- 2 days ago
Riddiculous - Season 3 - Episode 23
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Short filmTranscript
00:00MUSIC
00:17Welcome to Ridiculously, Ridiculously Clever Show,
00:21where three teams of riddle solvers take on our devious riddle master.
00:27Hello, Henry. Hi, Ranvier.
00:28Now, have you got any tips for today's teams?
00:31I think communication is always the key with these riddles.
00:33When you've got the riddle, really talking it through,
00:34taking it apart, because someone might say something
00:37and that might trigger something in someone else.
00:39That's the key, I think.
00:40Shall we practise a bit of that now before we get going?
00:43Why don't we try? Yeah.
00:44I'm giving away the ending with this sports car attachment.
00:48What am I?
00:49Giving away the ending. Right.
00:51OK, I'm going to muse on that one for now.
00:54Thank you so much, Riddle Master.
00:56But first, let's meet today's teams.
00:59Who's with us today?
01:01I'm Sam.
01:01This is my mum, Sue, and we're from Essex.
01:04I'm Susan.
01:05This is my sister, Theresa, and we're from Western Supermare.
01:08I'm Yusuf, and this is my housemate, Ollie, and we're from Oxford.
01:11Welcome to the show.
01:12Now, I know you probably didn't expect to get going this early on in the show,
01:16but let's put you to the test.
01:17Go on, Riddle Master.
01:18I'm giving away the ending with this sports car attachment.
01:21What am I?
01:23Susan and Theresa, you look like you had an idea, yes?
01:25Spoiler.
01:26Spoiler is the right answer, yes.
01:27Of course, if you give away the ending, you spoil it,
01:29and you have a spoiler on a sports car.
01:31I love it.
01:32Good way to start the show.
01:33Thank you so much, Henry.
01:35Now, welcome, one and all.
01:37Let me tell you how this is going to work.
01:39You're going to face a series of riddles from Henry,
01:41and in order to unlock each riddle,
01:44you'll first have to correctly answer three general knowledge questions.
01:48Now, in this first round, questions are worth £25.
01:52How much are your riddles worth?
01:54In this round, the riddles are worth £100 each,
01:56and they're the easiest you're going to face throughout the entire game,
01:59so it's important to get these ones right.
02:01Thank you, Henry.
02:02And we will be saying goodbye to one team at the end of this round,
02:07so every question is important.
02:10OK, if you're ready for some general knowledge, let's play.
02:16Which traditional pasta dish is often informally referred to as spag bol?
02:22Sam and Sue?
02:23Spaghetti bolognese.
02:24Correct.
02:25You're up and running £25 to Sam and Sue.
02:28Featuring the vocals of Christina Aguilera,
02:31Moves Like Jagger was a UK top ten hit for which American band?
02:36Yusuf and Dolly?
02:38Marine Five.
02:39Correct.
02:39That's £25.
02:41Have you got matching shirts on?
02:43We do.
02:44This is the kind of dedication we like,
02:47right through to the fashion.
02:48Lovely.
02:50Macaws and African greys are what type of birds?
02:53Susan and Theresa?
02:55Parrots.
02:56Correct.
02:57Well, look at this.
02:58You're all up and running.
02:59Which constructed waterway connects the Mediterranean and the Red Sea?
03:04Susan and Theresa?
03:05Suez?
03:06The Suez Canal.
03:07Yes, correct.
03:08Correct.
03:09Which actor played the title character in Willow, Professor Flitwick in the Harry Potter films
03:15and a version of himself in Life's Too Short?
03:19Sam and Sue?
03:20Warwick Davis.
03:21Correct.
03:22The cities of Bern and Zurich are in which European country?
03:26Sam and Sue?
03:27Switzerland.
03:28Yes.
03:29You've unlocked your first riddle, Sam and Sue.
03:31Mother and son, welcome to the show.
03:33Thank you for having us.
03:34Tell us why you applied to be on the show.
03:36We're big fans of the show.
03:38We've been watching it since series one.
03:39And so we thought, why not chance our arm and apply?
03:41And didn't think we'd be here, but here we are.
03:43Oh, well, it's lovely to have you here.
03:45Sue, tell me a bit about your lovely boy.
03:46Yeah, he's my oldest son.
03:49We get on very well and we like to quiz.
03:52And so that's why we thought we'd come here today.
03:54OK.
03:55First riddle, please.
03:56Riddle Master.
03:57Here it comes, Sam and Sue.
03:57Good luck.
03:58A cocktail of this colourful fruit creates no rage.
04:02What is it?
04:03What are you thinking?
04:04A colourful fruit creates no rage.
04:07Thinking of a colourful fruit.
04:10No rage.
04:12Oh, orange.
04:13Because no rage is an anagram of...
04:14Orange.
04:15Yeah.
04:16Orange, Henry.
04:17Why, Sam?
04:18Because no rage is an anagram of orange.
04:22And it's colourful, so...
04:23It certainly is.
04:24And it is the right answer.
04:26Orange, yeah.
04:27Make a cocktail of the colourful fruit, as in mix up the letters,
04:30and you'll get no rage.
04:31Well done.
04:32I had gone down the literal route, which is the one thing you say never to do.
04:35I was going, what kind of calming fruit is there out there?
04:37No, I said the key was communication, but also the key is...
04:39Ridiculous.
04:40There's lots of keys, isn't there?
04:41There's lots of keys.
04:42Sam and Sue, you've got through your first riddle,
04:45and I can add £100 to your prize pot.
04:48The name of what item of sporting equipment is used in fashion
04:52to describe a tapered tuck sewn into a garment to shape it?
04:58Sam and Sue.
04:59Pint up.
05:00Incorrect.
05:01The name of what item of sporting equipment?
05:05Susan and Theresa?
05:06Dart.
05:07Yes.
05:08Dart is correct.
05:09It's those little seams, isn't it, that you go down the top.
05:13On the London Underground map, the central line is represented
05:16by which primary colour?
05:17Sam and Sue?
05:18Red.
05:19Correct.
05:21Which Labour politician who became Deputy Prime Minister in 1997
05:25was nicknamed Two Jags by the British press?
05:29Susan and Theresa?
05:30John Prescott.
05:31It was.
05:33The Derry Girls actress Nicola Coughlin plays Penelope Featherington
05:37in which Netflix period drama?
05:40Sam and Sue?
05:41Bridgerton.
05:42Yes.
05:43I love Bridgerton.
