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00:31Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown Studio.
00:33On what I'm reliably informed is trivia day.
00:37Rachel, it's trivia day today.
00:39And I'll give you a few tidbits.
00:42Okay.
00:42Titbits of trivia.
00:44You may or may not know about these.
00:46Adult cats, now you'll know all about this,
00:49only meow to communicate with humans.
00:52They don't meow at each other.
00:54I've heard that.
00:56Google was once called backrub.
00:59Backrub?
01:00Backrub?
01:00That was the brand.
01:01And then somebody said, let's call it Google.
01:04What little bit of trivia have you got for us?
01:08I guess the things that might seem obvious for me might not be to others,
01:11but did you know that horses and cows can sleep standing up,
01:15but they can only dream lying down?
01:18Who told you that?
01:20The internet.
01:21Is that right?
01:22Internet doesn't lie.
01:23Never lies.
01:24Never lies.
01:25Backrub.
01:26Never lies.
01:27Exactly.
01:27Brilliant stuff.
01:28So they dream when they're lying down.
01:30Yeah.
01:31Okay.
01:31Most useless piece of information you'll hear all day.
01:33Now then, Rachel, we've got Jacob back.
01:36Jacob Coventry Peters.
01:38Two good wins.
01:39I think that you had your cage rattled slightly yesterday, but you came through and you won it on the
01:47Crucial Conundrum.
01:48Well done.
01:49Excellent stuff.
01:50All right.
01:51Well, Jacob, you're joined by Anthony McLaughlin, school cover supervisor from Leeds, an Irishman.
01:57Yeah.
01:57From the north.
01:59Yeah.
01:59From Donegal.
02:00From Donegal.
02:01Gosh.
02:01Windy up there, I think, isn't it?
02:02It sure is.
02:03It can be.
02:04Yeah?
02:04You get the weather coming in from the Atlantic.
02:07From the Atlantic Ocean, yeah.
02:09It's fantastic.
02:10But also, you're a football referee and a Gaelic football referee.
02:13Yeah, I do both sports.
02:15Gaelic football is such a huge sport in Ireland, isn't it?
02:19It sure is.
02:19I'm one of the biggest sporting events in Ireland back home.
02:23Yeah.
02:24Well, good luck to you both.
02:25Good luck to Anthony and to Jacob.
02:27Take a big round of applause.
02:33And over the corner, sitting right next to Susie, is journalist and TV presenter Richard Arnold.
02:38Richard, how are you?
02:40Very good, Nick.
02:41Good to be back.
02:44We've now turned to Jacob for a letter's game.
02:47Hi, Rachel.
02:48Hi, Jacob.
02:49Could I start with a consonant, please?
02:51Start today with Z.
02:54And a better one, please.
02:56Oh.
02:57That's better.
02:59Another one.
03:01S.
03:02And another one.
03:05T.
03:06And a vowel.
03:09I.
03:10And another vowel.
03:12I.
03:15And a consonant.
03:17D.
03:24And lastly, P.
03:30And here's the countdown clock.
03:31We'll see you next time.
03:35Bye.
03:40Bye.
03:42Bye.
03:47Bye.
03:51Bye.
03:55Bye.
03:57Bye.
03:57Bye.
03:59Bye.
04:03Jacob?
04:04That's seven.
04:05That's seven.
04:06Anthony?
04:06Six.
04:07And you're six?
04:08Straight.
04:10And?
04:11Striped.
04:12And striped?
04:14Yep.
04:15Now, Richard?
04:16Well, whenever I was picked for games at school, Nick,
04:19they always said I'd put in a spirited performance,
04:21which basically meant I was enthusiastic,
04:24but got absolutely nowhere.
04:26But there you have it.
04:26There's eight.
04:28Spirited.
04:29Very good.
04:31APPLAUSE
04:31Anything else, Susie?
04:33There's a nice one using the Z, spritzed,
04:36as in she spritzed some perfume behind her ears.
04:39Really?
04:39Spritz it?
04:40Spritz it, yeah.
04:41Short, sharp burst.
04:42Seven points to Jacob,
04:43and it's Anthony's letters game.
04:46Anthony?
04:47Good afternoon, Rachel.
04:48Afternoon, Nancy.
04:49Can I have a consonant to start off with, please?
04:51Start with L.
04:53And another one, please.
04:56F.
04:57And another.
04:58N.
05:00A vowel.
05:02O.
05:04And another.
05:05E.
05:07And another.
