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Do You Know Your Place S01E20 Episode 20 Engsub
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00:10Hello everyone and welcome to Do You Know Your Place? Now the UK is a spectacular and surprising
00:15country but how much do we actually know about it? Well we're about to find out because we've
00:20sent our tour guide Paul on the road to get to the bottom of some top facts. Some are spot
00:26-on,
00:26others are totally off the mark and it's up to our three players to decide which is which.
00:32So let's get cracking and play Do You Know Your Place?
00:37From making us laugh on stage and taking us on adventures around the world she's an absolute
00:43joy that's what it says here it's Susan Calvin! Hello! He's the internet's favourite prankster
00:49it's Max Foch everyone and closing out our lineup in style it's award-winning
00:56presenter and top-tier stand-up Noreen Khan! Now before we get started today let's take a look
01:03at the weekly leaderboard. Noreen you've got six points even though you can't win today you can
01:09give Max a run for his money. Now Max you can still win if Susan has an absolute shocker.
01:17I know, I've got to try and catch Susan but I think she might be too good.
01:20No listen, I had a really nice time yesterday it was lovely but it wasn't my best day so I've
01:26had a
01:27word with myself. Oh, fighting talk you two. Strong comeback on the way. I said Susan, we've had a bit
01:34of fun
01:35now Susan but just knuckle down. You're in trouble. So, err. You're in trouble.
01:42Susan you've got ten points, Max you've got eight, Noreen you've got six. Now today we're sorting fact
01:47from fiction in Leicester! Yes, lovely Leicester. Right, let's kick things off as we always do on this
01:55show by finding out where Leicester actually is within the United Kingdom. I can tell you right now
02:01this is not going to be good for me. All right, well earlier each of you placed a pin on
02:07the map
02:08as to where you think Leicester is located. Furthest from Leicester today is... Max!
02:15Oh! Yes, Max!
02:16Oh, that's so bad! Max, you were 59 miles away, you landed on the Peak District and to be exact,
02:23Peak Wildlife Park and here they are in Staffordshire, there's the staff.
02:27Well Max, you didn't find Leicester but you did find Peak Wildlife Park here in Leic. Drop by any time.
02:33Oh, I'd love to! There you go! Very nice!
02:36We've got free tickets to the wildlife park! That's great!
02:38Exactly! Susan, you were next! You were only 24 miles away.
02:42That's fine! You were in the turn of West Bridgeford, just outside Nottingham. Noreen,
02:47your pin was 17 miles away from Leicester on the turn of Melton-Morbury,
02:51which is home, of course, to the pork pie.
02:53Pork pie! Well done. Which means, Noreen, congratulations.
02:57Well done, Noreen! I gave myself a clap there.
03:00You pulled it out of the bag. Right, the first question today is to you.
03:03Susan, you ready? Mm-hm! Paul, kicking things off in regal style. Go on, big fella.
03:12If you love cheese of the red variety, rockets of the space variety,
03:16and Premier League wins of the underdog variety. Then you love Leicester, the largest city here
03:23in the East Midlands with a population of just under 400,000 people. We've got so much to cover
03:29today, so let's get going. First established as a Celtic settlement, Leicester grew into a key
03:35Anglo-Saxon stronghold and, for a time, a Viking city. And in 2012, beneath this very unassuming car park,
03:45archaeologists made a discovery that was going to shock the world. They found the remains
03:51of King Richard III. But would you believe a giant letter R marked the spot where he was buried?
04:03Wow. Right, kicking us off, the first question is to you, Susan. Would you believe
04:10a giant letter R marks the spot where Richard III was buried? He was found under a car park,
04:16correct, Mundo? Yep. My question, I don't know why, Max, you've become... Max has become my conscience.
04:22He's your signboard all this week. So, Max, let me ask you this. Do you think,
04:26Max, anyone would have noticed a giant letter R before they built the car park?
04:31I think the R in this case is denoting reserved. I don't think the R was already there.
04:40OK. I'm dismissing that as rubbish. That's absolutely rubbish. Whatever he said is just
04:44absolutely right. He's trying to throw me off. I think that if there had been any denotation
04:50of where he was buried, they would have found him before now. So, I'm going to say,
04:56I do not believe a giant letter R marked the spot where Richard III was buried. There you go,
05:01I've said it. Let's see if it is fact or fiction.
