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00:30Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown Studio. Here's a question. Where's your favourite food come from? And I'm not
00:36talking about from which takeaway outlet or restaurant even. I'm talking about from which country. Which country's cuisine do you
00:43enjoy most? We've got a survey, Rachel. Lovely. Big one. Right. 25,000 people across 24 countries. This is real
00:53statistical stuff.
00:56They've determined that the country producing the most popular cuisine is Italy. 84% actually agreed with that. It's extraordinary.
01:06Chinese came in second with 78%.
01:08Maybe a lot of those 25,000 people came from China. I don't know. Japanese were third with 71%. Now,
01:17what about Britain? Let's hear it for Britain. Way down the list, 50%. Way, way down.
01:24But we weren't as bad as the Finnish and the Peruvians who came in joint last with 32%. But we
01:31were pretty much grovelling around the bottom there. Now, come on. Whose food do you most enjoy?
01:38Well, I think people probably are judging by takeaways of what they know rather than the actual food. I haven't
01:43been to Peru, but I've been to Colombia and Brazil and around there where you get Peruvian ceviche. So the
01:49fresh fish cured in lime and it's delicious. I think whoever was surveyed probably hadn't been around to all these
01:55places and tried the local grandma's cooking food. Any local grandma that's going to cook your food is going to
02:00be delicious wherever you are in the world.
02:01That's fair. All right. Actually, Mongolia's not great. That's grey mutton and bones. Anyway, listen, enough of food. Italy takes
02:09it. All right. Who's with us? Colin. Colin Beattie's back, senior finance manager from Arbroath. There he is, look. Teapot
02:18owner and two wins, two crucial conundrums. Not bad. You're having fun. You've settled in. You're a cool customer, I'll
02:27tell you that.
02:27And you're joined by Tom Silverlock from Camden, electrical engineer. Loves his cycling. Loves his cycling. I do love cycling.
02:37But not in London, you tell me. I don't like cycling in London. The motors aren't that considerate. You used
02:43to be in a club, you told me.
02:45I used to do a bit of racing. Yeah, I wasn't very good, but I used to enjoy it. You've
02:50plumped up a bit. I've plumped up. It's all about power-weight ratio. So if your weight goes up, and
02:55as you get older, your power goes down, the ratio. All right. But listen, you love your cycling. I do
03:00love cycling. It's great to have you here. Thank you. You look like fun. It's great to be here. I
03:04am fun.
03:04Good. Let's have a round of applause for Tom and Colin.
03:14Brilliant. All right. And over in the corner, Susie, of course, and joined with the jet-setting TV presenter, Susie
03:22Perry. Welcome back, Susie.
03:23Thank you very much.
03:28Well done. All right. Now, Colin, off we go.
03:32Afternoon, Rachel.
03:34Afternoon, Colin.
03:35May I have a consonant, please?
03:36Thank you. Start today with F.
03:39And another.
03:40B.
03:41And another.
03:43R.
03:45And another.
03:46T.
03:47And a vowel.
03:49U.
03:50And another.
03:51A.
03:52And another.
03:54E.
03:56And a consonant.
03:58D.
04:00And another consonant, please.
04:02And the last one, L.
04:04And here's the countdown clock.
04:06T.
04:07T.
04:07T.
04:08T.
04:09T.
04:34MUSIC CONTINUES
04:37Colin?
04:38I've got an eight.
04:39An eight?
04:41Tom, what do you reckon?
04:42I've got a seven.
04:43And your seven is?
04:44Dearest.
04:45Yes.
04:46I've got brusseled.
04:49Brusseled.
04:51Um...
04:52No.
04:53Bustle and bristle, but not brusseled.
04:56Sorry about that, Colin.
04:57Can't have dearest either because we don't have two E's, I'm afraid.
05:00So I have to disallow both.
05:03Sorry.
05:03Bad luck.
05:04What can we have amongst the Susies?
05:07Um, for a seven, you could have bluster.
05:10Yeah.
05:11Yes.
05:12And I think you've got an eight, haven't you?
05:13Yes.
05:14Um, it is an old term, um, an adulterer.
05:17So that's a male adulterer.
05:20Um, or it's also the verb.
05:21To corrupt, debase, dilute the purity of something.
05:25OK.
05:30Now, Tom, your letters go.
05:33I'll have a consonant, please.
05:35Rachel.
05:35Thank you, Tom.
05:36S.
