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00:31Well, good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio.
00:34Now, in these days of, you know, difficulty and austerity and all the rest of it,
00:38it's up to all of us to try and find a way of making a living, I suppose.
00:43And some bright spark down in South London has decided that he will have a mobile barber's shop
00:49and it will be for those requiring an emergency haircut.
00:53Now, I don't know about you, Rachel, but I've never suddenly thought to myself,
00:56Oh, no, I need a haircut. I need it now.
01:00But some people do, apparently, and it started out, apparently, last year, going like a storm.
01:06Now, what about, what other sort of mobile services do you think might catch on?
01:12Oh, they're pretty much mobile services for everything these days, aren't they?
01:15Yeah. We have, um, we get a mobile masseur that comes round and he's amazing.
01:20It's the proper sports massage for the muscles and I'm sitting there screaming and wondering what I've done wrong
01:25and Pasha can fall asleep through it and he does it harder for Pasha as well.
01:28Is that right?
01:29I'm a bit of a wuss when it comes back.
01:30He's a Russian. These Russians can take enormous punishment.
01:33I think it's all the vodka.
01:37It may well be.
01:38Now, who's with us? Karina's back. Oh, Karina, well done.
01:42Well done. You had a good score. 93, was it?
01:44It was, yes.
01:45Brilliant. Little Oscar James, your two-and-a-half-year-old son, is loving it.
01:48Licking the screens you told us yesterday.
01:50And now, you've got your teapot and you're up against Norman Greve, a retired solicitor from Del Cleef near Edinburgh.
01:58Good to have you here. We're lucky to have you here because we nearly didn't.
02:02Because apparently you had your one and only parachute, solo parachute jump and it was sort of touch and go.
02:11Tell us a little bit about it.
02:13Yeah, when you jump, you're meant to spread heel your arms and legs and fall belly down so that the
02:19chute on your back opens cleanly.
02:21I didn't. I jumped out feet first, your animal style.
02:24So, when the chute, it didn't open properly, it opened so that the cords were wound around my neck and
02:30it was pressing my windpipe.
02:31But the lines just unwind naturally, I was spinning around and eventually the chute opened properly and it was okay.
02:37Frightening. What height was this at?
02:39Two, two-and-a-half-thousand feet.
02:40Well, I'm glad you're here. Listen, have a lot of fun today. Both of you, enjoy it.
02:46Fight fiercely. Big round of applause for Karina and Norman.
02:54And Sue's over there looking after our wonderful Dixery Corner guest, none other than the wonderful Paul Sinner, the Sinner
03:00Man from the Chase.
03:05Oh, big welcome there for Paul as we go into our first letters round. Karina.
03:12Good afternoon, Rachel.
03:14Afternoon, Karina.
03:14Can I start with a consonant, please?
03:16Thank you. Start today with P.
03:18And another.
03:20Z.
03:21And another.
03:23N.
03:24And another.
03:26G.
03:27And a vowel.
03:29E.
03:30And another.
03:32A.
03:33And another.
03:35I.
03:37And another.
03:39U.
03:40And a final consonant, please.
03:42And a final D.
03:44Stand by.
03:46Who boreth.
04:02And a vowel.
04:15Who boreth and a vowel.
04:16yes Karina six and Norman six two sixes Karina pained Norman teasing yeah happy
04:27happy now got unpaid for six there's a seven though isn't there Susie yes there
04:33is an unpaid the book can be unpaid we normally say unpaginated but it means the
04:38same thing so not having the pages numbered thanks thanks Susie thank you
04:42Paul six apiece and it's Norman's letters game you're off the blocks Norman and
04:47it's your letters game hi Rachel hi Norman could I have a consonant please you
04:51can indeed W another one S a third M and one more please N a vowel O another vowel E
05:08a
05:08third vowel a a consonant S and another vowel please and lastly you stand by
05:23so
05:31ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:01ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:08ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:09ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:09ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:20ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:22ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:24ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:25ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:26ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:27ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:36ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:37ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:38ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:38ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:50ORCHESTRA PLAYS
06:53718.
06:54718.
06:55718.
07:26Karina.
07:28712.
07:29712.
07:30How about Norman?
07:32721.
07:33And 721.
07:35Norman.
07:376 plus 1 equals 7.
07:39Sorry, 100 plus 3 equals 103.
07:42100 plus 3, 103.