05:07Vindication! You've got to believe it. That is genuinely true. He's right. The R didn't
05:13stand for Richard or Royal. It had been painted on to the space above Richard III and it did actually
05:21mean reserved. He's an internet prankster. He is. Right? So, how am I meant to believe
05:26that? Regal japes. Yeah. Regal japes. You and your regal japes. Yeah. Right. Max,
05:33it's your question. Yeah. Let's see where Paul is off to next.
05:39Leicester was known for its sporting success. Cue the ball! In 2016, Leicester City Football
05:47Club pulled off one of the greatest underdog sporting moments in history when they won the
05:53Premier League despite being 5,000 to one. And not to be outdone.
06:01Rugby. Leicester Tigers are the most successful team in English rugby and have the biggest crowds.
06:07But would you believe that the nickname Tigers comes from the Sumatran Tigers over into White Cross
06:11Zoo? Well, would you? Ask me. Well, there you go, Max. You played a little bit of rugby yourself.
06:20Yeah. I liked rugby when I was growing up, watching it. My dad was quite a good rugby player.
06:25Yeah. And so I've seen a few Leicester Tigers games in my time. Nice. I don't know about the
06:31etymology of their team name, however. Right. Well, would you believe the name of the rugby team,
06:36Leicester Tigers, comes from the Sumatran Tigers in nearby Twycross Zoo? I mean,
06:42it would be odd for them to call themselves the Leicester Tigers after any other tiger in Leicester,
06:47because I don't think that they are native to the area. Well, they are. That's where you're
06:51wrong, Max. I know a lot about Tigers in Leicester, and they are actually native. Yes, they are.
06:55Do you know what? I think this is a relatively new thing in terms of kind of the commercialisation
06:59of rugby. So I am going to say I believe that. You believe it? You shouldn't believe it.
07:07I shouldn't believe it. No. Too gullible. Twycross Zoo is home to two Sumatran Tigers,
07:12but they're not connected to the club. The club's name originates from the colour of their original
07:16kit, orange and chocolate. No. The original Cincinnati Bengals NFL team was named after a rare
07:22white Bengal tiger at Cincinnati Zoo. There you go. Right, Noreen, it's your question,
07:28and Paul is learning all about holidays.
07:35Who doesn't love a good holiday? Well, our love of travel is pretty much down to this fella here,
07:41Mr. Thomas Cook. A true trailblazer. He shone light on 19th century UK tourism, highlighting
07:49destinations and turning them into must-see spots. Some would say he was the original tour guide,
07:54and for that, I salute him. At its peak, Thomas Cook served 19 million customers every year. But would
08:03you believe the company's very first trip away was to Ibiza in 1841? Well, would you believe it?
08:13Noreen, would you believe the Thomas Cook Company's first trip away in 1841 was to the White
08:22Isle of Ibiza? Sounds quite believable, I think. So, Thomas Cook, I'm going to say I believe that.
08:31You believe it? Let's have a look. Are we right to believe it? It is not true.
08:37Oh! They actually went to Loughborough.
08:42Ibiza didn't become a significant tourist destination until the mid-20th century. These
08:47days, Loughborough is just a nine-minute train journey away. In Loughborough, they enjoyed a
08:52wholesome day of marches, speeches and tea in the park, and they were all back in Leicester
08:57by 10.30pm that night. Wow. There you go. So, at the end of round one,
09:02let's take a look at the scores. Points everywhere. Absolutely. My goodness.
09:07Ow! They're flying at me. The only point on the board is because, Noreen,
09:11put your pin nearest to Leicester. Well done. Time for round two. Let's go back to Paul now,
09:16in the town centre, where there were more statues of old men than actual old men.
09:24Leicester has always been a city of trade and textiles. The statues on this clock tower celebrate
09:29people who were important to Leicester's development, including Gabriel Newton,
09:33who started out as a humble wool comber. Textiles were a big business in Leicester,
09:38and by 1825, cotton became Britain's biggest import, being used in everything from clothing to ropes,
09:46bandages and cosmetic pads. But which of these items were often made using cotton until the 21st
09:53century? Was it UK banknotes, checkbooks or hearing aids? Hmm. Susan, what do you think? Which of these
10:02items were often made using cotton until the 21st century? Is it UK banknotes, checkbooks or hearing
10:12aids? Checkbooks is the one that I'm intrigued by. What do you think, Max? I would choose banknotes.
