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00:31Well, good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown Studio. Here we go. Heading into the weekend, what's happening at Alexandra
00:37Palace in North London? None other than the annual Soapbox Race. Apparently, Rachel, it attracts people from all over the
00:45world to drag their homemade carts to the top of the hill. And then with nothing but gravity and courage,
00:54they hurtle to the bottom and it's a race.
00:57Of course, the thing is, this is an invitation to turn up in all sorts of things. May I offer
01:01you a giant baby carriage with the driver sitting in it, hurtling down. Somebody's got a jail cell. That's quite
01:09good. And also a massive corn on the cob, which you sort of slide into with your little head sticking
01:14out, I assume.
01:15Fantastic. But if you were designing a soapbox and letting your mind run riot, what form would this soapbox take?
01:23I guess it's got to be something that you're interested in, but something aerodynamic, hasn't it?
01:28Well...
01:29Maybe it would be a lizard-shaped something. My brother likes a bit of fancy dress, and he went to
01:34one of those 999 balls where most people go as, you know, a fireman or a policeman.
01:39He went as an ambulance.
01:41Really?
01:41That was his costume.
01:42He had a little blue light on his head.
01:44He had the whole box. He had everything. He's just his legs sticking out the bottom.
01:48Brilliant.
01:49He's a bit of a weirdo, my brother.
01:51It's fun.
01:52It's fun.
01:52It is fun.
01:53Listen, who's here? We've got Tom Silverlog back, who thought he was going to get two teapots just because he
02:00won two goes.
02:00You've got one teapot. These are very valuable. Can't be giving them away to every Tom, Dick and Harry, you
02:05know.
02:05Of course, you had a great win yesterday. You beat young Sam, so now you're a seasoned player.
02:11Are you feeling comfortable?
02:12I'm feeling very comfortable, Nick. Thank you.
02:14Good. You look relaxed.
02:16I'm chilled, yeah.
02:18Stay awake. You're joined by Libby Fawcett. Welcome, Libby.
02:22Hello.
02:22Hello.
02:22From Kirk Oswald in Cumbria, part-time shop assistant. Loves her rugby.
02:27Yes, absolutely.
02:28Oh, you had us great Six Nations, being Welsh.
02:32Yes.
02:33Yeah.
02:34Still buzzing from last March, yes. Absolutely brilliant.
02:36I'm still hurting from last March.
02:38And now we've got the World Cup coming up.
02:40Yes.
02:40So it's something to look forward to.
02:42Yes.
02:42Have some fun here today.
02:44Yes.
02:44You've got Tom there to compete with and have some fun.
02:48Big round of applause now for Tom and Libby.
02:53Tom and Libby.
02:55And over there, Susie, of course.
02:58You know, keeping the whole show stable.
03:01And she's joined once again by MotoGP presenter, the Queen of Speed there, Susie Perry.
03:07Welcome back, Susie.
03:08Hello again.
03:08Thank you very much.
03:13Yes.
03:14Tom, off you go.
03:16You know how it works.
03:17Hi again, Rachel.
03:18Hi, Tom.
03:19Hi, can I have a consonant, please?
03:20You can indeed.
03:21Start the day with C.
03:23And another one.
03:25R.
03:26And another consonant.
03:28T.
03:28And another consonant.
03:31X.
03:32And a vowel.
03:34E.
03:35And another vowel.
03:36O.
03:37Another vowel.
03:39I.
03:40And a consonant.
03:42D.
03:42And another vowel.
03:44And the last one.
03:45You.
03:46And here's the countdown clock.
04:16MUSIC CONTINUES
04:19Well, Tom? I've got a seven.
04:22Libby? Seven.
04:23Yes. Tom?
04:26Courted. Libby?
04:27Courted, same word.
04:29There we go.
04:30Yep.
04:31Yep, we had courted and cordite.
04:34Yes.
04:35Smoked with explosive.
04:36Anything else, Susan?
