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00:24Hello and welcome to Mastermind with me, Clive Myrie.
00:28In the spotlight tonight are Peter Glanville, a retired GP.
00:33His specialist subject is the Jurassic Coast.
00:36Phyllis Ramage, a librarian.
00:37She'll be answering questions on the major plays of Moliere.
00:41Matthew McStay, a civil servant whose subject is the rock band Queen.
00:45And Marcus Welsh, a video editor.
00:47His specialist subject is Mickey Mouse cartoons from 1928 to 1935.
00:58A rollercoaster of emotions can grip any contender as they face their inquisition in the mastermind black chair.
01:05Regret, did I do enough homework?
01:07Fear that the questions will come too thick too fast.
01:10Relief when the buzzer sounds and it's over.
01:13All this is normal.
01:14The experience of facing two minutes of questions on a specialist subject and two and a half minutes on general
01:20knowledge isn't supposed to be easy.
01:23After all, the battle is to win this magnificent glass bowl and claim the ultimate prize in quizzing, the title
01:30of mastermind champion.
01:32With all that in mind, can I ask our first contender tonight, vying for a place in the semifinals, to
01:38join us please.
01:51Your name.
01:52Peter Glanville.
01:54Your occupation.
01:55Retired GP.
01:57And your specialist subject.
01:58The Jurassic Coast.
01:59The UNESCO World Heritage Site spanning the coastal region of Dorset and East Devon.
02:05In two minutes.
02:06Here we go.
02:07The limestone arch known as Durdle Door is about a mile west of what popular cove next to Stare Hole,
02:13renowned for its almost perfectly circular horseshoe shape?
02:17Lulworth Cove.
02:18Yes.
02:18What was the surname of the paleontologist Mary, who, with her family, made many exceptional fossil discoveries around Lime Regis
02:26in the 19th century?
02:27Anning.
02:28Yes.
02:28The easternmost end of the Jurassic Coast World Heritage Site is marked by what series of chalk sea stacks extending
02:34out from the headland of Ballard Down?
02:37Old Harry Rocks.
02:38Yes.
02:38What's the name of the unusually squat lighthouse, just under 40 feet tall, which stands atop high cliffs at the
02:44edge of Durlston Country Park?
02:46Anvil Point.
02:47Yes.
02:47Which quarry on the Isle of Portland ceased commercial activity in 1982 and became a nature reserve and sculpture park
02:54displaying several local carvings, including one by Sir Anthony Gormley entitled Still Falling?
02:59Tout Quarry.
03:00Yes.
03:01What's the name of the 19th century circular tower overlooking Kimmeridge Bay, which was dismantled and reassembled inland by the
03:08Landmark Trust after it was in danger of falling into the sea?
03:12Clavel's Tower.
03:13Yes.
03:13What hotel at Sidmouth was previously called Woolbrook Cottage when it was the home of the Duke and Duchess of
03:19Kent, who moved there in 1819 for a brief period with their infant daughter, the future Queen Victoria?
03:24The Esplanade?
03:26No, Royal Glen.
03:27What was the name of the vicar of Axminster, who, along with his fellow clergyman William Buckland, is believed to
03:32have been the first person to give a scientific description of landslip at Bindon in East Devon?
03:38Connybeer.
03:38Yes.
03:39A narrow-gauge electric tramway, popular with birdwatchers in the Axe Valley, runs from the small seaside resort of Seton
03:45and ends at which town, about three miles inland?
03:48Colleton.
03:49Yes.
03:49What's the name of the beach on the Isle of Portland, which is overlooked by the ruined castle known as
03:54Rufus Castle?
03:55Church Oak.
03:56Yes.
03:56Church Oak Cove.
03:57Which headland and cliff between Bridport and Charmouth is, at almost 630 feet, the highest point on England's southwest coast?
04:05Golden Cat.
04:06Yes.
04:06What's the title of the stone?
04:08I've started, so I'll finish.
04:09What's the title of the stone obelisk sculpture at Orkham Point, designed by Michael Fairfax and unveiled in 2002 by
04:16the future King Charles III?
04:20Memorial stone.
04:21No, it's Geo-needle.
04:23That's it.
04:24Peter, at the end of that round, you had no passes.
04:27You've got ten points.
04:28Okay.
04:38And our next contender, please.
04:48Your name?
04:49Phyllis Ramage.
04:50Your occupation?
04:52Librarian.
04:52And your specialist subject?
04:53The major plays of Molière.
