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00:04Well, good afternoon, good afternoon, and good afternoon to a very noisy audience we've got today.
00:10Welcome to the Countdown Studio.
00:12Now, are you a doodler?
00:13And if so, what do your doodles mean?
00:16Now, apparently, according to cryptologists, if you doodle when you're sort of absent-mindedly doodling,
00:22your doodles can say an enormous amount about you.
00:25For instance, did you know that circular doodles, scribbles, represent the need for love and belonging,
00:32whereas the square is the need for material security?
00:36The triangular shape, the triangular-shaped doodle, that is, represents the need for achievement in one's works.
00:45Fascinating, because I doodle all the time.
00:47In fact, I'm looking at my doodles, and they're all square.
00:50Not only are they square, Rachel, but they are boxes.
00:52I always draw boxes.
00:55And actually, I sort of like boxes and even collect boxes.
00:58Now, apparently, that means that I need material security.
01:01So that's me, squares.
01:03What about you, Rachel?
01:04I think that's the biggest load of rubbish I've ever heard.
01:08So they're trying to say you draw squares so you're materialistic.
01:11Was that it?
01:12No, I need material security.
01:14I don't know.
01:14Which is true.
01:15I mean, I don't want to disparage any of your attire, Nick, but I've seen your jacket, one of your
01:20coat, your tweed coat and your hats and your briefcase.
01:22And judging by those, you don't need new things very often.
01:26Well, I don't know.
01:27I don't know.
01:28But do you doodle?
01:29That's my question.
01:30I do.
01:31And do you have a particular sort of doodle?
01:33I'd kind of like spirograph.
01:35If I'm on the phone to a, you know, utilities company and on hold forever, then that's the only time
01:41I would.
01:41But I don't know what that says about teenage boys as well, because they always do a particular distinct form
01:46of doodling.
01:46We're moving on.
01:47So I would love to ask the graphologist.
01:49I used to do those.
01:51I remember.
01:51I'm sure you did.
01:52Yeah.
01:52They always had a big nose.
01:58Now, we're joined today.
02:00Well, of course we're joined today by Zate Sempre.
02:03Welcome back, Zate.
02:04Afternoon.
02:04Brilliant.
02:05To four great wins, all of them over 100.
02:09I'm not trying to frighten your contestant, but the last one was 128.
02:13And who is your contestant?
02:15It's Patrick Gray from Bingley, NHS administrator, and a big, big football fan.
02:20Is that right?
02:21That's right, yes.
02:21And your team is?
02:22Bradford City.
02:23And what have they done brilliantly?
02:25Well, back five years ago, four years ago, they were in the final of the Capital One Cup, as it
02:32was then.
02:33First team from the bottom tier for, oh, about 50 years.
02:37Yeah.
02:37Beating three premiership sides on the way.
02:40Name them.
02:42Wigan, Arsenal, and Aston Villa.
02:45Arsenal, you say?
02:46Yes.
02:46I bet Sousa was unhappy in those days.
02:49All right.
02:51And then, at the end of the year, we beat Northampton 3-0, and they got promotion.
02:58The Cobblers.
02:59That's right.
03:00Well, well done, Bradford City there.
03:02I'm sure grateful to have you as a devoted fan, Patrick.
03:05Yeah.
03:05Well, good luck to you both, Patrick and Zate.
03:08Good luck to you.
03:08Big round of applause.
03:13And there are Arsenal fan Susie Dent is over there.
03:18Had a miserable time back in 2013, I guess.
03:21Well, for an afternoon, anyway.
03:23And she's joined by wild animal biologist and TV presenter, the wonderful Liz Bonin.
03:29Welcome back, Liz.
03:33Welcome back.
03:34And Zate, your letters go.
03:36Afternoon, Rachel.
03:37Afternoon, Zate.
03:38Start with a vowel, please.
03:39Start today with O.
03:41And a consonant.
03:43Y.
03:44And another.
03:46P.
03:47And a third, please.
03:50R.
03:51And a fourth.