10:19Why would you choose banknotes? Because it feels like a book would be made out of, you know,
10:23other book material. It's not hearing aids. I don't think they've been around long enough for them to
10:27develop. Well, they had ear trumpets, didn't they, in the old days? They had ear trumpets. Max,
10:30you're very kind in helping. He's a good boy. He is. He's a good boy. He's a lovely lad.
10:36In the supermarket, I often ask that, I have to ask a young man. Yeah, but this is a quiz,
10:39he's not helping you cross the road. Yeah. No, but he can see my distress and he's helping me.
10:45All right, take a deep breath. Right? UK banknotes. You're going to go UK banknotes? Yeah.
10:49I think I want this to be right more than Susan does. Yeah, I think we all do after that.
10:54UK banknotes is
10:55locked in. Is it the right answer? Yeah. I got one right. You did indeed. UK banknotes were made
11:06with cotton until the recent change to polymer. The first polymer banknote in the UK was issued by
11:12Northern Bank in Northern Ireland in 1999 to commemorate the millennium. There you go.
11:18Yeah. Right. Next up, Max, it's your question. Paul is diving into fashion. Maybe we should call him
11:23RuPaul from now on. Leicester has always had a strong fashion game. That's why I fit in so well
11:30here. He'd also give us legendary style guru, Gok Guan. In fact, during the 20th century, Leicester's
11:36booming textile trade helped propel it to being one of the wealthiest cities here in Europe.
11:41What heavy industry left its mark on the River Soar? The waterway that runs through the heart of
11:46this city. But due to industrial activity, which one of these statements about the river is true?
11:52It once caught fire. It used to be pink. It glowed in the dark. Well, what do you think?
12:03Wow. Interesting. Now, due to industrial activity, which one of these statements about the River Soar
12:09is true is true. It once caught fire. It used to be pink. It glowed in the dark.
12:17The only glow in the dark stuff that I know about from kind of the industrial revolution was I
12:21remember that a lot of women, especially during the war, would use pink radium onto the watches of
12:27the RAF, which would cause them to glow in the dark. So I think that's got to be a lot
12:32of radium to
12:33make it glow in the dark. It once caught fire. That's probably quite plausible. Oil rise to the top,
12:41separates. If that oil catches fire, you've got a river of fire. I'm not really sure what would
12:46cause it to be pink. I think it might actually just be a one-off event. So I would like
12:52to lock in
12:52that it once caught fire, please. Once caught fire. It is locked in. Let's see if it is the right
12:57answer.
12:59No. No, it used to be pink. It used to be pink because of runoff from the textile factories
13:04nearby. That's why it's been clean and natural for quite a while now. The Thames famously caught
13:10fire in the 1970s after an oil leak. In Puerto Rico, there's a bay that glows bluey green at night,
13:16thanks to tiny organisms called bioluminescent plankton. Yes.
13:22Right, Noreen, it's your question. Paul's off to the theatre, darling. Ha! Lights, camera, action.
13:31Leicester is truly a cultural city, with theatre staging everything from world-class musicals to
13:36grassroots productions. And plenty of homegrown talent have gone on to make their mark in film
13:41and television. This theatre is named after Sue Townsend, the brilliant author of the Adrian
13:46Mole series of books, which chart Adrian's awkward adolescence, family dramas and disastrous love
13:52life. Something that I know nothing about. Sue Townsend was awarded the freedom of the city
13:57of Leicester in 2009. But which of these people received it at that very same ceremony?
14:13Noreen, what do you think? Sue Townsend was awarded the freedom of the city of Leicester in 2009.
14:19But which of these people received it at the same ceremony?
14:23Is it Barry Manilow, Engelbert Humperdinck or Julio Iglesias?
14:29What a Glastonbury line-up that would be. Well, Sunday afternoon at Glastonbury, nailed on,
14:34right there. Well, I'm assuming it can't be Julio Iglesias or Engelbert Humperdinck.
14:40Why would it then be Barry Manilow? With the same trail of thought, could it be Barry Manilow?
14:43Yeah. It's definitely one of them. That's a really... I'm just going to take a wild guess and say
14:50Barry Manilow. You're locking in, Barry Manilow. Is Barry Manilow the right answer?
