07:31It was like being taken to church.
07:33It was amazing.
07:34I'm going to say it's true.
07:36You're going to believe it?
07:36Yeah, go on.
07:37Why not?
07:38We're going to believe it.
07:39Yeah!
07:41Well done.
07:42Yes, you were right to believe it.
07:43Yes.
07:44Susan Davis and Frances Gwynn met in Derry and sailed on the same emigrant ship to Philadelphia
07:50in 1836.
07:52A real-life love story.
07:54There you go.
07:56Right, Alex, you ready?
07:57Yes, let's do it.
07:58It's your turn.
07:58And Paul's found a funny-looking Englishman on a local mural.
08:02Or he might just be looking in the mirror.
08:04Potato, potato.
08:08We're outside one of Derry's most photographed landmarks, the Derry Girls mural on Badger's
08:14Bar.
08:14Since it appeared in 2019, it's become an instant icon of the city, drawing fans from
08:21around the world who want a selfie with the girls.
08:23And, of course, the wee English fella who is an honorary Derry Girl.
08:28The Derry Girls are called Erin, Orla, Michelle and Claire.
08:32Not counting the wee English fella.
08:34But would you believe that as a result of the show, all of those names are now in the
08:38top ten baby names in Northern Ireland?
08:45Thank you, Paul.
08:47Right, Alex.
08:47Would you believe that as a result of Derry Girls, the names Erin, Orla, Michelle and
08:53Claire are now in the top ten baby names in Northern Ireland?
08:57Would I believe that the Derry...
08:59I mean, it would have been a huge success.
09:00It would be amazing if it was, true.
09:03But I don't think it is.
09:05You don't believe it.
09:06I don't believe it.
09:07You don't believe it.
09:07Are we right not to believe it?
09:10Yes!
09:11Yes.
09:12They're not in the top ten, though the names did experience a rise.
09:15The number one girl's baby name in Northern Ireland is...?
09:18Sarah.
09:20Grace.
09:20Sinead.
09:22No way!
09:24It is Grace.
09:24Wow.
09:25A Chris and a lot of babies.
09:26No bonus points.
09:27A Chris and a lot of babies.
09:29Yeah, yeah, yeah.
09:29So, well done.
09:30Yeah, it is Grace.
09:31At the end of round one, let's take a look at the scores.
09:35Oh, that's Claire.
09:36Nice.
09:36Nice.
09:38Yes.
09:38Everyone has one point.
09:40Perfect.
09:40So, it's time for Rome 2.
09:41Let's go back to Paul, who's channelling his inner, Michael Flatley.
09:48We're at the beating heart of Irish language, music and dance in Derry.
09:54There's no shortage of fancy footwork around here, and that's before the pubs even open.
10:00Alright, it's time to see what all the foot is about.
10:03Let's give it a go.
10:09Derry isn't just a hub for Irish dancing, it's a city of movers and shakers of all kinds.
10:15In fact, it's even inspired a famous Hollywood film about dancing.
10:19But which one?
10:21Footloose, Saturday Night Fever or Dirty Dancing?
10:24But which one is it?
10:48I don't see Irish dancing in any of these films, so I'm trying to figure out what the connection to
10:53London Derry is.
10:54Saturday Night Fever, definitely not.
10:57Dirty Dancing?
10:58I don't know.
11:00I don't know.
11:00I don't know!
11:01I would go for Footloose.
11:03Alright, you've locked in Footloose.
11:05Let's see if you're right.
11:11I was convinced it was Footloose as well.
11:13Yes.
11:13Welcome to Do You Know Your Place.
11:15The film was inspired by a magazine feature about the disco scene in New York.
11:21But the author, Nick Cohn, made most of it up.
11:25He took the inspiration from memories of people he knew in his youth in Derry.
11:30As well as London, where he lived later on.
11:34Well, you don't get a point, I'm afraid.
11:35Okay, let's see if you can win a point for your next question.
11:38Go on, Kate.
11:39Paul is in a plane.
11:40Paul.
11:43We're here at Eglinton Flying Club to talk about one of the most famous flights in history.
11:49On May 20, 1932, a 34-year-old American pilot named Amelia Earhart
11:54became the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic.
