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00:12Hi everyone, welcome. Here we go again. This is Do You Know Your Place. The UK is magnificent,
00:17but how well do we actually know it? Well, we've hired a mischievous and somewhat unreliable
00:23tour guide, Paul, to find out. He'll be taking us on a tour across the country, sharing a mixture
00:28of fact and folly. We're going to sort out the authentic from the absurd on Do You Know Your Place.
00:38Playing this week, we've got a comedian and presenter who's brought joy,
00:41laughter and a healthy dose of Scottish sass to our screens. It's Susan Cullman.
00:49We've got the internet's favourite cheeky genius, Max Foch.
00:54And her comedy has taken it all over the UK, but will that stand her in good stead today?
00:59It's award-winning TV and radio presenter, Noreen Khan, everyone.
01:04Now, before we get started today, let's take a look at the weekly leaderboard. We've only played one
01:09game, but Susan, you've got three points. Max, you've got two, and Noreen, you've got one point.
01:14Good luck to you all. Today, you're sorting the fact from fiction in...
01:20Enniskillen, everyone. Beautiful. Looking forward to this. Now, earlier on,
01:25each of you players depend on the map where you think Enniskillen is. Let's find out the actual
01:30location on the map of Enniskillen. Ooh. Now, let's find out where you think Enniskillen is located.
01:41Ooh, not bad. Max, bit of a shocker there, my friend. I'm afraid you're the furthest away today,
01:47Max. You're actually 68 miles away in the village of Kilray, just above Loch Nair. And to be precise,
01:55the Manor House Hotel, and here are some of their staff. Ooh.
01:59Hi, guys. Look at them. Buzzing to be on the show. Yes, they're very excited. So, well done.
02:05Bravo, you. Noreen, you landed 43 miles away. But Susan, your pin is just 21 miles up the road from
02:11Enniskillen. So, Susan, you win the point today. I'm delighted with that. Well done. Delighted.
02:17Right. The first question today, as always, is to you, Susan. So, it's time to start the tour with
02:22Paul and he's kicking things off in the heart of the action, quite literally.
02:30Welcome to Enniskillen, the beating heart of County Fermanagh. And do not let the population of just
02:37over 18,000 fool you, as it may look small, but Enniskillen has produced a plethora of poets,
02:43pop stars and performers from film and television. But first, I want to focus on the town's standout
02:50site, Enniskillen Castle, which has been keeping watch over Loch Earn for around six centuries.
02:58Built by the Maguire chieftains, its main purpose back in the 15th century was simple,
03:03to guard the waterway, and everyone brave enough to cross it. But would you believe that Enniskillen
03:09was built on an island which you can canoe around? Or would you?
03:18What do you think, Susan? Would you believe that Enniskillen was built on an island which you can
03:23canoe around? Now, an island within an island, is that an island? Question. You see, the canoe around
03:32seems to me, is that a red herring to make, have they dripped that in to make it sound more
03:36feasible?
03:38Don't rush to your decision. All right, I don't believe it.
03:41You don't believe it? I don't believe it.
03:43Karlman doesn't believe everyone. I don't believe it.
03:45Is she right to not believe it? No, I'm not right. I'll put you in.
03:48No, you've got to believe it! No! You've got to believe it!
03:51Enniskillen was indeed built on an island. It's where Upper Loch Earn meets Lower Loch Earn.
03:57Its name comes from the Irish Innis, meaning Ireland, and Kethlyn.
04:02Kethlyn was a fierce warrior in Irish mythology. Thank you.
04:06There you go. It's the island of the warriors.
04:08Still not going to sleep tonight because of that island within an island, but you know.
04:12Ooh! Right, Paul is exploring the military history of Enniskillen.
04:16Fascinating stuff. Let's take a look.
04:22Enniskillen gave its name to two of the most decorated military units in British and Irish history.
04:27The Royal Innerskilling Fusiliers and the 5th Royal Innerskilling Dragoon Guards.
04:33These regiments and their predecessors fought across Europe, Africa and beyond.
04:38You can do this. You're such a good tour guide, Paul.
04:41You know, you're very clever in a 6 out of 10 on a good day, maybe.
04:46Oh, you just caught me borrowing a little confidence trick from Patrick O'Brien Tuig,
04:52one of the most colourful commanders the Innerskilling Fusiliers ever had.
04:57And during World War II, his unit played a key role in Sicily.
05:02And to keep morale high, he hung a full-length mirror in the camp with the words,
05:07Do you look like a victorious British soldier now? A great bit of old-school self-help.