05:46Which bovine animals provide the nickname of a rugby league team
05:51from Bradford and a basketball...
05:53Sam and Sue?
05:54Bulls.
05:55And a basketball team from Chicago?
05:57It is the Bulls.
05:59Quick on the buzzer, Sam and Sue.
06:01Right.
06:02You've got your next riddle.
06:03You did very well in solving the last one.
06:05See if you can get this one.
06:07I'm a chopper that isn't a sword but is often sword with blades.
06:12What am I?
06:14Yeah, so a chopper that isn't a sword is a helicopter.
06:18Has the nickname chopper.
06:18But sword is spelt differently as in in the air.
06:22So...
06:22Blade.
06:23Yeah.
06:24Helicopter.
06:25Helicopter.
06:26Yep.
06:27You beat me again.
06:28It's the right answer.
06:29Well done.
06:30A chopper is a helicopter, not a sword of course.
06:33And yet soaring into the air.
06:34Your preferred route into work, isn't it?
06:36You go, only come by helicopter.
06:37Only ever by helicopter.
06:38Only ever by helicopter.
06:40Only ever by helicopter.
06:40Riddle helicopter.
06:42Thank you so much, Henry.
06:43Well done, Sam and Sue.
06:44Another £100.
06:46But there's plenty more money left in this opening round,
06:49so keep playing hard.
06:50Here we go.
06:51What is the name of the main thoroughfare that runs from the castle
06:56to the Palace of Holyrood House in Edinburgh?
07:00Yusuf and Ollie?
07:01The Royal Mile.
07:02Correct.
07:03Which celebrity antiques dealer uses the catchphrase cheap as...
07:08Sam and Sue?
07:09David Dickinson.
07:10What was the catchphrase?
07:11Cheap as chips.
07:12Cheap as chips.
07:13Actually, you got it right anyway.
07:14The answer was David Dickinson.
07:15I was just wondering if you knew the catchphrase.
07:17Cheap as chips.
07:19A card in the game Uno that features two arrows pointing in opposite directions.
07:26Yusuf and Ollie?
07:28Change direction.
07:29Incorrect.
07:30A card in the game Uno that features two arrows pointing in opposite directions
07:35shares its name with which gear on a car?
07:39Sam and Sue?
07:40Reverse.
07:40Yes.
07:42You probably knew that, did you, Yusuf and Ollie?
07:44I did.
07:44But it was an interception too soon.
07:46Yeah.
07:47OK, here we go.
07:47Sam and Sue, one away from unlocking the third riddle of the round.
07:50Who released the albums Hypersonic Missiles and Seventeen Going Under?
07:58Sam and Sue?
07:59Sam Fender.
08:00Yes.
08:01APPLAUSE
08:02Well, here we are.
08:04Could it be a hat trick?
08:05I'm absolutely certain that my glass half full outlook will be a big plus for the team.
08:11What am I?
08:12I'm thinking of synonyms for plus, so addition maybe.
08:17I'm absolutely certain that my glass half full outlook will be a big plus for the team.
08:25I can't think of what else that could mean.
08:26I'm absolutely certain that my glass half full outlook will be a big plus for the team.
08:31I can't think of what else that could mean.
08:33I'm absolutely certain that my glass half full outlook, glass half full outlook will be...
08:39Oh, positive.
08:41Uh...
08:41Positive.
08:42Oh, yeah, because if it...
08:43It'd be a big plus.
08:44It's a positive.
08:45Yeah.
08:45Very nice.
08:46Yeah.
08:47Positive, Henry.
08:48You're locking in positive.
08:50Yes.
08:50Are you positive?
08:52She is.
08:53Sue, tell us why you think it's positive.
08:55Um, because positive is a synonym to a plus.
09:00So, if you're positive, it's half full rather than half empty, so it'd be positive.
09:07I'm positive.
09:08You've got it absolutely right.
09:09Positive, yeah.
09:09If you're certain of something, you're positive.
09:11If you're a glass half full person, you are positive.
09:14Plus size positive.
09:15Yeah, well done.
09:15That is a hat trick.
09:16That's another £100 to Sam and Sue.
09:18So, we're into our final riddle of this round.
09:21And as you know, the team with the lowest prize pot will be going home.
09:26Keep playing.
09:26Here we go.
09:27Good luck.
09:28What name is given to magma when it erupts from a volcano?
09:31Yusuf and Oli.
09:32Lava.
09:33Correct.
09:34Which 2008 novel has sequels titled Catching Fire and Mockingjay?
09:40Yusuf and Oli.
09:41The Hunger Games.
09:42Correct.
09:44Feels like under pressure you're coming through.
09:46So, Yusuf and Oli, for the first time, you're now just one correct answer away from facing the riddle master.
09:52What was the occupation of the title character in the classic TV drama Dixon of Dot Green?
09:58Sam and Sue.
10:00Police officer.
10:01Police officer is correct.
10:04What do the letters N-E represent in the beer term N-E-I-P-A?
10:13Yusuf and Oli.
10:14New England.
10:16Correct.
10:17Look at this, you see.
10:19See, this is what happens.
10:21Under pressure, sometimes people crumble and sometimes, Yusuf and Oli, you rise to the occasion.
10:25Which is what you have done.
10:26Welcome to the show properly.
10:28So, you're housemates.
10:29That's right, yeah.
10:30How long have you known each other?
10:32About a year.
10:32Yeah.
10:33About a year.
10:33Okay, so come on then.
10:34You've lived together for a year.
10:36Dish the dirt.
10:37There's no dirt to dish.
10:38That's not true.
10:41We're...
10:42No, we're pretty outgoing.
10:43Yeah?
10:44We've done a few trips.
10:45Oh yeah, what have you done?
10:46We just decided one night just to go to Bruges and then from there we went into Amsterdam and
10:51then from there we decided to go to Jordan.
10:54To Jordan?
10:55Yeah.
10:55Wow.
10:56So, Oli, this is like, it sounds like you're very spontaneous as a sort of pair of friends.
11:01Yeah.
11:02It just happened.
11:04Yeah, I don't really say no to much.
11:05You don't really say no to much?
11:06No, we don't.
11:07And what do you both do for a living?
11:09So I'm an aircraft engineer.
11:11Oh, fabulous.
11:11I work for a radiopharmaceutical company and we make radio tracers for prostate cancer diagnostics.
11:17Oh, fantastic.