03:53S.
03:54And a vowel, please.
03:55I.
03:56And another.
03:57A.
03:58And a vowel, please.
04:01I.
04:02And a final consonant, please.
04:05And a final T.
04:07And here's the countdown clock.
04:39Zate.
04:40Seven.
04:41Patrick.
04:41Six.
04:42And that's six?
04:43Pastry.
04:45Pastry and topiary.
04:47Topiary.
04:48Nice.
04:49Quite neat.
04:50Very neat.
04:51Clip, clip.
04:52Now, in the corner, Liz and Susie.
04:55We didn't get another seven.
04:57No.
04:58But there's a few sixes.
05:00Yeah.
05:00Parity, spirit.
05:02I was hoping for spirito, musical direction, but it has to be conspirito.
05:06I see.
05:07So that doesn't work.
05:08But topiary is excellent.
05:09So well done to Zate there.
05:11Now, let's try Patrick.
05:12Patrick.
05:13Good afternoon, Rachel.
05:15Afternoon, Patrick.
05:16Can I have a consonant, please?
05:18Start with G.
05:19Vowel.
05:21U.
05:23Consonant.
05:24D.
05:26Consonant.
05:28R.
05:30Vowel.
05:31O.
05:33Consonant.
05:35S.
05:36Vowel.
05:38E.
05:45And lastly, I.
05:49Stand by.
05:49C.
05:51Vowel.
05:53I.
05:53E.
06:12And lastly.
06:13I.
06:14I.
06:14I.
06:14I.
06:19I.
06:19I.
06:21Patrick.
06:22Six.
06:23A six and Zate?
06:25Eight.
06:25And an eight.
06:26Patrick.
06:27Gifted.
06:28Yes, Zate.
06:30Stodgier?
06:31Stodgier is excellent.
06:33I'm afraid there's no F, Patrick, for gifted.
06:36Sorry.
06:38And now what can we have?
06:40In the corner, Susie and Liz.
06:43Another eight, outsider.
06:46Very good.
06:47So 15 to Zate and...
06:49Let's have a numbers game, Zate, shall we?
06:522-1-2-1, please, Rachel.
06:54Thank you very much, Zate.
06:552-1-2 and a one.
06:57And these little ones are nine, three, ten and five.
07:02And the big two, 50 and 75.
07:05And the target, 895.
07:088-9-5.
07:40Now, Zate?
07:41Yep, 8-9-5.
07:438-9-5.
07:448-9-5.
07:45Thank you, Zate.
07:479 plus 3 is 12.
07:49Yep.
07:49Times 75.
07:508 is 900.
07:52And take five.
07:52There we go, well done.
07:53And Patrick.
07:54Exactly the same.
07:55All good.
07:56Good.
07:58Close off the block.
08:0025 plays.
08:0110 as we turn to our first tea time teaser, which is fetid rice.
08:05And the clue, the accountant had all the qualifications, but was declared insane.
08:11The accountant had all the qualifications, but was declared insane.
08:32Welcome back.
08:33I left with the clue, the accountant had all the qualifications, but was declared insane.
08:39He was, in fact, certified.
08:40He was a certified accountant.
08:43Certified.
08:4325 to 10.
08:45Zate in the lead.
08:46Patrick, your letters go.
08:48Er, consonant, please.
08:49Thank you, Patrick.
08:51R.
08:52And a vowel.
08:53U.
08:55Consonant.
08:57B.
08:58Vowel.
08:59A.
09:01Consonant.
09:03M.
09:04Vowel.
09:06U.
09:06Consonant.
09:09L.
09:10And a consonant.
09:13F.
09:14And a vowel.
09:15And the last one.
09:16E.
09:18Stand by.
09:20Ce1.
09:21C.
09:22C.
09:23C.
09:23C.
09:24C.
09:31C.
09:50Patrick.
09:51Six.
09:52Six.
09:53Zati?
09:53I will stick with a six.
09:55Thank you, Patrick.
09:57Lumber.
09:58Lumber and rumble.