07:43And then 6 plus 1 equals 7.
07:45Yep.
07:46And multiplying.
07:46721, 3 away.
07:48There we go.
07:49But 718 is really what we were after.
07:51Rachel.
07:53I found a way.
07:54If you say 100 plus 3 plus 1 is 104.
07:596 plus the other one is 7.
08:01Times them together for 728.
08:03And take away the 10.
08:04718.
08:05That's the way.
08:06Thanks, Rachel.
08:10So, 19 plays 12.
08:13Karina's lost her lead for the moment as we turn to our first Tea Time teaser,
08:17which is into sauce and the clue.
08:20He had blackjack.
08:21And he was very persistent.
08:24He had blackjack.
08:25And he was very persistent.
08:42Welcome back.
08:43I left with the clue.
08:44He had blackjack.
08:46And he was very persistent.
08:48In fact, he was tenacious.
08:50Tenacious.
08:52Tenacious.
08:53So, 19 plays 12.
08:55Norman.
08:57That is game.
08:58Go start with a bow, please.
09:00Thank you, Norman.
09:01I.
09:02And another one.
09:02E.
09:04And another one.
09:05O.
09:07A consonant.
09:08R.
09:09Another one.
09:10L.
09:11Another one.
09:12C.
09:14And a fourth one, please.
09:16T.
09:18A vowel, please.
09:21A.
09:21And finish with a consonant.
09:23Finish with M.
09:25Stand by.
09:26T.
09:27T.
09:27T.
09:28T.
09:29T.
09:41MUSIC CONTINUES
09:58Norman.
09:59Seven, Nick.
10:00And?
10:01Seven.
10:02And two seven. Right. Norman.
10:04Claim it.
10:04And?
10:05Reclaim.
10:06And over in the corner, there's quite a few sevens.
10:09There's Reclaim and Article and Metical, which I think is the currency of Mozambique, if I'm not mistaken.
10:16No, you're not.
10:18But I think you've got an eight, haven't you, Susan?
10:20Oh, we can just put the R in Metical and have Metricorfer.
10:22I'm feeling so smug at remembering the currency of Mozambique.
10:25I didn't spot the eight-letter word staring me at the face.
10:27That's a countdown for you.
10:29Exactly.
10:29The 26th place, 19.
10:31Norman in the lead, and it's Carina we turn to.
10:33Now, Carina.
10:35Can I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
10:37Thank you, Carina.
10:38R.
10:39And another.
10:41P.
10:42And another.
10:44N.
10:45And another.
10:47R.
10:48And a vowel.
10:50E.
10:51And another.
10:52O.
10:53And another.
10:55A.
10:56And a consonant, please.
10:59L.
10:59And a final vowel.
11:01And a final I.
11:04And it's countdown.
11:06Time.
11:22Hello.
11:35I'm Tim.
11:37Carina?
11:38Seven, not written down.
11:40Thank you. Norman?
11:41Seven.
11:42So?
11:43Planar.
11:44Thank you. And Norman?
11:46Just as soon.
11:47There we go.
11:50Mmm. Tough game.
11:52Now, Paul?
11:53And when I'm opening a box of chocolates,
11:56I don't opt for the planar chocolate,
11:58I opt for the praline.
12:00Oh, I love that.
12:01Which is an anagram of planar.
12:03Thank you. Well done.
12:05Norman, it's your numbers game.
12:07Just one large and five small, please, Rachel.
12:10Thank you, Norman. One from the top again,
12:11and five little ones.
12:12This time around we have...
12:15Nine.
12:16Ten.
12:17Seven.
12:18One.
12:19Five. And the large one, 75.
12:21And the target, 695.
12:25695.
12:56Well, Norman?
12:58696.
13:00696.
13:00696. And Carina?
13:02694.
13:02694.
13:04And 694. Right.
13:05Norman, you take the lead.
13:0775 times 9.
13:0975 times 9.
13:11675.
13:12And add 10 plus 7 plus 5.
13:16Add them together and take away one.
13:19Oh, yeah. And then take away the one.
13:20The one away. Lovely.
13:21And Carina?
13:22I did 75 minus 5.
13:2570.
13:26Times the 10.
13:28700.
13:2970 minus 1 is 6 and take it away.
13:32And one the other way.
13:33That's it.
13:34And somewhere in the middle is exactly what you want.