05:37And another.
05:39P.
05:40And another.
05:42N.
05:43And another.
05:45And another.
05:46And a vowel, please.
05:49O.
05:50And another.
05:51I.
05:52And another.
05:54E.
05:55And a consonant, please.
05:58W.
05:59And another consonant.
06:00Last one.
06:01N.
06:03Standby.
06:04BING
06:35Tom.
06:36I've got a seven.
06:37A seven and?
06:39I've just got a six.
06:40Your six?
06:41Pavos.
06:42Tom.
06:43Winners.
06:44Yes, well spotted.
06:45Winners of F7.
06:47Very good.
06:47Well done.
06:47Any more seven, Susie?
06:49Another seven in pension, hurtling towards that.
06:53It's quite nice when you get there, I can tell you.
06:56Now, Susie.
06:58Snowier is a nice one.
06:59That's another seven.
07:00Snowier.
07:01OK.
07:02Seven points to Tom.
07:04Colin, your numbers gain now.
07:06May I have one large and five little, please?
07:08You may indeed.
07:09Thank you, Colin.
07:10One large and five little.
07:12And the first one today is one, three, ten, two, six.
07:19And the large one, 25.
07:21And the target, 224.
07:24Two, two, four.
07:25I do not.
07:27Amen.
07:30I do not.
07:54Lorde,一, two, three.
07:54People participate in the program.
07:55Colin?
07:562, 2, 4.
07:58And Tom?
07:592, 2, 4.
08:01Colin?
08:02OK, I've got 10 minus 1 equals 9.
08:04Yep.
08:05Times is 25.
08:062, 2, 5.
08:07And then 3 minus 2 is 1.
08:09Lovely.
08:10Tom?
08:11Tom?
08:12Exactly the same way.
08:12Same way?
08:13All right.
08:17So, Tom in the lead.
08:1917 points to Colin's 10.
08:21As we turn to our first teatime teaser, which is Nora, quite.
08:25And the clue, Nora was quite fond of this sweet little fruit.
08:29Nora was quite fond of this sweet little fruit.
08:49Welcome back.
08:50I left with the clue, Nora was quite fond of this sweet little fruit.
08:53What would that have been?
08:54It would have been an Ortanique.
08:56What on earth is an Ortanique?
08:59We used to the tangelo, which is the grapefruit and the tangerine.
09:02This is a citrus fruit that's a cross between an orange and a tangerine,
09:06developed in Jamaica.
09:07And the word is a blend of orange, tangerine and unique.
09:12OK.
09:13Are they bigger or smaller?
09:15I've never tried one.
09:16I'm not sure.
09:17I guess they're orange-sized.
09:19So, it's orange and tangerine.
09:21I suppose you can work it all out.
09:22Yeah.
09:23And it's unique.
09:24Lovely.
09:2517 plays 10.
09:27Tom on 17.
09:28Tom, your letters game.
09:30I'll have a consonant, please, Rachel.
09:33Thank you, Tom.
09:34T.
09:34And another.
09:37R.
09:38And another.
09:39T.
09:40And another one, please.
09:43Z.
09:43And a vowel.
09:46A.
09:47And another vowel.
09:48E.
09:49And another vowel.
09:51O.
09:52And a consonant.
09:54D.
09:55And another consonant.
09:57And L.
09:59Stand by.
10:00I.
10:01I.
10:17I.
10:31Yes, Tom?
10:32I've got a seven.
10:33A seven and?
10:34Seven as well.
10:35Two sevens.
10:35Tom?
10:36Rattled.
10:37Rattled and?
10:38Rotated.
10:40Very good.
10:40Rotated.
10:42Rattled.
10:43I'm constantly rattled.
10:45Susie?
10:46Nothing different.
10:47That Z was quite off-putting in that, wasn't it?
10:49Rotated, I had a seven.
10:51Yeah, couldn't beat that, Nick.
10:52That's it.
10:5324 plays.
10:5517.
10:56Colin on 17.
10:57Yes, Colin.
10:58Letters go.
10:59OK, may I have a consonant?
11:01Thank you, Colin.
11:02P.
11:03And another?
11:05L.
11:06And another?
11:07J.
11:09And a vowel?
11:10A.
11:11And another?
11:13I.
11:14And a third?
11:16E.
11:16And a consonant?
11:18T.
11:20And another?
11:22C.
11:23And a final consonant, please.
11:26A final M.