05:08A.
05:10Consonant, please.
05:12T.
05:13Another consonant.
05:16R.
05:18And finish with a vowel, please.
05:20And finish with E.
05:22Stand by.
05:24BELL RINGS
05:48BELL RINGS
05:54Anthony?
05:55Six.
05:55A six.
05:56Jacob?
05:57Seven.
05:57Anthony, you're six.
05:59Loner.
06:00A loner.
06:01Jacob?
06:02A floater?
06:03Very nice.
06:03Yep.
06:04Excellent.
06:05Any advances there?
06:06Richard, Susie?
06:07I wanted theatre, but she won't let me have it.
06:09Going back to my East End roots, F-E-A-T-R-E,
06:12but apparently it won't stand.
06:14Reflate?
06:15Seven?
06:17Yep.
06:17It's all to do with inflation.
06:19It's to expand the level of output of an economy.
06:21By government stimulus.
06:23Yes.
06:24It's to reflate.
06:25And I think eternal is also there for seven.
06:29All right.
06:29So 14 points to Jacob.
06:31And now, Jacob, here's your numbers game.
06:35Could I have a cross, please, Rachel?
06:38So one from the top?
06:39Yeah, and then going down.
06:40You can indeed.
06:42And five little ones.
06:44And for this round, they are nine, ten, five,
06:49another nine, two, and a large 150.
06:52And the target, 792.
06:55792.
07:29Jacob, 791.
07:31And Anthony, 790.
07:34790. Let's go with Jacob, shall we?
07:38OK, so I've got 9 plus 5 plus 2.
07:41Shall you give me 16?
07:429 plus 5 plus 2, 16.
07:44Times 50 is 800.
07:46Yep.
07:47And then take off the 9.
07:49And then the other 9, one away.
07:51One away.
07:53792, Rachel, how tricky is that?
07:56Yes, there were a couple of ways.
07:58If you say 50 minus 10 is 40, divide it by 5 for 8,
08:04and then 9 plus 2 is 11.
08:06Times them together for 88, and times it by the other 9.
08:10Superb.
08:10Yeah.
08:11Well done.
08:14Very good indeed.
08:1521 points to Jacob as we turn to our first tea time teaser,
08:18which is fated semi.
08:21He thought his team were fated to lose in the semi-final
08:25because he suffered from this.
08:27He thought his team were fated to lose in the semi-final
08:30because he suffered from this.
08:48Welcome back.
08:49I left with the clue he thought his team were fated to lose in the semi-final
08:53because he suffered from this.
08:55Suffered from defeatism.
08:58Dear, dear.
08:59Defeatism.
09:00So, 21 to Jacob.
09:02Anthony yet to score, but there's lots of time, Anthony.
09:04Now it's your letters game.
09:06Can I start with a consonant, please?
09:08Thank you, Anthony.
09:09N.
09:09And a vowel.
09:12O.
09:13Another consonant.
09:16B.
09:18Now, vowel, please.
09:20I.
09:21And a consonant.
09:24D.
09:25And another consonant.
09:28R.
09:29Now, vowel.
09:31E.
09:33And another consonant.
09:35P.
09:37And a final consonant.
09:40And a final M.
09:42Stand by.
09:43The largest consonant.
10:11But a consonant.
10:14Anthony?
10:15Six.
10:16A six.
10:17And Jacob?
10:17Six as well.
10:19Thank you, Anthony.
10:20Morbid.
10:21And?
10:22Binder.
10:23And binder.
10:25Yeah.
10:26And Richard?
10:27Primed for six and seven.
10:30Poinder.
10:32I defer you to my legal representative here on Earth, Susie Dent.
10:36Yeah, it's a Scottish legal term for a person who seizes goods,
10:40or an official who sees as goods, so possibly the same as a bailiff.
10:44There we go.
10:45Susie, any girls?
10:46No, that was our best for seven.
10:47It'll do.
10:48So, six plays at 27.
10:51Jacob, let us go.
10:53Can I start with a consonant again, please, Rachel?
10:55Thank you, Jacob.
10:56S.
10:57And another one?
11:00S.
11:01And another?
11:03B.
11:07And one more?
11:09M.
11:10And a vowel?
11:13A.
11:14And another vowel?
11:16U.
11:17And another vowel?
11:20I.
11:22OK.
11:23And another consonant?
11:26R.
11:27And another vowel?
11:32And lastly, A.
11:35Stand by.
11:36T mixed by.
