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Do You Know Your Place S01E19 Episode 19 Engsub

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00:11Hello and welcome to Do You Know Your Place? Now the UK is full of amazing stories, facts and
00:17trivia but how much do we actually know? Well that's what we're here to uncover with a little
00:23assistance from Paul, our eager tour guide. Some of what he tells us is absolutely top-class,
00:28the rest, bottom of the barrel. So let's separate the fact from the fiction on Do You Know Your Place?
00:37Playing this week from dancing to cruising, there's a combo, comedy to quizzing, she does it all.
00:43She's having a ball, it's Susan Kalman! The man who's turned mischief into an art form and racked up
00:51millions and millions of views in the process. Max Foch is with us. And the comedian who's
00:58ladies of laughter tour took her all over the country, hopefully she was learning as well as
01:03laughing, it's Noreen Khan! Now before we get started today let's take a look at our weekly leaderboard
01:10with three victories back to back. Susan sits at the top with nine points, Max has got five and
01:17Noreen has got four. Now today we are sorting fact from fiction in Bamboura!
01:24Oh! Yes!
01:26Earlier we asked each of you to place a pin on the map where you think Bamboura is situated.
01:32Now before we find your thoughts let's take a look at the actual location of Bamboura.
01:39There you go, it's on the east coast, but where do you think it's situated? Let's drop your pins.
01:45Oh goodness gracious me! Noreen you were furthest away, you landed 50 miles from Bamboura in the
01:52market town of Lauder in the Scottish borders. Susan and Max you both dropped your pin in Northumberland.
01:59Max you were 22 miles away in the village of Almuth.
02:02Ah! And Susan you landed on the coastal village of Seahouses which is only four miles.
02:08Oh! Four miles! Oh come on! From Bamboura which of course means you got the first point again!
02:14Oh good. Well done. Thank you. Congratulations, let's put that on board.
02:18There it is, we are up and running and the first question today goes to you Susan.
02:22Okay. So let's go over to Paul who's having a lovely time by the seaside.
02:29Constantly taking top spot as one of Britain's best seaside resorts, this is Bamboura. A small village
02:37in the north east of England with a commanding castle, sandy beaches and a population of 400.
02:45That can't be right, I've got more grey hairs in my beard than there are people in that village.
02:50I'm going to ask you. And while Newcastle has the time, Middlesbrough has the tease, Bamboura
02:58has the impressive Milburn, a stream running to the North Sea. Keep up guys.
03:07Milburn was also synonymous with football through one of Newcastle United's greatest strikers,
03:12Jackie Milburn, born a bit south of Bamboura in Ashington. Jackie worked in a coal mine before
03:18turning professional, he inspired his cousins Jack and Bobby Charlton to world cup football glory
03:23in 1966 and he held Newcastle United's goal scoring record for nearly 50 years. He was very revered in
03:32his day. But would you believe Jackie Milburn was the only footballer the Beatles featured on the
03:38Sgt Pepper album cover? Well, I've got to say that looks divine. That looks lovely. Beautiful. Right,
03:49Susan, would you believe Jackie Milburn was the only footballer the Beatles featured on the
03:56Sgt Pepper album cover? What year was Sgt Pepper? It was 1967. The only reason I'm asking that is,
04:04of course, I think something happened in 1966, didn't it? England won the World Cup? Yes. Hardly
04:09ever mentioned. We don't do well. I think it's all over. Hardly ever mentioned. If it was 1967,
04:14my only question would be whether or not they would have included any of the England team. That's the
04:19only thing I'm thinking in my head. Nice. But what I'm going to say is that, yeah, I believe that.
04:26Go on.
04:27You believe that Jackie Milburn was the only footballer on the Beatles Sgt Pepper album. Is it the right answer?
04:33No. There was only one footballer on the album. It wasn't Jackie though. It was his teammate,
04:40Albert Stubbins. He played for Newcastle before moving to Liverpool and Albert was such a cult hero
04:45in Liverpool that the Fab Four gave him a coveted place on the famous album cover. One of the greatest
04:51album covers of all time. Absolutely outstanding. Yes. Yeah. You don't get a point. Oh, listen,
04:55that's fine. I can't believe it. I'm just having a nice time. Well, someone else who is still having a
04:59lovely time. By the seaside, by the way, is Paul. Let's take a look.