04:55The best-known works of the celebrated French dramatist born in Paris in 1622.
05:01In two minutes.
05:02Here we go.
05:03In the school for wives, what name, indicating a pure ancestral lineage, is chosen by the protagonist, Arnulf, as his
05:09new identity?
05:11Monsieur de la Souche.
05:12Yes, in the misanthrope, what's the name of the aspiring poet who is cruelly insulted by the title character, Alceste,
05:18after asking him for his opinion on a sonnet he'd written?
05:21Or on.
05:22Yes.
05:23After Tartuffe caused a huge controversy on its premiere in 1664, Molière's rewritten version ran for one performance only in
05:301667, under what new title, before being banned by the Paris Parliament?
05:38The hypocrite.
05:40No, the imposter.
05:40In 1673, Molière was taken ill on stage and died later that evening, during his performance as the lead character
05:47in which of his own plays?
05:49The hypochondriac.
05:50Yes.
05:50The school for wives was presented at the court of Louis XIV, following the resounding success of its first performance
05:57in 1662, at which theatre?
06:00Palais Royale.
06:01Yes.
06:01In the misanthrope, Acaste and Clitones, who are both suitors for the young widow Selimène, each hold what rank of
06:08nobility?
06:11Duke?
06:12No, Marquess.
06:13The adventuress Frozine tells the titular miser, Harpagon, that if he married the young Marianne, he could save how many
06:19francs per year, thanks to her lack of interest in gambling, clothes, jewels and fancy food?
06:2615,000?
06:26No, 12,000.
06:28What type of confectionery does Tartuffe offer his hostess, Elmere, to treat her cough, not knowing that the cough is
06:34actually a secret signal to her husband, Orgon, who's hiding under a table?
06:41Turkish delight?
06:42No, licorice.
06:42Although the ingenue, Agnès, in the School for Wives is thought to have been based on Moliere's own wife, Armand
06:48Béjar, he chose which other actress to create the role on stage?
06:55Madeleine Béjar?
06:56No, Catherine de Brie.
06:58When the maidservant, Toinette, disguises herself as a doctor in the hypochondriac...
07:02I've started to finish.
07:04When the maidservant, Toinette, disguises herself as a doctor in the hypochondriac, she tells the neurotic Argon that which of
07:11his organs are causing the symptoms of his illness?
07:15Liver.
07:16No, the lungs.
07:19Phyllis, at the end of that round, you had no passes.
07:22You've got four points.
07:33And our next contender, please.
07:42Your name?
07:43Matthew McStay.
07:44Your occupation?
07:45Civil servant.
07:46And your specialist subject?
07:47Queen.
07:48Yes, the stadium-filling rock group originally led by Freddie Mercury.
07:52In two minutes.
07:54Here we go.
07:54Queen's soundtrack to what 1980s science fiction film featured tracks including In the Space Capsule, Escape from the Swamp and
08:01Volton's Theme?
08:03Flash Gordon.
08:03Yes.
08:04The opening shot of the video to Bohemian Rhapsody shows the faces of the four band members partly in shadow,
08:10a representation of the cover of which of the group's albums?
08:14Queen 2.
08:14Yes, which of the band's 1975 singles features the line, Down in the city, just Hoople and Me, a reference
08:21to their stint the previous year as a support act for Mott the Hoople?
08:24Now I'm Here.
08:25Yes, the band's 1984 album, The Works, featuring the hit singles Radio Gaga and I Want to Break Free, was
08:31co-produced by which German record producer?
08:34Reinhold Mack.
08:35Yes, in the video for their 1989 single, Breakthrough, the band perform in an open carriage pulled by a steam
08:41engine dubbed the Miracle Express, on which preserved English railway?
08:46Neen Valley Railway.
08:47Yes, the Neen Valley Railway.
08:48Which song from the album Sheer Heart Attack begins with the lines,
08:52Happy Little Day, Jimmy Went Away, Met His Little Jenny On A Public Holiday?
09:00Long, Long Away.
09:02No, Brighton Rock, the 1991 chart-topping single, Innuendo, features a flamenco-style guitar solo by which member of the
09:09band Yes?
09:10Steve Howe.
09:11Yes, the stage musical We Will Rock You was inspired by a conversation at the 1996 Venice Film Festival between
09:17Roger Taylor, Ryan May, and which American actor who went on to co-produce the show?
09:22Ben Elton.
09:23No, Robert De Niro, which song from Queen 2 was inspired by a 19th century painting of the same title
09:29by the British artist Richard Dadd in the collection of the Tate?