05:12But would you believe that O'Brien Tuig coined the phrase,
05:16paint the town red, when rallying his troops during the capture of a key Sicilian town in 1943?
05:23Well, would you?
05:29So, would you believe, Max, that O'Brien Tuig coined the phrase,
05:34paint the town red, when rallying his troops in Sicily in 1943?
05:38Um, you know, putting a full-length mirror in the camp, you know, great.
05:44Really, that's good for morale, I think. So, I think that OBT definitely did that, I believe it.
05:52All right, good stuff. Let's find out whether it is fact or fiction.
05:56No!
05:57No.
05:58The phrase, paint the town red, is often linked to an 1837 incident
06:03when the Marquess of Waterford and his friends had such a big night out,
06:08they ended up literally daubing buildings with red paint.
06:12A little bit of posh vandalism.
06:14Yeah, no, that sounds like a great idea.
06:16I've done that with the boys before.
06:19Right, Noreen, your turn. You ready?
06:21Yeah.
06:22Paul's off to the pub. Good stuff. Oh, it's a hard life.
06:27Oh, winter's coming.
06:30This is Blake's of the Hollow, one of the most famous Victorian pubs in Northern Ireland.
06:36It's been serving pints and stories since the 1880s, but this isn't just any old pub,
06:42as Blake's is home to a special Game of Thrones-themed door.
06:46The six counties of Northern Ireland became the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros for the HBO series,
06:52and over the show's eight-year run, around 13,000 lucky locals got their moment on screen.
06:58But would you believe local extras in Game of Thrones commonly use coloured contact lenses on set
07:03to change their appearance so their producers would hire them more than once?
07:09Clever.
07:10If it's true.
07:15Have you ever been a background artist?
07:17No.
07:17Max?
07:18No.
07:18Susan?
07:19You have.
07:20There was a Scottish series called Taggart.
07:23There's been a murder.
07:24Yes.
07:24And I played shocked schoolgirl from the left.
07:27No, you didn't.
07:28I can still do it.
07:29You ready?
07:29Yeah.
07:30Ready?
07:31So...
07:31Bastard.
07:33Yeah, it was a pretty great day.
07:34Wow.
07:34It was a pretty great day.
07:35Anyway, Noreen, would you believe local extras in Game of Thrones commonly used coloured contact lenses
07:42on set to change their appearance so that producers would hire them more than once?
07:48It's very clever.
07:50It is, but I don't think it's true.
07:51Noreen, let's have a look.
07:52You don't believe it.
07:54You're right.
07:55Yay!
07:55She got points.
07:57Yes.
07:58However, if you were an extra and wanted to be asked back for the next season of shooting,
08:03you learnt that you had to die face down during a battle scene so they could use you again.
08:10Right.
08:11Very clever.
08:11Right, at the end of round one, let's take a look at the scores.
08:16Noreen has a point.
08:17Wow.
08:18Susan has a point.
08:19Max has a nil point.
08:20Right, time for round two, so let's go back to Paul.
08:22He uncovers all sorts of things on these tours,
08:25but I never imagined we'd be digging this deep.
08:30Back in 1980, a local farmer was out cutting turf in a peat bog
08:35when his spade hit something quite unusual.
08:39And at first, it just looked like a stone or maybe a bone, perhaps an old T-Rex joint.
08:46No one could tell.
08:47All they knew is that it was a big white lump weighing around 35 pounds.
08:53And here's your question.
08:55What did the 35 pound lump consist of?
08:59Was it bog butter?
09:00Was it bog booze?
09:02Or was it bog shampoo?
09:04Which one was it?
09:10Interesting.
09:10What did a 35 pound lump found by a farmer just outside Enniskilling consist of?
09:18Was it bog butter, bog booze or bog shampoo?
09:24So, of course, the bog will preserve things.
09:30A fermentation, perhaps, because as material deteriorates, there's a chemical reaction within it.
09:40And so I'm leaning towards the bog booze.
09:44Bog butter is possible because if you had a...
09:46I hope you're enjoying your dinner.
09:47If there was a sheep, for example, that decomposed,
09:50then the fatty tissues can liquefy in a way.
09:54So what do you think? Is it butter booze or shampoo?
09:56OK, it's a lump.
09:57That's the only thing that's putting me off.
09:58It's a lump.
09:59And booze, I'm not sure, would be a lump.
10:03That's all. The only reason I'm staying away from it.