10:00Rumble.
10:01Yes.
10:02Let's rumble.
10:04Now, Liz and Susie.
10:07There are a couple of other sixes.
10:09Yes.
10:11Flambé.
10:12Yeah.
10:13Amble, armful.
10:16Fumbler would be there for seven.
10:18I don't know if that's what you were thinking of.
10:19What was that?
10:21Fumbler.
10:21Fumbler.
10:22Somebody fumbles around.
10:23Very good.
10:2431 plays 16, and it's Zati we turn to.
10:26Yes, Zati.
10:28Start with a consonant, please, Rachel.
10:29Thank you, Zati.
10:30X.
10:30And another, please.
10:33M.
10:34And a third.
10:36T.
10:37And a fourth.
10:39P.
10:40And a vowel, please.
10:41A.
10:42And another.
10:44I.
10:44And another.
10:46O.
10:48And another.
10:50U.
10:52And a final vowel, please.
10:56And a final E.
10:58Stand by.
11:00year.
11:16realized.
11:17I.
11:17I.
11:17I.
11:17And honor.
11:30Sate.
11:31Seven.
11:32And Patrick.
11:33Five.
11:34And that five?
11:35Expat.
11:36Expat.
11:37And mixtape.
11:40Ooh.
11:41Er, didn't see that one.
11:42And it is all one word.
11:43Well done.
11:44Excellent.
11:45What a clever one.
11:49Very good.
11:50Mixtape.
11:51Mmm.
11:52Now, Liz and Susie.
11:54Ooh.
11:55There's a seven matipu.
11:56Er, er, a kiwi plant.
11:58Oh, yes.
11:59Anything else, Susie?
12:00Er, no, we like that one.
12:01You have a black matipu, red matipu with dark red bark.
12:04Sounds quite beautiful.
12:05That'll give you a seven.
12:06Good seven.
12:0738 plays 16.
12:08And Patrick.
12:09It's a numbers game for you.
12:11Can I have one large, please, Rachel?
12:13And five small.
12:14You can indeed.
12:15Thank you, Patrick.
12:15One from the top.
12:16Five Littlands.
12:17And this time, the small ones are four, nine, five.
12:23Ooh.
12:24One and three.
12:25And the big one, 50.
12:27And the target, 163.
12:29One, six, three.
12:45One, six, four, nine, five, six, six, six, seven, six, seven, six, seven, six, seven, six, seven, six, seven, seven,
12:45seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven,
12:45seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven,
12:45seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven,
12:45seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven,
12:45seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven, seven
13:02Patrick?
13:021-6-3.
13:04And?
13:041-6-3.
13:06Sir Patrick?
13:0750 times 3 is 150.
13:09It is.
13:10And add 9 and 4.
13:12Very straightforward again.
13:13And Zate, there we are.
13:15Nothing too complicated about that.
13:19So, 48 to 26.
13:21Zate in the lead as we turn to Liz.
13:24And Liz, you're talking today about something or someone even that you met in Panama.
13:30Well, an animal that I've been dreaming of having an encounter with for years, the sloth.
13:36A three-toed sloth in Panama that I had the great pleasure of meeting with one of the world's most
13:42renowned sloth scientists.
13:44And the Panama rainforests are incredibly humid and damp.
13:48So, fungus and mold is always growing.
13:50And even on the sloth's fur, being such a slow-moving animal, you get this green hue of algae that
13:57grows on the fur.
13:58Sure. And scientists think that one of the reasons is that as very slow-moving animals, they're easy targets for
14:08harpy eagles or jaguars.
14:12And so, the algae serves as a bit of a camouflage as it moves slowly across the forest.
14:17It's a green hue, camouflages it a little bit.
14:19But for the algae to really flourish on their fur, they need a bit of help.
14:24They need food to grow and to do well on the fur.
14:27And that's where it gets really interesting because the fur of the sloth is so filled with ants and spiders
14:34and particularly moths, there has to be a reason for it.
