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00:16Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown Studio. It's the 3rd of January. Christmas,
00:22the remembrance of Christmas is sort of dimming now. So let's talk about that rather vexed
00:28question, the re-gifting of gifts. You know, you get something, you think, oh, I've already
00:33got one of those, I don't much care for it. I think I'll pop it in the cupboard and give
00:37it to somebody else at some stage in the future for a birthday or maybe next Christmas. And
00:43sort of people feel a little bit embarrassed about that. What about you? I think there
00:47needs to be a conversation in the country about giving champagne. It just seems to be
00:52the thing that everybody gives, especially, you know, work people, because it's not personal
00:56and everyone assumes that you like it. But I don't know if anyone actually drinks it
00:59or if anyone just gets the bottle and then passes it on. But you do feel guilty when you
01:03get given something that you don't really want. And someone's gone out and spent some
01:06money and you'd rather it have gone to charity or, you know, something.
01:10All right. Thank you. Who's back with us? Jacob's back. Jacob Coventry-Peters. He's got six languages
01:18under his belt. Looking for a seventh, which is Welsh, a politics student from Newcastle.
01:23How are you feeling? One win under your belt. I feel much better than I did the first
01:27time, but still nervous. That's not going to go away. You won very well. You got the
01:32conundrum in, you know, milliseconds, as it were. So well done on that. Now you're joined
01:37today by Sheila Addis, retired from Wales, that beautiful city down in the West Country.
01:42And I think for the last 24 years of your working life, you were a cathedral guide. Tell
01:48us a little bit about that. You meet all sorts of people. It's never the same every day.
01:54You've got a lot to learn. Specialist languages in architecture and religion.
02:00Now, we'd better get down to business. Let's have a big round of applause then for Sheila and Jacob.
02:11And over in the corner, joining Susie, once again, TV presenter and journalist, Richard Arnold.
02:17Welcome back, Richard. Thank you.
02:22Welcome back. Lots of fun and games with Richard a little bit later. But now, Jacob, time for
02:27a letters game.
02:28Hi, Rachel.
02:29Hi, Jacob.
02:30Can I start with a consonant, please?
02:32Thank you. Start the day with T.
02:33T. And another, please.
02:37N. And another.
02:41R. And a vowel.
02:45I. And another vowel.
02:48O. And another one, please.
02:52A. And a consonant.
02:56M. And another consonant.
03:01R. And finally,
03:03A vowel, please.
03:04And finally,
03:06E.
03:07And here's the countdown clock.
03:09R.
03:10Hi.
03:10Is a vowel, please.很多
03:20polling are not ready. The
03:20silence, please. In
03:20a Secretary嘅 group are seveners dumb. Or
03:20Amor. Is
03:25a vowel, please. I
03:26vowel, please. Are
03:26you? Sorry.
03:28you? A vowel,
03:29right. I'm
03:29Everybody.\ Are
03:29you? I
03:30No 그렇 Math
03:31All right.
03:39Jacob, risky seven.
03:42No, Sheila.
03:43Seven.
03:45Far more seven, by the sound of it.
03:46Jacob, I've got Monia.
03:48And Sheila.
03:50Mariner.
03:51Mariner.
03:52Mariner, excellent.
03:54And, yes, you can be grumblier than the next person, Monia.
03:58Very good.
03:58Whinger.
03:59Whinger.
04:00Richard.
04:02And Terrain.
04:04Which is seven.
04:06Yes.
04:07Yeah, Raymond is another seven.
04:10There might be an eight there.
04:11We'll keep looking.
04:12Seven apiece.
04:13Sheila, your letters go.
04:15Hi, Rachel.
04:16Hi, Sheila.
04:17Continent, please.
04:18Start with M.
04:20And another?
04:23V.
04:24Oh, dear.
04:25And a third?
04:27W.
04:28Worse.
04:30A vowel?
04:32U.
04:33And another?
04:35A.
04:36And a third?
04:38E.
04:41Consonant?
04:42L.
04:44Another?
04:46D.
04:48And a final vowel, please.
04:53And a final O.
04:55Stand by.
04:57Stand by.
04:58Stand by.