11:40One
11:41and another vowel.
11:52All right.
11:53The best move.
11:54One.
11:54One.
11:59One.
12:00One.
12:02One.
12:02One.
12:03Three.
12:05Three.
12:05One.
12:06Yes, Jake.
12:08Six.
12:09And?
12:10Five.
12:11And your five.
12:12Brass.
12:13Now then.
12:15Roombas.
12:16Roombas.
12:17Yeah, very good.
12:19Richard?
12:19No Roomba, but I've been in the company of the odd samurai,
12:23and when you have two of them, there's samurais, which is eight.
12:27Excellent.
12:28Well done.
12:31That's a special one.
12:33It is.
12:33Very, very good.
12:34All right.
12:35So, Anthony, your numbers game.
12:38Can I have one from the top and any other five, please?
12:41You can indeed.
12:42Thank you, Anthony.
12:43One large five, a little coming up again.
12:44And this time, your selection is one, two, ten, six, seven, and one hundred.
12:54And this target, 880.
12:56Eight, eight zero.
13:28Yes, Anthony?
13:30Oh, didn't get it.
13:31No too far?
13:31Well, now, Jacob, 880.
13:34Let's hear it.
13:36100 plus 10 is 110.
13:39Yes.
13:40Six add two as eight and multiply them.
13:41It is.
13:42Well done.
13:42880.
13:43Well done.
13:48Neatly down as we turn to Richard Arnold.
13:51Now, Richard, are you flogging your wares on the telly, I hear?
13:55Yeah, I was flogging my wares for charity, it must be said, not because I have to pay Susie
13:59here a stipend to appear on Dictionary Corner every year, although you're not getting any
14:02cheaper, dear.
14:04It's a show called Star Boot Sale on this very channel, actually, in which celebrities compete
14:08by flogging their wares for charity at a car boot sale.
14:12You see how they came up with that idea.
14:13It was fascinating.
14:14I'd never done a car boot sale before.
14:16My other half seized at the opportunity and said, you've got to flog all the tat that we've
14:19got in this house, because the old you get is you ripen in age, you've yet to get them,
14:23I love, but you accumulate an awful lot of stuff.
14:25So I've always been fascinated by those shows, like Antics Roadshow, that sharp intake of
14:29breath, the jeopardy when they get to the point where they're just itching to find out
14:32how much their stuff is worth.
14:34And the other day, having rediscovered my Lego, I went downstairs, it was a very slow news
14:39day, so I built this Lego model that I'd been given for my 40th birthday many, many
14:43years ago, and I was delighted, opened the box, built it, and then I thought,
14:50I'll Google it, and see how much it's worth.
14:53Had I not opened that box, that Lego set would have been worth £1,400.
14:59Unbelievable.
15:00So, hunt around, there is cash in the attic.
15:03£1,400.
15:04Unbelievable.
15:05Amazing.
15:06Amazing.
15:06I'm furious with myself.
15:07Couldn't have stuck it back on again a bit.
15:08I might too.
15:09All right.
15:10Well done.
15:10Big round of applause.
15:16Good story there, Richard.
15:1843 plays Anthony, 6, and Jacob, it's your letters game.
15:22All right.
15:23Can I start with a consonant again, please, Rachel?
15:25Thank you, Jacob.
15:26N.
15:27And a vowel?
15:29I.
15:32And a consonant?
15:34R.
15:35And another consonant?
15:39T.
15:41And a vowel?
15:43I.
15:44And a vowel?
15:47E.
15:49And a consonant?
15:52H.
15:54And a consonant?
15:56M.
15:59And a consonant, please.
16:02And lastly, F.
16:04Countdown.
16:07ORCHESTRA PLAYS
16:35Now, Jacob, that's seven.
16:38And Anthony?
16:39Only a five.
16:40And that five is?
16:41Nighter.
16:42And Jacob?
16:43Interim.
16:44Interim, very nice.
16:45Good word.
16:46Now, Richard, Susie?
16:48Mither for six, which is one of my all-time favourite words in the English language.
16:52Don't mither me, Susie.
16:53Yes.
16:54And mintier.
16:56And mintier.
16:57Yeah.
16:57For that ring of confidence first thing in the morning when you clean your teeth, Nick.
17:00Mintier.
17:01Seven.
17:01Lovely.
17:02Well done.
17:03So, Anthony, your letters game.
17:05Start with a consonant, please.
17:07Thank you, Anthony.
17:09Thank you, Anthony.