09:33The Ferryfellers' Masterstroke.
09:35Yes, which musician played keyboards on Queen's tour of the UK and Europe in the spring of 1982 before being
09:41replaced by Fred Mandel when the band toured North America later that year?
09:49Martin.
09:49No, Morgan Fisher. Following Freddie Mercury's death in 1991, Bohemian Rhapsody was re-released as a single. I've started, so
09:57I've finished. Re-released as a single, with the proceeds going to the Terence Higgins Trust in the UK and
10:03to a charity in the United States named after which sportsman?
10:10Uh, Brian Lara.
10:12No, Magic Johnson.
10:14I don't know if you have any of them.
10:16Matthew, at the end of that round, you had no passes. You've got seven points.
10:19Thank you, sir.
10:29And our final contender, please.
10:38Your name.
10:39Marcus Welsh.
10:40Your occupation.
10:41Video editor.
10:42And your specialist subject.
10:43Mickey Mouse cartoons, 1928 to 1935.
10:46The original black and white cartoons which introduced the iconic Walt Disney character.
10:51In two minutes.
10:53Let's go.
10:53Steamboat Willie was the first Mickey Mouse cartoon to be released with sound, but two silent cartoons had already been
11:00animated before its premiere.
11:01The Galloping Gaucho and which other?
11:03Plane Crazy.
11:04Yes.
11:05Mickey was created after Disney lost the rights to another popular character, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, along with most of
11:11his animators, to which distributor at the rival Winkler Studio?
11:15Charles Mintz.
11:15Yes.
11:16What are the first words spoken by Mickey Mouse on screen in the 1929 cartoon, The Carnival Kid?
11:22Hot dogs.
11:22Yes.
11:23What was the name of the cinema in New York where Steamboat Willie opened to the public ahead of the
11:28main feature, Gang War, in November 1928?
11:31Pass.
11:32While Disney himself provided Mickey's voice, which member of the studio's ink and paint department became the voice of his
11:38girlfriend, Minnie Mouse, in the spring of 1930?
11:41Master Light Garner.
11:42Yes.
11:43What's the name of Minnie's pet, Pekingese, who first appears in the 1933 cartoon, Puppy Love, and is kidnapped by
11:50Mickey's arch-nemesis, Pete, in The Dognapper, the following year?
11:54Fifi.
11:54Yes.
11:55Which animator, who would go on to direct more than a dozen Mickey Mouse shorts and serve as a supervising
12:00director on Pinocchio and Dumbo, made his directorial debut on Two-Gun Mickey in 1934?
12:09Ben Sharpstein.
12:10Yes.
12:10In the game of American football in 1932's Touchdown Mickey, what's the name of the team that's playing against Mickey's
12:17manglers?
12:18Alleycats.
12:18Yes.
12:19Although Donald Duck made his debut in the 1934 colour Silly Symphony, short The Wise Little Hen, his first appearance
12:26alongside Mickey came later that year in what other cartoon?
12:30Orphan's Benefit.
12:31Yes, in Mickey Steps Out, while Pluto is chasing a cat, Mickey gets three items in succession stuck on his
12:37head. A goldfish bowl, then a cuckoo clock, and finally, what other object?
12:42Bird house?
12:43No, a globe. In the 1933 cartoon Building a Building, Minnie sings that she is selling box lunches that contain
12:49bologna, macaroni, and what type of pie?
12:53Huckleberry.
12:54It is Huckleberry. Marcus, you had just the one pass. The name of the cinema in New York where Steamboat
13:01Willie opened to the public, the Colony Theatre.
13:04So, at the end of that round, Marcus, you've got nine points.
13:17At the end of the specialist subjects round, let's have a look at the scores.
13:21In fourth place with four points, it's Phyllis.
13:23In third place with seven points, it's Matthew.
13:26In second place with nine points, it's Marcus.
13:29And in first place with ten points, it's Peter.
13:32So, now, it's general knowledge.
13:33And if there's a tie at the end, then the number of passes is taken into account, and the person
13:38with the fewer passes is the winner.
13:40And if they're tied on passes as well, it's a tie break.
13:43So, let's ask Phyllis to join us again, please.
13:55Phyllis, you start with four points. You've got two and a half minutes on general knowledge.
13:59Here we go.
14:00What metric unit of measurement is abbreviated to the letters MM, both in lowercase?
14:06Millimetres.
14:06Yes.