04:37Nothing better, was it?
04:38No, that's it.
04:40So, seven apiece. Libby, your letter's going.
04:44Good afternoon, Rachel.
04:46Afternoon, Libby.
04:47Can I have a consonant, please?
04:49C.
04:49And another.
04:52H.
04:53And another.
04:54L.
04:56And a vowel.
04:57A.
04:59And another.
05:00E.
05:01And a consonant.
05:03D.
05:05And another.
05:06R.
05:09And another.
05:11M.
05:12And a vowel.
05:13And the last one.
05:15And the last one.
05:17Stand by.
05:18Stand by.
05:20And a vowel.
05:21And a vowel.
05:36And a vowel.
05:37And a vowel.
05:37And a vowel.
05:37And a vowel.
05:37And a vowel.
05:37And a vowel.
05:38And a vowel.
05:39And a vowel.
05:43And a vowel.
05:516
05:52Tom
05:52I've got a 7
05:53Libby 6
05:55Drench
05:55Drench and
05:57Ched
05:58Ched is fine
05:59I can't allow drench
06:00There's no N
06:01Libby I'm sorry
06:02Right
06:02Sorry
06:03And in the corner
06:05An 8
06:06With Miracled
06:09Miracled
06:09Miracled with a D on the end
06:10Miracled
06:11How does that work
06:12As a verb
06:13Yeah it's quite rare
06:14I have to say
06:15First one in the mid 17th century
06:17It's just
06:17Another way of saying miraculous
06:19Really
06:20Okay
06:21Yes
06:22Miracled
06:23I was miracled
06:2414 plays 7
06:26Tom
06:27Your numbers game
06:28Can I have
06:295 small
06:301 large plays
06:31You can indeed
06:321 from the top row
06:32And 5 little ins
06:34And for the first time to date
06:36The numbers are
06:373
06:375
06:388
06:396
06:401
06:41And 25
06:42And the target
06:44330
06:453
06:463
06:460
06:471
06:482
06:492
06:502
06:512
06:522
06:542
06:552
07:093
07:102
07:114
07:113
07:114
07:114
07:119
07:17Yes, Tom?
07:183, 3, 0.
07:20Libby?
07:21No, sorry, I've gone wrong.
07:23Sorry.
07:23Oh, bad luck.
07:24Tom?
07:258 plus 5 times 25.
07:2813 times 25, 3, 2, 5.
07:30Plus 6, minus 1.
07:32Well done, 3, 30.
07:34Well done, indeed.
07:38And now it's time for our tea time teaser,
07:42and it's sat finest, and the clue.
07:44He sat and ate the finest rack of lamb.
07:46There wasn't a hint of this about it.
07:48He sat and ate the finest rack of lamb.
07:50There wasn't a hint of this about it.
08:08Welcome back.
08:09Let's do it with the clue.
08:10He sat and ate the finest rack of lamb.
08:12There wasn't a hint of this about it.
08:15There wasn't a hint of fattiness.
08:19Fattiness.
08:19That's the answer to that.
08:21Now, Libby, your letters came.
08:26Consonant, please.
08:27Thank you, Libby.
08:28F.
08:29And another.
08:31T.
08:32And another.
08:33M.
08:35And another.
08:36N.
08:37And a vowel.
08:39A.
08:40And another vowel.
08:41E.
08:42And another vowel.
08:44O.
08:45And a consonant.
08:47S.
08:48And another consonant.
08:50And the last one, R.
08:52Stand by.
08:53And another vowel.
09:11And another vowel.
09:12And another vowel.
09:12And another vowel.
09:12And another vowel.
09:12And another vowel.
09:12And another vowel.
09:13And another vowel.
09:14And another vowel.
09:24Libby.
09:26Six.
09:27A six, Tom?
09:29Um, I'll go for a seven.
09:32Libby.
09:33Frames.
09:35Now, Tom.
09:36Moaners.