10:05I'm going to go for bog shampoo.
10:08We're going bog shampoo. We've locked in bog shampoo.
10:10Is the right answer?
10:12No! It was bog butter!
10:15Yes, the butter is dated to between 1030 and 1150 AD.
10:20It's thought that it being in the bog was intended as a way of preserving the butter,
10:25hence why it's still around today.
10:27There you go.
10:28Right, Max, your question. Paul is heading to school.
10:31Oh, gosh. Wow. I bet he was always the teacher's pet, oh, Paul.
10:38This is Pertora Hill, home to the oldest school in Inneskillen
10:42and one of the oldest in Northern Ireland.
10:45And one of its most celebrated pupils is none other than Oscar Wilde.
10:50Today, Oscar Wilde is celebrated as one of the greatest literary voices
10:55and is famous for writing classics like The Importance of Being Earnest,
11:00An Ideal Husband and The Picture of Doreen Grey.
11:04Oscar Wilde claimed that his fellow pupils had looked upon him as a prodigy.
11:08But which of these skills did he claim to have mastered?
11:11Speed reading two pages at once, mirror writing with both hands simultaneously,
11:17or speaking backwards in three languages?
11:20It is one which but.
11:22What? But which one is it?
11:28What do you think, Max?
11:30Which of these skills did Oscar Wilde claim to have mastered?
11:34Speed reading two pages of a book at once,
11:37mirror writing with both hands simultaneously,
11:40or speaking backwards in three languages?
11:43I feel like three is probably, that would have been too few for Oscar Wilde.
11:47I feel like he would have wanted to be able to show that he could do it in as many
11:49as possible.
11:50Um, speed reading two pages of a book at once,
11:54does that mean he's kind of going full chameleon,
11:56and like a left eye on the left and right eye on the right,
11:59or is he just zook zook both very quickly?
12:02Um, mirror writing with both hands simultaneously,
12:06I think that's the one that he claimed to have mastered,
12:10so I would like to lock in mirror writing with both hands simultaneously, please Vernon.
12:13All right, let's have a look.
12:14Is it the right answer?
12:17No!
12:17No!
12:18It's speed reading two pages of a book at the same time.
12:22He learned to speak fluent French and German in his youth,
12:25and he was very good at English, of course.
12:27He also claimed that he could provide a detailed summary of a three-volume novel
12:32after reading it through in just 30 minutes.
12:35Tom Fellick.
12:36Right, Paul is sticking with Pettora School for his next stop.
12:38Let's see what else he's discovered there.
12:43If Oscar Wilde brought the wit and wordplay to Pettora Royal School,
12:47then Samuel Beckett brought the minimalism and silences,
12:51as the Nobel Prize-winning playwright also studied right here.
12:56The author of much-loved works like Waiting for Godot moved to Paris in the late 1920s,
13:01and eventually became one of the great literary figures of the 20th century.
13:05In the 1950s, when Beckett was living abroad,
13:08he was one of a number of adults who drove local children to school.
13:12But which of these famous people was driven to school by Samuel Beckett?
13:17Actor and adventurer Brian Blessed?
13:19Ski jumper Eddie the Eagle Edwards?
13:22Or wrestler Andre the Giant?
13:25Right, come on.
13:26Which one was it?
13:27Did he sit in the front?
13:29Have he got a long car?
13:30Was he quite loud?
13:32Did he have skis?
13:36Right, Noreen, it's your turn.
13:38So here's your question.
13:39Which of these famous people was driven to school by Samuel Beckett?
13:45Oh, you're lovely now.
13:46It's just, of all the questions.
13:49I would love if Noreen right now just said,
13:51oh, I don't need the answers. I know exactly who it is.
13:53Yeah, yeah, yeah.
13:53It's Eddie the Eagle.
13:54Yeah.
13:56Because he was from my hometown of Bedford, I'm sure he was.
13:59All right, well, let me give you the options.
14:01Brian Blessed, Eddie the Eagle Edwards, or Andre the Giant?
14:06That's a party.
14:08Yeah.
14:09This is just going to be a wild guess.
14:11I'm just going to say Brian Blessed.
14:13You're going to say Brian Blessed?
14:14Yeah.
14:14For any particular reason?
14:15No.
14:16All right, OK.
14:16You've locked in Brian Blessed.
14:18The answer is...
14:20Andre the Giant!
14:22Beckett lived abroad for most of his life,
14:24and in the 1950s, he had a house in France.