11:19Two very clever young men here for you, Riddle Master.
11:22Do your worst.
11:23I will.
11:24Here we go.
11:24See if you can get it.
11:26When a ship heads out to sea, I'm left behind.
11:28And when the ship is at sea, I'm always left as well.
11:32What am I?
11:34I'm pretty sure that's...
11:35Well, I'm going to guess port.
11:37That's what I think is so far until we discuss it.
11:40But port means left.
11:43Obviously, I know that because it's the same on an aircraft.
11:46And you leave the port.
11:50And...
11:52Yeah, I mean, it just makes sense.
11:53To me, anyway.
11:54Do you agree?
11:55Yeah, I agree.
11:56Alright, sweet.
11:56Can we lock that in, then, please?
11:58You're locking in port.
11:59Yeah.
11:59Well, you've certainly sailed out of a few ports on your world trip there.
12:03Port is the right answer.
12:04Yeah, of course, the same on an aircraft.
12:06I didn't realise it was the same on an aircraft.
12:08It is, yeah.
12:09Yeah, I didn't know that either.
12:10Of course, port is, yeah, on the left-hand side of a ship,
12:12starboard on the right.
12:13Yeah, port is the right answer.
12:15Well done.
12:15On the last riddle of that opening round.
12:18Well done, Yusuf and Oli.
12:19That's another £100 added to your prize pot.
12:22So, teams, at the end of that round,
12:24Sam and Sue, you have £550.
12:28Yusuf and Oli, you now have £225.
12:31And Susan and Theresa, you have £100.
12:35Which sadly means we'll be saying goodbye to the two gorgeous sisters.
12:40Tell us a bit about, you know, your friendship and your sort of sisterly love.
12:44Because you look very similar and I know that you're very close, aren't you?
12:47Yes, we are.
12:48We're very close emotionally and physically.
12:51We live nearby.
12:52Aww.
12:52And Theresa's got a little dog and I help look after a dog when she goes off playing the ukulele.
12:58Yes.
12:58Oh my goodness.
12:59You're very active sisters.
13:01And Theresa, have you enjoyed your time on Ridiculous, short as it was?
13:05I have, Ranveer.
13:07But Henry, it's all gone wrong.
13:11Very good.
13:13Thank you so much, Susan and Theresa.
13:16Nicely done.
13:17And that's it for part one.
13:20Now, Henry, how about another little riddle for the viewers to solve over the break?
13:24Which smart jacket top looks flaming hot?
13:27I'll give you the answer when we come back.
13:40Welcome back.
13:41Now, before the break, Henry, you set us a riddle and I think I might know it.
13:45You might know it?
13:45I might do.
13:46Very good.
13:46Yeah, I asked, which smart jacket top looks flaming hot?
13:50Which smart jacket top looks flaming hot?
13:53Go on there, Ranveer.
13:54What do you think?
13:54You're wearing it?
13:55I am.
13:56A blazer?
13:57A blazer is the right answer.
13:58Yeah, well done.
13:59You could have given me a round of applause.
14:01No, no, no, nothing.
14:02But listen, sometimes I get them and mostly I don't.
14:05So I'm in awe of anybody who stands where you are to play the game properly.
14:09Now, Yusuf and Oli, you came alive when the pressure was on to stay in the game.
14:14Yeah, I think I was really a bit nervous when we first started, but then once we got into it,
14:18it was...
14:18Yes, and it all came down to that last riddle as to whether you were going to stay in or
14:22not.
14:22Yusuf, how much practicing have you been doing for today?
14:26Um, you know what?
14:27We practiced yesterday quite a lot in the car.
14:30Oh.
14:30Not for months or anything, just yesterday.
14:33We watched the show quite a lot.
14:34Yeah.
14:35Yeah.
14:36We practiced on the show.
14:37And now, usually teams who come on to Ridiculous are big pub quizzes.
14:41What about you guys?
14:43I've done quite a lot of pub quizzes, but I took Yusuf to his first pub quiz a couple of
14:47weeks ago.
14:47For his first one?
14:49My first one.
14:49Yeah.
14:50Yeah, it wasn't great.
14:51It wasn't great!
14:52How did you do?
14:53How did you get on?
14:54Upper middle, I reckon.
14:55But we had a teacher mark our answer sheet, and she'd annotated it like she was marking her
15:00kids.
15:00Right!
15:01Sometimes it takes the fun out of a pub quiz, doesn't it?
15:04I love that.
15:05I tell you what, it's pretty brave, Yusuf, to have done one pub quiz and then come on
15:08to face the Riddle Master.
15:09But good luck to both teams.
15:11So let me bring you up to date on your prize pots.
15:13Sam and Sue, you're ahead with £550.
15:16Yusuf and Ollie, you've got £225.
15:19But now here in round two, the questions are worth £50.
15:23Once again, you need three correct to unlock a riddle.
15:27And the riddles have changed.
15:28Henry, would you care to explain?
15:29Yeah, so in this round, you're going to be facing visual riddles.
15:32So as you might expect, they involve pictures, but also numbers, shapes and words.
15:36They're a little trickier in this round, but if you can get them right, they're worth £200
15:40each.
15:41Now, only one member of your team will be able to answer the riddle and you'll have
15:45just 60 seconds in which to get it right.
15:48Also in this round, if you get it wrong, the riddle will then be offered to the opposing
15:53team for a steal.
15:54So, plenty of gameplay and strategy involved in this game.
15:59Are you ready for more general knowledge?
16:02OK.
16:02Hands by the buzzers.
16:03Here we go.
16:03Let's play.
16:06The Damned United is a book about which football managers?
16:11Sam and Sue.
16:12Brian Clough.
16:12Correct.
16:13The Damned United is a book about which football manager's 44-day tenure at Leeds United in
16:18the 1970s.
16:20That's £50.
16:22In geometry, what name is given to a triangle in which all three sides are the same length?
16:27Yusuf and Oli.
16:28Equilateral triangle.
16:29Correct.
16:30That's £50.
16:31I suppose you do a lot of that in your...
16:33A little bit.
16:34A little bit.
16:34Just remind us what you do.
16:35An aircraft engineer.
16:36An aircraft engineer.
16:38I bet you need to know all your angles, don't you?
16:39A few of them.
16:40A few of them.
16:40Very good.
16:41OK, here we go.
16:43Which river in the USA flows for 2,340?
16:47Sam and Sue.
16:49Mississippi.