14:37When you get up close to one, I can tell you it's quite disconcerting.
14:42Hundreds of moths are crawling around any one animal's fur at any one time.
14:46And the reason for that is when the moths finally die in the sloth's fur, their dead bodies, or actually
14:53their excrement, feeds the algae.
14:55So, there's a reason for the sloth to want to keep all of these creepy crawlies on its fur.
15:00It's actually providing nutrients for the algae to flourish, therefore giving the sloth more camouflage.
15:04But there's an extra angle to this.
15:07The sloth has to help the moths to continue their life cycle or, in fact, to complete their life cycle.
15:12And to do that, it's got to do something really, really dangerous.
15:15It's a slow-moving arboreal creature, but every week or so, it will go, right, this is it.
15:21I've got to get off this tree, and I've got to defecate in order for the moths to complete their
15:27life cycle.
15:27So, it scurries down the tree, and it looks around.
15:30It actually doesn't scurry.
15:32It moves very slowly down the tree.
15:34Defecates.
15:35The moth jump off its fur, lay their larvae in the poop, climb back up on the fur,
15:41and then those larvae will emerge, and they'll feed on the feces and continue the life cycle, right?
15:49So, is everybody following me?
15:50It's a little bit...
15:51Isn't it beautiful how these two completely different species are helping each other out?
15:56And so, by the sloth helping the moth to continue their life cycle,
16:00it maintains its food source for the algae, and then the algae thrive.
16:05The extra final bit of the puzzle is, not only does the algae provide camouflage for the sloth,
16:10it also provides food for the sloth.
16:13Sloths are folivore.
16:14They're very specialist leaf eaters.
16:15They don't get a lot of nutrients from the leaves.
16:18And so, by feeding, by literally licking their fur, they get extra nutrients from the algae.
16:24Algae are full of fats and extra nutrients that the sloth wouldn't get otherwise.
16:27So, it's a wonderful, mutually beneficial system going on with three different species,
16:32the algae, the moths, and the sloths.
16:35It's wonderful.
16:37Lovely.
16:3948 to 26, Zarte on 48, and...
16:43Wow.
16:44Zarte, you're back again.
16:45Start with a consonant, please.
16:47Thank you, Zarte.
16:48T.
16:49And a vowel.
16:51A.
16:52And another one.
16:54I.
16:54And a third, please.
16:57O.
16:58And a consonant.
17:00S.
17:01And another.
17:03D.
17:04And another.
17:05T.
17:06And a vowel, please.
17:09E.
17:10And a final consonant, please.
17:12And a final W.
17:14Stand by.
17:45Yes, Zarte?
17:47I will stick with a seven.
17:49A seven, Patrick?
17:50Seven.
17:51Zarte?
17:52Toadies.
17:54And twisted.
17:56Twisted?
17:57Yeah.
17:58Also had toasted.
17:59Two good sevens?
18:00Toasted.
18:01And toasted.
18:02Susie, anything else?
18:03Yeah, no, toadies was the one we had as well.
18:06Person who behaves secrecy.
18:08But also in Australian English, it's a puffer fish.
18:11A toady.
18:12I should have known that.
18:13So 55 to 33.
18:16Patrick.
18:16Doing well here, Patrick.
18:18Your letters again.
18:19Can I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
18:21Thank you, Patrick.
18:22N.
18:23And a vowel.
18:25I.
18:26And a consonant.
18:28L.
18:29And a vowel.
18:31A.
18:32And a consonant.
18:34D.
18:35Vowel.
18:36E.
18:38And a consonant.
18:40G.
18:42And a vowel.
18:44U.
18:46And a consonant, please.
18:47And to finish, N.
18:50Stand by.
18:50D.
18:52D materiality.
18:55D For Bu load.
19:17D For Buyersarios.
19:21Well, Patrick.
19:22Seven.
19:23And Zate?
19:25I'm going to try nine.
19:27Good man.
19:28Patrick?
19:29Landing.
19:30Landing and?
19:31Unaligned.
19:32Something can be unaligned.