11:58The pioneering pilot had set out aiming for Paris,
12:01but after 15 gruelling hours in the air fighting storm clouds and engine trouble,
12:05she was forced to bring her plane down in a farmer's field.
12:09And co-founder of the Amelia Earhart Legacy Association, Nicole McKinley said,
12:14when Amelia landed here, no one had ever seen a woman driving a car,
12:18let alone flying an aeroplane, or what?
12:22Using a radio, smoking cigars, or wearing trousers.
12:27Well, which one is it?
12:45I think that's the last we ever saw of Paul.
12:48Kate, what do you think?
12:50The co-founder of the Amelia Earhart Legacy Association said,
12:55when Amelia landed here, no one had ever seen a woman driving a car,
12:59let alone flying an aeroplane, or what?
13:04Is it using a radio, smoking cigars, or wearing trousers?
13:09Well, I'm thinking about the date, so it's 1920s, so I...
13:13I'm going to go wearing trousers.
13:15You're going to go wearing trousers?
13:16I think so.
13:17All right, we've locked in wearing trousers.
13:19Is that the right answer?
13:21Yes, it is.
13:23You did it.
13:23Well done.
13:24Do you know I'm going to sweat on every point?
13:26This is how it's going to be for every point, Miss.
13:28Well done, it is wearing trousers.
13:30The airport lounge at City of Derry Airport is named in her honour.
13:34Oh, that's nice.
13:35All right, Alex, you're next up.
13:37And I think we need to stop Paul from doing his own hair and make-up.
13:41Leave it to the props department, please, Paul.
13:47Halloween isn't just a night out here.
13:49It's a full-blown season.
13:51Derry's Halloween Festival is the biggest in Europe
13:53and ranked amongst the best in the world.
13:56Every October, the city bursts into life with a carnival of costumes,
14:00fireworks and face paint, drawing more than 100,000 visitors
14:03from across the globe.
14:07What's going on here?
14:08Give me my jacket.
14:09No!
14:10He's got my jacket and my clipboard!
14:12Give it back!
14:14Nobody does spooky quite like Derry,
14:17but which of these figures is on the city of Derry's coat of arms?
14:21Is it a ghost, a skeleton or a witch?
14:24Well, which one is it?
14:28All right, Alex, which of these figures is on the city's coat of arms?
14:33Is it a ghost, a skeleton or a witch?
14:37That's a tough one because I wouldn't believe any of them, to be honest.
14:40Um...
14:41It's like Guess. I don't think it's Ghost.
14:43It's out of skeleton or witch.
14:45I just can't imagine a skeleton on a coat of arms for a city.
14:49So maybe I'm going to go witch, I think.
14:51You're saying witch?
14:52Mm.
14:54It is a skeleton.
14:55Skeleton.
14:56I'd have gone witch.
14:56Most people think it's the bones of a Norman knight,
15:00who was held in the Castle Dungeons in 1332.
15:04Wow.
15:05Here we go.
15:05There he is.
15:06Oh!
15:07It's the thinker.
15:09He's jaunty, isn't he?
15:11He must have been thinking for a long time, yeah.
15:12He's rather jaunty.
15:13He's sitting on a ghost.
15:15Yeah, exactly, yeah.
15:16At the end of that round, let's have a look at the scores.
15:21Taking the lead, Kate.
15:22Alex and Nithin, you've got one point.
15:24Kate has taken the lead with two points.
15:25Well done, Kate.
15:26Right, let's take a break from Paul's tour note.
15:29And here's some local lingo from some Derry folks.
15:31As we play, do you know this phrase?
15:34All you need to do here is work out what a word
15:36that's often said in Derry actually means.
15:39You'll hear up to three clips.
15:40The sooner you get it, the more points you will win.
15:43Now, Nithin, you're up first.
15:44Here's your first clip.
15:46And this is Connor.
15:48Hi, Nithin.
15:49I don't know about you,
15:50but I get told all the time to sort my bake out.
15:53I don't know about you,
15:54but I get told all the time to sort my bake out.
15:59I have no idea, but I sort my bake out.
16:04Is that some street thing?
16:06Like, you know, like, sort my bake out.
16:10In Ireland, no.
16:11You can either guess no,
16:12or you can have another clue for two points.
16:14If you get it right here, you'll win three.
16:16Give me a clue.
16:17All right, we'll give you another clue for two.