09:37Moaners?
09:38Absolutely fine.
09:39Yes.
09:39Well done.
09:41Now, amongst the Susies, what have we got?
09:45Um, a couple of eights.
09:47Stallman.
09:48Yep.
09:50Um, and the plant Monstera.
09:52Um, the Swiss cheese plant, in other words.
09:54The house plant is the Monstera.
09:56We were hoping for Forest Man, but not there.
09:59All right.
10:02Tom, your letters game.
10:04I'll have a consonant, please, Rachel.
10:06Thank you, Tom.
10:07T.
10:08And a vowel.
10:10E.
10:10And another consonant.
10:12J.
10:14And a vowel.
10:16A.
10:17And a consonant.
10:19S.
10:20And a vowel.
10:22I.
10:23And a consonant.
10:25C.
10:26And a vowel.
10:28O.
10:30And a consonant.
10:31And lastly, D.
10:34Stand by.
10:35Lick wasseless.
10:38And a vowel.
10:38and a vowel.
10:49And a vowel.
10:52And a vowel.
10:55And a vowel.
11:07Well, Tom?
11:08Seven.
11:09And Libby?
11:11Seven.
11:11Thank you, Tom.
11:13Coasted.
11:14Libby?
11:15Coasted.
11:15There we go.
11:19And over there?
11:20Coasted.
11:21Coasted?
11:21It's universal.
11:22Miss Dent?
11:23Yeah, a couple more sevens.
11:25Dacoits are there, the armed robbers,
11:26and Joy stood as well,
11:28but couldn't get beyond seven.
11:30All right.
11:3038 plays 14.
11:32Tom's still in the lead.
11:33Libby, it's your numbers game.
11:35May I have two large and four small, please?
11:38You may indeed.
11:39Thank you, Libby.
11:39Two, two, and two.
11:41And for this round,
11:42the four small ones are
11:43one, ten, seven, and six,
11:46and the large two, one hundred, and fifty.
11:49And the target, 397.
11:53397.
12:23Libby.
12:26Uh, yes, 397, I think.
12:28Tom?
12:29I've got 396, not written down.
12:32But Libby's 397?
12:34I think so.
12:35Off we go, Libby.
12:36Six times 50 is 300.
12:38It starts well.
12:40Plus 100.
12:41400.
12:42Minus the 10.
12:44390.
12:45And plus the 7.
12:46397, perfect.
12:47Well done.
12:47Well done.
12:48Well done.
12:51Well done, Libby.
12:53Up to 24 now, to Tom's 38.
12:56As we sweep around and gaze at Susie Perry.
12:59Susie, what have you got for us today?
13:01Ah, no pressure.
13:03Um, well, in my job, I've been lucky enough to interview many different people, music stars,
13:09actors, sports stars.
13:11And sometimes I'm asked what was my favourite interview.
13:15So, my very favourite one is with the legendary Murray Walker, who we all know and love.
13:21Um, I was equating sort of along the same line as David Attenborough, you know, Murray Walker
13:26of the sporting world and his voice synonymous with Formula One.
13:29But he used to be a biker.
13:31He loves motorbikes.
13:33And his father was a biker and he has a huge passion for bikes.
13:36So, when I started, um, when I became a journalist and broadcaster, I wrote for a bike magazine.
13:42And I used to have a column where I used to go and interview people that were associated
13:46with biking, but not necessarily racers.
13:49So, I went to interview Murray Walker.
13:51Now, this is back in the 90s.
13:53And I organised to go to his house and there weren't many female journalists at the time
13:59in sport, let alone in motorsport.
14:02So, he opened the door to me and he looked down on me.
14:05He still lives in the same house now and there's a big step.
14:08And he looked down and he just went, what's a girl doing talking about motorbikes?
14:12And I thought, oh, this is going to be so hard, this interview.
14:15And all the things I wanted to talk to him about.
14:18And it was just a different era, you know, back in the 90s when I first started.
