- 1 day ago
Category
📺
TVTranscript
00:17Good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio.
00:20On the very day that way back in 1867, the Nobel Prize winner for literature, John Galsworthy, was born.
00:28He won the Nobel Prize, actually, for literature in 1932, you'd be interested to know.
00:32And what surprised me was that the Nobel Prize, the first Nobel Prize for literature, was awarded in 1901.
00:38I thought it was much later, but I was wrong.
00:42And John Galsworthy carried it off in 1932.
00:45He married his cousin's wife and died at the age of 65.
00:49But just after, I guess, having finished the Foresight Saga, a series of novels about a family,
00:56and, of course, it turned into an absolute blockbuster of a TV series.
01:01Anyway, there we are.
01:02Now, which books have turned into TV programmes that you've particularly enjoyed?
01:08Well, this year, did you see Big Little Lies?
01:10No.
01:11Oh, I thought it was brilliant.
01:12It was a seven-parter and I didn't realise it was a miniseries, so it just suddenly finished and I
01:17was distraught.
01:18But that was really good. Very dark.
01:19And that came out of a book of some sort?
01:21Yeah, it did. I didn't realise. I think it's one of those ones where I might go back and have
01:24a look at the book.
01:25Excellent stuff.
01:25It's a good series.
01:26All right, who's here?
01:28Sarah. Sarah Caperode is here from Stirling, a consulting engineer.
01:33Big win on Friday.
01:35Yeah.
01:35You did very well. Did you enjoy it?
01:36I had a great time, yes. Thank you.
01:38Excellent stuff. Well done.
01:39Sarah, you're joined by Randy DeCruz.
01:42Played to a welder from Leeds.
01:44You used to be a semi-pro musician.
01:46Loved to play his guitar to all types of music.
01:49Welcome. Are you a big Countdown fan?
01:50Absolutely.
01:51When did you start watching?
01:531982.
01:54When it first started?
01:55Yeah.
01:55You were a pioneer.
01:57Pioneer, yeah.
01:58An early adopter, as we call you.
02:00All right. Brilliant.
02:01Well, listen, I hope you have a great day today. Enjoy it.
02:06Thank you, Nick.
02:07Enjoy it, and good luck to you both.
02:08Let's have a big round of applause for Randy and Sarah.
02:14And over in the corner, of course, we've got Susie Dent.
02:17And for the last time, until she comes back, the wonderful Helen Fospero.
02:22Welcome back.
02:25Always a pleasure.
02:27Always a pleasure to have you here.
02:28Am I coming back again or not?
02:30You are coming back.
02:30Is that a formal invitation for next time?
02:32Yes.
02:32There's a contract waiting just outside.
02:34Excellent.
02:35We've already signed it.
02:36Oh, really?
02:36It's down to you to sign it.
02:37Oh, OK.
02:37We'll do that at the end of the show.
02:39It's unpaid, of course.
02:40Now, let's get down to business here.
02:42What about Sarah?
02:43Let's have a letters game, shall we?
02:45Hi, Rachel.
02:46Hi, Sarah.
02:47Can I start with a consonant, please?
02:49Start the week with D.
02:51And another, please.
02:53S.
02:55And a vowel.
02:57E.
02:58And a consonant.
03:00V.
03:01And another.
03:04R.
03:05And a vowel.
03:07I.
03:09And another.
03:11E.
03:12And a consonant.
03:15T.
03:16And a consonant, please.
03:19And lastly, P.
03:21And here is the countdown clock.
03:23I.
03:24I.
03:26And.
03:51I.
03:55Sarah?
03:55Just a six.
03:57A six.
03:57Randy?
03:58A seven.
03:59And a seven.
04:00Sarah?
04:01Served.
04:02Randy?
04:04Strived.
04:05Absolutely fine, yes.
04:06We always have to check the past tense.
04:07It can be strove or strived.
04:09So it's absolutely fine.
04:10Very good.
04:11And which would you have picked?
04:13What would I have picked?
04:14I would have picked priested.
04:17Priested?
04:18Which has eight.
04:19Heron's priest.
04:20There's a lovely...
04:22Dylan Thomas poem about priesting herons.
04:25Oh.
04:26Formally it means it's ordained to the priesthood.
04:28OK.
04:30Seven points to Randy.
04:31And Randy's letters came now.
04:34Yes, Randy.