05:06In 2025, Bamboura was awarded UK's best seaside town by Which Magazine. Which magazine is a magazine,
05:14folks? We are not at the question yet. And the wonderful Bamboura Beach achieved blue flag status
05:19in 2005. An award that means that beach meets international standards for water quality,
05:25environmental management, safety and accessibility. In other words, it's great for a dip. So, uh,
05:31I'll be back soon. Thanks for lending me these, Vernon. Beautiful. But would you believe the UK
05:38has more blue flag beaches than Brazil? Or would you?
05:48Yeah. Hi, Tess. Yeah. No, no, no, no, no. No, Paul's got them. Yeah. All right. Love you. Bye.
05:55Oh, crikey. All right, Max. Would you believe the UK has more blue flag beaches than Brazil? Now,
06:04that doesn't necessarily mean the UK has better beaches than Brazil. That is, the UK is, wants to
06:11be on the list more than Brazil. We love being on an honours board of some description. And so any
06:17opportunity for us to have more accolades, I'm sure we will take. Yeah. So, I absolutely believe that we
06:25have more blue flag beaches, but I do not believe we have better beaches. But the answer is, I will
06:30say,
06:30I believe that. All right. Well, Max, I can tell you, you were right to believe. Yeah. Yes. Well
06:36deduced. The UK bought 105, while Brazil, despite all its famous course line, has just 38 blue flags that
06:45have been awarded for safety, cleanliness and environmental standards. Interesting stuff.
06:50Right. He's making these links really easy for me today because, yes, you've guessed it, Paul,
06:54they're still having a lo-o-o-lo-lo-lo-lo-lo-lo-lo-lo-lo-lo-lo-lo-lo
06:56-lo-lo-lo time by the seaside.
07:01Factor 50 sun block. Check. Budgie smugglers. Check. Concrete blocks painted like Rubik's cubes.
07:10Check. These rainbow coloured cubes were originally World War II anti-tank defences built in the wake of
07:17Dunkirk evacuation to help protect Britain from Nazi invasion in World War II. Thankfully they
07:23were never needed and have now been given a much brighter purpose, with some painted as the famous
07:283D combination puzzle and others as dice. There are more possible combinations of Rubik's Cube
07:34than there are grains of sand on Bamboura Beach. But would you believe there are more Rubik's Cube
07:41combinations than there are grains of sand in the entire world? I did it. That was so clever.
07:53Tricky question, Noreen. Would you believe there are more Rubik's Cube combinations than there are
07:59grains of sand in the entire world? I don't think you could ever put a number for grains of sand
08:06in the entire world. Whereas I think you could put a number on the combinations of a Rubik's Cube.
08:15So yeah, I don't believe that. No. Let's take a look. It sounds ridiculous.
08:21What? Yes. A Rubik's Cube has about 43 quintillion combinations. No way. Compared to about 7.5
08:31quintillion grains of sand on earth. OK. There you go. Right, at the end of round one,
08:36let's take a look at the scores. Noreen, yet to score. Max and Susan, you've got one point.
08:42Right, let's go back to Paul, who's discovering how Bamboura Castle became a blockbuster favourite
08:47for movie makers. Thank you. Bamboura Castle has starred in its fair share of big budget bangers,
08:56including a Transformers film, an Indiana Jones adventure, and even kids favourite, the BFG.
09:04The castle spans nine acres, making it one of the largest inhabited castles in the country. But it
09:10hasn't always looked this mighty, as during the late 1800s, it had fallen into ruin until an
09:16industrialist and philanthropist stepped in, restoring it to what we see today. But which TV presenter is a
09:24relative of that philanthropist? Is it Alexander Armstrong? Is it Mel Gedroych? Or Tess Daly?
09:31Don't tell them, Vernon. If you know.
09:36All right, Susan, what do you think? Which TV presenter is a relative of the philanthropist that
09:43saved Bamboura Castle from ruin? Is it Alexander Armstrong, Mel Gedroych, or Tess Daly?
09:50So tell me something, just chatting, Vernon. Yeah, I'm not going to look at you. Where's your
09:55missus from? Derbyshire. Great. And as a child, did she visit Bamboura Castle? Often.
10:03Now, Mel, when I've met Mel, she's never mentioned having a relative who owned Bamboura Castle.
10:10Saved. Saved.
10:11It probably did own it, though, if they've saved it. Imagine coming back home and be like,
10:15what are you doing? I'm saving it. I'm not going to save a lasagna shop without owning
10:19the lasagna shop. Alexander Armstrong, so this is where you have preconceived notions of because
10:25you've seen someone and they seem quite posh. You're looking a lot at me here.