19:34Excellent.
19:35Very, very good.
19:38Well done.
19:42Unaligned nations, I think.
19:44Yeah.
19:44Unaligned.
19:45And in the corner, what can we offer?
19:49We had unaligned a couple of sixes other than that, but that's it.
19:53That's it.
19:55Unaligned indeed.
19:5673 to 33, and it's Zate we call upon for a numbers game.
20:02Thanks, Nick.
20:022-1, 2-1, please, Rachel.
20:04Same as usual.
20:05Thank you, Zate.
20:06And this time around, your selection is 1, 10, 6, 7, 25, and 50.
20:15And the target to reach 874.
20:188, 7, 4.
20:51Zate.
20:52Yeah, 8-7-4.
20:54And Patrick?
20:548-7-5.
20:558-7-5. Zate?
20:5710 plus 7.
20:5917.
21:00Times 50.
21:01850.
21:02Add the 25.
21:038-7-5.
21:04And take one.
21:05Yeah, well done.
21:07APPLAUSE
21:09Well done.
21:1183 plays 33 as we turn to our second tea-time teaser,
21:15which is I Rang Milk.
21:17And the clue, I rang the milkman
21:18and ordered an extra pint for the cat.
21:21I rang the milkman
21:22and ordered an extra pint for the cat.
21:34APPLAUSE
21:43Welcome back.
21:44I left you with a clue.
21:46I rang the milkman and ordered an extra pint for the cat.
21:50And the answer to that one, Susie, is Grimalkin.
21:54Grimalkin?
21:55What is this?
21:55It's a great word.
21:56Yeah, it comes from a grey malkin.
21:59So it was a grey cat, but it was especially an old she-cat,
22:04and it was also contemptuously applied to an old spiteful woman,
22:08someone who was jealous or imperious in some way.
22:11A Grimalkin?
22:11A Grimalkin.
22:12It's a great word.
22:13Hmm.
22:14First time I've come across that.
22:1683 to 33.
22:18Patrick, your letters go.
22:19Can I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
22:22Thank you, Patrick.
22:23S.
22:24And a vowel, please.
22:25A.
22:26Consonant.
22:28N.
22:30Consonant.
22:32P.
22:33Vowel.
22:35I.
22:36Vowel.
22:37O.
22:39Consonant.
22:40R.
22:42Consonant.
22:43H.
22:44And a vowel, please.
22:46And lastly, E.
22:47Stand by.
22:50BELL RINGS
22:51BELL RINGS
22:54BELL RINGS
22:56BELL RINGS
22:58BELL RINGS
23:05BELL RINGS
23:05BELL RINGS
23:05BELL RINGS
23:06BELL RINGS
23:06BELL RINGS
23:06BELL RINGS
23:21Patrick, six.
23:23A six and eight.
23:25And eight for Zate.
23:27Patrick.
23:28Parrish.
23:29Zate.
23:30A for eyes?
23:32A for eyes.
23:33A for eyes, yes.
23:34To create an aphorism or a witchy saying.
23:36Very good.
23:37Mm.
23:37Yep.
23:38Clever.
23:39Now, Liz and Susie.
23:41There was also nine.
23:43Yes.
23:44Orphanise.
23:45Orphanise.
23:46Oh, well done.
23:48Excellent.
23:51Well, well, well.
23:52Excellent.
23:53We'll leave it there.
23:5591 to 33.
23:56Zate, your letters go.
23:58Start with a vowel, please.
23:59Thank you, Zate.
24:00I.
24:01And a consonant.
24:03B.
24:04And another.
24:07M.
24:08And a vowel, please.
24:09U.
24:10And a consonant.
24:12N.
24:12And a vowel, please.
24:14A.
24:15And a consonant.
24:16L.
24:18And a consonant, please.
24:21D.
24:22And a final vowel, please.
24:27And a final E.
24:29Stand by.
24:31D.
24:32And a consonant.
25:03Dodgy eight.
25:05How about Patrick?
25:06Dodgy eight.
25:09Zate?