17:09And a vowel.
17:12I.
17:13And another vowel.
17:15E.
17:16And a consonant.
17:18W.
17:20Another consonant.
17:21G.
17:23And a vowel.
17:23O.
17:24I.
17:26Another consonant.
17:28S.
17:30Another consonant.
17:32N.
17:33And a final consonant.
17:35And a final K.
17:38Down and down.
17:39Biodivers.
17:41But...
17:42I.
17:51I.
18:07I.
18:09I.
18:09I.
18:09I.
18:10Anthony?
18:11Seven.
18:12A seven.
18:13And Jacob?
18:14Seven as well.
18:15Anthony?
18:16Sewings.
18:18And Jacob?
18:20Skewing.
18:21Skewing is absolutely fine.
18:23Anthony, can you just follow yours for me?
18:25S-E-W-I-N-G-S.
18:28Sewings.
18:28Ah, OK.
18:29I'm not sure that that's going to be there as a noun by itself.
18:34It is there as a noun by itself, but as a mass noun,
18:36which means you can't put the S on it.
18:38I'm sorry.
18:38Oh, that's bad luck.
18:39No sewings.
18:40That is bad luck.
18:41What can we have, I wonder?
18:42Susie?
18:42Richard?
18:43Kissing.
18:44Yes.
18:46And swinges is also there.
18:48To swinge.
18:49Literally term for striking hard or beating something.
18:52A swinging tackle.
18:54Yes.
18:54Exactly right.
18:55Thank you very much.
18:56Fifty seven plays six.
18:57And it's Jacob's numbers game.
18:59Jacob.
18:59All right.
19:00Can I have one from the top and any other five, please?
19:04You can indeed.
19:04Thank you, Jacob.
19:05One large, five little and for this round.
19:08Your small numbers are seven, six, eight, two, and nine.
19:14And the large one, 25.
19:16And this target, 360.
19:18360.
19:19Zero.
19:51Well, Jacob, 360, I think.
19:54Thank you. And Anthony?
19:56350.
19:57Right, let's go to Jacob first, then, shall we, Jacob?
20:00I'm going to tell you, no, I got that wrong.
20:03So, Anthony squeezes in.
20:05I did 8 plus 6.
20:0714.
20:0814 times 25.
20:10340. 350, rather.
20:12And that's what you declared. Lovely.
20:13Thank you. But 360, where's that missing 10 got you, Rachel?
20:16Um, a few ways.
20:19This one, you could have said 8 plus 7 is 15,
20:21plus 25 is 40, and then times it by 9.
20:26That's very neat, yeah.
20:30Thank you, Rachel.
20:31So, 57 to Anthony's 11.
20:33As we turn to our second tea-time teaser,
20:36which is if dragons, and the clue,
20:39even if dragons come charging towards her,
20:42she'll stay calm due to this.
20:44Even if dragons come charging towards her,
20:46she'll stay calm due to this.
21:04Welcome back.
21:05I left with the clue.
21:06Even if dragons come charging towards her,
21:08she'll stay calm due to this.
21:11That's just the fact that she has 5 foie.
21:14Cool under pressure.
21:16Cold-blooded.
21:165 foie.
21:18Now, 57 please, 11.
21:20Anthony, let us gain.
21:22Start off with a consonant, please.
21:24Thank you, Anthony.
21:25T.
21:26And a vowel.
21:28O.
21:29Another vowel.
21:31I.
21:33Consonant.
21:34X.
21:36Another consonant.
21:37M.
21:38A vowel.
21:41A.
21:42A.
21:42A.
21:43A consonant.
21:45S.
21:46A vowel.
21:49O.
21:50And a final consonant.
21:52And a final T.
21:54Stand by.
21:54A vowel.
22:26Anthony.
22:27Five.
22:28Five, Jacob.
22:29Doji seven.
22:31Anthony.
22:31Toast.
22:32And Jacob.
22:34I've got tomatoes.
22:35Without the E.
22:36Yeah, without the E.
22:37I do need the E. I'm afraid. I'm sorry. Sorry, Jacob.
22:41And what can we have?
22:42Richard, you've been working away there.
22:45Well, when you say working, what have you got?
22:48It's a stretch. Atomast.
22:50Atomist.
22:51Oh, right.
22:51Oh, yeah, sorry. Atomist.
22:54Atomist, which is?
22:56Atomist.
22:57Yeah, it's a form of philosophy, really.