10:32Their family... It's just his accent.
10:35That their family would therefore be philanthropists who saved Bamboura Castle.
10:39And if it's Alexander Armstrong, then you've won. You've won by making me do this.
10:43And I'm going to go Mel Gedroych. All right.
10:45Just because I love Mel Gedroych. Is it Mel Gedroych, though?
10:51It's the Bosch man. Alexander Armstrong was born and bred in the North East,
10:55and he is related to William Armstrong, who bought the castle in 1894 and therefore saved it.
11:04Mel Gedroych is related to a noble Lithuanian family.
11:08There you go. All right, Max, you ready?
11:10Yeah. This time, Paul is diving into Arthurian legend,
11:14exploring the castle said to be home to Sir Lancelot.
11:21That's not a sword.
11:26This is a sword. Every TV show needs a troublemaker and every castle needs a bad boy.
11:32For Bamboura, that was Sir Lancelot. Because in Arthurian legend, his home was right here.
11:39How much is this one?
11:42He's known for his heroic deeds with King Arthur's Knights. And of course, just a little scandal.
11:48Lancelot was the first knight of the round table and accomplished many noble feats.
11:53He won jewels against other knights, rescued damsels, and also defeated giants.
12:00All this made him one of the most skilled and trusted knights of the round table.
12:09For which of these unknightly deeds did Lancelot commit?
12:12Tip his chamber pot on Merlin, put itching powder in Gawain's armour, or have an affair with Gawain's armour?
12:39I don't know much about the round table.
12:42I do know Sir Gawain was one of the knights.
12:44It's putting itching powder in his armour, that almost feels too childish.
12:50Which, great japes, but not quite sure...
12:53Jolly good japes!
12:54Absolutely.
12:55Good japes. I learned that from Alexander Armstrong, actually.
12:57Absolutely. Come to Bamberg Castle, I own it.
13:01Tip his chamber pot on Merlin, that doesn't sound unknightly, that just sounds jazorrid.
13:06That is not very nice. To be fair, neither is having an affair with Guinevere, but that feels
13:12the most knightly slash unknightly, so I would like to say have an affair with Guinevere.
13:19All right, it's locked in. But is it the right answer?
13:22It is!
13:24I so wish it was the itching pose.
13:26So do I.
13:26In fact, in the legend, the romance sparked a civil war.
13:31Oh, right.
13:32Guinevere became a nun, and Lancelot became a hermit.
13:35It didn't work out for either of them.
13:37That's not the best case scenario for anyone involved.
13:39No.
13:40Like a scene from EastEnders, really.
13:41Yeah.
13:41Let's be honest.
13:42Right, polls up again, this time with some surprise grooming habits of the Norsemen.
13:50So the show was called The Traitors.
13:52I was incredible in it, if you ask any of my family members.
13:55Just two seconds.
13:56Batmere Castle might look like an impenetrable fortress today, with good reason.
14:01For instance, from the 8th to the 10th centuries, it was like a beacon for Vikings,
14:05who came charging over the waves, axes in hand, keen for plunder.
14:11But most of the public eye infuriated, and I still apologise to them to this day.
14:21Surprisingly, Vikings were clean freaks, obsessed with personal hygiene, grooming and looking good.
14:26Archaeologists have no doubt that they really, really, really, really cared about their appearance.
14:32And I can relate.
14:37But which of these self-care routines did Vikings not practice?
14:41Bleach their hair blonde, carry tweezers with them or apply fake tan?
15:05I remember at school learning about the Vikings putting urine in their hair.
15:11I don't know whether it turned their hair blonde or helped with something.
15:14Well, there's lots of ammonia in there in urine.
15:16Yeah, ammonia.
15:18But looking at those three, yeah, apply fake tan.
15:23Like Paul said, they were quite vain, it seems.
15:25But is that the right answer?
15:27Yes, it is.
15:29Well done.
15:30Well done indeed.
15:31The Vikings lighten their hair and beards, not just for the look, but also to ward off lice.
15:37Yeah, they've frequently carried tweezers, razors, combs and ear cleaners,
15:41made from anal bones and antlers.
15:43There you go.
15:44So, at the end of the round, let's take a look at the scores.
15:48OK.
15:49Yes, Noreen and Susan, you've got one point.