14:23It was perceived very differently that a woman was working in that world.
14:27And, um, it always sort of surprised me when I have to tell that story.
14:32And I told it to a guy in a cab the other day.
14:34And I thought, yeah, things have changed so much now.
14:36And Murray is a great, great friend of mine.
14:38And I've interviewed him many, many times since then.
14:41And he's an absolute joy and a real one-off.
14:43And then my other favourite interview was with somebody who can be very difficult.
14:48But I love her.
14:49I think she's amazing.
14:50And that's Grace Jones.
14:52So, I think she's quite famous for hitting Russell Harty with her handbag live on TV.
14:57Sure, yeah.
14:57And walking out of an interview.
14:59But, um, I was thinking, oh, I hope she's nice.
15:02You know, I hope she doesn't kind of do anything weird.
15:05Or, and she was absolutely fantastic.
15:07And, uh, and we interviewed her and her mum about coming to Royal Ascot.
15:12And she was talking very much about the millinery, about the hat.
15:15She was wearing a Philip Tracy.
15:16And she looked incredible.
15:18And, uh, it stayed with me.
15:19And she kept on putting her hand on me and calling me sexy, seriously.
15:22And I thought, I'll take that from Grace Jones.
15:25But a lot of fun.
15:26Very different to the world of motorbikes.
15:28But what a privilege to be able to do that.
15:30Oh, brilliant.
15:30Well done.
15:33APPLAUSE
15:37There is a sort of an aura of danger around her and unpredictability, I think, isn't there?
15:42I think that's what makes it exciting.
15:43Keeps you on your toes.
15:45Good for you.
15:45Yeah.
15:45Well done.
15:46Now, 38 plays 24.
15:49Tom on 38.
15:50Tom, your letters came.
15:52OK, Rachel, can I have a consonant, please?
15:55Thank you, Tom.
15:56N.
15:57And another?
15:58G.
15:59And another one?
16:02S.
16:03And another one?
16:05N.
16:06And a vowel?
16:07U.
16:09And another vowel?
16:10A.
16:11And another vowel?
16:13O.
16:15And a consonant?
16:17S.
16:18And another vowel?
16:20And the last one?
16:21I.
16:23Stand by.
16:55Yes, Tom?
16:56Five.
16:57Libby?
16:59Five.
17:00Tom's five?
17:02S.
17:02Libby?
17:03Gaines.
17:04And Gaines.
17:06Can we beat five?
17:08Susie's?
17:09I've got six in Unions.
17:12Yes.
17:12Have you got any more?
17:13Yes, I've got the X from the Seabirds and Bats, Guano, but you can put the S on that, Guano's.
17:20It's still just sixes for us.
17:22Well done.
17:2443 to 29.
17:25Libby.
17:26Libby.
17:26Letters game.
17:27Can I have a consonant, Rachel, please?
17:30Thank you, Libby.
17:31T.
17:32And another?
17:34N.
17:35And a vowel?
17:36E.
17:37And another?
17:39A.
17:39And a consonant.
17:41And another?
17:45And the last one.
17:56N.
17:58And it's Cantan.
17:59We're one, who.
18:01And another?
18:01And another?
18:30Libby.
18:30Seven.
18:32Tom.
18:33I've got a seven.
18:34Libby, seven.
18:35Planter.
18:36Tom.
18:37I've got a planner.
18:39Yes.
18:40Pretty fine.
18:41Well done, guys.
18:43And any more sevens there, Susie?
18:45Sevens all round, I think.
18:47Had planter as well.
18:49Yes, pronate, a good old countdown word.
18:52Pronated palms or sole of your foot.
18:54But just sevens for us.
18:5750 to 36.
18:59Tom, numbers game.
19:01Rachel, can I have two large and four small, please?
19:04You can indeed.
19:05Thank you, Tom.
19:06Two large, four little.
19:08And for this round, the little ones are nine, three, nine and eight.