23:00A theoretical approach that regards things as being interpretable through analysis into distinct parts, hence the idea of distinct atoms.
23:08Words right out of my mouth.
23:10Of course it was.
23:11Well done.
23:12And atomist.
23:1357 to 16.
23:15Now, Jacob, your letters game.
23:18All right, Rachel, can I start with a consonant, please?
23:20Thank you, Jacob.
23:21W.
23:22And another one?
23:25N.
23:26And another?
23:28G.
23:30And a vowel?
23:32U.
23:33And another one?
23:35E.
23:36And another vowel?
23:40O.
23:41And a consonant?
23:44P.
23:45And another consonant?
23:48C.
23:50And finally, could I have another consonant?
23:54And finally, S.
23:57Stand by.
23:57
23:58And another consonant?
24:11E.
24:28Yes, Jacob?
24:29That's seven.
24:30Anthony?
24:30Five.
24:32And that five?
24:33Scope.
24:34Scope and pounces.
24:36Yeah, very good.
24:37Pounces.
24:38Anything else?
24:39Pogues, sponge, but pounces was the clincher.
24:42Yeah, well done.
24:44Thank you, 64 to 16.
24:46And Susie, we turn to and politely ask what she might have for us today by way of her origins
24:53of words.
24:54Well, I have been talking about money this week, and yesterday I was talking about old slang terms for British
25:01money.
25:01Today I'm going to talk about the names of some foreign coins.
25:05I'm going to start with nickel, which became very popular after about 1866,
25:10and that was when the content of the five-cent piece in North America was changed from silver and copper
25:16to copper and nickel,
25:17which was a much cheaper metal.
25:20It comes from kupfer nickel, which was a German name meaning copper demon,
25:26and it was called copper demon because miners would sometimes alight upon this ore and think,
25:30wow, we found some copper when in fact it was just nickel, which, as I say, was cheaper.
25:34It's related to pumper nickel, as I often delight in saying, which actually is a bread, of course,
25:40which means farting demon, if you only wanted to know.
25:42Back to coins, though.
25:45Quarter were, they were originally, quarters were Spanish dollars circulated alongside U.S. dollars for many years,
25:51and they were often divided into eight wedge-shaped segments, believe it or not.
25:57And so the government eventually issued a 25-cent coin to enable people to give change,
26:02and these coins were known as quarters or two-bits, and we still talk about a two-bit operation,
26:07which is kind of small change, if you like.
26:09Not the same, incidentally, as pieces of eights.
26:12They were the eight real coins, the Spanish silver dollar, and they were marked with the figure eight, hence that
26:18term.
26:18The Australian dollar, suggested names for that were great.
26:22They were the royal, the austral, the oz, the boomer, the roo, the emu, the kanga, the digger, and the
26:26dinkum,
26:27all slang terms for the Australian dollar.
26:29But I'll finish with dollar itself, because people often wonder about this one.
26:33That goes back to Joachim's Thaler, and that was a coin that came from the silver mine of Joachim's Thaler.
26:39That was in the Czech Republic.
26:41It then crossed over to Spanish-American colonies and eventually to North America, close to the War of Independence.
26:48But it's actually a name that comes all the way from the Czech Republic.
26:51Thanks for all of you.
26:55Well, well, well.
26:58Fascinating. Thank you.
26:59You're welcome.
26:59Thank you. 64, please. 16. Anthony, you're on 16.
27:02And it's Anthony's Letters Game. Yes, sir?
27:04Start it off with a consonant, please.
27:06Thank you, Anthony.
27:07D.
27:08And another.
27:10J.
27:12And another.
27:14G.
27:15A vowel, please.
27:17I.
27:18And another.
27:19E.
27:20And another.
27:23O.
27:24A consonant.
27:25T.
27:27And another.
27:29M.
27:30And a final consonant.
27:33And a final L.
27:36Countdown.
27:37And a final consonant.
28:00Oh, my God.
28:08Anthony.
28:09Six.
28:10And Jacob?
28:11Six as well.
28:12Yes, Anthony.
28:14Toiled.
28:15And?
28:16Jilted.
28:17And jilted?
28:17Yeah, very good.
28:19Toiled and jilted.
28:20Richard?
28:21Gimlet.
28:23Ah, gimlet-eyed.
28:24Hmm.
28:25Or the cocktail, if I always follow up with.
28:27Ah, we thought you'd turn to that.
28:30And motile, another six.
28:3370 plays 22.