16:50Yes.
16:50Great interception.
16:52Which river in the USA flows for 2,340 miles from Lake Itasca in Minnesota down to the Gulf
16:59of Mexico?
17:01Sam and Sue, you're one correct answer away from unlocking the first visual riddle.
17:05In the 1973 Disney animation Robin Hood, what animal is Robin?
17:12Sam and Sue.
17:13Fox.
17:13Correct.
17:15Sam and Sue.
17:16Now, you've got to make a decision here.
17:18One of you can take on this riddle.
17:20Do you want to see which categories are available?
17:22Yes, please.
17:23You've got numbers, shapes or pictures.
17:26So, what's jumping out at you?
17:28Can I do pictures?
17:29If you want to do pictures.
17:30Yeah, go ahead.
17:31Pictures, please.
17:32And is it you, Sue?
17:33Yes.
17:33Pictures it is.
17:35Henry, over to you.
17:36Sue, 60 seconds to give me a correct answer after I've finished reading the riddle.
17:40What do these things have in common?
17:42Your time starts now.
17:45What do these things have in common?
17:48So, you've got muscle, nail, hair, eye, calf.
17:54So, they're all parts of the body.
17:58You're locking that in?
17:59I am.
18:00Please.
18:02Sue, it's the right answer.
18:03Well done.
18:03Very quick work.
18:04Calf, eye, muscle, nail, hair.
18:08All body parts.
18:09Well done.
18:09Good decision, wasn't it, for Sue to take that one on?
18:12Nicely done.
18:13£200 to Sam and Sue.
18:16Let's keep playing.
18:18Uncloaked is the companion show to which BBC reality competition series?
18:24Sam and Sue.
18:25The Traitors.
18:26Yes, it is.
18:28Which English city is served by New Street Station?
18:33Sam and Sue.
18:35Birmingham.
18:35Yes.
18:36One away from unlocking the next visual riddle.
18:39What is the stage name of the New Zealand singer whose albums include melodrama and Solar Power?
18:47Sam and Sue.
18:49Sia.
18:50Incorrect.
18:51What is the stage name of the New Zealand singer whose...
18:55Yusuf and Ollie?
18:56Is it Lorde?
18:57It is.
18:58Was that a guess?
19:00Sort of.
19:01I didn't know if she was from Australia or New Zealand.
19:03But you went for it and it paid off.
19:05Which part of the body is treated by a chiropodist or podiatrist?
19:10Sam and Sue?
19:11The feet.
19:12Correct.
19:14Well done.
19:15Sam and Sue.
19:16Now, who wants to take this next category?
19:19Numbers or shapes?
19:21Are you happy for me to do numbers?
19:22Yes, I am.
19:22Numbers it is.
19:23Lovely stuff.
19:24Good luck.
19:26Yeah, Sue got pictures very quickly.
19:27Let's see if you can do the same, Sam.
19:29You've got 60 seconds to give me a correct answer once I've finished reading the riddle.
19:33Which of these dice isn't correct?
19:35Your time starts now.
19:38Which of these dice isn't correct?
19:49Um, I'm looking for one with the same number on two sides.
19:53There we go.
19:54Um, so that'll be, so C2 has two sixes on it.
20:00Um, whereas every other dice, from what I can see, has one of each.
20:04So, I'm going to go with C2, final answer.
20:10C2, Sam.
20:11Yep.
20:12It's right.
20:13Well done.
20:14Two sixes on that one.
20:16Correct dice.
20:17Have a different number on each face.
20:18Well done.
20:19Sam and Sue.
20:20Quickly done.
20:20That's another £200.
20:22Yusuf and Ollie, did you spot it?
20:24Yeah.
20:25Yeah.
20:25You did spot it.
20:26No chance of a steal there, though.
20:28They're so quick.
20:28Yeah, very quick.
20:29Yeah.
20:29Right, okay.
20:30We have one more visual riddle left in this round.
20:32So, hands by the buzzers.
20:34The Olympic flag features five interlinked rings of red, blue, yellow, green, and which
20:40other colour?
20:41Sam and Sue.
20:42Black.
20:42Correct.
20:44In which Roald Dahl book does the protagonist have an adventure with a group of insects
20:50who live in an oversized fruit?
20:54Yusuf and Ollie.
20:55James and the Giant Peach.
20:55Correct.
20:58According to superstition, a person will receive seven years of...
21:03Yusuf and Ollie.
21:04Walking under a ladder.
21:05Incorrect.
21:06A mirror.
21:07According to superstition, a person will receive seven years of bad luck for breaking
21:11which reflective object?
21:14Sam and Sue.
21:15A mirror.
21:16Correct.
21:17Sam and Sue, you're one correct answer away from facing the Riddle Master once again.
21:22Poet's Corner.
21:23The area containing graves and memorials of great writers is in the south transept of
21:29which London church?
21:32BUZZER
21:32Sam and Sue.
21:33We're Smith's Trevi.
21:34Correct.
21:36Here we are again.
21:38Could it be a hat trick?
21:38Henry, let's take a look at the category available.
21:41Shapes, who's going to do it?
21:44I'm doing it anyway.
21:46And we've got a clue to go as well.
21:48Yeah, we've got a clue.
21:49Okay.
21:49Sam, into the fray once again.
21:51Shapes it is.
21:52Sam, can you complete the clean sweep of this round?
21:56Let's find out.
21:56Once again, 60 seconds to give me a correct answer after I've finished reading the Riddle.
22:00Which shape completes the second pattern?
22:03Your time starts now.
22:07Um, one, two, three, four, one, two, one, two, three, four, five, six.
22:13Um, right, okay.
22:16I'm, hmm, a bit stuck on this one.
22:20So I'm going to go for a clue, Henry, if I may.
22:23Stop the clock.
22:25Some days it feels like it's just one thing on top of another.
22:28Start the clock.
22:31Clue is some days it feels just like one thing on top of another.
22:36Some days it feels like it's just one thing on top of another.
22:40Hmm.
22:42Um, are they days of the week or I'm thinking M plus T?
22:48No.
22:49Um, oh, I am struggling with this one.
22:53Um, I'm gonna, I'm gonna say.
22:59You've got ten seconds.
23:01Lock something in.
23:02Ten seconds.
23:03Um, I'm gonna say, I'm gonna say D.
23:08Final answer.
23:09D?
23:10Yes.
23:11It's wrong, Sam, I'm afraid.