19:14And the large two, 50 and 25.
19:17And this target, 976.
19:20Nine, seven, six.
19:38Go, go, go.
19:38Yuck, go.
19:52Well, Tom, I've got 9, 6, 8, not reading down.
19:569, 6, 8. Libby?
19:599, 7, 5, I think.
20:01Off we go.
20:043 plus 9 plus 8.
20:063 plus 9 plus 8 is 20.
20:0920 times 50.
20:11Times 50, 1,000.
20:12And minus 25.
20:14That gets you to 1 away, 9, 7, 5.
20:16Well done. Well done.
20:18Not quite perfect, though.
20:19For that, we turn to Rachel and see whether 9, 7, 6 is a runner.
20:24You will have to leave it with me, Nick.
20:26Certainly will.
20:27But Libby, meanwhile, is up to 43 to Tom's 50
20:32as we turn to our second tea time teaser,
20:35which is tries this.
20:37And the clue, when it comes to getting hot under the collar,
20:39nobody does it better.
20:41When it comes to getting hot under the collar,
20:43nobody does it better.
21:00Welcome back.
21:01I left you with the clue, when it comes to getting hot under the collar,
21:03nobody does it better.
21:05And the answer to that is, of course,
21:07shirtiest.
21:09Shirtiest.
21:10Rachel?
21:12Mm-hmm.
21:12Never a moment wasted?
21:14No, I have found the answer.
21:15If you say 9 divided by 9 is 1.
21:1950 minus 1 is 49.
21:21Times that by 3 for 147.
21:24Minus 25 for 1, 2, 2.
21:26And times it by 8.
21:28But there are a few ways for this one.
21:29Well done.
21:30Excellent.
21:32Thanks, Rachel.
21:36And now, Libby, it's your letters game.
21:40May I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
21:42Thank you, Libby.
21:42Z.
21:43And another.
21:44M.
21:46And another.
21:48L.
21:49And another.
21:50T.
21:52And a vowel.
21:53U.
21:54And a vowel.
21:56E.
21:57And another vowel.
21:59O.
22:00And a consonant.
22:02S.
22:04And another consonant.
22:06And lastly, R.
22:08Stand by.
22:10OK.
22:10OK.
22:40Yes, Libby?
22:42Six.
22:42A six, Tom?
22:43I've got a six.
22:46Libby?
22:47Result.
22:48And?
22:48Roots.
22:51Happy enough?
22:52Roots, yes, absolutely fine.
22:54Now, Susie's.
22:56Um, there's an eight in malters, as in animals that malt, birds or cats.
23:02I've got cats and malt.
23:03Cats and dogs drive me mad.
23:04When my white cat goes, that's it.
23:07You're so angry.
23:09No more white cats.
23:11Have a black cat.
23:12Get very angry with that, Ada.
23:1356 to 49.
23:16Tom, your letters game.
23:18Can I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
23:20Thank you, Tom.
23:21W.
23:22And a vowel.
23:24A.
23:25And a consonant.
23:26P.
23:28And a vowel.
23:29I.
23:30And a consonant.
23:32D.
23:33And a vowel.
23:35O.
23:36And a consonant.
23:37K.
23:39And a vowel.
23:42U.
23:43And a consonant.
23:45And lastly, M.
23:48Stand by.
23:48A vowel.
24:05Original.
24:07I won't.
24:10Evo.
24:11I won't.ール
24:11see you next time. Bye.
24:11Bye.
24:14Bye.
24:15Bye.
24:16Bye.
24:16Bye.
24:19Yes, Tom?
24:20I've got a six.
24:22Libby?
24:22Six.
24:24Tom?
24:25Podium.
24:26Now then.
24:27Oh, two podiums.
24:28Podium.
24:28Yeah.
24:29Three podiums, and I was thinking how apt that would be.
24:33That's it?
24:34A couple more sixes, Paduk, which is the wood from a tropical tree,
24:38and Mikado is a Japanese emperor.