15:51But in the lead, Max is at the top of the podium.
15:53Bravo you.
15:55Right, it's the Wacky Crazy Bonkers round three.
15:58In this round, we have taken some simple souvenirs from a souvenir shop.
16:01All you've got to do is work out how much they cost.
16:05Whoever's the closest gets the point.
16:08There are three items.
16:09The first one we're going to look at is your classic bucket and spared.
16:12This is an actual steel shovel.
16:14Is Greek quality this?
16:15Yeah.
16:16This isn't...
16:16You can tunnel out of anywhere with that.
16:18Yes.
16:19I want you to tell me how much you think the bucket and spared
16:23cost.
16:24The reality is how much is a tired and sad parent willing to pay
16:28to keep their child amused on the beach.
16:30Right.
16:31So, I probably am quite a tight...
16:34If they're the only shop around, monopoly prices.
16:39Look, I don't know.
16:40So, we'll just put an amount down.
16:43What have you put?
16:44Well, I wouldn't pay any more than £12.99 for that.
16:46Right, Max.
16:47Glad we're in the same ballpark.
16:48I went £11.99.
16:49£11.99.
16:49Oh, I went £10.99.
16:51Oh!
16:53This is great.
16:55I can reveal the actual price is...
16:58£9.99!
17:01Yes!
17:03Well, £1.99.
17:04Well done, great.
17:05Bravo, you.
17:06Right, item number two.
17:07Yep.
17:07This is the Bambara snow globe.
17:10Oh, price is still attached on the bottom.
17:12Is it really?
17:13No.
17:14Cheaty.
17:14I always bring the missus back a snow globe from where I go
17:17and she puts them on our desk.
17:18I think you can put your own photo in it as well.
17:20Ooh, that gives it an edge.
17:21Values increase now a little bit.
17:23Yeah.
17:23Okay.
17:24Okay.
17:25Okay.
17:26All right, Susan, we'll always start with you.
17:27What have you got?
17:28£6.99.
17:29Max?
17:30I thought this would probably be more expensive than a bucket and spade,
17:32so I went £15.99.
17:34Whoa!
17:34You're not paying £15 for that, mate.
17:36This is what it's being... what it's on in the shop for.
17:39Noreen?
17:39I've gone £7.99.
17:40So £6.99, £7.99, £15.99.
17:43The actual price of the Bambara snow globe is...
17:4917 pounds!
17:50Wow!
17:5117 pounds!
17:52Expensive.
17:53You get a pop, Max?
17:54You've bought these before, haven't you?
17:55That's a lot of money.
17:57Wow, that's a high-end snow globe.
17:59Max collects them.
18:00Right, next up, the third and final item is a Viking hat and beard combo.
18:04It's a classic, really.
18:06Max, you could do the honours.
18:08I'm rather follically challenged on the old beard front.
18:10Goes with your jumper as well.
18:11Yeah, so, okay.
18:13It's this way round.
18:14Oh, that's lovely.
18:15The hat's nice.
18:16The beard needs hitching up a bit,
18:17because it looks like a hat-scarf combo at the moment.
18:20It's like a bib, actually.
18:22Hurry, babe.
18:22I actually have the hat without the beard.
18:25Right.
18:26Sometimes I like to pretend to be a Viking.
18:29All right.
18:30Susan, please reveal what you think the value of the Viking hat and beard is.
18:3422.99.
18:3622.99.
18:38Max?
18:38You could probably charge quite a lot for this, especially if you really need one.
18:41I'm going 23.99.
18:4323.99.
18:44I've gone a lot lower.
18:4513.99.
18:4613.99, Noreen.
18:48All right.
18:49The actual price of the Viking hat and beard is...
18:5516.99, which means...
18:57Noreen, you're the winner.
18:59You get a point.
19:01Yes.
19:02Right, at the end of that round, let's take a look at the scores.
19:05Susan has got one point.
19:06It's the first time this week that you've been behind.
19:08Everyone likes to come back.
19:09Max, you've got three.
19:10Noreen, you've got three.
19:11I am loving this.
19:13Right, we're going to skip back to Paul now,
19:14and he's going to talk about one of Bambrough's most celebrated heroines.
19:20You do have to do something pretty special to get your very own museum dedicated to you.
19:25And that's exactly what our next Bambrough Local did.
19:29Grace Darling was born here in 1815 and won the heart of the nation.