04:34Hi, Rachel.
04:35Hi, Randy.
04:37Consonant, please.
04:39Start with N.
04:40And another one.
04:42L.
04:43And a third.
04:46T.
04:46And a vowel.
04:48U.
04:49A second.
04:50A.
04:51And a third.
04:53O.
04:54Consonant.
04:56H.
04:58Vowel.
05:00I.
05:02And a consonant.
05:03And the last one.
05:04S.
05:05Stand by.
05:06So...
05:08And a consonant.
05:36I won't.
05:36Randy? Seven. And Sarah? Six. And that's six? Insult. Now, Randy. I'm going to try outlayed, O-U-T-E
05:49-L-A-I-N.
05:50Mm-hmm. Oh, it's not there, unfortunately. Outlayed would have been there. I'm very sorry, Randy.
05:59OK. Bad luck. What can we have, I wonder? Helen, Susie?
06:03We found an interesting seven-letter word, Lutinos. Which is? Yes. Made on the pattern of albinos, they are birds
06:13such as parrots, et cetera, that have more yellow in their plumage than usual. The Latin for yellow is luteus.
06:20Especially caged birds of the parrot family are Lutinos.
06:28Very good. Sorry, I didn't mean to make that odd noise.
06:33But there we are. I couldn't help it. And now, Sarah, it's your numbers game.
06:38Could I have two large and four small, please?
06:41You can indeed. Thank you, Sarah. Two from the top row. Four little for the first one of the week.
06:45And this selection is four, nine, five, one, twenty-five, and seventy-five.
06:55And the target, four hundred and sixty-five.
06:57Four, six, five.
07:31Four, six, six.
07:32One away. Randy?
07:34I've gone wrong. Gone wrong.
07:36Let's stick with Sarah. Now then, Sarah.
07:39I did five plus one is six times seventy-five.
07:44Four hundred and fifty.
07:45And twenty-five minus nine is sixteen, and added on.
07:49Yep, one away.
07:50Very good. Not quite perfect, though. Four, six, five.
07:54Rachel, tricky?
07:55A couple of ways.
07:57You could have said seventy-five plus twenty-five is one hundred times five, five hundred, and then nine times
08:06four, thirty-six, minus one, thirty-five, and taken away.
08:10Mm, very good.
08:12Very good.
08:13Well done, Rachel.
08:14So, with the score standing, Sarah on thirteen, and Randy on seven, we turn to our first Tea Time teaser,
08:21which is Late Slice.
08:23And the clue, if you want to get this, then reach for the sky.
08:27If you want to get this, then reach for the sky.
08:47Welcome back.
08:48I left with the clue.
08:48If you want to get this, then reach for the sky.
08:51And the answer to that is, uh, Celestial.
08:55Celestial.
08:56Thirteen plays, uh, seven.
08:58And, Randy, it's your letters game now.
09:02Time to catch up.
09:03Right, can I start with the consonant, please?
09:05Thank you, Randy.
09:06N.
09:07And another one.
09:09L.
09:10And another one.
09:13N.
09:13And a farce.
09:15M.
09:16A vowel.
09:18E.
09:19Another one.
09:20I.
09:21Another vowel.
09:23A.
09:24A consonant.
09:26T.
09:27And a vowel, please.
09:28And the last one.
09:29Aye.
09:32Standby.
09:32Or a vowel, please.
09:33A vowel.
09:33A vowel.
09:44I am a vowel.setby.
09:47I am a
09:49vowel. Let me know.
09:49, I am a
09:50amلك swoo
09:50vowel. You
09:51know. Whatever I am.
10:01What do I am?
10:04Yes, Randy?
10:06Six.
10:06A six.
10:07And Sarah?
10:08And a six.
10:10Randy?
10:11Inmate.
10:12And Sarah?
10:13Menial.
10:15There we go.
10:16That's absolutely fine.
10:17Yep.
10:17Any advances on six?
10:19I didn't do very well, so I'll leave it to you.
10:22There is an eight there, Nick.
10:23A liniment.
10:25A liniment being a liquid or ointment that you rub on the body to relieve pain.
10:30Yep.
10:31Yep.
10:31A liniment major.
10:36Nineteen plays.
10:38Thirteen.
10:39Sarah, it's your letters game now.
10:41Could I have a consonant, please?
10:43Thank you, Sarah.
10:44F.