05:05THE END
05:33THE END
05:38THE END
05:40THE END
05:45THE END
05:47THE END
05:50THE END
05:53THE END
05:55THE END
05:57THE END
05:58THE END
06:10THE END
06:13THE END
06:14THE END
06:14THE END
06:16THE END
06:16THE END
06:18THE END
06:19THE END
06:20THE END
06:21THE END
06:21THE END
06:21THE END
06:22THE END
06:23THE END
06:25THE END
06:26THE END
06:26THE END
06:28THE END
06:29THE END
06:31THE END
06:32THE END
06:32THE END
06:32THE END
06:32THE END
06:36THE END
06:37THE END
06:48THE END
06:49Sheila? I got nothing either.
06:53How difficult is this? Rachel?
06:55I found one way for this one.
06:57If you say 6 minus 1 is 5, times by 25 is 1, 2, 5.
07:0310 minus 7 is 3.
07:05Take that away for 1, 2, 2, and times it by the other 7.
07:098, 5, 5, 5.
07:10Perfect.
07:15My duration, 8, 5, 4.
07:17So, the score's standing, 13 apiece.
07:19We turn to our first tea-time teaser, which is Tosca Pier.
07:23And the clue, she was offered tickets to see Tosca on the pier,
07:27but she wasn't into this type of thing.
07:29She was offered tickets to see Tosca on the pier,
07:32but she wasn't into this type of thing.
07:50Welcome back. Warm welcome back.
07:52I left with the clue, she was offered tickets to see Tosca on the pier,
07:56but she wasn't into this type of thing.
07:59What type of thing would that have been? Why?
08:02Operatics.
08:03Didn't care for operatics, sadly.
08:0513 apiece, and Sheila, your letters again.
08:08Can I have a continent, please?
08:11Thank you, Sheila.
08:12G.
08:12And another.
08:15N.
08:16And a third.
08:19F.
08:20And a vowel.
08:22I.
08:23And another.
08:25A.
08:26And a third again.
08:29O.
08:30And a consonant.
08:33D.
08:35And another.
08:37J.
08:39Ouch.
08:40And finish with a vowel, please.
08:43And finish with E.
08:46Stand by.
09:16Yeah, Sheila.
09:18Six.
09:19Jacob.
09:20Six as well.
09:22Yeah, Sheila.
09:23Joined.
09:24And?
09:26Fanged.
09:28Fanged, absolutely fine, yes.
09:30Fanged.
09:31Richard.
09:32Six.
09:33Gained six.
09:34Mm-hm.
09:35And thank goodness I'm here, because Susie never would have got this.
09:38She's too busy Googling herself.
09:39Um, Fejoa?
09:42Yes, or Fejoa.
09:44What would that be?
09:46It's an evergreen shrub that bears green fruit resembling the guava fruit,
09:51and it is native to tropical South America and cultivated in New Zealand.
09:56That was to that.
10:01How could you expect us to get that?
10:04Very good.
10:05Nineteen apiece.
10:06Nineteen apiece.
10:08Jacob.
10:09Okay, Richard, can I start again with a consonant, please?
10:12Thank you, Jacob.
10:13L.
10:14And another one, please?
10:16D.
10:18And another again?
10:20P.
10:22And a vowel.
10:24I.
10:25And another vowel?
10:27A.
10:29And another vowel?
10:32U.
10:34And another vowel?
10:37E.
10:39And, um, consonant, please?
10:43N.
10:44And, uh, finally, another consonant.
10:48And finally, V.
10:50Stand by.
11:22Jacob, six.
11:25Yes, Sheila.
11:26Six.
11:28Jacob, unpaid.
11:30And?
11:31Valued.
11:32And valued.
11:34Yes, very good.
11:36And Susie, Richard?
11:39There is a slightly strange seven there, but a kind of poetic one.
11:42And unalive, if you're feeling unalive, you were lacking in vitality.
11:49That's it.
11:5025 apiece now.
11:52Sheila, numbers have come round for you.
11:55Could I have one from the top, Rachel, and five from the bottom?
12:00Thank you, Sheila.
12:02One large, five little.
12:04And this round is four, five, ten, six, three.
12:10And a large one, 100.
12:12And your target, 662.
12:15Six, six, two.
12:17One large, five, ten, six, three.
12:21And a large one, 100.
12:21And a large one, 100.
12:35And a large one, 100.
12:35And a large one, 100.
12:35And a large one, 100.
12:35And a large one, 100.
12:35And a large one, 100.
12:36And a large one, 100.
12:36And a large one, 100.
12:36And a large one, 100.
12:36And a large one, 100.
12:36And a large one, 100.
12:38And a large one, 100.
12:39And a large one, 100.
12:41And a large one, 100.
12:48SHEILA
12:50662
12:51Yes, Jacob?
12:53Only 660.