28:34Jacob, final letters game for you.
28:36Can I start with a consonant again, please, Rachel?
28:39Thank you, Jacob.
28:40D.
28:41And another one?
28:43L.
28:45And another?
28:47C.
28:48And a vowel?
28:50I.
28:51And another vowel?
28:53E.
28:55And another vowel?
28:58U.
29:00And a consonant?
29:03Q.
29:04OK.
29:05And another consonant?
29:07R.
29:10And why not another consonant?
29:13And lastly, V.
29:14And here's the countdown clock.
29:17That sounds real.
29:18Of course, it's nice.
29:18Maybe.
29:36Maybe.
29:46Maybe.
29:46yes Jacob I think seven Anthony only a five and that five based now then Jacob
29:57liqueur how are you selling that l-i-c-q-u-e-r that's kind of a blend of lacquer
30:05and liqueur
30:06but liqueur is actually l-i-q-u-e-u-r okay I'm afraid sorry I'm not sure about vice
30:15did you say
30:15vice I don't know if that will be in either Anthony it's not I'm afraid no it's actually
30:21slabo bad luck what can we have Richard not a lot well it's a word that I often get shouted
30:28at when
30:29I leave the Good Morning Britain studios drivel which I assume is just a huge compliment because
30:33I get it quite a lot and curved Susie yes well yeah yeah I get that too but I'm still
30:41trying
30:41to drop a dress size after Christmas Nick thank you very much drivel and 70 plays 22
30:49and it's um what should we do here Anthony let's have a numbers game one from the top and any
30:54other
30:54five please thank you Anthony one large five a little for the final one of the day and this
30:59last selection is nine one two ten another nine and 100 and the target 592 592
31:13so
31:26so
31:41Anthony?
31:435, 9, 1.
31:44One away. Jacob?
31:46590.
31:47590.
31:49Now then, Anthony.
31:509 minus 1 is 8.
31:53Minus 2.
31:54Minus 2 is 6.
31:55Times 100.
31:57600.
31:58And take away the 9.
31:59And the other 9 for one away.
32:00Well done.
32:01Well done.
32:02Well done indeed.
32:03But just that missing one.
32:04Rachel, can you help?
32:05This one was actually impossible, so one away was the best.
32:08Oh, well done, Anthony.
32:09Good man, Anthony.
32:10So, 29 to 70, we go into the final round, gentlemen.
32:14Fingers on buzzers.
32:15Let's roll today's Countdown Conundrum.
32:49No.
32:50Stumped.
32:51Both of you.
32:52Both stumped.
32:53Who in the audience?
32:55Yes, madam?
32:56Motivator.
32:57Motivator.
32:58Let's see whether you're right.
33:00There you go.
33:01Well done.
33:06Motivator.
33:06There you go.
33:08So, Anthony and Jacob.
33:11Jacob, I'll come to you in a second.
33:13But, Anthony, bad luck.
33:14Very well.
33:15But you're up against the cracking ground.
33:16Very good.
33:17Well played.
33:17Thank you very much indeed for coming back to Leeds.
33:21You're a school cover supervisor.
33:22How does that all work, then?
33:24It's the equivalent of a supply teacher.
33:25If any teachers are off, you cover their subjects.
33:28You're in there.
33:29Yeah.
33:29Well, you take this goodie bag back to Leeds with our very best wishes.
33:34Very best wishes.
33:34Good luck with the football, by the way.
33:36And, young Jacob, we shall see you tomorrow.
33:39Well done again.
33:40How many is that?
33:41Three?
33:42Three now, yeah.
33:42Well done.
33:43Well done.
33:44Now, Richard, we'll see you tomorrow.
33:48More Tales from Tinseltown with Susie beside you.
33:51Absolutely.
33:51Just send my usual litter and I'll be on it.
33:55See you tomorrow.
33:56Both of you.
33:57See you tomorrow, Rachel.
33:58See you tomorrow, Nick.
33:59Look forward to it.
33:59Same time, same place.
34:01You join us then.
34:02You be sure of it.
34:03A very good afternoon.
34:05Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com, by Twitter at C4Countdown, or write to us
34:12at Countdown Leeds LS3 1JS.
34:15You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
34:22Beating the X-mas bloat.
34:24Food Unwrapped is here to guide you.
34:26I think that means put the chocolates away.
34:28The diet special tonight, 8 o'clock on Channel 4.
34:30Well, next up, marking your territory.
34:32It's a chimps game at the zoo.

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