10:45And another?
10:47W.
10:48And a vowel?
10:51E.
10:52And a consonant?
10:54Z.
10:55And a vowel?
10:57U.
10:58And another?
10:59Another?
11:00A.
11:01And a consonant?
11:03P.
11:04And another?
11:06S.
11:07And finish with a vowel, please.
11:10And finish with E.
11:13Stand by.
11:13Theielen.
11:15T.
11:16T.
11:18T.
11:18T.
11:19T.
11:20T.
11:33T.
11:44Yes, Sarah?
11:45Say five.
11:47And Randy?
11:48Five.
11:49Yes, Sarah?
11:50Pause.
11:51And Randy?
11:52Pause.
11:53Same?
11:53Pause.
11:54All right.
11:56Now then, in the corner, Helen Smiley, what have you got?
12:00Feels like I'm in the naughty corner.
12:01We got pause as well, but also you could have had peas.
12:04As in peas pudding, which is five, two.
12:07But struggled to get anything bigger, didn't we?
12:08Yeah.
12:09Nothing much there.
12:10What is peas pudding, anyway?
12:12Peas pudding is split beans that are boiled to a pulp.
12:16So it was a savoury pudding.
12:18Doesn't sound very appetising, but...
12:20No, I'm not desperate for one.
12:22All right.
12:2424 plays, 18.
12:25And Randy, it's your numbers game.
12:28Good luck.
12:29Can I have one large and five small, please?
12:32You can, indeed.
12:33Thank you, Randy.
12:33One large.
12:34Five little coming up.
12:35And this time, they are three, four, one, eight, seven.
12:42And the large one, 50.
12:43And the target, 371.
12:47Three, seven, one.
12:48One large.
12:49Two, three, seven, five.
12:55All right.
13:18Randy.
13:19No, I've gone wrong again.
13:21How about Sarah?
13:233-7-1.
13:243-7-1?
13:24Well done.
13:25And?
13:2650 plus 3.
13:2853.
13:29Times 7.
13:30That's it.
13:30Yep.
13:31That's right.
13:31Well done.
13:32Well done indeed.
13:34APPLAUSE
13:35OK, so 34 plays 18.
13:38Randy on 18.
13:40And Helen, Little Bird tells me you've become quite at home
13:44in a steel cap, boots and a helmet and some high-vis jackets.
13:48What's going on?
13:49I've been rocking safety goggles and fire-retardant suits and hard hats
13:54because I got involved in a new project called Working Eye.
13:57And I've been making or helping to make what I hope will become
14:02a library of careers films that will go in senior schools up and down the country.
14:07And the idea behind them is to show children like my daughter, who's 13,
14:12give them an idea of what subjects they should choose at GCSE and A-level,
14:16and also just explain, you know, what people do for a living
14:19and a warts-and-all look at what the actual job involves.
14:22And the man who dreamt this idea up was inspired, I think Sarah will like this,
14:27was inspired by Professor Brian Cox, who a couple of years ago said
14:31the reason this country is short of engineers is because we don't really know what an engineer does.
14:36So the first few films we've made have been in the engineering field, hence the hard hats and the high
14:43-vis jackets.
14:43We've been working in the steelworks industry, aviation, watching those big North Sea wind farm blades being made,
14:50which are 75 metres long, interviewing mechanical engineers, chemical engineers,
14:55lots of them, I'm pleased to say women, who have taken STEM subjects and realised that engineering is a great
15:00career.
15:00But the idea is that hopefully by the end of next year, this library will be in all senior schools
15:06and you can go and pull out a film and see what a doctor does or a nurse or, you
15:11know, whatever subject you fancy, really.
15:12Having a teenage daughter as well makes me realise how little there is, you know, out there really about careers
15:18and what people do.
15:19So, you know, it's been an interesting project.
15:21I think so many youngsters just leave school with no idea really what they're going to do.
15:25And then they get into this sort of, you know, they're not moored to any sort of industry or sector
15:30at all.
15:30It also looks at apprenticeships as well, and I think they're coming back.
15:33I mean, I was an apprentice journalist. I didn't go to university.
15:36I think a lot of industry now are looking at apprenticeships as well.
15:39We're at an aviation company, and they're not now taking graduates anymore.
15:43They will only take apprentices, and if they feel a degree is needed, they'll send them to university.
15:49Yeah.