12:55Mmm.
12:56SHEILA
12:57100 plus 10
12:59110
12:59Multiplied by 6
13:02660
13:035 minus 3
13:05Here's your 2. Well done, 662.
13:07Well done.
13:09APPLAUSE
13:12Well done, Sheila. You've broken away.
13:14OK, 10 points in it now, 35 to Jacob's 25
13:17as we turn to Richard.
13:20Richard, since we last spoke to you, you've been off on your travels again.
13:24I have indeed, Nick. Yeah, the real trip for me last year,
13:27and it was quite the moment, was Elvis,
13:30the anniversary of 40 years it had been since he passed away.
13:33And it was quite a moment, actually, because they hold a sort of vigil there every year,
13:37but on a scale of which I'd never witnessed before.
13:39There were some 40, 50,000 people passing through Graceland.
13:44It was extraordinary.
13:45But the real moment was interviewing Priscilla Presley there, of course,
13:50and standing outside the house, you know, 40 years to the night that he actually passed away.
13:55Candles everywhere.
13:57Elvis songs playing in the background.
13:59And we did the live into breakfast television here in the UK.
14:03So it was about one o'clock in the morning in Memphis.
14:05It was boiling, boiling hot.
14:07And we weren't allowed to go too close to the house.
14:09And after we'd done our broadcast, I said, why is that?
14:13And they said, because there could be a member of the Presley family actually on the top floor,
14:18where he passed away, marking the moment.
14:21And anyone who's been to Graceland will know that only the family are allowed upstairs.
14:24As a tourist, you're only allowed to go in on the ground floor and, of course, down to the jungle
14:27room, as the song goes.
14:28Yeah, yeah, yeah.
14:29But it was an amazing experience.
14:31Quite a bucket list moment.
14:33Very good.
14:39Lovely story.
14:40Lovely story.
14:4140 years.
14:42Imagine.
14:42It's extraordinary, isn't it?
14:44There we go.
14:4535 plays 25.
14:46Sheila in the lead.
14:47And it's Jacob's letters game now.
14:49Yes, Jacob.
14:50Can I start again with a consonant, please, Rachel?
14:52Thank you, Jacob.
14:53G.
14:54And another one?
14:57R.
15:00E.
15:03And a vowel, please.
15:06A.
15:07And another vowel?
15:09E.
15:11And one more vowel.
15:14E.
15:16And a consonant.
15:20Q.
15:21Lovely.
15:22And another consonant.
15:25L.
15:27And one more consonant then.
15:31And lastly, H.
15:33Stand by.
15:52And one more consonant.
15:52And one more consonant.
16:05Jacob.
16:06Only a six.
16:07And Sheila.
16:08Six also.
16:10Jacob.
16:11Lika.
16:12No, Sheila.
16:14Heeler.
16:16Both absolutely fine.
16:18Yes.
16:19Can we beat it?
16:20Richard, Susie?
16:21No.
16:22Six.
16:22Regale.
16:23Yep.
16:24Yep, that was as good as it got.
16:26That's it.
16:26Six is all round.
16:2741 plays 31.
16:28Still ten points in it.
16:30And, Sheila.
16:32Your letters go.
16:33A consonant please, Rachel.
16:35Thank you, Sheila.
16:36P.
16:37And another.
16:40G.
16:41And again.
16:43L.
16:44A vowel.
16:46U.
16:47And a second.
16:48E.
16:50And a third.
16:53O.
16:54And a fourth, please.
16:58U.
17:01A consonant.
17:03S.
17:05And a consonant.
17:07And the last one.
17:09W.
17:10And the clock starts now.
17:11A consonant.
17:25A consonant.
17:26Nice.
17:28No.
17:30No.
17:32No.
17:33No.
17:42Sheila?
17:43Only a five.
17:45Jacob? Five for me as well.
17:48Mm-hm.
17:49Sheila?
17:50Louse?
17:51And gulps.
17:54Gulps?
17:55Yes.
17:57Gulps.
17:58Absolutely fine.
17:58Yep, gulps something down.
18:00Rich is looking...
18:00He's concentrating mightily there.
18:02I'm ready to pucker up again, Nick.
18:05Pogues.
18:06Pogues.
18:07A kiss.
18:08Yes.
18:09A kiss.
18:09Exactly.
18:10Irish, English for a kiss.
18:12And gospel is also there for six.
18:1546 to 36.
18:17Still at a ten-point difference.
18:19Jacob?
18:20Your numbers game.