16:18Go on then, Connor.
16:20That fella has a really sour bake.
16:24Sour bake.
16:25That fella has a really sour bake.
16:27Do you think you know Alex?
16:28Maybe.
16:29Sour bake.
16:30Sour smell.
16:31Yeah.
16:32Smell.
16:33Sort your odour out.
16:35Bake.
16:35Ooh, that's good.
16:36Yeah.
16:36OK, it's going to be body odour then.
16:38You're going to go body odour?
16:39Oh, yeah.
16:39Is body odour the right answer, please, Connor?
16:42Your bake is...
16:43Your face!
16:45Oh!
16:46Your face, Alex!
16:47Yeah, Alex had that one there.
16:50So, unfortunately, you don't win any points.
16:52Right, Kate, your turn.
16:54OK.
16:54Here we go.
16:55This is Sophie.
16:57Hi, Kate.
16:58Hi, darling.
16:58Did you watch the rugby the other day?
17:00It was pure kyat.
17:02Ooh.
17:03Did you watch the rugby the other day?
17:05It was pure kyat.
17:07It's sport, obviously.
17:08Thrilling or exciting.
17:10Could be something like that.
17:12But I am ahead by a point.
17:15I know it's not a massive lead, lads.
17:16But I just want to point out...
17:17Enjoy it while it lasts, is all I say.
17:19I'm just going to revel in it for a second.
17:20It's round three of a brand new week
17:23and the rev is going tactical already.
17:26She's revving it up.
17:27So, I think I can take another clue.
17:29All right, go on, Sophie.
17:30Give us another clue, please.
17:31I told him I wasn't coming to the party.
17:34He just said, that's kyat and walked on.
17:37It was pure kyat.
17:39He said...
17:43What word could that be?
17:46I couldn't ever know.
17:47I couldn't tell you.
17:48That's fine.
17:49That's OK.
17:50He's playing tactical as well.
17:50It was pure kyat.
17:52Would you like another clue for a point?
17:53Yeah, let's just go for another clue.
17:55The phone reception here is kyat.
17:57I always seem to have no bars.
18:00It's rubbish, isn't it?
18:01Go on, Sophie.
18:03If something is kyat, it's bad.
18:06There we go.
18:07Rubbish.
18:08I'll take a point on that.
18:09Yeah, we'll give you that.
18:10One point's better than no one.
18:11Well done.
18:12All right, Alex, it's your turn.
18:13Here's Molly.
18:14Welcome, Molly.
18:15Hi, Alex.
18:16There's loads of hallions around here.
18:18Ooh.
18:19Wow, hallion.
18:21There's loads of hallions around here.
18:24I wouldn't even know where to start.
18:25Hallion, maybe we would call them wrong-ins, maybe.
18:29Where I'm from.
18:31Hooligans.
18:33I'm going to have to go over the second clue, I think.
18:35I wouldn't want to take a guess from here.
18:37For two points.
18:39At school, our teacher said our class was full of hallions.
18:43I'm going to take a guess.
18:44I'm going to take a point on that.
18:46I'm going to stick to the hooliganism type answer and say rowdy people.
18:51Molly, is that the right answer?
18:53If someone is a hallion, then they're a right-wing messer.
18:57Yeah, it is.
18:58Troll maker, mischief maker, a little bit of a rascal.
19:00We'll give you that.
19:01Well done, Alex.
19:02So, at the end of that round, let's take a look at the scores.
19:07Oh, let's go.
19:08Oh, Nithian, you've got one point.
19:10Kate and Alex, you're up there on top of the podium with three each.
19:14Bravo.
19:14Right, we're going to go back to Paul now.
19:16He's had a little bit of a break and he's showing us his musical chops
19:19and really slapping that bass.
19:21Slapping the bass.
19:24The song's for you, sugar.
19:27Music is at the heart of this vibrant city.
19:30And Nerve Centre, which first opened in the 90s,
19:32is a creative hub that gives young musicians the tools
19:36to turn ideas into chart-toppers and full-blown careers in the arts.
19:45There are tons of legendary musicians.
19:49The undertones who gave us teenage kicks right through the night.
19:53Girls Aloud superstar Nadine Coyle was born right here.
19:57And who could forget the original Derry Girl, Dana,
20:01who won Eurovision in 1970 and gave us, well, all kinds of everything.