14:27The young Andre Russimov lived nearby
14:31and was one of the many children
14:33who Beckett would give a lift to school.
14:36That is possibly the greatest fact of all time.
14:40What a fact. Love that.
14:41Right, at the end of that round, let's take a look at the scores.
14:46Max, you've still got nothing.
14:48It's been a good start for me today.
14:49Yeah. Noreen and Susan, you've got one point.
14:52I've got one point. I'm happy with that.
14:53I'll go home now.
14:55Yep.
14:55Right, this is round three.
14:56Now, this is where we like to mix it up a little bit.
14:59This is my favourite thing, though.
15:00It's the music round.
15:01We've lined up a very special guest.
15:03She's come all the way from just outside Enniskillen
15:06with her concertina.
15:08Please welcome Erin Whitley, everyone.
15:11Hi, Erin.
15:14Erin, a joy to have you with us.
15:16How long have you been playing?
15:17For 15 years.
15:18Right, and it's a traditional Irish instrument.
15:20Yes.
15:21Do you just pop it in your bag when you're with your mates
15:24and say, oh, shall I get out the concertina?
15:26And then everyone starts singing.
15:27Yeah.
15:28Yes!
15:29Right, gang, we're going out after the show.
15:33This is how it works.
15:34We'll get through this really quick, then we can go out with Erin.
15:36Erin is going to play a selection of tunes from Northern Ireland.
15:39All you've got to do, gang, is work it out.
15:41Now, you get a point for the track.
15:43You get an extra point for the artist.
15:45OK, Erin, in your own time, with your first tune, take it away.
16:01Yes!
16:03I'm excited.
16:04Remember, six points in total, two points per round.
16:07Right, Susan, what do you think?
16:09Right, I think it's this, from your beautiful playing,
16:12Divine Comedy National Express.
16:15Very good.
16:16National Express!
16:17Max?
16:18Yeah, I thought this was an original piece by Erin, so it's called We Love Enniskillen
16:22by Erin, and that was the name of the track.
16:25Wow.
16:25All right, Noreen?
16:26And I think it was No Idea But Sounded Cute.
16:29Oh, OK.
16:30No Idea But Sounded Cute.
16:32It is, of course.
16:33Well, let's hear it.
16:34Take the National Express When your life's in a mess
16:40It'll make you smile
16:41It's got the most incredible chorus.
16:45It is National Express by The Divine Comedy, and, of course, Neil Hannan grew up in Enniskillen.
16:50Well done.
16:51So you get two points.
16:52No points for you, Max.
16:53No points for you, Noreen.
16:55All right, Erin, take it away.
17:04Oh.
17:05Oh.
17:17Beautiful.
17:21Susan, what have you read?
17:22I think it is The Marvelous Snow Patrol, and is it Chasing Cars?
17:26Right.
17:27Max?
17:27I wrote Chasing Cars by Snow Patrol.
17:30Noreen?
17:30Nothing.
17:31Sorry.
17:31Oh, Noreen!
17:32No, I know.
17:33Well, let's hear what it actually is.
17:36If I lay here
17:40If I just lay here
17:45Would you always be?
17:48It is, of course, Chasing Cars by Snow Patrol.
17:51So, Susan, Max, you do get two points.
17:54Noreen again, nothing.
17:56Third and final track.
17:58Erin, in your own time.
18:18Susan, what have you put?
18:19Van Morrison, Brown Eyed Girl.
18:21Max?
18:22I wrote Brown Eyed Girl by Van Morrison.
18:24Noreen?
18:25No.
18:28Noreen!
18:29I did really well in that round.
18:31Let's find out what it is.
18:38Yes, well done.
18:39It is Van Morrison and, of course, Brown Eyed Girl.
18:42Wow.
18:43Wow.
18:43Excellent stuff.
18:44Before we take a look at the scores after that round,
18:46we should say goodbye for now to Erin.
18:49Well done.
18:49Well done, Erin.
18:51That was awesome.
18:52That was so good.
18:54All right, let's have a look at the scores after round three.
18:58Noreen, you had a shocker.
19:00It's safe to say you had an absolute shocker.
19:03You're still on one point.
19:05Max, you scored four.
19:07Susan, once again, running away with it.
19:08Yeah.
19:08A smile.
19:09Seven points.
19:11Well done.
19:11Right, let's go back to Paul.
19:13He's on the home turf of a much-loved acting legend.
19:16Over to you, fella.
19:21Fans of high-octane BBC police dramas might recognise this familiar face.