14:07Benny Long Point is the site of which famous Australian performing arts venue?
14:13Sydney Opera House.
14:14Yes.
14:14In human anatomy, what mass of tissue at the back of the mouth, which protects against infection, comprises three different
14:20types, described as the palatine, the lingual and the pharyngeal?
14:26Tonsils?
14:26Yes.
14:27Which British singer had UK hit singles in 2006 and 07 with the songs Rehab, You Know I'm No Good
14:33and Tears Dry on Their Own?
14:35Amy Winehouse.
14:36Yes.
14:37A new design of polymer, £50 note, featuring a portrait of the education campaigner Flora Stevenson, was first issued in
14:432021 by a bank in which of the home nations of the UK?
14:52Scotland.
14:53Yes.
14:53What was the name of the American football coach after whom the Super Bowl trophy is named?
15:00Carter.
15:00No, Vince Lombardi. The British author Graham Swift won the 1996 Booker Prize for which novel about a group of
15:07army veterans meeting up to scatter an old friend's ashes?
15:12The Veterans.
15:14No, Last Orders. Eric McCormack and Deborah Messing played the title characters in what Emmy award-winning American television sitcom,
15:21which ran from 1998 to 2020?
15:23Will and Grace.
15:24Yes. What's the name of the flagship of King Henry VIII, the remains of which were raised from the seabed
15:30in 1982 and put on display in a dedicated museum in Portsmouth?
15:34The Mary Rose.
15:35Yes.
15:36What 1943 musical by Rodgers and Hammerstein is based on a 1931 play by Lynn Riggs entitled Green Grow the
15:43Lilacs?
15:45South Pacific?
15:46No, Oklahoma. In June 2024, which politician was sworn in to serve a third consecutive term as Prime Minister of
15:53India?
15:55Indira Gandhi.
15:56No, Narendra Modi. On a standard London Monopoly board, one of the corner squares features an image of a policeman
16:02with a whistle in his mouth. And what three-word instruction?
16:06Go to jail.
16:06Yes. The 2025 film Ballerina starring Ana de Armas as a dancer turned assassin is a spin-off from a
16:13series that began with what 2014 film?
16:16Pass.
16:18The 1878 painting And When Did You Last See Your Father, depicting a young boy being interrogated by parliamentarians during
16:25the English Civil War, is by which British artist?
16:28John Sargent?
16:29No, William Frederick Yeaves.
16:32Phyllis, you had the one pass. The film Ballerina starring Ana de Armas is a spin-off from the 2014
16:39film John Wick.
16:41So at the end of that round, you've got 12 points.
16:54Next up, it's Matthew.
17:03Matthew, you start with seven points. The score to beat, as it stands, is 12 points. And you've got two
17:09and a half minutes on general knowledge. Here we go.
17:11Wellington is the capital city of which Commonwealth country?
17:14New Zealand.
17:15Yes. What 2003 romantic comedy film features an ensemble cast that includes Alan Rickman, Emma Thompson and Liam Neeson, as
17:22well as Bill Nye, who plays an ageing rock star called Billy Mac?
17:26Love Actually.
17:27Yes. Sieben is the German word for what number?
17:33Seven.
17:33Yes. The Theodore Boone series of children's novels about a teenager who aspires to be a lawyer is written by
17:39which American author?
17:42For Broth.
17:44No, John Grisham.
17:45What stage musical about a group of auditioning dancers ran for more than 6,000 performances on Broadway from 1975
17:52to 1990 and won nine Tony Awards, including original musical score for Marvin Hamlish?
17:58A Chorus Line.
17:59Yes. In Roman mythology, which Trojan hero marries Lavinia, the daughter of the Laurentine king, Latinus, following his arrival in
18:06Italy and his victory in the war that follows?
18:11Agamemnon.
18:12No, Aeneas.
18:13What name is given in chemistry to the unique combination of temperature and pressure at which the solid, liquid and
18:18gas forms of a substance can exist simultaneously?
18:22Triple point.
18:23Yes. Which Shakespeare play is set mainly in Elsinore Castle in Denmark?
18:27Hamlet.
18:27Yes. In motor racing, what's the name for the area of a track where drivers can pull in during a
18:32race for car maintenance or to have tyres replaced?
18:36The pit limb.
18:36Yes. What name, partly derived from a Greek word for egg, is given to the branch of ornithology concerned with
18:43the study of birds' eggs?
18:46Autology.