20:08Her real name is Rosemary.
20:10Dana is a stage name, which means bold or mischievous in Irish.
20:15But would you believe her schoolmates called her Dana
20:18because she kept practising judo moves on them?
20:23OK, everybody.
20:25Thank you all for coming out tonight.
20:26Would you believe it?
20:29Interesting question, Nitin.
20:30Would you believe Dana's schoolmates called her Dana
20:33because she kept practising judo moves on them?
20:38I used to do a Brazilian martial art called capoeira.
20:42Nice.
20:42Jeet Kune Do and Thai boxing and stuff.
20:45So I'm not sure if the judo thing would work.
20:49I don't think it's true.
20:51All right, you don't believe it. Let's have a look.
20:54Ooh!
20:56I know. I know.
20:58That's what this show does to people.
20:59Her older sister was a woman's judo champion in Northern Ireland,
21:03so that's where she learned her moves.
21:06Don't mess with her.
21:07Kate, you're up next.
21:08OK.
21:08All right.
21:09Paul is out of his tour guiding uniform, which is very rare for this show.
21:13And, yes, it's as bad as it sounds.
21:16Derry was once the beating heart of shirt-making.
21:20At its peak, thousands of workers were employed across 40 shirt factories,
21:24with garments being exported all over the world.
21:29The factory girls here were the first unionised group of female workers
21:34on the island of Ireland.
21:36And, with male unemployment high,
21:38they were often the main breadwinners in their families.
21:41But would you believe that Derry's shirt-makers came together
21:44to push Casual Fridays at work as a way to boost sales of short-sleeved shirts?
21:54Kate, would you believe that London Derry's shirt-makers came together
21:59to push Casual Fridays at work as a way to boost the sales of short-sleeved shirts?
22:07I don't think short-sleeved shirts are particularly casual.
22:10I think Dressed Down Friday's T-shirts, isn't it?
22:12I'm going to say, Vernon, I don't believe it.
22:15You don't believe it?
22:15You don't believe that this is the start of Dressed Down Fridays?
22:19Don't believe it.
22:19I like it.
22:23The Hawaiians did, though.
22:25In 1966, the Hawaiian Fashion Guild successfully lobbied their government
22:30to allow government workers to wear aloha shirts on a Friday,
22:33thus giving a rise to aloha Fridays.
22:37See, there was a little clue, wasn't there?
22:38There was a clue.
22:38Because he was wearing his Hawaiian shirt.
22:40Yes.
22:40Like they know what they're doing or something on their show.
22:42Come on.
22:42It's all in there.
22:43Right, Alex, you're up next.
22:45Let's get back to the tour.
22:46Over to you, Paul.
22:50This grand neo-Gothic building is the Guildhall
22:54and has been at the heart of Derry's civic and cultural life since 1890.
23:00Over the years, it's hosted everything from lavish banquets
23:03and political debates to world-class concerts and theatre shows.
23:08Derry was home to one of the world's great hymn writers,
23:11Cecil Francis Alexander.
23:15She lived here for years and penned some absolute classics,
23:19including All Things Bright and Beautiful,
23:21There Is a Green Hill Far Away and Once in Royal David City.
23:25Her work is still performed by choirs all over the world today.
23:29But would you believe when choirs sing, their heartbeats synchronise?
23:34Would you believe it?
23:43Right, Alex, would you believe when choirs sing together,
23:49their heartbeats synchronise?
23:52I would love this to be true, but I think...
23:55Go where you got, Babs.
23:56I think...
23:57I go with my heart, I think.
23:59Yay!
24:00I think the voices synchronise, but the heartbeats don't.
24:03Right.
24:04You don't believe it.
24:07I'm happy to be proved wrong there, to be fair.
24:09That's great.
24:10You've got to believe it.
24:11Researchers in Sweden monitored the heart rates of choral singers.
24:15They've found that as members sang in unison,
24:18their pulses sped up and slowed down together.
24:21Wow!
24:21That's so cool!
24:22Isn't it amazing?
24:22There you go, you don't get a point.
24:24Bad luck, mate.
24:24That's OK, but I feel more enriched for that fact, to be honest.
24:27Good.
24:28That's basically how we end, please, on this show.
24:31It's no time for a bonus question,
24:32so if you would, do us a favour and grab your whiteboards, please.