18:21Same again for me, please, Rachel.
18:22One from the top and then the other five.
18:24Thank you, Jacob.
18:25One large, five little, and your chance to plug that ten-point gap.
18:29These five small ones are two, five, ten, seven.
18:35Eight, and a large one, 25.
18:37And the target, 829.
18:39Eight, two, nine.
18:40Eight, and a large, and a large one out there.
18:45Eight, two, and a large one, 25, nine.
19:12Jacob, I've got eight, two, seven.
19:16Sheila?
19:17I think I've got eight, two, nine.
19:21Right. Off you go.
19:24Seven times five is 35.
19:27Seven times five is 35.
19:29Multiplied by 25.
19:31Multiplied by 25 is 875.
19:33Ah, I've gone wrong.
19:35Got too many. I only made it 825.
19:38Sorry.
19:39No, that's all right.
19:40Bad luck now, Jacob.
19:42Now's your chance.
19:42So seven times five is 35.
19:45Seven times five, 35.
19:46And if you take away two, you should give me 33.
19:49It does.
19:50Multiply that by 25 for 825.
19:53Yeah.
19:53And then I did 10 minus eight is two, and I did that one.
19:57Yes, haven't used any of those.
19:59Two away.
20:00Well done.
20:01A bit of a saver there now.
20:03Narrowed it down to three points.
20:05But, Rachel, 829?
20:07And this was there.
20:10If you say 25 times five is 125, minus eight is 117, times that by seven for 819, and then
20:22what do you have left?
20:23A 10.
20:24Marvellous.
20:25829.
20:26Well done.
20:26Well done.
20:30Perfect as ever.
20:32So it's 46 to 43, Jacob on 43, as we turn to our second tea time teaser, which is born
20:38hater.
20:39And the clue?
20:39He was a born hater, and everything seemed this to him.
20:43He was a born hater, and everything seemed this to him.
21:04Welcome back.
21:05I left with the clue.
21:06He was a born hater, and everything seemed this to him.
21:10Everything just seemed so terribly abhorrent.
21:14Abhorrent is the word we're after.
21:16For sure.
21:17Imagine being a hater.
21:1946 to 43.
21:20Sheila on 46.
21:22Sheila, letters again.
21:25We'll start with the consonant again, please, Rachel.
21:28Thank you, Sheila.
21:29T.
21:29And another.
21:32C.
21:33And a third.
21:35X.
21:36Oh, no.
21:37And a fourth.
21:39N.
21:40And vowel.
21:42A.
21:43And another.
21:45E.
21:47And a third.
21:50A.
21:52And a fourth.
21:55I.
21:57And a consonant.
22:00And lastly, S.
22:02Standby.
22:03How many miles.
22:05And a ένα.
22:05And a captive life.
22:09And a third.
22:30And a unity.
22:31And a third.
22:32And a third.
22:33Yes, Sheila.
22:35Just a five.
22:37Jacob.
22:37That's seven.
22:38And a seven.
22:39The fight back.
22:41Sheila.
22:42Exist.
22:42Now then, Jacob.
22:44I hope I can have candies.
22:47How are you spelling it?
22:48C-A-N-D-I-E-S.
22:50Oh, there's no D in the selection here, Jacob, I'm afraid.
22:53Oh, I'm seeing things, though.
22:54But I might have been pretty, sorry.
22:56Bad luck.
22:57Bad luck.
22:58You want to see these things.
23:00Richard.
23:02Estancia.
23:04Estancia.
23:05Yes.
23:05You're on your travels again.
23:07But, you know, I did go to Argentina last year, actually.
23:09Yes, indeed.
23:09Had a run-in with a couple of gauchos.
23:11It was interesting.
23:13Fantastic.
23:14Susie?
23:14No, just Estancia.
23:16Cattle ranch.
23:16Estancia.
23:17Especially in Latin America.
23:18Yeah.
23:18Brilliant.
23:1951 plays 43.
23:23Jacob, your letters go.
23:25OK, can I start again with a consonant, please, Rachel?
23:27Thank you, Jacob.
23:28Y.
23:30And another one?
23:32H.
23:32And another one?
23:35S.
23:37And a vowel, please.
23:41O.
23:42And another vowel?
23:44E.
23:45And another vowel?
23:48A.
23:50And a consonant, please.
23:53R.
23:54And another consonant?
23:56T.
23:58And finally, another consonant, please.
24:02And lastly, another T.
24:05And here's the countdown clock.
24:36We'll talk to you later.