24:41Oh, yeah.
24:42OK, thank you.
24:43Thank you, Susie.
24:46It's time, Susie.
24:48For your origins of words.
24:50And today?
24:51So I'm going to talk a little bit about wormholes.
24:54I've been reading a great entry, actually, in the Oxford Dictionary blog,
24:58which I can recommend to all.
24:59It's free and just definitely worth a browse.
25:02And essentially it just explores this word that takes us from the grabby dirt
25:07to the final frontier in science fiction.
25:11So I'll start with the literal wormhole, which is a hole made by a burrowing insect
25:16or larva in books and fruit.
25:19Shakespeare used it in this sense.
25:21He's one of the first, as so often, in 1594 to film with wormholes stately monuments.
25:27But quite soon we have Shakespeare again to thank for taking it off into a metaphorical direction.
25:34And he says it's quite melancholy, this quote, actually.
25:36It's from Henry V.
25:36It is no sinister nor no awkward claim picked from the wormholes of old, vanished days.
25:43It's quite beautiful, really.
25:44Beautiful image.
25:45And that takes us to theoretical physics, where wormholes were first theorised in 1916.
25:52And there was an Austrian physicist called Ludwig Flamm, who was looking at basically people playing around with Albert Einstein's
26:01theory of relativity
26:02and coming up with different solutions.
26:05And he thought of a white hole, so a time reversal of a black hole.
26:11And he thought that black holes and white holes possibly could be connected using a kind of channel between time
26:18and space.
26:19And it's a lovely idea.
26:21And there's a great article, actually, in a publication called Live Science, which describes it perfectly.
26:26Wormholes are cosmic shortcuts.
26:28Tunnels burrowing through hyperspace.
26:30Hop in one end and you could emerge on the other side of the universe, which is just a lovely
26:35thought.
26:36So little surprise that it was picked up then in science fiction.
26:39You'll find them in Star Trek, etc.
26:42And it's become a real trope in fantasy stories.
26:46Obviously, it's still hypothetical.
26:48We have yet to spot a real wormhole, but wouldn't it be wonderful if we did?
26:52But it's also taking on a slightly new direction again, in that it's used not in terms of the skies
26:58and the stars,
26:59but in terms of something that will take us down a really complicated route.
27:04So it's a little bit like rabbit's hole.
27:05So you might say, I've got lost in a wormhole of etymology or statistics.
27:10So going back to the Oxford blog, and it finishes really well, it just says,
27:14Wormhole simultaneously names our highest aspirations and our lowest reality.
27:18We want to hop from star to star, but we can't stop burrowing through the dirt.
27:23Yes, very good.
27:30Wonderful, Susie. Thank you.
27:3362 plays 55. Close.
27:36Libby, your letters go.
27:39Consonant, please, Rachel.
27:41Thank you, Libby.
27:42F.
27:43And another.
27:44G.
27:45And a vowel.
27:47E.
27:48And a consonant.
27:50H.
27:51And another.
27:53T.
27:54And another.
27:56S.
27:57And a vowel.
27:59I.
28:00And another.
28:03E.
28:04And the last one.
28:08B.
28:09Standby.
28:41Libby?
28:42Six.
28:42Tom?
28:43I've got six.
28:45Thank you. Libby?
28:46Fights.
28:47Tom?
28:48Bights.
28:50Yes.
28:51Can we beat six?
28:52Lots of sixes. I can't. Fetish was another six.
28:56And you can have bites as well, B-I-G-H-T-S, which are loops of rope or they
29:01can be curves in a coastline or river.
29:04All right.
29:0668 to 61.
29:07Tom, final letters game for you. Off we go.
29:12I have a consonant, please.
29:13Thank you, Tom.
29:15C.
29:16And another one.
29:18Y.
29:19And another consonant.
29:21R.
29:21And another consonant.
29:24V.
29:25And a vowel.