19:26A man who's brought a bit of fair manner wit to living rooms all over the world.
19:30Jesus, Mary and Joseph and the wee donkey.
19:33It's only Adrian Dunbar.
19:36Despite being set in England, most of Line of Duty was filmed in Northern Ireland.
19:41And Adrian Dunbar is from right here in Skintown.
19:44The slang name locals affectionately use for Enniskilling.
19:49He brought Enniskilling slang to millions around the UK.
19:52But when it comes to local phrases, what does having a queer handling mean?
19:57A right old faff or a right old knees up?
20:01Which one is it?
20:05He didn't say anything.
20:12Right, Susan, here's your question from Paul.
20:14Yep.
20:15What does having a queer handling mean?
20:18Is it a right old faff or a right old knees up?
20:24That's a tough one, isn't it?
20:25Now, I'm thinking queer handling because I'm thinking handling,
20:28so I'm having difficulty handling something, maybe?
20:32I'm going to go for a right old faff.
20:33I don't know the answer.
20:34I'm going to go for a right old faff.
20:36It's locked in.
20:37Is it the right answer?
20:39Yeah!
20:41Well done.
20:42It's akin to...
20:43Ooh, what a palaver.
20:44It's a situation...
20:45It's akin to what?
20:46Ooh, what a palaver.
20:51It's a situation that is a considerable hassle
20:54or proves to be an overly complicated, stressful process.
20:58That's what it is, a right old faff.
21:00All right, then, here we go again.
21:01Paul's off for a short back and sides.
21:03He likes to say quaffered during his toes.
21:09Sure, Berlin might have its very own dentist that's done up like a nightclub,
21:14and New Yorkers might boast laundromat slash cocktail bars,
21:18but none of them come close to what we've got right here in Enniskilling.
21:22Because if you need a haircut and fancy a quick history lesson on Irish rail travel, then Headhunters Barbershop and
21:30Railway Museum is the right place for you, my friend.
21:33It's a cut above your average museum.
21:36Back in the heyday of steam, Enniskilling was a bustling railway hub with trains that once connected the town of
21:43Sligo, Bundoran, Belfast and beyond.
21:47But when the steam era began to fade, the tracks fell silent and Enniskilling's railway story looked set to end
21:54for good.
21:55That is until locals, including the barbers here, stepped in to preserve the memories of Ireland's great age of rail,
22:03filling this hairdresser's with vintage signs, ticket stubs and uniforms from the glory days.
22:09Although steam engines stayed in service right up until the lines closed in the 1950s,
22:14would you believe horses regularly pulled passengers on nearby tracks?
22:19Right then, mate. Make me look like Vernon Kaye. I'm not a magician.
22:26Would you believe horses regularly pulled passengers on nearby tracks?
22:32This seems like very believable. Now, I don't know whether you were doing that to hoodwink me,
22:36it's a double bluff, and therefore I'm going to look like a right numpty.
22:40Stop being so suspicious.
22:41So, I think...
22:43Yes, I would absolutely believe that horses would regularly pull passengers on nearby tracks,
22:49so I would like to say yes, I believe that, Vernon.
22:51All right, for a point, to get closer to Susan, let's see.
22:54Are you right to believe?
22:56Yes!
22:58Well done. Well done, yes.
23:00In nearby Fintana, it closed in 1957 after 104 years of service,
23:05the horse pulling the passengers was also known as Dick,
23:09regardless of whether it was male or female.
23:13All right, time for the last stop on today's tour.
23:15Paul, over to you.
23:19Here at Enerskilling College of Agriculture, Food and Rural Enterprise, the team specialises in equine care,
23:27training the next generation of horse handlers and riders who will keep the local equestrian tradition galloping along.
23:34Neil Hannan, frontman of the Divine Comedy, spent much of his youth in Enerskilling.
23:39He's the man behind tunes like National Express, Something for the Weekend, the Father Ted theme tune,
23:46and, of course, one of the most memorable songs about wholesome animal husbandry to ever grace the television.
23:54My Lovely Horse was written for Father Ted's legendary Eurovision spoof episode.
23:59Would you believe that Neil Hannan's family now runs an animal sanctuary called My Lovely Horse Rescue Centre?
24:08Giddy up!
24:12All right, Noreen, let's get straight to it.
24:13Would you believe that Neil Hannan's family runs an animal sanctuary called My Lovely Horse Rescue Centre?
24:20It's a lovely name for a rescue centre.
24:22It is.