25:10Unlimbed.
25:12Patrick?
25:13Unmailed?
25:16Unmailed is in, not in the way I thought, a sort of postal way,
25:20but actually not covered or protected by chain mail.
25:23It goes back to the 18th century.
25:24And unlimbed, to unlimbed someone is to dismember them unpleasantly,
25:29but it's in the dictionary, so both very good.
25:31Well done.
25:32APPLAUSE
25:33So, 99.
25:36Zate.
25:37Relentless.
25:3899 to 41.
25:39It's Susie.
25:40It's your origins of words.
25:43I'm going to talk cheeks today, believe it or not, and words in English that involve the cheeks of our
25:49face in some way.
25:52And I'm going to start with leery.
25:54Leery is something that you really don't want to be or be on the receiving end, as someone who's leery
25:59these days.
26:00It actually is a word that began life very innocently in Anglo-Saxon times, even though these old English ancestors
26:06of the word are now completely obsolete.
26:09So, the source is chlur, which is an old English word for the face or the countenance of someone.
26:16And this leery, in a way, was used in, as I say, very, very positive ways.
26:20So, you would find expressions like lovely leer or lovesome of leer or someone's lily-like leer, which is a
26:27beautiful, alliterative expression.
26:29How did it change?
26:30Well, the cheek sense, as a noun, leer, indirectly inspired the verb leer, to look over your cheek, to look
26:37askance at someone or obliquely at someone.
26:40And gradually, that idea of voyeurism crept in.
26:42So, you weren't looking at someone directly.
26:44You were looking at them in a slightly sly or malevolent kind of way.
26:49And that is how it turned, really, and it spun completely around.
26:54And by the time that Milton was using it in Paradise Lost, he talks of the devil as he looks
26:58askance at Adam.
26:59Aside, the devil turned for envy, yet with jealous leer, malign, eyed them askance.
27:04By that time, it had become completely negative.
27:07And so, it has stayed ever since, which I think is a bit of a shame, really, because it was
27:11quite sweet.
27:12But there's another word that actually meant cheek around that time, and that was cheer.
27:17So, cheer comes in the Greek, charo, meaning head.
27:19And it came to mean not just your face, but your expression or your mood.
27:24So, you might be in positive cheer, in heavy cheer, sorrowful cheer.
27:29It simply summed up the way that you were feeling that day.
27:32And what cheer became an incredibly common greeting around the 16th, 17th century.
27:36You would meet someone, instead of hello, you would say, what cheer?
27:39How are you? How is your mood today?
27:41And unbelievably, that what cheer changed into what cheer?
27:44And finally, if you were cheeky towards someone, a little bit disrespectful or mischievous,
27:49the idea is simply of someone's cheeks moving as they rudely answer someone's back
27:54with some kind of, someone back with a kind of witty retort.
27:57So, lots of cheeks, hidden and not so hidden, facial cheeks, I should say,
28:03that you will find all the way through the history of English.
28:05Oh, well done. Thank you.
28:11So good. Thanks. Thanks, Susie.
28:13Now, 99 to 41, Zarty on 99, lead us to say, and it's Patrick's letters game.
28:21Good luck, Patrick.
28:21Can I have a consonant, please, Rachel?
28:24Thank you, Patrick.
28:24R.
28:26Vowel.
28:27I.
28:29Consonant.
28:30D.
28:31Vowel.
28:33A.
28:34Consonant.
28:36V.
28:38Consonant.
28:39T.
28:40Vowel.
28:42O.
28:44And another vowel, please.
28:47E.
28:49And a consonant.
28:50And lastly, L.
28:53And here's the countdown clock.
28:54E.
28:56E.
28:56E.
28:58E.
29:01E.
29:05E.
29:07E.
29:25Patrick.
29:26Eight.
29:27Eight.
29:28Zate?
29:28Also eight.
29:29Patrick.
29:30Violated.
29:31Violated and?
29:32Deviator.
29:34And deviator.
29:35Very, very good, both.
29:36Mm.