14:56Oh! No, Humperdinck. Actually, the Humperdinck. Engelbert Humperdinck grew up in Leicester.
15:02He did not know that. He did, yeah, and said he was proud to be considered a son of Leicester.
15:07Barry Manilow is from New York and Julio Iglesias was born in Madrid in Spain.
15:12Well, that's the end of that round, so let's have a look at the scores.
15:16It's going really well. You kind of peaked on Monday and Tuesday.
15:19Well, I've been consistent all week. You have been consistent all week.
15:23Yeah, it's hilarious. Max, you've got no points.
15:26I've not got a single one right in the entire episode.
15:29Yes. Noreen and Susan, you've got one point.
15:32Right then, gang, we are going to play round three.
15:35We're going to show you some famous faces who are from Leicester.
15:38It's a game called Do You Know Your Face?
15:41Thank you. Thank you, Max.
15:43This game is played on the buzzer.
15:45Here comes your first slice of Leicester's finest.
15:49Who's this?
15:52Anyone? No.
15:56Max?
15:57Is that Sir Ian McKellen?
15:59It's not Sir Ian McKellen.
16:01You've frozen out for the rest of the face.
16:02Here's another slice of delight.
16:06Susan, what do you think?
16:07Is it David Attenborough?
16:08Susan, it is David Attenborough. Yes, well done.
16:11Oh, I didn't know who's first.
16:12Perfect stuff.
16:14All right, next face. Who's this?
16:20Oh.
16:26Max, is that Dion Dublin?
16:28It is Dion Dublin, yes. Former footballer.
16:30And now Holmes under the hammer horse.
16:33Well done.
16:33Yeah, well done indeed. You get a point.
16:35Next up, who is this?
16:38If none of you get this, I will be so disappointed.
16:41Who's this?
16:45Max?
16:46Is it Tess Daly?
16:47It's not Tess Daly, Max.
16:53Oh, I know that face.
17:02Do you know who it is now?
17:03I think so, yeah.
17:09Oh!
17:10Oh.
17:10Noreen?
17:11It's not Rachel Riley, is it?
17:12No, nearly!
17:13It's not Rachel Riley!
17:15Susan!
17:16Is it Rachel Paris?
17:17Yes!
17:19It is.
17:20Fabulous stuff.
17:20Comedian, of course it is.
17:22I thought, oh, you were itching there, Max.
17:23You've got off your name, right?
17:24You did.
17:24Is that who you had?
17:25That's who I had, yeah.
17:26But I thought, you know, I need to take risks.
17:28I knew it was Rachel something.
17:29Yeah.
17:30All right, who is this?
17:32Oh, this is really quite a stressful game.
17:34It's really good, this one.
17:36Who's this?
17:41Noreen?
17:42Is it Gokhwan?
17:42It is Gokhwan!
17:43Well done.
17:44Yes!
17:45Well done, Noreen.
17:46And that is the end of the round.
17:48Wow, perfect.
17:49After round three, highest scoring round so far.
17:52All right, let's take a look at the scores.
17:55Ooh!
17:56Max, you've got one.
17:57Noreen, you've got two.
17:58There you go.
17:59Susan's got three points.
18:01Let's move on.
18:02Right, let's find out what Paul is up to.
18:04Actually, we're off to space.
18:05Paul, off you go.
18:07Light the rocket.
18:11The National Space Centre in Leicester has six galleries, a real spaceship and a planetarium
18:17that will make you feel dizzy.
18:20It's a real jewel in Leicester's crown.
18:22When Queen Elizabeth II visited here in 2002, she was shown around by the first British astronaut,
18:28Helen Sharman.
18:32Other notable space alumni include Geoffrey Hoffman, who studied here in Leicester back in the 70s,
18:38and is now visiting professor.
18:41He went to space several times, most notably to repair the Hubble telescope.
18:47On one occasion, he'd taken quite a sentimental item with him.
18:50But what was that item?
18:52A Buzz Lightyear figurine?
18:54A didgeridoo?
18:55Or a beer mat?
18:57Who knows?
18:59I know.
19:06I love that. Wow.
19:08So, what sentimental item did Geoffrey Hoffman take with him to space?
19:12Was it a Buzz Lightyear figurine, a didgeridoo, or a beer mat?
19:17Do you know what? I'm just going to be quite quick about this.
19:19Somewhere in the back of my head, I've got an image of an astronaut trying to play a didgeridoo.