18:47No, oology. The actress Jessica Gunning won a BAFTA in 2025 for her supporting role in what television drama series
18:54about an aspiring stand-up comedian and his stalker?
18:58Baby reindeer.
18:59Yes. The former Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee, which became the National Civil Rights Museum, was the site of the
19:05assassination of which civil rights leader?
19:07Martin Luther King Jr.
19:09Yes. What was the name of the Canadian classical pianist noted for his unorthodox playing style, whose 1956 debut album
19:15was a studio recording of Bach's Goldberg Variations?
19:19Liberace.
19:20No, Glenn Gould. In the second line of the Christmas song that begins, chestnuts roasting on an open fire, what
19:25mythical personification of winter and cold weather is nipping at your nose?
19:30Jack Frost.
19:30Yes. The Long River, known in Welsh as the Hafren, which flows through Wales and the west of England, has
19:36what English name?
19:37Avon.
19:38No, the seventh. Which saint and biblical apostle was also known as Saul of Tarsus?
19:44Paul.
19:45It was. Paul.
19:46Matthew, at the end of that round, you had no passes. You've got 18 points.
20:00Next up, it's Marcus.
20:09Marcus, you start with nine points. The score to beat, as it stands, is 18 points. You've got two and
20:14a half minutes on general knowledge.
20:15Here we go. What word meaning happening now refers to a type of bank account that allows instant access and
20:22is used for day-to-day transactions?
20:25Debit.
20:26No, current. In the standard UK version of the board game Scrabble, the two letters with the maximum face value
20:31of 10 points are Z and which other letter?
20:34Q.
20:35Yes. Which US president is commemorated with a memorial at Runnymede overlooking the River Thames near Egham?
20:42JFK.
20:43Yes. The medical condition, hypoglycemia, results from an abnormally low level of what sugar in the bloodstream?
20:50Insulin.
20:51No, glucose. Another Saturday night and Twisting the Night Away, where UK hit singles in the early 1960s. For which
20:57American soul singer?
20:59Choppy checker?
21:00No, Sam Cooke. The prefix tetra, as in the words such as tetrarch and tetrapod, is derived from the Greek
21:07word for what number?
21:08Thousand.
21:09No, four. The plays, the Browning version, The Deep Blue Sea and Separate Tables, were all written by which British
21:15dramatist?
21:18Arthur Miller.
21:19No, Terence Rattigan. What name derived from Yiddish is given to the highly seasoned smoked beef, usually served in thin
21:25slices on rye bread, that has become a feature of New York Jewish cuisine?
21:30Pass.
21:30Which French actress won an Oscar for her role as the singer Edith Piaf in the 2007 film La Vie
21:37en Rose?
21:43Pass.
21:43At the London Olympics on the 4th of August 2012, a day that became known as Super Saturday, the British
21:49team won six gold medals, three in athletics, one in cycling and two in which other sport?
21:55Swimming.
21:56No, rowing. The nucleus of an atom is made up primarily of neutrons and what other subatomic particles?
22:02Electrons.
22:03No, protons. A magician named Harry Moulding finished ahead of the dance troupe The Blackout in second place to win
22:09the 2025 series of which television show?
22:12Britain's Got Talent?
22:13Yes. Robert Devereaux, a former favourite of Elizabeth I, who led an abortive rebellion against her in 1601, held the
22:20noble title Second Earl of where?
22:22Warwickshire.
22:23No, Essex. What's the title of the four-part novel, written in the 1920s by Ford Maddox Ford, about the
22:29experiences of a British officer during and after the First World War?
22:33Pass.
22:34Which small African country has a short strip of coastline on the Atlantic Ocean but is otherwise completely surrounded by
22:41Senegal?
22:43Gambia.
22:44Yes. In 2019, five recently discovered moons?
22:47I've started, so I'll finish. In 2019, five recently discovered moons of which planets were officially named as Ursa, Pandya,
22:56Irene, Euphemy and Philophrysyni?
23:00Saturn?
23:01No.
23:02Jupiter.
23:04Marcus, you had three passes.
23:07The title of the four-part novel, written by Ford Maddox Ford, Parade's End.
23:12Marielle Cotillard was the French actress who won an Oscar for playing Edith Piaf in La Vie en Rose.
23:19And the highly seasoned smoked beef, a staple of New York Jewish cuisine, pastrami.
23:25So at the end of that round, Marcus, you've got 13 points.
23:38And finally, let's have Peter again, please.