24:38Yes, Jacob.
24:39Seven.
24:40Seven and Sheila.
24:42Also a seven, Nick.
24:45Jacob.
24:45Shatter.
24:47And Sheila.
24:48Threats.
24:50Threats, absolutely fine.
24:52Yep.
24:53Earshot for seven.
24:56Yes.
24:57Yes, Hattery for seven as well.
25:00But there is an eight there, Nick.
25:02Rheostat.
25:03So that's R-H-E-O-S-T-A-T.
25:05The electrical instrument used to control the current,
25:08so you vary the resistance on a Rheostat.
25:10That's right.
25:11You can dim the lights.
25:16You can dim the lights in a room with your Rheostat.
25:19Yeah.
25:20Very good.
25:2058 pages.
25:2158 points in it.
25:23And we turn to Susie.
25:25And her wonderful origins of words.
25:27What have you for us today, Susie?
25:29I have an email from Neil and Christine Shuttleworth from Huddersfield,
25:33who said some of the old coins have slang-type names such as Tanner and Bob
25:38and quid for a pound note, and they wonder where they come from.
25:42I'll start with Bob for a shilling, and that's incredibly convoluted, this one.
25:46It's a bit of a mystery.
25:48But one theory is that it stems from the use of Bob by bell ringers in churches for a ring
25:54of the bells.
25:55And as the word shilling came from a Germanic word, scale, which also meant ring,
26:01it might be a very clever play on words.
26:03But as I say, that's a slightly circuitous answer.
26:06Truth is, we're not completely sure.
26:08A sixpence, did you know, was once known as a bender.
26:11And that's because, due to its silver content, it could be bent quite easily.
26:15And it was commonly done, bent in this way, to create love tokens.
26:19And you can find some of these wonderful love tokens, sixpence love tokens, in museums today.
26:23But the value of a sixpence was enough, quite often, to get you quite enubrated, shall we say, at your
26:30local pub.
26:31And some people say that that's at the root of going on a bender.
26:35A tanner, another name for the sixpence, dates from the 1800s.
26:40Again, not completely sure about this one.
26:41But there is a Romany word, torno, which simply means a small one.
26:46And again, that may account for it.
26:48And finally, the quid.
26:49I think this comes from the classical Latin quid, meaning what?
26:52In other words, a quid is your what, your wherewithal, your means to buy something.
26:57So there's just a few whizz around some of the coin origins, as I say.
27:01But they're really, really difficult to track down.
27:03And the hunt goes on.
27:04Very good.
27:1058 plays 50.
27:12Sheila in the lead.
27:12Sheila, your letters go.
27:15Continent, please.
27:16Rachel.
27:17Thank you, Sheila.
27:18C.
27:19And the second.
27:21T.
27:22And the third.
27:24L.
27:25And the fourth.
27:27M.
27:28And a vowel.
27:30E.
27:32And another.
27:33U.
27:36And again.
27:38O.
27:41A consonant.
27:44T.
27:45And another vowel, please.
27:48And lastly, I.
27:50Countdown.
27:52Countdown.
27:54Countdown.
28:22Sheila,
28:24Sheila,
28:26and Jacob,
28:27six as well.
28:29So, Sheila,
28:30mottl and cutlet,
28:33and a cutlet.
28:35Very nice.
28:38Now, Richard, looking pensive,
28:40totemic.
28:42Seven.
28:43A totemic person.
28:46Very, very good.
28:47Yes, something is emblematic, it's totemic.
28:50Anything else, Susie?
28:50That was our best.
28:51Totemic, thank you.
28:52So, 64 plays 56.
28:55Final letters game for you.
28:57Yes, Jacob.
28:58Can I start again with a consonant, please, Rachel?
29:01Thank you, Jacob.
29:02S.
29:03And another one?
29:06N.
29:07And another one?
29:10T.
29:12And a vowel?
29:13E.
29:16E.
29:16And another vowel?
29:18A.
29:19And another vowel?
29:22E.
29:24And a consonant?
29:27D.
29:29And another consonant?
29:31R.
29:33And finally, one more consonant?
29:38And finally, S.
29:40Stand by.
29:41H.
29:42One, two, three.
29:48Okay.
30:10We're going to be right there.
30:13Jacob?
30:14I've got an eight.
30:15An eight. Sheila?
30:17Only a seven.
30:19And your seven?
30:20Tenders.
30:22No.
30:23Jacob, standees.
30:26Very, very good. Yes.
30:28Very good.