29:27A.
29:28And another vowel.
29:30O.
29:32And another vowel.
29:34A.
29:36And a consonant.
29:43And lastly, T.
29:45Stand by.
29:47And another vowel.
30:15And a consonant.
30:16And a consonant.
30:16And a consonant.
30:17Tom?
30:18Six.
30:20Libby?
30:20Six.
30:21And Tom, six?
30:23Coater.
30:24Yes, Libby?
30:24Cravat.
30:26Yes.
30:26Susie's?
30:27Yeah, I had cravat as well.
30:30I'm not seeing coater, though, Tom.
30:33Pill coater is there, machine for coating pills,
30:35but not coater standing on its own.
30:37So I have to disallow that, I'm afraid.
30:39Sorry.
30:39OK.
30:41Mmm.
30:42Rachel?
30:43I think a ham might overact.
30:45Oh, brilliant.
30:47Well done, Rachel.
30:48Overact.
30:49Never.
30:50Never.
30:51So 68 to 67.
30:53Only a point in it, look.
30:54She's shaved away the points,
30:56and she's snapping at your heels there, Tom.
30:58One point in it.
31:00Libby, your numbers game.
31:02May we have two large and four small again, please?
31:05We may indeed.
31:06Thank you, Libby.
31:07Two from the top four not.
31:08And the final one of the week is six, ten, seven, nine,
31:14and the large two, 75 and 50.
31:17And your target, 383.
31:20Three, eight, three.
31:22One, two, eight.
31:22One, two, three.
31:53Libby?
31:56Er, 393.
31:58393? Tom?
32:00I've got 383.
32:02Tom?
32:04Six times 50.
32:06Six, 50 is 300.
32:08Plus 75.
32:09375.
32:10Plus a 7.
32:11Plus a 7, 382.
32:13Plus 10 minus 9.
32:14Well done. You've saved yourself a crucial conundrum.
32:17Yeah, well done.
32:18APPLAUSE
32:24Well done, Tom.
32:26So Libby, bad luck there, Libby.
32:2867 to Tom's 78.
32:31So we're conundrum time now.
32:33Fingers on buzzers.
32:34There we go.
32:35You ready?
32:35Let's roll today's Countdown Conundrum.
32:39MUSIC PLAYS
32:59Libby?
33:00Is it permitted?
33:02Let's see whether you're right.
33:04Here we go.
33:05Oh, look at you!
33:12Oh, Libby.
33:14Only a point in it.
33:16You got the conundrum, though.
33:17Mm-hm.
33:18And that's a real, that's a real bonus.
33:20Absolutely.
33:22Thank you very much indeed.
33:23At the end of the day, though, Tom takes the day.
33:2778 to Libby 77.
33:29Libby, you've been terrific.
33:30Thank you very much for coming.
33:31I enjoyed it very much.
33:33Well, you take this goodie bag back to Cacorswold with our very best wishes.
33:38And good luck to Wales in the World Cup.
33:40Oh, absolutely.
33:41Absolutely.
33:41Brilliant stuff.
33:42Yes, we're going to do it.
33:42So, Tom, take it easy over the weekend.
33:44Yeah.
33:45Only a little short cycle, right?
33:46OK.
33:47Because you're coming back here on Monday.
33:49OK.
33:49I look forward to it, yeah.
33:50Well done.
33:51See you on Monday.
33:52See you on Monday.
33:53Both of you.
33:54Both the Susies.
33:55All right.
33:55Definitely see you then.
33:56Look forward to it and Rachel too, of course.
33:58Just the one, Rachel.
33:59See you Monday.
34:00See you then.
34:00All right.
34:01Same time, same place.
34:02You'll be sure of it.
34:05Tom Silverlock is back.
34:07You'll be sure of it.
34:08A very good afternoon.
34:09Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com, by Twitter at C4Countdown, or write to us
34:17at Countdown Leeds LS3 1JS.
34:20You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.

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