23:13Okay.
23:13Yusuf and Ollie for a steal, what's your answer?
23:15E.
23:16E, Ollie, why?
23:18Uh, so if you move the, the Z over the N, it will create that shape that's E.
23:23Yeah, exactly.
23:24E.
23:24Well done.
23:25Uh, yeah.
23:25So it's about layering things on top of each other.
23:27That's what the clue was talking about.
23:28So you take the M shape and the T shape at the top.
23:30You put the two over the top of each other.
23:32Uh, that's what creates the blue shape on the right there.
23:35So you've got to complete the same, uh, pattern.
23:37You've got to do the same thing.
23:38Uh, layer the, uh, Z and the N over each other.
23:42And it gives you the full outside of the box with the two diagonal lines cross.
23:46The others don't work.
23:47Well done.
23:48Sam, you look furious.
23:50I'm annoyed with myself because I feel like that's one I just didn't see.
23:53But when you're watching at home, it's so much easier, isn't it?
23:55Well, it certainly is.
23:57Sue, step in.
23:58You might need a little hug from his mom after that one.
24:00No, it won't.
24:02Oh, my goodness me.
24:04But the clue was, I thought the clue, I thought the clue might have given it away to you.
24:08Yeah, the clue was some days it feels like just one thing on top of another.
24:11One thing on top of another, yeah.
24:11You've got to put one thing on top of the other.
24:13You've got to put the first one on top of the second one.
24:15Or it doesn't matter which way around, uh, to give you that second image.
24:18Once you know what happened on the top line, you can work out what happened on the bottom line.
24:20Yeah, I thought the clue would have helped.
24:22It just sort of didn't.
24:23Yusuf and Ollie, did you need the clue?
24:25Um, I got it just before the clue, but I can see where Sam was going with the days of
24:29the week
24:30because of the letters and...
24:31Oh, mate, you don't have to.
24:32Yeah, because I, and then I was trying to figure it out.
24:35And so when, uh, yeah, I got it just before the clue.
24:37You can sort of commiserate, can't you, when a fellow competitor is struggling with something and you see it.
24:42That's just the way with some of these riddles though, isn't it?
24:44Sometimes it pops out and sometimes you just can't get there.
24:47Great seal from Yusuf and Ollie there.
24:49Another £100 added to your prize park.
24:51And that was the final visual riddle of this round.
24:53So teams at the end of that round, Sam and C, you have £1,400.
24:58Yusuf and Ollie, you have £475.
25:00Now, that seems like a very big gap, doesn't it, to you right now?
25:03But let me promise you that in the next round, things change all the time.
25:07So stay focused.
25:08And, uh, it's time for another break.
25:10Henry, what have you got for us?
25:11See if you can figure this one out.
25:13With colourful clothes and oversized nose, I bring gags when the ring I enter,
25:17but I'm always low in the centre.
25:20What am I?
25:21I'll give you the answer when we come back.
25:27APPLAUSE
25:34Welcome back to Ridiculous, the ridiculously clever and brain-teasing show.
25:39Now, before the break, what was that riddle, Henry?
25:41The riddle before the break was...
25:42With colourful clothes and oversized nose, I bring gags when the ring I enter,
25:48but I'm always low in the centre.
25:50What am I?
25:50Sam, Sue, Yusuf, Ollie, what do you think?
25:54Not a clue.
25:55A clue?
25:57Yeah, I'll be honest.
25:58I'm not sure on this one.
25:59Should have put it in the first round.
26:01It doesn't bode well for this round, does it?
26:03No, no, no.
26:03Well, let's break it down.
26:05So, who might wear colourful clothes and an oversized nose?
26:10Oh, clown.
26:10A clown, yeah, a clown is the right answer.
26:13Clown enters a circus ring to make everyone laugh, of course, do gags.
26:17And, of course, low.
26:19You've literally got the word low in the middle of the words there.
26:21Clown is the right answer.
26:23It's a smart one.
26:24I liked it very much.
26:25Thank you so much, Henry.
26:26I wonder if you got that at home.
26:27Well done if you did.
26:29Now, teams, you're still working out that one, aren't you, the two of you, Yusuf and Ollie?
26:33Okay.
26:33Now, listen, let's take a look at your prize pots as they stand so far.
26:37So, Yusuf and Ollie, you're on £475.
26:40And, Sam and Sue, you're on £1,400.
26:43Now, that may look like an unassailable lead, but let me tell you this.
26:47It's where the competition gets serious right now.
26:49And that lead changes all the time.
26:52In this deciding round, the team with the highest prize pot at the end of it
26:57will be going through to the final to face Henry's riddle run.
27:00Now, I was saying about that gap can change because this time the questions from me are worth £100.
27:07And the riddles are much more valuable too.
27:09Certainly are.
27:10£300 if you get these riddles right.
27:13But, of course, they're the hardest ones you've faced so far in this, the deciding round.
27:17So, you can see a couple of riddles here and there and that lead can change.
27:21So, yes, hands by the buzzers.
27:24If you're ready, let's play.
27:29In 2022, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge became the Prince and Princess of where?
27:36Yusuf and Ollie.
27:37Wales.
27:37Correct.
27:39That's £100.
27:41Whose first UK number one single was Saving All My Love For You in 19...
27:46Salmon Sue?
27:47Whitney Houston.
27:48Correct.
27:48Back in 1985, another £100 to Salmon Sue.
27:52When weaving on a loom, the two sets of threads are known as the warp and the what?
27:58Salmon Sue.
27:59What-o?
28:00Incorrect.
28:01When weaving on a loom, the two sets of threads are known as the warp and the what?
28:07Yusuf and Ollie.
28:08Is it weevil?
28:09No, it's weft.
28:11Oh.
28:12The warp and the weft.
28:14How many pins does a standard UK plug have?
28:18Yusuf and Ollie?
28:19Three.
28:19Correct.
28:20OK, Yusuf and Ollie, one correct answer away from unlocking your first £300 riddle.
28:25Which long-running US magazine shares its name with a 19th century novel by William Makepeace?
28:33Salmon Sue?
28:34Fenity Fair.
28:34Yes, by William Makepeace Thackeray.
28:37Salmon Sue, Yusuf and Ollie, either one of you could now unlock the next riddle.
28:42It all hangs on this question.
28:44How many letters are used in a standard countdown letters game?
28:49Salmon Sue?
28:50Nine.