30:34Well, well.
30:36Level pegging at 64p.
30:39Exciting times.
30:41Yes, Richard.
30:43Dearness.
30:44Dearness.
30:45Dearness.
30:47As in dearness, let's go on a bender, no?
30:50Yes.
30:51Yes.
30:52The state of being cherished or the act of cherishing somebody.
30:55That would give you an eight.
30:56It does look like there should be a nine there, doesn't it?
30:58Yeah.
30:58But we haven't found one yet.
31:00It'll do. Eight.
31:0164 pieces, I say, as we go into the final numbers game.
31:05Sheila?
31:05Can I be difficult, please, Rachel,
31:08and have one from each corner
31:09of the little ones
31:11and two from the two middle ones on the top?
31:14You can, indeed.
31:15Not difficult at all.
31:16Thank you, Sheila.
31:17Four little, two large,
31:19and the final one of the day
31:20is six.
31:22One.
31:23Another six.
31:24Eight.
31:25Eight, and then the two big ones,
31:26one hundred and seventy-five.
31:29And the target, six hundred and eighty-two.
31:32Six, eight, two.
31:32Eight, and then the two big ones,
31:36Eight, and then the two big ones,
31:44Eight, and then the two big ones,
31:50Eight, and then the two big ones,
31:51one hundred and eighty-two.
31:51Eight, and then the two big ones,
31:51one hundred and eighty-two.
31:52Eight, and then the two big ones,
31:52Eight, and then the two big ones,
31:53Eight, and then the two big ones,
31:54Eight, and then the two big ones,
31:56Eight, and then the two big ones,
32:00one hundred and eighty-two.
32:01Eight, and then the two big ones,
32:02Yes, Sheila.
32:046.82.
32:05And Jacob, 6.82.
32:08Now then, Sheila.
32:09Six times 100.
32:12600.
32:14Plus the 75.
32:166.75.
32:17Six plus one is seven.
32:19Yeah, the other six.
32:21Lovely, 6.82.
32:22And Jacob, I did it exactly the same way.
32:25There we are.
32:25I'll trust you.
32:27APPLAUSE
32:32So, neck and neck, 74, means only one thing.
32:36We're at the final round,
32:37and we're going into a crucial countdown conundrum.
32:41So, fingers on buzzers, please.
32:43Let's roll today's crucial countdown conundrum.
32:54Jacob?
32:55I feel like I've made this up.
32:56I've got limbering.
32:58Limbering?
33:01Limbering.
33:02Woo!
33:03Woo!
33:12Ah, well done.
33:14You took a big risk there, did you?
33:16Yes.
33:16You felt very big.
33:17When it came off.
33:19Oh, what am I to say to Sheila Addis?
33:21You played so well.
33:23I think you led the way for a long, long time.
33:26And then he stole a march right at the end.
33:29But it's been a great pleasure having you here.
33:31Thank you, Nick.
33:32I hope you've enjoyed it.
33:33Thoroughly.
33:34Excellent.
33:34Will you take the goodie bag back to that beautiful city of Wales?
33:39And thanks.
33:39You've travelled with our, you know, admiration and good luck.
33:43Now, it was a dangerous business, wasn't it?
33:46Very dangerous.
33:47I was terrified.
33:48Well, well done.
33:50You're still in the game.
33:51You're still in the game.
33:51See you tomorrow.
33:52See you tomorrow.
33:53See you tomorrow.
33:54We will see Richard.
33:56More starry stories from Richard tomorrow.
33:59And more help from Susie, too, I think.
34:01Yes?
34:01I hope so.
34:02We'll see you both tomorrow.
34:04See you then.
34:04Brilliant stuff.
34:05Well done.
34:06And Rachel, too.
34:07Gosh.
34:07Back to my place with some champagne in the meantime, Nick.
34:10All right.
34:10I've got a few buttons with your name on.
34:12Oh, please.
34:13See you tomorrow.
34:14See you tomorrow.
34:14See you tomorrow.
34:15Same time, same place.
34:16You'll be sure of it.
34:17A very good afternoon.
34:19Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com, by Twitter at C4Countdown, or write to us
34:26at Countdown Leeds LS3 1JS.
34:29You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
34:37Are we at capacity?
34:38Nope.
34:39Another is on the way.
34:40Plus, it's time for a special silver wedding treat.
34:43It's back, but now 20 kids and counting at nine.
34:46But coming up, even baby penguins need a lesson at the start.
34:49We're at the zoo.

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