11:28Stand by.
11:29A.
11:30E.
12:03I'll go for a six.
12:05And your six is?
12:07Place with an I.
12:09OK.
12:09I'll go for a clumpet.
12:12Clampet.
12:15It's not in, I don't think.
12:18No.
12:18It's not.
12:19Sorry.
12:20How bad luck.
12:21We've got the place, though.
12:23Now.
12:25Susie.
12:26There's a seven with climate.
12:28Yes.
12:29That's it.
12:30Yes, that was as good as we got.
12:31Impact for six, otherwise.
12:32Thank you very much.
12:3330.
12:3430 for Tom playing Colin, 17.
12:37Tom, how are you with numbers?
12:39Let's try.
12:41Rachel, can I have one large and five small, please?
12:46You can, indeed.
12:46One from the top five.
12:47It'll come in up, Tom.
12:48And for this round, they are three, four, eight, four, two, and 25.
12:57And the target, 981.
13:00Nine, eight, one.
13:02One from the top five.
13:33Tom.
13:34I've got 9, 8, 8.
13:369, 8, 8.
13:38Colin.
13:38I've got 9, 7, 7.
13:40Yeah, it's Colin.
13:41OK.
13:42So, 8 times 4 is 32.
13:45Yep.
13:464 plus 3 is 7.
13:49Add them together.
13:5039.
13:51Times the 25.
13:529, 7, 5.
13:53And add on the remaining 2.
13:55And the 2 left over, 9, 7, 7, 4 away.
13:58Very good, but not quite there.
14:00Rachel, 9, 8, 1.
14:02Is that a tricky one?
14:04Well, if you start with 2 plus 8 is 10.
14:08Times 25 is 250.
14:11Less one of the 4s for 2, 4, 6.
14:14Times the other 4 for 984.
14:17And take away the 3 for 981.
14:19Oh, well done.
14:20Lovely.
14:24Well done indeed.
14:27So, 32, 24, 6 points in it.
14:30Tomsters in the leads.
14:31We turn to Susie.
14:33Susie, we talked about tigers yesterday.
14:36And today?
14:38Tigers of a different variety.
14:40No, not tigers of a different variety, really.
14:43But I think when I've been on before, I've talked about when I used to work at the theatre when
14:46I was young, as a follow-spot operator and an electrician.
14:50And earlier this year, it was the Grand Theatre in Wolverhampton's 125th anniversary.
14:55So, they decided to have this huge dinner and show and everything and invited stars of theatre to come and
15:03entertain everybody.
15:04And I was invited as a previous employee to talk about what I'd done there.
15:09And the man opening the show was somebody called Don McLean.
15:12Do you remember Don?
15:13I do.
15:13Do you remember Cracker Jack?
15:14Friday 5 to 5?
15:16Yes.
15:16Anybody my age in here?
15:18He was very, very famous throughout the 70s.
15:21Stand-up comedian, brilliant on television, extremely handsome, had these great white teeth, black hair.
15:28And as a child, I had a crush on him.
15:31And when he used to come and open Fates or anything in Wolverhampton, I used to force my mum to
15:36go and take me there.
15:37And I used to go to the pantomime when he was in it.
15:40And I was completely obsessed with Don McLean.
15:42And so, when I found that he was going to be opening this night, I thought, this is going to
15:47be interesting.
15:48And when I was seven, I wrote to him at the BBC asking for his autograph.
15:53And I heard nothing for ages and ages.
15:55And I waited literally every day.
15:57Is there any mail for me?
15:59And one day, on February the 14th, Valentine's Day, this big envelope came through the door.
16:05BBC stamp on the front, Wood Lane.
16:07And as a child, it was, you know, really iconic.
16:10And I opened it and there was this beautiful picture signed by Don McLean and this handwritten letter saying how
16:16lovely it was that I wanted his autograph.
16:18Talking about Cracker Jack and the pantomime and everything.
16:21Really beautiful.
16:22And I kept it.
16:23He was always my Valentine.
16:24And here I was at Molyneux in Wolverhampton about to meet Don McLean.
16:29And I was thinking, you know, he's in his 70s and he looks incredible still, bounced on stage, did his
16:36show, was really rude, really funny, had this amazing singing voice.
16:40And then it was me next.
16:42And I felt like, how can I follow this, you know?
16:45So, I got up and I was about to be interviewed by the lovely Nick Owen.