29:39Can we match it, Liz and Susie?
29:42We can with one more eight, Dovetail.
29:45Dovetail, yeah.
29:46Yeah, nice.
29:47Excellent.
29:48Eights all round, 107 to 49, and Zate, here we go, final letters game.
29:54Start with a vowel, please.
29:56Thank you, Zate.
29:57A.
29:57And a second.
29:59O.
30:00And a third.
30:02A.
30:02And a consonant, please.
30:04F.
30:05And another.
30:06P.
30:07And another.
30:09V.
30:10And a fourth.
30:11H.
30:13And a vowel, please.
30:16U.
30:17And a final consonant, please.
30:20And a final D.
30:22Stand by.
30:24diagnosed.
30:30We've got a vowel.
30:36We've got a vowel.
30:37We've got a vowel, a vowel.
30:54starting got a three how about Patrick three sorry what's happening here what three is this
31:04you speak fat now Patrick pod let's see what Susie and Liz have been up to one not a lot
31:13more
31:13no no so tricky oh well well 110 to up 52 Patrick numbers go can I have one large Rachel
31:24and five
31:25small please you can indeed thank you Patrick finish the day off with these five smalls which
31:30are six six three seven and five and the big one 100 and the target 727 727
31:48so
31:58so
32:12Patrick.
32:1472, sir.
32:16Sate.
32:16727.
32:18Patrick.
32:18100 plus 3.
32:20103.
32:22Times 7.
32:24721.
32:25And add one of the sixes.
32:26Another simple one.
32:27727.
32:28And Sate.
32:30Exactly the same.
32:31There we are.
32:33OK.
32:38So, 120 plays 62.
32:40We go into the final round.
32:42Good luck to you both.
32:43Fingers on buzzers.
32:44Let's roll today's countdown conundrum.
32:48Patrick.
32:50Patrick.
32:51Sorry.
32:51No.
32:52No.
32:52No.
32:52Down to you, Sate.
32:56Thank you, Sate.
32:57Condiment.
32:58Condiment.
32:59All right.
32:59Let's have a look and see whether you're right.
33:01Condiment.
33:02Oh, well done.
33:06Well done.
33:08Sate.
33:08High score today.
33:09130.
33:10Fantastic.
33:11Patrick, you put up a very good old fight there.
33:13You really did.
33:15What was that buzzing going on?
33:16What happened there?
33:17Sorry.
33:19You snatched at it.
33:20Snatched.
33:21All right.
33:21Well, you did very well.
33:2262.
33:23Very, very respectable score.
33:25Thank you very much for coming.
33:26You take your goodie bag back to Bingley.
33:30Did you enjoy it?
33:30Oh, it's brilliant.
33:31Yes.
33:32Excellent.
33:32Well, we enjoyed having you.
33:33Thank you very much.
33:34Thanks for coming.
33:35Well done.
33:36And he marches on.
33:38Five wins for Sate and the highest score yet.
33:42Brilliant.
33:43We shall see you.
33:44We'll see you tomorrow.
33:45Indeed.
33:45Thanks.
33:45Congratulations.
33:46Well done.
33:47And we'll see you both tomorrow, Liz and Susie.
33:49Of course.
33:50And Rachel, there's no stopping in.
33:52It's ridiculous, isn't it?
33:53The highest score yet and one of those winning words was a three-letter word.
33:56Exactly.
33:57Well done.
33:58See you tomorrow.
33:59See you tomorrow.
33:59Join us there and see what Sate gets up to tomorrow.
34:01Same time, same place.
34:03You'll be sure of it.
34:03A very good afternoon.
34:06Contact us by email at countdown at channel4.com, by Twitter at C4Countdown, or write to us
34:13at Countdown, Leeds, LS3, 1JS.
34:16You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.
34:24One Born Every Minute returns tonight for a brand new series.
34:27Lives are about to change and you get to be there from the very beginning, nine o'clock.
34:31Next today, Crufts Extra with Alan Carr and Claire Balding, live.

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