15:49You know, they're being trained on the job.
15:51There we go. Anyway, well done.
15:55Very good, Helen.
15:57Good work, as we say.
15:5934, please.
16:0018, and we turn to Sarah for letters again, yes?
16:03Could I have a consonant, please?
16:05Thank you, Sarah.
16:06L.
16:06And another.
16:09W.
16:10And a vowel.
16:11I.
16:12And a consonant.
16:15R.
16:16And another.
16:18X.
16:19And a vowel.
16:21O.
16:22And another.
16:24I.
16:26And a consonant.
16:29R.
16:31And finish with a consonant, please.
16:34And finish with...
16:36C.
16:38Stand by.
16:39T Nor side.
16:59And a vowel.
17:07And a vowel.
17:10Sarah.
17:11Just a four.
17:12A four. Randy.
17:14Four.
17:14Two fours.
17:15Sarah.
17:16Coyle.
17:18And Randy.
17:19Oric.
17:21Oric.
17:21O-R-I-C.
17:23Not there, Randy, I'm afraid.
17:25Orc is there.
17:27We're thinking about Tolkien, but no, Oric.
17:29Sorry.
17:30Coyle is there.
17:31Coyle is certainly there.
17:33Anything above four?
17:35We have.
17:35We've got crowl, C-R-O-W-L.
17:39Is that where you catch a crab in?
17:41No, it's a Scottish and Northern English term for the smallest and weakest animal or bird in a litter or
17:47brood.
17:48Oh, like a runt?
17:49Yes, like the runt.
17:50So, Sarah on 38, Randy on 18.
17:53And Randy, letter's time for you.
17:55Can I have a consonant, please?
17:56Thank you, Randy.
17:57R.
17:58And another one.
18:00G.
18:01And a third.
18:03L.
18:04A vowel.
18:06E.
18:07A second one.
18:09A.
18:10Another vowel.
18:12E.
18:13Consonant.
18:14M.
18:16Vowel.
18:18O.
18:19And a consonant, please.
18:20And the last one.
18:22T.
18:22And the clock starts now.
18:25And the other one.
18:29.
18:29.
18:29.
18:29.
18:29.
18:29.
18:29.
18:31.
18:31.
18:55Randy?
18:57.
18:57Er, seven.
18:59Sarah?
19:00a risky eight.
19:02Right, Randy.
19:05Er, gleamer.
19:08And Sarah?
19:10I've just realised I've used the A twice. Amortage, but there's not two A's.
19:13That's a withdrawal.
19:15What about Randy's words?
19:17No, I'm afraid that was the first word I looked up and gleamer is there but not gleamer.
19:21So, Randy's not having much luck today I'm afraid.
19:23Oh dear.
19:23a gleaner well there are a few sixes regale and morale but there was an eight
19:31which i think rachel's got telegram telegram yeah telegram indeed
19:40so hurrying on sarah on 38 randy on 18 and it's sarah's numbers game now sarah
19:46can i have one large and five small please thank you sarah one big five little coming up
19:52and for this round the five small ones are six nine four seven and one and the big one 100
20:02and the target 730.
20:36sarah
20:37730 730 randy 730 thank you sarah i did nine times four is 36 yep minus the six 30 and
20:50then
20:50seven times 100 lovely plus seven thirty well done and randy add a hundred plus four 104
21:01times seven seven hundred and twenty eight and nine minus six is three yep three minus one is two
21:08marvellous 10 30.
21:10smashing well done
21:13well done so 48 plays 28 we turn to our second tea time teaser which is liar pulse and the
21:21clue
21:21is it what you do when you tell more than one fib is it what you do when you tell
21:28more than one fib
21:46and the answer to that is
21:58and the answer to that is
21:59and the answer to that is
22:00so 48 to 28 sarah in the lead and it's randy's letters game yes randy
22:04can have a consonant please thank you randy d and another one r and a third l a vowel
22:15e a second a a third o consonant r a vowel
22:24e and a consonant and the last one s countdown
22:31and the last one s
23:01randy um eight and eight sarah nine randy uh resolder sarah reloaders
23:13reloaders very good very happy to say that both are in the dictionary yeah very very good
23:23that jumps your score up to 66 fantastic randy good 28 as we turn to sarah
23:29after her recent triumph it's sarah's letters game can i have a consonant please thank you sarah t
23:36and another b and another b and a vowel a and a consonant n and a consonant m and a
23:52vowel
23:53o and a vowel e and a consonant t and a final consonant please and a final c
24:04thank you
24:06thank you
24:20so
24:37Yes, Sarah?