13:37Is it possible?
13:38I can see someone has got it again.
13:40Got another chaser.
13:41I'll give it a go.
13:43Chaser special.
13:43Nine sevens are 63.
13:45Nine sevens are 63.
13:47Add one is 64.
13:49Add one for 64.
13:51Add 75 is 139.
13:54Ah, 75, 139.
13:56And multiply it by the 5.
13:57Perfect. Yeah.
13:58Lots of ways for this one, but very nice solution.
14:00Well done.
14:00Well done.
14:05So, 40 plays 33.
14:08Norman maintains his lead as we turn to Paul.
14:12What have you got for us, Paul?
14:14I've been going through some big topics on this show.
14:16Big topics for quizzes.
14:17How you start to learn stuff.
14:19One of the biggest topics for quizzes is the Oscars.
14:22It's not enough that you have to learn about films.
14:24You've got to know about who won what in what year.
14:26And the Oscars, they're very big this year,
14:29thanks to the national treasure that is Olivia Colman.
14:33Everybody considers her a national treasure.
14:35She went to Hollywood and she won the award for Best Actress.
14:37And it makes you think, what constitutes a national treasure?
14:40And it basically is anybody that goes to America
14:42and beats a lot of Americans at something and comes out as a victory.
14:45And especially if they're quintessentially British,
14:48that makes them even better.
14:49And through the history of the Oscars,
14:51there's some people that are undoubtedly national treasures
14:53that you might not necessarily have realised
14:56they were going to win an Oscar.
14:58Because for a start, like Olivia Colman started off
15:00in a sitcom called Peep Show,
15:02Judi Dench for many years was perhaps most famous
15:04for being in a fine romance as time goes by.
15:09And then she won an Oscar.
15:11But my all-time quintessentially British hero of the Oscars
15:14is the late, great David Niven.
15:17For two reasons that most people don't know.
15:20It's not to do with his acting, which is brilliant,
15:21but to do with his hosting.
15:23Because he's got two records as a host of the Oscars.
15:26In the 1950s, he was the only host of the Oscars
15:29to win an Oscar while he was actually hosting it,
15:33which is an unbelievably smug thing to do.
15:34But he's won Oscar for Best Actor
15:36came the night that he was actually hosting the Oscars.
15:39And then in the 1970s,
15:41he achieved another first as host of the Oscars,
15:44because he was the only presenter of the Oscars
15:46to have to witness a streaker running onto stage.
15:50The Oscars is full of naked ambition,
15:53but only once he's actually been a naked human being.
15:56A naked man who ran onto stage from behind the curtains
15:59and walked off.
16:00And in the most David Niven thing you could possibly imagine,
16:03he wasn't flustered at all.
16:05He just dusted himself down,
16:07and he said,
16:08how ironic that that man's biggest laugh
16:10would be to come on stage
16:11and reveal his shortcomings.
16:13The greatest...
16:13LAUGHTER
16:14..the greatest improvised line
16:16in the history of Oscars hosting.
16:18So there's been a lot of British heroes in the Oscars.
16:19Indeed.
16:20Oh, very good.
16:21Very good.
16:22APPLAUSE
16:27Niven was a class act, wasn't he?
16:30Absolutely.
16:30So smooth.
16:32Naturally suave.
16:33Anyway, and now, Carina, it's your letters game.
16:37I'll start with a consonant, please, Rachel.
16:38Thank you, Carina.
16:39N.
16:40And another.
16:42T.
16:43And another.
16:44P.
16:45And another.
16:47S.
16:48And another.
16:58And a final consonant, please.
17:01And a final C.
17:03Stand by.
17:04MUSIC PLAYS
17:34Well, Karina.
17:37I'll try an eight.
17:38An eight.
17:39How about Norman?
17:39Six.
17:41And you're six, Norman.
17:42Key points.
17:44Now then.
17:45Capstone.
17:47Capstone?
17:48Yes.
17:48Capstone is in the dictionary as a stone that is fixed on top of a wall.
17:53Usually a wall, but on top of anything, really.
17:56Something that tops the summit.
17:58OK.
17:58Yeah.
17:59Capstone.
17:59Well done.
18:02Well done, Karina.
18:03Well done.
18:04Popsy, just one point ahead of Norman.
18:06So this is a close-run thing now.
18:08Norman, off we go.
18:10Letters game.