19:25So, I'm just going to cut it all out, Vernon, and I'm going to go didgeridoo.
19:29All right, you've gone for didgeridoo.
19:31Is that the answer? Let's find out.
19:35Didgeridoo-nt.
19:35Well, I meant beer mat when I said...
19:38Yeah, he brought a beer mat from a nearby pub in Leicester.
19:42A Buzz Lightyear figurine and a didgeridoo have both been in space.
19:46Buzz was launched on board the space shuttle Discovery in 2008,
19:50and in 2012, a homemade didgeridoo was used to explore sound waves
19:54on the International Space Station.
19:56That's what I was thinking of. So, in a way, I'm right.
19:58But for this particular question, you're wrong.
20:01Boys for Susan, please.
20:03The people rest.
20:04Max, here we go.
20:05Now, Paul's taking a stroll down Leicester's Golden Mile.
20:08What's that?
20:12This stretch of Leicester is known as the Golden Mile.
20:15It sells more 22-karat gold than anywhere in Europe.
20:20But if all the gold in human history was melted down,
20:23which landmark would it fill?
20:25Would it fill the Leaning Tower of Pisa?
20:28Would it fill Wembley Stadium?
20:30Or would it fill the Grand Canyon?
20:36There you go, Max.
20:38So, the question is, if all the gold mined in human history was melted down,
20:44which landmark would it fill?
20:46Would it fill the Leaning Tower of Pisa,
20:48Wembley Stadium, or the Grand Canyon?
20:51Right. First thing, I've been to the Grand Canyon. No way.
20:55That thing is absolutely enormous.
20:58And I think that's the same about Wembley Stadium.
21:01So, I think Leaning Tower of Pisa, please, Vernon.
21:04You're saying the Leaning Tower of Pisa? Let's lock it in.
21:06Yeah.
21:07Is that the answer? Let's find out.
21:09It's the right answer.
21:11Wow.
21:11Yes.
21:12Amazing.
21:12The total amount of gold ever mined will take up about as much space as a cube with 22-metre
21:19sides.
21:20Only a small fraction of Wembley Stadium, an even tinier fraction, of course, of the Grand Canyon.
21:25Well done. You get a point.
21:27Right, let's move on to you, Noreen.
21:29It's time for our final stop with Paul, and he looks like he's feeling a little bit peckish.
21:33He always ends up in an eatery.
21:38We've got lessons to thank for some of our favourite childhood memories.
21:41Take Blu-Tack, invented right here in the 1960s at Bostick, when a lab technician was trying to
21:46make a new sealant, but instead ended up with a strange putty-like substance.
21:51But rather than throwing it away, he realised it was perfect for sticking paper to walls without
21:56leaving marks. And so, Blu-Tack was born.
22:03And then, of course, Walker's crisps, a staple of many a childhood lunchbox.
22:07These are made right here in Leicester, in one of the largest crisp factories in the world.
22:13But how long does it take to make a packet of crisps from raw potato to fully sealed bag?
22:18Is it three and a half minutes? Is it 35 minutes? Or is it three and a half hours?
22:40Yeah, from the potato to the bag, so it can't be three and a half minutes.
22:45Potatoes have got to be washed, peeled, sliced, fried.
22:50I mean, they could be really, really fast. It could be 35 minutes.
22:54I can't even make dinner in 35 minutes.
22:57But then if it took three and a half hours...
23:00It's a long process, isn't it? It's a long process and they make a lot of bags.
23:04I'm going to go 35 minutes. You're going to go 35 minutes.
23:06Let's lock in 35 minutes. Is 35 minutes the right answer?
23:11Yay! You won a point. Yes.
23:15The Walker's factory in Leicester produces over 11 million bags of crisps per day.
23:21And it does take... Per day?
23:22Yeah, per day. And it does take 35 minutes.
23:25Right, it's bonus question time, so I'll get your whiteboards out, please.
23:28All right, OK. Here's your question.
23:31Which of these is not a real flavour of crisps once sold by Walker's?
23:38Is it French garlic baguette, Japanese teriyaki chicken or Russian beef stroganoff?
23:47I have absolutely no idea. I mean...
23:54You can tell it's the final show of the week.
23:57I've just... It's getting intense.
24:01All right, Susan, what do you put?