24:38Just a six.
24:39A six. Randy?
24:40I'll have to try a nine, won't I?
24:42Why not? Great man. Sarah?
24:45A baton.
24:47Now then, Randy.
24:48Yeah, combatant.
24:51Combatant. Are you spelling it with an E?
24:53C-O-M-B-A-T-E-N-T?
24:56Yeah, it's A-N-T, unfortunately.
24:59That is bad luck.
25:01Sorry.
25:02Very bad luck.
25:03Yeah.
25:03Brave try.
25:04Brave try.
25:05Fighting try, in fact.
25:06All right, six to six to 28, but in the corner, your nine.
25:11Yes, my nine is, I'm still looking for that.
25:14Seven boatmen?
25:15Yep, why not?
25:17And Susie, anything else?
25:19Boatmen in a canoe, perhaps.
25:21But, yeah, that was our best of seven.
25:22Well done.
25:24So, Susie, what have you for us today in your origins of words slot?
25:31Well, I've talked before about a few words that have passed over into English from cartoons,
25:37so they were used in very specific senses in cartoons and then crept into mainstream language.
25:42So I thought I'd do a few more today.
25:44I've mentioned Shazam, which is Captain Marvel's famous magic word in Wiz Comics, and Jeep as well.
25:53Jeep obviously stands for GP, general purpose for the vehicles, but was definitely influenced by Eugene the Jeep.
25:58And then there's malarkey as well, usually taken to be an alteration, if you like, of an Irish surname,
26:06but also goes back probably to an American cartoonist who used that surname as a byword for nonsense.
26:13I don't know if it was anti-Irish or not, but certainly, again, that's probably how it crept into the
26:17language.
26:17But I was going to concentrate on a couple.
26:20One is a goon, and it's thought to originally derive from an old English dialect word, goony,
26:26and that was used by sailors to describe really cumbersome-looking, quite weighty seabirds like albatrosses and pelicans.
26:35A bit like boobies, actually.
26:37Boobies were very heavy seabirds that were very, very easy to catch,
26:43and so the boobie prize comes from there, which is something that was very easy to gain and so not
26:48particularly valuable.
26:49In the same way, goon came to be used for a dull-looking or a slow-witted person.
26:54But the Popeye cartoonist, E.C. Seaguar, created the character of Alice the Goon in his cartoon strip
27:02and portrayed her as somebody, I think she was a giant, she was about eight feet.
27:07And so, again, that kind of crept into the language as a hired heavy or a thug,
27:11somebody who was just very big but not particularly sharp.
27:14And finally, possibly my favourite, Zilch.
27:17We use Zilch to mean zero or nothing.
27:20But when it was first used, it was a nickname for a useless or hopeless character or non-entity,
27:26and that was because of a cartoon strip that appeared in the Ballyhoo American humour magazine in the 1930s,
27:33and it featured a hapless businessman who you never actually saw,
27:36but he was called President Henry Zilch.
27:39Zilch. So, President Zilch, I think, could come in useful at some point.
27:43But again, that goes back to the cartoon.
27:46Well done.
27:51Go ahead, Owen.
27:53Lovely.
27:5472 to 28.
27:56Randy, your letters go.
27:58Can I have a consonant, please?
28:00Thank you, Randy.
28:00S.
28:01And another one.
28:02B.
28:04A third.
28:06T.
28:07And a fourth.
28:09S.
28:11Can I have a vowel, please?
28:12U.
28:13Another one.
28:14A.
28:15Another vowel.
28:17I.
28:18A consonant.
28:20Y.
28:21And a vowel.
28:22And lastly, E.
28:25Countdown.
28:26E.
28:27E.
28:28E.
28:32E.
28:35E.
28:37E.
28:38E.
28:41E.
28:42E.
28:42E.
28:42E.
28:45E.
28:46E.
28:47E.
28:48E.
28:49E.
28:49E.
28:50E.
28:50E. E.
28:51E. E.
28:57Yes, Randy?
28:58Seven.
29:00Sarah?
29:01Just a five.
29:02And that five?
29:03Stubbs.
29:05Yes, Randy?
29:06Er, busiest.