24:23That name seems a little bit unlikely, so I'm going to say I don't believe it.
24:28You don't believe it?
24:30Yeah.
24:30Let's see if you're right not to believe.
24:34No!
24:35No, if you think about it, My Lovely Horse Rescue Centre is so Neil Hannan.
24:40Right, it's time for a bonus question, so if you would please get your whiteboards and your pens ready.
24:47Here is your question.
24:50Neil Hannan lived in Enniskilling because his grandfather ran a local paint factory, his mother was a local MP, his
25:00father was a local clergyman.
25:04What do you think?
25:07Let's see your answers.
25:08Susan.
25:09I went down the middle.
25:10An MP.
25:12Max?
25:12I said paint, please, Vernon.
25:15Paint, please, Vernon.
25:16Noreen, member of the clergy.
25:17Oh!
25:18We've got all three, but one of you is right.
25:20Yes.
25:20But who is it?
25:22Oh!
25:24Yay!
25:25Shocking!
25:26We're so excited!
25:27Yay!
25:28Yes!
25:29We've got a point.
25:30Yes!
25:31His father, Brian Hannan, was a rector in Enniskilling and eventually a bishop.
25:36It's why he grew up there.
25:38Well done, Noreen.
25:39Good stuff.
25:40Right, that's the end of the round, so let's take a look at the scores and how that point for
25:43Noreen has affected them.
25:44Oh, massively.
25:46Look.
25:46Two!
25:47You doubled your score.
25:48Well done.
25:49You've got two.
25:49Max, you're three behind Susan, who's got eight points.
25:52Yeah.
25:52It's all for the left four.
25:53It's the quickfire round.
25:55Fingers by your buzzers.
25:56Here's your first Enniskilling-related question.
26:06Max?
26:07Coronation Street.
26:07It is Coronation Street.
26:08Well done.
26:09Come on.
26:10World leader, who was at Enniskilling's G8 Summit.
26:15Max?
26:16Angela Merkel.
26:18Angela Merkel, yes.
26:19All right, here we go.
26:21Come on, Noreen.
26:22A local course was designed by this golfer.
26:25Oh.
26:27Susan?
26:27Nick Faldo.
26:28Yes, it is Nick Faldo.
26:30Next question.
26:32Susan?
26:38St Michael's Church.
26:39Oh, yes.
26:39Yes, it is St Michael's Church.
26:41Well done.
26:41Great gameplay.
26:43Next question.
26:45Popular local leisure activity.
26:50Max?
26:50Fly fishing.
26:51Yes, fly fishing.
26:52Surprised it's not canoeing.
26:54Oh, it's the last one!
26:56It's the last one.
26:57Time's up and that's the end of the round.
26:58Let's take a look at the final score.
26:59No, let's not.
27:01LAUGHTER
27:02So, Noreen, you've got two points.
27:04Wow.
27:04Max, you've got eight.
27:06You tried, Max.
27:07I did, I did try.
27:08You really did.
27:08St Michael's Church was a legendary pull from six to nine.
27:11It really was.
27:12Which means that, Susan, two days in a row, you've got ten points.
27:16You are victorious this Tuesday.
27:19Thank you very much indeed.
27:20Congratulations.
27:22So, Susan, you get three points for winning today.
27:24Max, you get two points for coming second.
27:26And Noreen, it's one point for you.
27:28Every point counts.
27:30Remember, we'll find out who's going to be victorious for the whole week on Friday.
27:34Now, two shows done and dusted.
27:36Let's see who's a top of the leaderboard.
27:38It's no surprise.
27:38Two days in a row, you've been victorious.
27:40Susan, you've got six points.
27:42Max, you've got four.
27:43Noreen, you've got two.
27:44And, Susan, because you are today's winner,
27:47obviously, again, you win a Paul's card from Paul.
27:51Oh, I like that one.
27:52Next agent.
27:52That's beautiful.
27:53Lovely.
27:54And you get this little prize.
27:55From Enniskilling, it's a drinking cup
27:57with a Fermanagh quart from Line of Duty.
28:00That's great.
28:01It says, no, we're sucking, Diesel.
28:02That is actually absolutely brilliant.
28:05That is brilliant.
28:05Oh, no, that is brilliant.
28:07Well, that's it for today.
28:08Join us on our travels next time,
28:09when we might be somewhere near you.
28:11But for now, goodbye.
28:14And thank you because you support me.
28:16Thank you again for singing in direct
28:40And thank you.details.
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