28:50Correct.
28:52You've used your clue.
28:54And it didn't really help me though, did it, Sam, in the last riddle?
28:57I did not.
28:57But you're on your own now.
28:58Good luck.
28:59Riddle Master, what have you got for Salmon Sue?
29:01I'm a rock and I can roll.
29:04Without you, I would really grow in confidence.
29:07What am I?
29:09So, I'm a rock is a fish.
29:11Sorry, a pebble.
29:12A stone.
29:14Without you, I would really grow in confidence.
29:17Without you, I would really grow in confidence.
29:20Without you, I would really grow in confidence.
29:23So, think maybe a stone.
29:27Without you.
29:28Without you, it could be the letter U.
29:30I would.
29:33I'm out of ideas.
29:35I just thought stone.
29:37Without you, I would really grow in confidence.
29:40I'm a rock and I can roll.
29:43I'm a rock and I can roll.
29:46You roll.
29:47Oh no, pin.
29:49I can roll.
29:50Well, think of a name for rocks.
29:52Pebbles.
29:53Stones.
29:56Without you, I would really grow in confidence.
29:58Stone.
29:59Other names for rocks.
30:00Boulders.
30:01Boulder.
30:03Boulder.
30:03Boulder.
30:04Without the letter U.
30:05In a boulder.
30:06Yeah, you grow in confidence, you're boulder.
30:08Yeah, boulder.
30:10Henry, we're going to say boulder.
30:13Boulder.
30:16It's the right answer.
30:18Well done, yeah.
30:18Yeah, you certainly grew in confidence in those last few seconds of that conversation.
30:23A boulder is a rock.
30:24A boulder can roll down a hill, of course.
30:25In a rock slide, that would be a boulder rolling.
30:28Without the letter U, as you correctly worked out there, Sue.
30:31Yeah, it's the letter U we're talking about.
30:33Take the letter U out and you really grow in confidence.
30:35You get bolder, as in to be bolder or be more confident.
30:37Great challenge there, Riddle Master.
30:40But Sam and Sue, you are up to the challenge.
30:41Well done.
30:42That's £300.
30:44OK, let's keep playing.
30:46Often used in Irish folk music, a boran is what type of percussion instrument?
30:52Sam and Sue.
30:54Flute.
30:55Incorrect.
30:56Often used in Irish folk music, a boran is what type of percussion instrument?
31:02Yusuf and Oli?
31:03Is it a drum?
31:04It is.
31:06The Mendip Hills, including the visitor attractions of Wookie Hole and Cheddar Gorge, are in which
31:12English?
31:12Yusuf and Oli?
31:13Bristol.
31:15Incorrect.
31:16The Mendip Hills, including the visitor attraction of Wookie Hole and Cheddar Gorge, are in which
31:20English?
31:21County.
31:21Sam and Sue?
31:22Sam and Sue.
31:23Correct.
31:25Which actor stars in the films Fences, The Equaliser and Training Day?
31:31Sam and Sue.
31:32Denzel Washington.
31:33Correct.
31:34The economic union known as Benelux consists of Belgium, the Netherlands and which other?
31:41Sam and Sue.
31:42Luxembourg.
31:42Correct.
31:43And which other European nation?
31:45Sam and Sue, I wonder whether this next riddle is going to be something that you can live
31:50up to the challenge of.
31:50Let's see, Riddle Master.
31:51What have you got for them?
31:52You may have heard we're no longer interested in having you play with us.
31:56That's not true.
31:57In fact, it's the only reason we exist.
32:00What are we?
32:02I'm thinking, I always think when I see questions like this, they've used an exclamation mark.
32:07That's not true.
32:08I'm probably overthinking it, but I don't know if that's got anything to do with it, an exclamative.
32:11You may have heard we're no longer interested in having you play with us.
32:15You're no longer interested in having you play with us.
32:18That's not true.
32:19You've got quite a lot of colons.
32:23Yeah, but you've also got a lot of punctuation.
32:26It's the only reason we exist.
32:28What are we?
32:28You may have heard we're no longer interested in having you play with us.
32:33That's not true.
32:33In fact, it's the only reason we exist.
32:36The only reason punctuation exists is to...
32:40Exclare.
32:41Well, to make sentences clearer.
32:45So what you think is punctuation?
32:47I don't know.
32:48I don't see how that ties in with play with us.
32:51What's it?
32:52Play with us.
32:53Play with us.
32:54Colons, semicolon, full star.
32:57Um...
32:57Play with us.
32:58Yeah, so it's clearly plural, isn't it?
33:01It's a collective.
33:03Um...
33:03I'm gonna...
33:05Yeah, I'll probably go with that, but it's gonna be wrong.
33:07Punctuation.
33:08Is that all right?
33:09Yeah.
33:10Yeah, I don't know.
33:12Punctuation, Henry.
33:13You're locking in punctuation.
33:15Yes, but not very confident about it.
33:18It's wrong.
33:19Okay, Yusuf and Olive have the same amount of time.
33:22No more conferring.
33:23What's your answer for a steal?
33:25We're just gonna guess and go with dolls.
33:29Dolls, Yusuf, why?
33:30It says play with us and...
33:35Oh.
33:35That's the only thing that came to my mind.
33:37Oh, I see.
33:38That was the end of the sentence there.
33:39Yeah, not quite...
33:41Not quite enough, I'm afraid.
33:43He locks in dolls.
33:44It's not the right answer.
33:45You're gonna kick yourselves, I think.
33:46It's quite simple.
33:47It is something you play with.
33:48That's right.
33:49You correctly identified that.
33:50Of course, that could be a number of things.
33:51Doll doesn't really fulfill much of the brief other than that.
33:55If you're no longer interested in something, what are you?
33:58You're bored.
33:59Bored, yeah.
34:00So, the correct answer is something you play with, which is...
34:03Board games.
34:04Board games is the right answer.
34:06Board games, yeah.
34:07So, no longer interested in something.
34:08You're bored.
34:09What do you play with?
34:09Games.
34:10The only reason that board games exist is to be played with.
34:13Board games is the right answer.
34:15Oh, that was a good one.
34:16Yeah, it was a really challenging one.
34:19Fantastic one.
34:20A ridiculous one, you might say.
34:21300 pounds to nobody in that round.
34:24Not even a steal, Yusuf and Oli.
34:26Okay, we have got one more riddle left in this round.
34:30So, hands by the buzzers.