29:07And Helen?
29:08Busiest.
29:09That's what we had.
29:10That's it?
29:10Yeah.
29:11Busiest.
29:12Moving on.
29:13It's 72 playing 35.
29:15Sarah on 72.
29:16Sarah, final letters game for you.
29:18Can I have a consonant, please?
29:20Thank you, Sarah.
29:21L.
29:22And another?
29:24H.
29:25And a vowel?
29:27U.
29:29And a consonant?
29:31D.
29:32And a vowel?
29:34O.
29:35And another vowel?
29:37I.
29:38And a consonant?
29:40F.
29:41And a consonant?
29:43P.
29:45And a final vowel, please.
29:47And a final E.
29:50Countdown.
29:52What the reading?
30:10Here comes your voice.
30:10I'm not a consonant.
30:10I'm not a consonant.
30:10You're not that Spanish.
30:10You're not too important.
30:21Yes, Sarah?
30:22A six.
30:23A six.
30:24And Randy?
30:26A seven.
30:27Seven.
30:27Sarah?
30:29Upheld.
30:30Upheld.
30:31Randy?
30:31Up-filed.
30:33Up-filed.
30:36Um...
30:36Oh, you can't up-file, Randy.
30:38At least not in the dictionary yet, I'm afraid.
30:41Sorry.
30:42What can we have, I wonder?
30:44Well, we could have had up-field, so nearly there, Randy.
30:48And also hopeful for seven.
30:51Hopeful.
30:5178 to 35, final numbers game.
30:54Randy?
30:55One large and five small, please.
30:57Thank you, Randy.
30:58Last one of the day.
30:59One big five, little.
31:01And they are seven, four, nine, ten.
31:06Another ten.
31:07And they're large on 75.
31:10And a target to reach 875.
31:13Eight, seven, five.
31:14And a target to reach 875.
31:45Randy, 875, Sarah, no, I haven't got it, no, Randy, I did 10 times 10, 10 10 is 100, times
31:579, times 9, 900, 7 minus 4 is 3, yep, 75 over 3, gives you 25, and that's perfect, 875.
32:07Well done.
32:12A cracking performance there, Randy, well done.
32:16So, 78 to 45 as you go into the final round, so, fingers on buzzers, concentrating, we're rolling today's Countdown
32:24Conundrum.
32:56No, we're stumped.
32:58Who in the audience will offer, no, all right, let's roll it, let's roll it and see what it is.
33:06Here we go, it's Croissant.
33:09The game finishes, 78 to Sarah, Randy on 45, well done, Randy, well played, well played.
33:15You take this goodie bag back to Leeds with our very best wishes, and you keep watching Countdown.
33:21I've been watching it since the very first day.
33:24Absolutely, yeah.
33:24That's brilliant, thanks for coming.
33:26And we shall see, we shall see you tomorrow, well done again.
33:30See you tomorrow, thank you.
33:30Two wins, got a teapot.
33:32See you tomorrow, Sarah.
33:33See you tomorrow.
33:34All right.
33:35And we'll see you tomorrow, Susie, sadly not Helen.
33:38I might just turn up.
33:39Well, you're always welcome here.
33:41I come and sit in the audience.
33:43Well, you could sit on Barry McGuigan's knee, actually, he's coming tomorrow.
33:46Really?
33:46Yeah.
33:47He's a lovely chap, actually, Barry, he's a smashing bloke, but thank you so much for
33:50coming, and you come back and see us soon, it's been a real pleasure.
33:53Thank you for having me, it's very nice.
33:55Well done.
33:55Well done.
33:56My mum used to say, don't hurt my Barry.
34:00She adored him, actually.
34:01He's lovely.
34:02He is superb.
34:04Lovely.
34:04We'll see you tomorrow.
34:05See you tomorrow.
34:06Join us then, Barry McGuigan, don't hurt my Barry, he'll be here, same time, same place,
34:10you be sure of it.
34:11A very good afternoon.
34:13Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com, by Twitter at C4Countdown, or write to us
34:20at Countdown Leeds LS3 1JS.
34:23You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
34:31Clever clogs back in the spotlight, but who's the cleverest clog of them all?
34:35Channel 4's child genius back tonight from 8 o'clock.
34:39New show next.
34:40Guess your way to big money.
34:41Hey, it's Noel Evans on the cheap, cheap, cheap.