16:48And I said, I've just got to interrupt you and just talk about the man in front of you, Don
16:54McLean.
16:54And I told my story about receiving his autograph and handwritten letter all those years ago and having kept it
17:02and that he was always my Valentine.
17:03Oh, great story.
17:04Well done.
17:10Don McLean.
17:11Well done.
17:12Thanks, Susie.
17:14So, 30 plays 24.
17:16Tom, still in the lead.
17:18Colin, it's your letters game now.
17:20Good luck.
17:21Can I start with a consonant, please?
17:23Thank you, Colin.
17:24H
17:24And a vowel
17:26I
17:27And a consonant
17:28C
17:30And a vowel
17:31A
17:33And a consonant
17:35X
17:36And another
17:37S
17:39And another
17:40G
17:41And a vowel
17:44E
17:45And can I finish with a consonant?
17:47Finish with R.
17:50Stand by.
17:52And a vowel
17:52That L.
18:22Well, Colin, a seven. Tom? I've got a seven as well.
18:26Okay, Colin. I've got charges. Now, Tom. I've got the same.
18:30There we are.
18:33Any more sevens over there? Susie? Susie.
18:35Er, there's a cashier. I'm going to have a cashier for seven.
18:38Yeah. Susie? Stuck at seven, Nick.
18:41That's it? Yes.
18:43Thank you. Six in it, 37 to 31.
18:48Tom, letters came for you.
18:50Well, I'll have a consonant, please, Rachel.
18:52Thank you, Tom. D.
18:54And another. S.
18:56And another one, please. M.
18:59And another. F.
19:02And a vowel, please. O.
19:05And another. E.
19:07And another. U.
19:10And a consonant. S.
19:14And another vowel.
19:15And lastly, I.
19:18Stand by.
19:20And a vowel.
19:21And a vowel.
19:36And a vowel.
19:37And a vowel.
19:37And a vowel.
19:37And a vowel.
19:37And a vowel.
19:37And a vowel.
19:38And a vowel.
19:38And a vowel.
19:38And a vowel.
19:39And a vowel.
19:41And a vowel.
19:50Tom? I've got a seven. How about Colin? I've got a seven. Tom? Misused. And Colin? Same. Misused. Susie, what
20:04are you up to? Well, we had misused as well, and also we're laughing at moosed. Moosed, like moosing your
20:10hair. Oh, right. When you say it a few times, it sounds weird, doesn't it? Yeah. Moosed.
20:1544 to 38. Colin, your numbers game. I have one from the top and five little ones, please. Thank you,
20:22Colin. Another one large one, five little ones selection. I'll try and find something challenging. And they are one, eight,
20:31three, six, ten, and 100. And the target, 109. 109.
21:12Yes, Colin? 109.
21:13And Tom? I've got 109.
21:15Oh, well done. And Colin?
21:18100 plus six plus three.
21:21Tom?
21:22I did 100 plus eight plus one.
21:24Yeah, that's the one I would have done.
21:28All right, thank you.
21:2954 plays 48.
21:32We turn to our second Tea Time Teaser, which is Rob Ascend, and the clue.
21:36Rob would ascend over the prison wall and turn into this.
21:40Rob would ascend over the prison wall and turn into this.
22:00Welcome back.
22:01I left with the clue.
22:02Rob would ascend over the prison wall and turn into this.
22:05He'd turn into an absconder.
22:07An absconder.
22:09Now, Tom, your letters go.
22:13Can I have a consonant, please?
22:15Thank you, Tom.
22:17T.
22:17And another one, please.
22:19D.
22:20And another.
22:22N.
22:23And another.
22:24V.
22:26And a vowel.
22:27A.
22:28And another vowel.
22:30E.
22:31And a vowel.
22:33U.
22:35And a consonant.
22:37N.
22:38And another vowel.
22:39And the last one, I.
22:41Stand by.
22:43TT.
22:45And another vowel.
22:45And another vowel.
23:10To answer them.
23:10If you can have a pronoun.
23:10The vowel.
23:10And a vowel.
23:10And a vowel.
23:10And a vowel.
23:11And a vowel.
23:13Tom?
23:15I've got a seven.
23:16Just a six.
23:18And a six for Colin.
23:19Yes, Colin?
23:20United.
23:21Tom?
23:22Vaunted.
23:23Yes, nice.
23:24Vaunted.
23:26Any advance on seven?
23:28Can we match it?