34:32Let's keep playing.
34:34Which medieval English poet wrote the Canterbury Tales?
34:38Yusuf and Oli.
34:39Geoffrey Chaucer.
34:40Correct.
34:42In England, landscapes designated AONB are areas of outstanding Yusuf and Oli.
34:49Natural beauty.
34:50Correct.
34:52Which TV soap has a pub called The Rovers Return?
34:56Salmon Soup.
34:58Coronation Street.
34:59Correct.
35:00He did it in unison.
35:02Which pop group was formed by brothers named Morris, Robin and Barry?
35:08Salmon Soup.
35:09The Bee Gees.
35:10Yes.
35:11What is the hyphenated term for playing sheet music without having previously seen it?
35:19Yusuf and Oli.
35:20Sight reading.
35:21Correct.
35:22Yusuf and Oli.
35:23You've unlocked a 300 pound riddle.
35:25Are you ready for it?
35:27Yeah.
35:27Yeah.
35:27You obviously haven't used your clue throughout the game, so this is the deciding round.
35:31It may be the time you want to use it.
35:33Let's see.
35:34Riddle Master, what have you got for Yusuf and Oli?
35:37What tiny floor switches sides?
35:41Should we use our clue?
35:42Yeah.
35:43One of you might want to abandon your teammate and join the opposition.
35:46That's the clue.
35:48So could it be a traitor?
35:51Yeah, that's what I'm thinking.
35:53Tiny floor.
35:54Tiny floor.
35:55Tiny floor.
35:56That floor is spelt floor instead of floor.
35:59You know what I mean?
36:00F-L-O-O-R.
36:02Yeah.
36:02Tiny floor, a traitor would be.
36:04Is a traitor a floor?
36:06I guess it is.
36:08Tiny floor.
36:09That's a massive floor if you're a traitor.
36:12But I can't think of anything better.
36:15Yeah, what makes it a tiny floor?
36:20A small traitor?
36:22A small...
36:23Yeah.
36:25Um...
36:25Tiny floor.
36:27What's another word for a tiny floor?
36:29Yeah, I can't think.
36:30Like, I don't think it's going to be a traitor, but it's the best thing that we have.
36:35I know, yeah.
36:35Should we just look in traitor and hope for the best?
36:38Yeah, and I can't think of anything else.
36:41Yeah, that's looking traitor.
36:43Traitor.
36:44Yeah.
36:45It's wrong, I'm afraid, guys.
36:46Okay, Sam and Sue, no more conferring.
36:48What's your answer for a steal?
36:50Deflect.
36:51Deflect.
36:53It's the wrong answer, Sam.
36:54Ugh.
36:55You were very close.
36:57This riddle has given you a lot of grief to both teams.
36:58Only five words, but it's tricky, isn't it?
37:00Yeah.
37:01Yeah.
37:01And the correct answer is defect or defect.
37:05Defect is a flaw.
37:07Yeah.
37:07If something's got a defect, Yusuf, perhaps you're maintaining aircraft, you'd find a defect,
37:12perhaps.
37:12Absolutely.
37:14Don't rub it in.
37:15Look at Yusuf's face.
37:17If one of you was to join a different team, you'd be defecting, or in the House of Commons,
37:21you'd defect to a different party or that kind of thing.
37:23Deflect was close, but a different meaning, I'm afraid.
37:25Grudging respect, I think, from all teams.
37:27That was a great riddle, wasn't it?
37:28It was a complicated and yet obviously simple one when you announced the answer, as is
37:33always the way.
37:34Right.
37:34No money in anyone's prize pot from that particular riddle, but we are at the end of our deciding
37:40round.
37:41So, after that round, congratulations, Sam and Sue.
37:43You are through to the final with a prize pot of £2,500.
37:47And Oli and Yusuf, you ended up with £1,075, but you played a good game.
37:53I guess it's different, isn't it, being here rather than just playing at home or in a pub
37:58quiz.
37:58They're so different.
37:59Yeah, they're so different.
38:00And it's the timing as well.
38:02Sam and Sue are very quick on the buzzer.
38:05They've done really well.
38:06Well, listen, Yusuf and Oli, thank you so much for being on the show.
38:10After the break, Sam and Sue will face Henry's riddle run and we'll see how they cope under
38:14pressure with all that cash that they've accumulated up for grabs.
38:17But first, Henry, can we have another riddle that isn't so tricky as the last one?
38:22You sure can.
38:23I don't know.
38:23There's a few more words, so maybe you've got a bit more chance.
38:26You can literally see me in sun and rain, but I'm definitely more useful in the latter.
38:31What am I?
38:32I'll give you the answer after this break.
38:45Welcome back.
38:46This is Ridiculous.
38:47Now, Henry, you set us a fun one, didn't you, ahead of the break?
38:50Certainly did.
38:51I asked, you can literally see me in sun and rain, but I'm definitely more useful in the
38:57latter.
38:57What am I?
38:58Sam and Sue, you're our top riddle solvers.
39:00What do you think?
39:01Well, the letter N is in sun and rain, but I can't see how it'd be more useful in the
39:07latter.
39:07You're looking for something that is in sun and rain.
39:11Not just in sun and just in rain, but something that is in sun and rain.
39:15The three words together.
39:16Look at them together and see what you can see.
39:18Drain.
39:19Drain.
39:20And of course, drain is more useful in rain than it is in sunny times.
39:24So yeah, drain is the right answer.
39:26Sam and Sue, you've played, I would say, a wonderful game, don't you think?
39:29Yeah, really, really good general knowledge and fantastic riddle solvers.
39:33Well done.
39:33I would say so too.
39:34Sam and Sue, congratulations.
39:36So you've got £2,500 in your prize pot.
39:39Now, before I ask you what you want to do with that money, Sam, I just want to know a
39:42little bit about what makes your mum, Sue, so lovely.
39:45Great question.
39:46What is she like?
39:47Very kind, very caring.
39:49Don't wish to embarrass her here.
39:50But yeah, she is one in a million.
39:51She's a great mum.
39:52Yeah, and we're very close.
39:53Kind of him to say, but I love him to be.
39:57Well, that's lovely.
39:58It's also the relationship we would all want with our children, I suppose, is what you've
40:01got there, Sue.
40:02Right, so you've got £2,500.
40:04What's the money going on if you manage to take it home?