18:11I'll start with a consonant, please, Rachel.
18:13Thank you, Norman.
18:14T.
18:15And another one.
18:16S.
18:17A third.
18:19B.
18:20A fourth.
18:22T.
18:23And a fifth, please.
18:26R.
18:27A vowel, please.
18:29U.
18:29Another vowel.
18:31E.
18:33Another vowel.
18:35A.
18:36And a consonant, please.
18:38And the last one, S.
18:40And it's Countdown.
18:42A.
18:43It's power.
18:56It's power.
18:57I.
18:57It's power.
19:00It's power.
19:01Do, baby.
19:07It's a cry.
19:11All będą.
19:12Yes, Norman?
19:13Six.
19:14A six and?
19:15I'll try another eight.
19:18Norman.
19:19Brutes.
19:20Now then.
19:22A butters.
19:23Very, very good, yes.
19:25The neighbourhood adjoining a property.
19:27Very good.
19:28Yes, well remembered.
19:29But the genius that is Susie Dent has beaten it with an actual nine.
19:34There is an abstruse is another eight and a nine is substrate.
19:38And that's the term from geology for an underlying substance or layer.
19:43Or it can be the surface or material from which an organism lives, grows or obtains its food.
19:48Substrate.
19:49Brilliant.
19:49Well done.
19:54Substrate.
19:55Wonderful.
19:56So nine points in it now.
19:5849 to 40.
19:59Well done there, Karina.
20:01It's your numbers game now.
20:03Off we go.
20:04I'll take one large and five small, please.
20:07Thank you, Karina.
20:08One from the top five a little.
20:10And this time around we have three, one, ten, nine, eight and 75.
20:19And the target, 611.
20:21Six, one, one.
20:23One, three, five.
20:26One, three, one.
20:40One, four.
20:41One, three, two.
20:42One, three.
20:43One, five.
20:45Two, three.
20:53Carina?
20:546-1-1.
20:55And Norman?
20:576-1-1.
20:58Yeah.
20:58So, Carina?
21:0075 times 8.
21:0175 times 8, 600.
21:03At the 10.
21:04600 and 10.
21:05At the 1.
21:05Nice and straightforward, well done.
21:07And Norman?
21:08The same way.
21:09Same way, there we are.
21:11APPLAUSE
21:17So, there we are, still that 9 points in it.
21:20Carina, 9 points ahead at 59.
21:22As we go into our second Tea Time teaser,
21:24which is Cinecard.
21:27And the clue, never mind the chaser,
21:29you wouldn't want to be chased by these.
21:31Never mind the chaser,
21:33you wouldn't want to be chased by these.
21:42APPLAUSE
21:51Welcome back.
21:52After the clue, never mind the chaser,
21:54you wouldn't want to be chased by these.
21:56And the answer to that is,
21:57you wouldn't want to be chased by arachnids.
21:59Is that simply spiders, or...
22:01Where's it come from?
22:03Scorpions, as well.
22:04OK.
22:05It comes from a Greek myth of revenge.
22:07And arachne was a maiden
22:09who was turned into a spider by Athena.
22:12I think it was by Athena,
22:13and she beat Athena in a weaving contest.
22:15And so, after spite, she was turned into a spider.
22:18OK.
22:2059 plays 50.
22:21Carina in the lead.
22:22Norman.
22:23Do you want to have a crack at this desert's game?
22:25Yes, please, Nick.
22:26Off you go.
22:27Can I start with a vowel, please?
22:29Thank you, Norman.
22:30E.
22:30Another vowel.
22:32I.
22:33Another one.
22:34U.
22:35And a fourth, please.
22:37O.
22:38A consonant, please.
22:40Y.
22:40Another one.
22:41R.
22:42Another one.
22:43D.
22:45Another one.
22:46N.
22:47And a final consonant, please.
22:49And a final R.
22:51Stand by.
22:52Thank you, Norman.
22:54Let's do it.
22:57Bye.
23:02Bye.
23:03Bye.
23:07Bye.
23:08Bye.
23:12Bye.
23:17Bye.
23:23Norman.
23:24A risky seven.
23:26Now, Carina, what do you think?
23:28A seven.
23:29I'm seven.
23:30Norman.
23:31Endured.
23:33I-N-D-U-R-E-D.
23:35Endured.
23:36Carina?
23:37Rounder.