19:33She received letters, gifts and even a £50 award from Queen Victoria.
19:38But what did Grace Darling do in 1838 that made her famous?
19:42Invented the life jacket, sailed solo around the British Isles,
19:47or rescued survivors of a shipwreck?
19:51Well, which one is it?
19:56Susan, what do you think?
19:58What did Grace Darling do in 1838 that made her famous?
20:02Did she invent the life jacket, sail solo around the British Isles,
20:08or rescue the survivors of a shipwreck?
20:11I actually took a boat out to the lighthouse where Grace Darling was.
20:15A ship was wrecked and it was spotted by Grace Darling.
20:18And I think maybe her father, someone else was there as well,
20:21but she sailed out and saved as many people as possible.
20:24And she's still remembered.
20:26So it's she rescued the survivors of a shipwreck.
20:29Excellent stuff. It is the right answer, of course.
20:32Yes, Grace Darling and her father, William, saved nine people from the shipwreck
20:36Forforshire, rowing almost a mile in stormy weather to reach them.
20:41Yes, well done. It gets you a point.
20:43Right, next up, Paul is visiting the local lighthouse to explore how the old keepers
20:47once guided ships to safety.
20:52Grace Darling's family worked in a lighthouse like this one right here in Banbro.
20:57Back then, lighthouses were manned around the clock by people guiding ships to safety.
21:02On the very last day lighthouses were manned, a very special song was dominating the airwaves.
21:07And no, it isn't the lighthouse family, because now you're all thinking,
21:11Oh, I know, it's humour. It's so predictable.
21:13I bet you he makes that joke about the white lighthouse.
21:16Well, I didn't. It was actually a song featuring the iconic Cher.
21:21Cher was number one in the UK singles charts, the day lighthouses were last manned.
21:26But with which song?
21:27I got you, babe, the shoop-shoop song, or Believe.
21:34Well, which one is it?
21:37All right, Max, we're asking you,
21:40Cher was number one in the UK singles chart,
21:42but with which song on the day the lighthouses were last manned.
21:47Is it I got you, babe, the shoop-shoop song, or Believe?
21:51I was really gutted when Paul said that it wasn't a question about the lighthouse family,
21:55because I actually do know some stuff about the lighthouse family,
21:57and they formed in Newcastle down the coast from Bambera.
22:02My Cher knowledge, not as strong.
22:06I simply have no idea.
22:09I would like to lock in Believe, please, Vernon.
22:12All right, we're going with the classic Believe from Cher.
22:15Is that the right answer?
22:17Yes. Well done, Max.
22:19Yes, Believe went to number one in the UK on the 31st of September 1998,
22:24and stayed at the top of the charts for seven weeks.
22:27Shoop-shoop's song, it's in his kiss, of course, was in 1991,
22:31and I Got You, Babe was back in 1965 with Sonny Bonham.
22:36Right, it's time for our final stop now with Paul,
22:38who's looking out towards Hawley Island, birthplace of Viking invasion tales.
22:47Lindisfarne, otherwise known as Holy Island, is just off the English mainland,
22:51and monastery was founded there in the 7th century.
22:55The first major Viking attack on Britain was recorded in 793,
23:00and it sent shockwaves through Europe.
23:03Lindisfarne is closely tied to nearby Bambera Castle.
23:06Bambera became the great fortress on the mainland,
23:09while Lindisfarne remained its spiritual sister offshore,
23:12and these days are a haven for birds, walkers and history buffs.
23:17But it's also been a setting for films and recently inspired post-apocalyptic tales.
23:22This location features prominently in the movie 28 years later,
23:26where survivors of a zombie apocalypse make a community there.
23:30But the government of which of these countries published an official guide to surviving the zombie apocalypse?
23:36Was it the UK, the USA, or North Korea?
23:42Oh, which one was it?
23:45Which one was it?
23:50Is he all right? Can we just check that he's all right?
23:52Noreen, it's your turn.
23:54The government of which of these countries published an official guide to surviving the zombie apocalypse?
24:01Was it the UK, the USA, or North Korea?
24:06Well, I doubt it would be North Korea, because they're so secretive about everything.
24:09I can't see them publishing any kind of guide.
24:12I mean, it's a good point.
24:13Yeah.
24:14I'm going to have to go with USA.
24:17The United States of America.
24:19We've locked it in. Is it the right answer?
24:21Yeah, of course it is. Well done.
24:23Of course it is.