40:06I've just moved in with my girlfriend, so I'd like to treat her to a holiday, or maybe,
40:11and I'm sure you'll say the same, my brother, he's a DJ, so we want to, he's starting to
40:17gain a bit of traction, gain a few fans now, and he's DJing around the world.
40:21So we'd like to put some money towards, you know, going to see him DJing in different
40:24countries.
40:25Right, so lots of travel and lovely things for the family.
40:28I hope you get to do all of that.
40:30Now, to take that money home, you have to face Henry's riddle run.
40:33Henry, what exactly is your riddle run?
40:35In the riddle run, you'll be facing puzzles in which words are represented by combinations
40:39of pictures and letters.
40:40They're often known as rebus riddles, and the answers are phrases or sayings or a combination
40:45of words that are familiar to all.
40:47Thanks so much, Henry.
40:48Well, Sam and Sue, you've done so well to this point.
40:51Now, the rules here are simple.
40:53There are ten riddles in all, and you need six correct in 60 seconds to take home the money
40:59that you've built up so far.
41:00Now, if you're not sure about a particular riddle, say pass, and you can come back to it.
41:04And that's not all.
41:06If you do answer six correctly, you'll then have the chance to double your winnings and
41:11take home £5,000.
41:13And don't worry.
41:14If it all went wrong, you would still go home with our collectible teacup and saucer,
41:18and you can have one for each home.
41:20You don't have to share it.
41:21All right.
41:22First of all, of course, you've got to face Henry's riddle run.
41:24Are you both ready?
41:25Bring it on, please.
41:26Good luck.
41:27Henry, over to you.
41:28Thanks, Ravi.
41:28Your 60 seconds will start as soon as the first riddle is revealed.
41:32Let's play.
41:34Stuck in a rut.
41:35Stuck in a rut.
41:35Correct.
41:36Star jump.
41:37Correct.
41:39Weak.
41:40Weak at the knees.
41:41Correct.
41:45Shakespeare vocabulary.
41:46Pass.
41:48A search engine.
41:49Correct.
41:51Last but not least.
41:52Last but not least.
41:53Correct.
41:54Seven deadly sins.
41:57Been the sins.
41:58Symbid.
41:58Correct.
42:04Lovely.
42:04And you can relax.
42:06Six correct riddles means you've just won £2,500.
42:11Henry, there was, I think, maybe one pass in there, I think.
42:14Three right.
42:14One little pass.
42:15Just a little break in the middle, a little pass in the middle, and then another three.
42:17Absolutely right.
42:18Well done.
42:18Let's have a quick look at them again.
42:20Yeah, you got this one very quickly.
42:22Stuck in a rut.
42:22The word rut and the word stuck inside it.
42:26You got this one right.
42:28Star jump.
42:28Very simple, yeah.
42:29It's a pretty one, though.
42:30I like the look of it.
42:30Nice.
42:31Yeah, lovely, isn't it?
42:32Such a kind of winning vibe.
42:34Yeah, it is.
42:34Yeah, I love it.
42:36Yeah, star jumping over a hurdle.
42:37This next one.
42:38Oh, yes.
42:39Yeah, weak at the knees.
42:40Love this one.
42:41All the days of the week in the middle of the legs there.
42:43That's weak at the knees or weak knees.
42:45And this next one.
42:47Oh, what is this?
42:47This was the one you passed on.
42:49Yeah.
42:49So you said Hamlet vocabulary.
42:50That's, of course, what's written there.
42:51But what is Hamlet?
42:53Shakespeare.
42:54Yeah.
42:54What would you call it?
42:55It's not a book.
42:55It's not a film.
42:56It's a play, yeah.
42:57Play on words.
42:58Play on words is the right answer.
43:00Yeah, vocabulary being words, of course.
43:01Play on words, because it's on top.
43:03This next one.
43:05Looking for something with the magnifying glass.
43:07Searching.
43:07And the word engine there.
43:08Search engine.
43:09Yeah.
43:10Last, but not least.
43:11Yeah.
43:12So the E is crossed out, of course.
43:13So it is last.
43:14And it's not least.
43:15So it's last, but not least.
43:17And then finally, it's actually only six of the sins in the bin.
43:20So it's not to do with seven.
43:22It's just sin bin.
43:23So you've managed to win two and a half thousand pounds.
43:25And if that's enough for you, then we're delighted.
43:27And you can finish the game and you can leave with that money.
43:32Or you could choose to face one last riddle.
43:35Now, this time you'll have just 20 seconds to give an answer.
43:38If you get it right, you will double your winnings
43:41and take away five thousand pounds.
43:43But if you can't find the right answer in that time,
43:47you will lose everything and you'll leave with nothing
43:49apart from, of course, the teacup and saucer.
43:52So what would you like to do?
43:54We've had this discussion so many times.
43:55Have you?
43:57I would gamble.
44:00And you would never gamble.
44:02I'd never think of him.
44:04Mum's the word.
44:05Aww.
44:06We'll take the money, thank you.
44:07You're going to take the money.
44:08Yeah, take the money, final answer.
44:10Sam and C, you are definitely walking away with two and a half thousand pounds.
44:13But just for you, Sam, do you want to see what it might have been?
44:18Yes.
44:19Let's see what it would have been.
44:20Let's take a look.
44:21You would have had 20 seconds to come up with an answer to this.
44:26Just you and me.
44:28Um.
44:28Just you.
44:29Er, er, just, er, just you and me.
44:32Just in the middle.
44:36Er, in the middle of you and me.
44:37No, you.
44:38Just you and me.
44:39Oh, I'm so pleased that I don't know it.
44:42Er, just.
44:45Just you and me.
44:46Just between.
44:46No.
44:46You and me.
44:48I'm afraid you've run out of the time there.
44:49The correct answer is just between you and me.
44:52Because the word just is written in between the word you and the word me.
44:55Well, I'm glad you didn't gamble too, because your mum would not have forgiven you for that one.
45:00You guys said you wouldn't.
45:01Sam and Sue, very well done.
45:02Thank you so much for being on the show and you have won two and a half thousand pounds.
45:06Thank you very much.
45:06And thank you so much, Henry.
45:08Ridiculous riddles today, each and every one.
45:10Thank you very much.
45:11I salute you.
45:11Well done, sir.
45:12Once again, thank you so much for joining us from home too.
45:15Hope you enjoyed the show.
45:16We'll see you next time for more Ridiculous riddles.
45:21Thank you so much.
45:37Bring us back together.
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