23:39And rounder?
23:41Rounder, certainly there, but no endured, unfried, Norman, sorry.
23:46Oh, that is bad luck.
23:47Bad luck.
23:48Paul?
23:48Just rounder, nothing more.
23:50Rounder.
23:50Susie?
23:51A bit of a sort of clumsy word, un-order, which is to cancel an order for something.
23:56To un-order it.
23:57I like yonder for six.
23:59Yeah, that's good.
24:01Yonder.
24:02Sixty-six to fifty.
24:03Carina, your letters came now.
24:05I'll start with a consonant, please, Rachel.
24:07Thank you, Carina.
24:08F.
24:09And another.
24:11D.
24:12And another.
24:14C.
24:14And another.
24:17S.
24:17And a vowel.
24:19I.
24:20And another.
24:21U.
24:22And another.
24:24A.
24:25And another.
24:27I.
24:28And a final consonant, please.
24:30And a final chi.
24:32And here's the countdown clock.
25:06Corina.
25:07Just a four.
25:08Norman.
25:09Just a four, too.
25:10And Corina's four is?
25:12Digs.
25:13And disc.
25:15And disc.
25:16Can we beat four, Paul?
25:18It's a difficult set of letters, but there was one five there.
25:22Acids.
25:23Acids.
25:24Plural.
25:25Susie.
25:25No, horrible one that one five was the best we could do.
25:28Acids.
25:2970 to 54.
25:31Susie, you've prepared something wonderful for us, I know.
25:35By way of your origins of words.
25:38Not so wonderful, because I'm going to talk about betrayal today.
25:43And a sort of, yes, betrayal of trust.
25:46The kiss of death is a fairly recent term in the dictionary.
25:50But we think it has fairly ancient origins.
25:53And it began with the Bible and the betrayal of Jesus by Judas in the Garden of Gethsemane.
26:00In Judas Iscariot, it essentially kisses Jesus on the cheek as a way of identifying him to the soldiers.
26:07And as a result of that kiss, of course, he was arrested and crucified.
26:11It used to be called a Judas kiss, in fact.
26:13But more recently, we do call it the kiss of death, which is usually used as something that's kind of
26:18beneficial, but that has fairly horrible consequences.
26:22I think it was thinking about grassing someone.
26:25So sort of grassing someone up, really, shopping them in.
26:29Grass and shop are, in fact, related, because to grass someone comes from rhyming slang, cottony rhyming slang, grasshopper, shopper.
26:36So if you're a grasshopper, that's what you do, you shop someone in.
26:39And that, in turn, shop sense comes from slang, where shop was also another term for a prison.
26:45If you were in the shop, you were in prison.
26:47So essentially, to shop someone was to send them to jail.
26:50And I thought I'd end with sycophant.
26:53You'd think sycophant has absolutely nothing to do with betrayal.
26:56It's all about fawning up to somebody and being quite servile.
26:58But we think it goes back to acts of betrayal in ancient Greece, where sycophants were transfigured from the ancient
27:06Greek for fig shower.
27:08And the export of figs were said to be illegal.
27:11And a fig shower was somebody who dobbed in the exporter to the police.
27:16That's one theory.
27:17The other theory is that to show someone the fig was to make a rude gesture with a thumb between
27:21your fingers and just sort of say,
27:24You know, I actually really can't stand you, but I will act in a way that will betray you in
27:29the end.
27:29So there you go.
27:30A whole collection of things to do with betrayal.
27:33There.
27:33Fascinating.
27:39Thank you, Susie.
27:41Figs.
27:42Who'd have thought it?
27:43Who'd have thought it?
27:4470 plays, 54.
27:46Norman, your letters game?
27:49Start with a consonant, please, Rachel.
27:50Thank you, Norman.
27:51D.
27:52Another one.
27:54R.
27:55Another one.
27:56D.
27:57And another.
27:58L.
28:00And another one.
28:01T.
28:03A vowel, please.
28:05O.
28:06Another vowel.
28:07E.
28:08Another one.
28:10A.
28:12And a final vowel.
28:14And a final I.
28:16Stand by.
28:17OK.
28:48Norman.
28:49A seven.
28:50A seven.
28:50A seven and?
28:51A seven.
28:52Norman.
28:53A toddler.
28:54Toddler.
28:54Toddler, yes.
28:55Two toddlers.