24:36Ooh!
24:36So here we go.
24:38In an advertising campaign starring Vinnie Jones,
24:40the British Heart Foundation recommended using which song
24:43to help perform CPR?
24:46Was it...
24:57I knew it before you said it.
25:02Right, Nithy, what do you think?
25:03I think Stayin' Alive.
25:05Stayin' Alive.
25:06Rev?
25:06It's Stayin' Alive.
25:07Stayin' Alive.
25:08Alex?
25:10Stayin' Alive.
25:12All right.
25:12Is it Stayin' Alive by the Bee Gees?
25:15Yes!
25:16You all get a point.
25:17Love it.
25:17Well done.
25:18It is indeed.
25:19Come on, Nithy, get in.
25:22Stayin' Alive.
25:23Are your heart rates in sync?
25:25Yes.
25:25I think so, yeah.
25:27A rhythm of 100 to 120 beats per minute
25:31is recommended to perform CPR most effectively.
25:35Right, at the end of that row, let's take a look at the scores.
25:39Oh!
25:39Goodness gracious me.
25:40Nithy, you've got to do some serious catch-up.
25:43OK.
25:44Excellent stuff.
25:45Right, so the scores could all change by the end of this round.
25:48It's dead simple.
25:49We're going to ask you some questions.
25:51They're all Derry, London Derry related.
25:52All you've got to do is fill in the blanks.
25:55Fingers by your buzzers.
25:56It's all to play for.
25:57Here we go.
25:57Here's your first question.
26:06Kate?
26:07UK City of Culture.
26:08Yes, it is UK City of Culture in 2013.
26:11Next question.
26:19Kate?
26:19The Apprentice.
26:20Yes, it is The Apprentice.
26:21Oh, my goodness.
26:22Oh, my goodness.
26:23Next question.
26:2590s group led by London Derry's Peter Cunna.
26:29Oh!
26:30Kate?
26:31D-Ream.
26:32Yes.
26:33Nithin, as they say, things can only get better.
26:35Ha, ha, ha, ha!
26:37Next question.
26:39Derry's Adam Beals was a host on this children's TV show.
26:45Oh, gosh.
26:46Alex.
26:47Blue Peter.
26:47Well done, Michael.
26:48Come on.
26:49Next question.
26:52Famous economist who wrote about London Derry's shirt makers.
26:57Kate?
26:58Karl Marx.
26:58Yes, it is Karl Marx.
27:00Well done.
27:01Oh, that's it!
27:02The buzzer is blown.
27:03Let's find out who's the winner for Monday.
27:07It's definitely not you, Nithin.
27:09Rob.
27:10I feel like there's going to be a big thing that opens up
27:13and I'm just going to disappear.
27:15After that round, let's take a look at the final scores.
27:20Nithin, you've got two points.
27:21Alex, you've got five, but way out in front with nine points.
27:26And today's winner is the Reverend Kate Botley.
27:29Well done.
27:31All right.
27:32So, Kate, you get three points for winning today.
27:34Alex, you get two points for coming second.
27:36Nithin, it's one point for you.
27:39And those points really do accumulate, let's hope, Nithin,
27:42throughout the week so every point counts.
27:45So, Kate, that means that you've won
27:47the very much sought-after postcard from Paul.
27:51Oh!
27:52Yes, and he's given you a little prize as well.
27:55Lovely.
27:55You can have Amelia Earhart's hat and goggles.
27:59They're not the actual one.
28:01Well, from one fine lady to another.
28:04I'm enjoying that.
28:05You look great.
28:05You've never looked better.
28:07Kate, you're too kind.
28:08Thank you very much.
28:09Well, that's it for today.
28:10Join us on our travels next time when we might be somewhere near you.
28:14We'll see you then.
28:14Goodbye.
28:14Bye-bye.
28:16Bye-bye.
28:20Bye-bye.
28:30Bye-bye.
28:33Bye-bye.
28:36Bye-bye.
28:38Bye-bye.
28:39Bye-bye.
28:40Bye-bye.
28:41Bye-bye.
28:41Bye-bye.
28:42Bye-bye.
28:42Bye-bye.
28:43Bye-bye.
28:43Bye-bye.
28:43Bye-bye.
28:44Bye-bye.
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