23:50Peter, you start with 10 points. The score to beat to get through to the semifinals is Matthew's 18 points.
23:56You've got two and a half minutes on general knowledge.
23:59Here we go.
24:00What primary colour follows electric, powder and duck egg in the names of three shades of that colour?
24:05Blue.
24:06Yes. What word meaning to block or obstruct is also the name of a style of slip-on leather or
24:11wooden shoe, traditionally with a thick wooden sole?
24:14Clog.
24:15Yes. Fallon Rogers, Adam Macy and Usher Franks are characters in what long-running Radio 4 soap?
24:22The Archers.
24:23Yes. In May 2025, which London football club won their first major trophy with a 1-0 victory over Manchester
24:29City in the FA Cup final?
24:31Tottenham Hotspur.
24:32No. Crystal Palace, which is the first opera of Richard Wagner's Ring Cycle and was performed in its entirety for
24:38the first time in Munich in 1869.
24:41The Valkyrie.
24:42No. Das Rheingold. What two words precede Freed and Darker in the titles of two novels in a series of
24:48books by E.L. James?
24:49Grey.
24:50No. Fifty Shades in the collective name the ABC Islands for three Dutch overseas territories in the Caribbean.
24:57The B stands for Bonaire and the C for Curaçao. What does the letter A stand for?
25:02Aruba.
25:03Yes. Which Taiwan-born filmmaker won a second Best Director Oscar for his 2012 adaptation of the novel Life of
25:10Pi?
25:12Ang Lee.
25:12Yes. Which chemical element used in the manufacture of matches or their striking surfaces has a name derived from the
25:19Greek for bringer of light and was isolated by the German chemist Hennig Brandt around 1670?
25:26Fosterous.
25:26Yes. The Battle of Waterloo, which brought an end to the Napoleonic Wars, was fought in 1815 on a site
25:31that's now part of which European country?
25:34Belgium.
25:34Yes. In the Gregorian calendar, the three months of the year with a name that begins with a vowel are
25:39April, August and which other month?
25:43Pass.
25:44What term a diminutive form of the Spanish word for war refers to a member of an unofficial army or
25:50independent group of military fighters?
25:54Team.
25:55No. Gorilla. Which British rock band had UK hit albums in the 1980s entitled Making Movies, Love Over Gold and
26:02Brothers in Arms?
26:03Dire Straits.
26:04Yes. During the 30 years after his appointments as Chief Engineer to the Metropolitan Board of Works, which British civil
26:10engineer designed London's sewer system as well as the Victoria, Albert and Chelsea embankments?
26:16Basil Gat.
26:17Yes. The British landrace is a breed of what farm animal?
26:22Pig.
26:23Yes. Which comedian, born in South Shields in 1975, has toured stand-up shows including Chatterbox, Control Enthusiast, Bobby Dazzler
26:32and Late Bloomer?
26:33Alan Carr?
26:35No. Sarah Millikan.
26:38Peter, you had one pass in the Gregorian calendar, three months of the year, beginning with a vowel, April, August,
26:45October.
26:47But it didn't matter, Peter, at the end of that round, you've done it. You've got 20 points.
27:02So let's have a look at the final scores. In fourth place with 12 points, it's Phyllis. In third place
27:08with 13 points, it's Marcus.
27:10In second place with 18 points, it's Matthew, which means in first place with 20 points, it's Peter.
27:16So he goes through to the semi-finals. Congratulations to him.
27:20If you'd like to be a contender in the next series, please go to our website, bbc.co.uk slash
27:26mastermind, and you can follow us at Mastermind Quiz.
27:29Join us again next time for more Masterminds.
27:32Thanks for watching. Bye for now.
27:38I have applied before for Mastermind. The first time I applied, 50 years ago, I was coming near my files
27:46as a medical student.
27:48And I got a letter back, and I must have filled in an application form. I've still got the letter,
27:53and I've kept it to this day.
27:56And your specialist subject?
27:58The Jurassic Coast. Well, I picked the Jurassic Coast because I'm very familiar with it. I don't live that far
28:05away from it.
28:05I've walked it. I've flown over it in a hang glider. I've dived in the sea off it. I've even
28:13explored caves on the Jurassic Coast.
28:16Anvil Point. Yes.
28:17Clavel's Tower. Yes.
28:19Golden Cat. Yes.
28:21When Clive said I'd won, I was stunned.
28:26You've done it. You've got 20 points.
28:29Just a state of mild shock, I would say, at the present time.
29:03You've got 20 points.
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