24:02I think a garlic baguette is just not... It's just garlic potatoes at that point.
24:09So I've gone... That's meant to be baguette, but I just thought if I said garlic,
24:13that would give you the right idea.
24:14Yeah, we get that. The garlic baguette. Max?
24:16I thought that they would have been able to easily sprinkle some garlic seasoning over some crisps
24:22and say that it's garlic baguette. So I think that that has existed.
24:25I seem to remember as well seeing a stroganoff packet 15, 20 years ago.
24:30I might be wrong. I might be misremembering. So I've gone teriyaki chicken.
24:34Noreen? We've all got different answers.
24:36I've gone for the Russian beef stroganoff.
24:38Right, OK. Well, we've got one of each again.
24:41Yeah. And obviously, one of you is correct.
24:43But who is it? Let's find out.
24:47Noreen! Can you believe it? Can you believe it?
24:51Yes. Russian beef stroganoff is the answer.
24:55Garlic baguette and Japanese teriyaki chicken were limited edition Walker's flavours in 2010
25:02to celebrate nations represented in the 2010 FIFA World Cup.
25:07Right, so that's the end of the round, including the bonus rounds.
25:09Let's take a look at the scores.
25:12Noreen is in the lead with four points. Come on, Noreen!
25:16Max has two, Susan has three. That's a first.
25:19Wow. All right, here we go. The scores could all change in the final round.
25:24Come on, Noreen. The quick-fire round.
25:26Remember, you've got to fill in the blanks.
25:28All the questions are Leicester-related.
25:30Good luck to you all. Here we go.
25:40Susan? Bob Mortimer.
25:42Yes, well done it is. Bob Mortimer, congrats.
25:44Next one.
25:51Noreen, go on. Corner Shop.
25:53Yes! Oh, well done, Noreen!
25:55Yes, well done, Noreen. You've got a music question right.
25:57Yeah!
25:59Right, next one.
26:01High Cross and Haymarket in Leicester are these.
26:07Max?
26:08Shopping centres.
26:09They are shopping centres, yes.
26:11Next question.
26:13Leicester-born England goalkeeper.
26:15Peter?
26:18Susan?
26:19Shelton.
26:19Yes, it is Shelton.
26:21Next question.
26:23UK clothing retailer, headquartered just outside Leicester.
26:28Max?
26:29Next.
26:29Yes, it is next.
26:31Here we go. Can we get one more in?
26:34Leicester Rock Band.
26:37Susan?
26:38Kasabian.
26:39Yes, it is Kasabian.
26:40Well done.
26:42Oh, there's the buzzer.
26:43Oh, you won again?
26:44This is exciting, right?
26:45Time's up, that's the end of the round.
26:46And so, let's take a look at the final scores at the end of today's game.
26:53Oh!
26:54Max, you've got four.
26:56Noreen, you've got five.
26:57There she is with six points.
27:00Well done, Susan.
27:02And of course, Susan, that means you've won the much sought after
27:05postcard from Paul.
27:06Lovely.
27:07And a little bit of a prize.
27:08We've got you some Leicester socks.
27:11Oh, it's lovely.
27:12Is it OK if Noreen takes them home, though, so that we've all got a prize at the end of
27:16the week?
27:16Is that OK?
27:16Oh, it's fine.
27:17You can help them.
27:17No, no, would you not want the Leicester socks?
27:20Take them away with you.
27:21That'd be nice.
27:22Then we've all got a postcard from Paul and we've all got a present at the end of the week.
27:25However, let's find out who's the winner this week.
27:29At the top of the table, there she is with 13 points.
27:32It's Susan Kalman.
27:33Then we've got Max.
27:34And then we've got Noreen on eight.
27:36So not too bad, actually.
27:38Well done to all of you.
27:39Fantastic stuff.
27:40Now, because you're this week's winner, Susan, you've won a very special prize.
27:45Oh!
27:45You're going to take away the I Know My Place sweatshirt.
27:49Congratulations.
27:50Wow.
27:51No one told me about that at the start of the week.
27:53And now everything's been worthwhile.
27:55Thank you very much.
27:56Well, what a great week it's been.
27:58Thank you very much to all three of you.
27:59We've truly enjoyed your company.
28:02Well, that's the end of this week.
28:03And it is, of course, the end of the series.
28:05But thanks for watching.
28:06Bye for now.
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