23:30Another seven was deviant.
23:32Yes.
23:32Love that word.
23:33Yes.
23:34Advice with eunuch.
23:35Oh, right.
23:37And there is an eight.
23:39And there is an inundate, is there?
23:41Inundate.
23:42Yes.
23:42Inundate.
23:48Thank you, Susie.
23:5061 to 48.
23:53Now, Colin, a bit of catching up to do here.
23:56Your letters game.
23:57OK, start with a consonant, please.
23:59Thank you, Colin.
24:00N.
24:01And another?
24:03R.
24:04And another?
24:05F.
24:07And a vowel?
24:09O.
24:09And another?
24:10A.
24:11And another?
24:12O.
24:13And a consonant?
24:15T.
24:16And another?
24:17C.
24:18And finish with a vowel, please.
24:20Finish with e.
24:23And here's the countdown clock.
24:24T.
24:26T.
24:26T.
24:27T.
24:28T.
24:33A.
24:34I.
24:35To.
24:35It.
24:47I.
24:53T.
24:57Colin.
24:58There's six.
24:59Tom.
24:59I've got a six as well.
25:01Yes?
25:01Ritter.
25:02Tom.
25:03Roofer.
25:04What are the corner there?
25:05Susie?
25:06I have to disallow Roofer, I'm afraid.
25:07There's only one R.
25:09Oh, bad luck.
25:10Sorry.
25:11Ooh.
25:12Seven with coronet.
25:15Yes, coronet is seven and another seven is the plural of corona.
25:20Corona, astronomical term for the envelope surrounding the sun.
25:24And other stars.
25:25Okay.
25:25Yeah.
25:26All right, well done.
25:27So, Tom's lead, shaved a little, 61 to Colin's 54.
25:33And now it's time to turn to Susie and her origins of words.
25:37Susie, today?
25:38Today, I'm going to go back to very early in our history.
25:42So, back to the end of the ninth century, really,
25:46when all the Slavic peoples in Central and Eastern Europe
25:49had been reduced into servile states.
25:53Often they had been taken to work for the Romans.
25:56And they were known as Slavs from Slavonia.
25:59And eventually, of course, that word became slave.
26:02Somebody who was taken up by, particularly in ancient Rome,
26:07taken up by the dominos, the master.
26:09And it was all enshrined in law.
26:11In fact, one of the biggest facets of Roman law related to master and slave.
26:17And it gave the master virtually unlimited power over his servile servant, if you like.
26:25It's given us lots of words in English.
26:26So, it's given us emancipate, which I've spoken about before.
26:28To emancipate was actually to let a slave go free.
26:32It includes manus the hand, because he would literally hand over and release the hand of the slave to freedom,
26:39to liberty.
26:40It's also given us another word, and that's addict, which is slightly stranger.
26:44So, it used to be a verb, and it was to bind to the service of somebody.
26:47That's what it meant in Roman law.
26:49So, quite often, a debtor, if they couldn't repay their debts in full,
26:54they would be assigned to a master and made to work for them.
26:58So, effectively, they became slaves.
27:01There was also an ancient myth around those times of Aedictus,
27:04which tells the story of a slave who was set free from his master, so he was emancipated,
27:09but became so used to his chains that he wandered the land with his chains still attached,
27:14even though he could have removed them at any one time.
27:18Because of all this kind of mythology, and, as I say, the tenets of Roman law,
27:24addict came into English to mean to be permanently bound to something, to be bound up in chains.
27:30There's a lot of discussion about addiction these days, in fact, obviously, addiction itself,
27:34but the term too, because it's become a bit of a blanket term.
27:36It's been really diluted, so we might say, I'm addicted to coffee.
27:40And we tend to use it very loosely, and there's a lot of worry around that,
27:44because, obviously, it can be devastating addiction.
27:47But, who knew? Yes, it goes all the way back to that Roman law,
27:50and actually assigning a person to another thing,
27:54just as we might tie ourselves to the chains of something
27:57that we really don't want to be bound to, but can do nothing about.
27:59Very good.
28:02Ah, brilliant.
28:08Fascinating, that really is.
28:10Very good.
28:1061 to 54.
28:12Tom, your letters came.
28:15I'll have a consonant, please.
28:18Thank you, Tom.
28:19K.
28:20And another.
28:21S.
28:23And another.
28:24M.
28:26And another one.
28:28T.
28:29And a vowel.
28:30U.