24:24Yes, in 2011, the United States Centre for Disease Control and Prevention published
24:29Preparedness 101, Zombie Pandemic.
24:32It was to raise awareness about readiness for pandemics, natural disasters, etc, etc, etc.
24:37So there you go. Well done.
24:38Right, it's no time for a bonus question.
24:39And here it is.
24:42Which one of these celebrities did not have a cameo in Shaun of the Dead?
24:47Right. Did not.
24:47Is it Paul Kaye, Peter Kaye, or Vernon Kaye?
24:55Vernon, did you have a cameo in Shaun of the Dead?
24:57I have.
25:00So Shaun of the Dead, directed by Edgar Wright and written by him alongside Simon Pegg,
25:05who also played Shaun.
25:06Susan.
25:07I've just gone, I've gone for...
25:09It feels like blind date.
25:12I'll go for Vernon, please.
25:14Max?
25:15Vernon, I've also gone for yourself, purely because I think you're too young.
25:21That's what I meant to say as well. I think you're probably too young.
25:24Thank you. Appreciate that.
25:26I agree.
25:27Wow, three for me.
25:28Well, the answer is...
25:31Peter Kaye!
25:32Were you one of the school kids?
25:34No, I wasn't one of the school kids.
25:36School kids?
25:36No!
25:37You don't need to keep buttering them up.
25:38No, exactly. But keep it coming. I do appreciate it.
25:41Paul Kaye, known for Dennis Pennys and Game of Thrones,
25:44he appeared uncredited as zombie behind the Winchester.
25:48Wow.
25:48I played myself.
25:50There was a T4 special.
25:52There was!
25:53Yes!
25:53That's nice!
25:55For zombie aid.
25:56Well, I'm sorry we all forgot you.
25:57Well, that's showbiz.
25:58Yeah, yeah, I know, I know.
26:00Right, that's the end of that round.
26:01So let's have a look at the scores.
26:05Ooh!
26:06This is good.
26:07Susan, you're behind by two points.
26:09Max, you've got four.
26:10Noreen, you've got four.
26:12This could be a real game-changer now,
26:13because it's the quick-fire round.
26:15All you've got to do is fill in the blanks.
26:17Here we go.
26:17Here's your first Bamboura-related question.
26:26Max?
26:27Northumberland.
26:28It is Northumberland.
26:29Well done.
26:30These animals breed on the Farn Islands.
26:36Noreen?
26:37Seals.
26:38Yes, it is seals.
26:39Well done.
26:41Bamboura Beach is a popular spot for this sporting activity.
26:47Noreen?
26:48Surfing.
26:48It is surfing.
26:50Oh, this is good!
26:51Come on, Noreen!
26:52This is so good!
26:54Nearest airport to Bamboura.
26:59Newcastle.
27:00Newcastle.
27:00It is Newcastle!
27:01Yes!
27:02Next up, Bamboura's Mary McKilkeham competed in this tournament.
27:10Max?
27:10Wimbledon.
27:11Wimbledon.
27:12Yes, it is Wimbledon.
27:14Oh, there you go!
27:15Right, time's up.
27:16So, let's see how the quick-fire round has affected the final scores for today.
27:20Susan, you didn't score.
27:21You've still got two.
27:22Noreen, almost, but not quite.
27:24You've got six.
27:25Max, you're today's winner with seven points.
27:28Well done.
27:28Well done.
27:29And you get bronze.
27:30You get bronze.
27:31So, for the weekly scores.
27:32Max, you get three points.
27:33Noreen, you get two points for coming second.
27:35Susan, you only got a point today.
27:37No, sorry!
27:38One point for sewing up!
27:42So, let's add those scores to the weekly total.
27:45Noreen, you've got six points.
27:46Max, you've got eight.
27:48Susan, you've got ten points.
27:50So, it's still to play for going into the final date.
27:52However, Max, we're not going to finish today
27:54without giving you your very much sought-after prize.
27:57Oh, postcard from Paul.
27:59Postcard from Paul.
28:00Not only that, he's got you a little prize.
28:02We're giving you a Rubik's Cube!
28:03Yay!
28:04Finally.
28:05Well, that's it for today.
28:06Join us for more trekking around the UK,
28:08where we might even bump into your good self.
28:10Bye for now.
28:11See you next time.
28:12Oh, oh, oh!
28:14Yeah!
28:42Bye for now.
28:42Bye for now.
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