28:56There we go.
28:59Any more toddlers over in the corner?
29:01Well, I've dreamt of saying this on Countdown for many years, but I've got Leotard.
29:06Leotard.
29:06Countdown favourite.
29:08And also idolater for eight.
29:10Idolater.
29:12Excellent.
29:13Susie?
29:13Yes, anagram of that is tailored.
29:16That's another eight.
29:17And tailored.
29:17Yes.
29:17Thanks, Susie.
29:31Thank you, Karina.
29:31W.
29:32And another.
29:33M.
29:34And another.
29:36H.
29:37And another.
29:38S.
29:39And another.
29:41K.
29:43And a vowel.
29:45O.
29:46And another.
29:48I.
29:49And another.
29:50A.
29:53And a final vowel, please.
29:55And a final O.
29:58Stand by.
30:17And a final vowel, please.
30:29Karina.
30:31Just a five.
30:32A five.
30:32And Norman?
30:33Just a five.
30:34A five.
30:35Karina.
30:36Amish.
30:37Norman.
30:38Hooks.
30:40Is this Amish?
30:41Yeah.
30:41Unfortunately, it's a capital A.
30:44It's not there with a small a, I'm afraid.
30:47Sorry.
30:47Bad luck.
30:48Yeah.
30:49Now.
30:50Paul and Susie?
30:51And we have mooks who are stupid fools, according to the dictionary.
30:56But that's it.
30:5977 to 66.
31:01And now, Norman, it's your numbers game.
31:04Good luck.
31:06One big and five small, please, Rachel.
31:07I will.
31:08I do have to ask.
31:09You are 11 points behind, and this is the last one.
31:11You don't fancy gambling?
31:12One large and five little.
31:14I think Karina might be pleased.
31:15Let's see how this one goes.
31:17Final numbers of the day are one, eight, nine.
31:21Another nine.
31:22Ten and the large one, 75.
31:25And the target, 397.
31:27Three nine seven.
31:30Three nine seven.
32:00Norman?
32:01No, too far away.
32:03Yeah.
32:04Too far away.
32:05Too far?
32:06Tricky.
32:07Tricky.
32:08I know somebody who will give it a good crack.
32:11What do you think, Rachel?
32:13How tricky is this?
32:15Very.
32:15Leave it with me, Nick.
32:16I certainly will.
32:17I certainly will.
32:19Now, 66 to 77.
32:21In we go to the final round.
32:24Fingers on buzzers.
32:25Let's roll today's Countdown Conundrum.
32:36Norman?
32:37Paul Dering.
32:39Let's see whether you're right.
32:42Nope.
32:43Rest of the time to Karina.
32:44Take your time, Karina.
33:09No, we've got two good players and they couldn't get it.
33:12But who in this large audience?
33:14Yes, sir.
33:15Deploring.
33:16Deploring.
33:17Let's see whether you're right.
33:20Deploring.
33:21There it is.
33:22Deploring.
33:23Well done.
33:25Well done.
33:27Well done.
33:27Bad luck, Norman.
33:28You have air pretty much all the way.
33:30But you've got a goodie bag to take back to Dalkeith with our thanks and blessing, too.
33:35And have a good journey home.
33:36Thank you, Nick.
33:37And thanks for coming, too.
33:38It's been good to have you here.
33:40Whilst Karina Atwood is back again tomorrow.
33:45I am.
33:45Well done.
33:46Did you enjoy that?
33:47You had a big smile.
33:49Well done.
33:50And we'll see you both tomorrow.
33:52Paul, yeah, and Susie, too.
33:54Absolutely.
33:54Lovely.
33:55And, Rachel, I know you've got it.
33:57It was a tricky one.
33:58I had to use my favourite product for two primes.
34:00If you say 10 plus 9 is 19, 9 plus 8 is 17, times those two together for 323, and
34:11then 75 minus 1 is 74, and add them together, 397.
34:16Well done.
34:16Perfect.
34:20Well done.
34:24Glorious.
34:25And we'll see you tomorrow.
34:26See you tomorrow.
34:26We'll see you tomorrow.
34:27Join us then, same time, same place.
34:28You'll be sure of it.
34:29A very good afternoon.
34:31Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com, by Twitter at C4Countdown, or write to us at Countdown Leeds
34:39LS3 1JS.
34:41You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.

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