28:32And another vowel.
28:33A.
28:34And another vowel.
28:36E.
28:37And a consonant.
28:39C.
28:40And another consonant.
28:42And lastly, R.
28:45Stand by.
28:46BELL RINGS
29:17Yes, Tom?
29:19Seven.
29:20A seven and?
29:21Seven also.
29:22Tom?
29:22Muckers.
29:24Yeah.
29:25I've got smacker.
29:28So, mucker is absolutely fine.
29:30Friend in dialect.
29:32And a smacker, yes, a loud kiss.
29:34It's absolutely fine.
29:36Gave her a smacker.
29:37Anything else, Susie?
29:39Um, a few sevens, matures.
29:42Yes.
29:42Another one, matures.
29:43Yes.
29:44Um, and the plural of rectum can be rectar or rectums, but rectums, they will give you a seven.
29:49One at a time, I think, yeah.
29:51Uh, 68 to 61.
29:53Colin, your letters game.
29:55OK, I'll start with a consonant, please.
29:57Thank you, Colin.
29:58S.
29:59And another.
30:01S.
30:02And another.
30:03N.
30:04And a vowel.
30:06I.
30:07And another.
30:08O.
30:09And another.
30:10A.
30:11And a consonant.
30:12S.
30:13And another.
30:15R.
30:16And a final consonant, please.
30:18A final H.
30:20Stand by.
30:22.
30:22.
30:22.
30:22.
30:22.
30:23.
30:23.
30:24.
30:24.
30:52MUSIC CONTINUES
30:54Five.
30:55And your five is?
30:57Shins.
30:58Yes, Colin.
30:59I went for Sean's.
31:01Sean's?
31:01Sean's.
31:05I don't think we're going to find it with the S on.
31:08We're not, I'm afraid.
31:09Sorry, Colin.
31:11I'd like that, Colin.
31:14Now, Susie's.
31:15Susie?
31:16Susie Perry.
31:17That was tricky, that one, wasn't it?
31:19The best we could come up with was six rhinos.
31:22It'll do.
31:24Rhinos?
31:24Susie, anything else?
31:25Can't beat that.
31:26That's it.
31:27Good enough.
31:2873 plays 61.
31:30And final numbers game for Tom Silverlock.
31:34Tom?
31:35Can I have two large and four small, please?
31:38You can indeed.
31:38Mix it up slightly.
31:39Two from the top, four little.
31:41See if this can put you over the line.
31:42Final numbers are three, eight, one, four, 50 and 100.
31:51And the target, 642.
31:54642.
31:55Two from the top.
32:07One.
32:09Two.
32:10Two.
32:11Two.
32:25Yes, Tom?
32:266, 4, 3.
32:286, 4, 3, Colin?
32:306, 4, 2.
32:31Yes, yes, Colin.
32:32OK, 4 plus 3, well, 7.
32:344 plus 3, 7.
32:35Times 100.
32:37Times 100, 700.
32:39Take off the 50.
32:406, 50.
32:41Take off the 8.
32:42And you've won yourself a crucial conundrum.
32:44Well done.
32:44Good.
32:48Well done.
32:51So, 73 to 71.
32:54That's it.
32:55Final round.
32:57Fingers on buzzers, Tom?
32:59Let's roll today's crucial countdown conundrum.
33:09Tom?
33:09Howlsome.
33:10Let's see whether you're right.
33:12Wholesome.
33:14Well done.
33:18Well done.
33:23Well done.
33:35Well done.
33:37You take this goodie bag as well back to Arbroath and the Arbroath Smokies, which was the first
33:42one that you got when you first came here.
33:46Thank you very much indeed for coming.
33:47Well done.
33:48Well done.
33:50And Tom Silverlock.
33:52Well done.
33:53See you tomorrow.
33:54Yeah.
33:54Excellent.
33:54I look forward to that.
33:55So do we.
33:56So do we.
33:57Susie, see you tomorrow.
33:58Both Susies.
33:59See you tomorrow.
34:00Excellent stuff.
34:01And Rachel too, of course.
34:02And after your survey, I'm having Italian for dinner.
34:05Excellent.
34:06Join us tomorrow.
34:07Same time.
34:07Same place.
34:08You'll be sure of it.
34:08A very good afternoon.
34:11Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com, by Twitter at C4Countdown, or write to us
34:18at Countdown, Leeds, LS3, 1JS.
34:21You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.