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00:30Hello, everybody. It's Bank Holiday Monday.
00:33It's May the 4th and Countdown is here to deal with all the letters and numbers by the bucket load.
00:40Thank you very much for tuning in.
00:42Let's head over to Dictionary Corner.
00:44Dealing with any faulty words, it's Susie Dent, of course.
00:48Goodness gracious me, Nina Wadia, is back.
00:51And happy to tinker with the numbers as necessary is our Rachel Riley.
00:57Good afternoon.
00:57I didn't get the Easter eggs.
00:59Right. So many of them.
01:00Tinker is Alice.
01:03Faulty is Sybil.
01:04Nessa is Jenkins.
01:06Bucket is actually Bouquet.
01:09And that is Hyacinth.
01:10Because just a welcome back, Nina.
01:12We're talking today about your favourite female sitcom character ever.
01:18Now, Nina, that's so hard for you, so you're going last.
01:21Yes.
01:21Right, Rachel, who's yours?
01:22I mean, I'm going to just be predictable.
01:24You know what show I'm going to say.
01:25Yes.
01:26Friends.
01:27Which one, though?
01:28You've got to pick one out of three.
01:30I think it's got to be, for me, between Monica and Rachel.
01:33I think Monica, early days, is the best character.
01:36But I like how Rachel just kind of stayed normal, where some of them turned into caricatures.
01:40So I've got to go with my namesake.
01:43What about you, Suze?
01:45I have two.
01:46So old school would be Mary Richards in The Mary Tyler Moore Show.
01:49I'm probably the only one old enough to remember this.
01:51But she was amazing.
01:52I think she was such a strong, independent woman.
01:55And also Lorelei Gilmore in The Gilmore Girls.
01:57Good.
01:58Which I've watched with my daughters, and she's brilliant.
02:00She's resilient, witty.
02:01Lovely.
02:02Here's the definitive answer, Nina.
02:04I think I'm going to have to go with Patricia Ratlidge, Keeping Up Appearances, Mrs. Bouquet.
02:09I mean, what an incredible actress.
02:13And that character still stands true.
02:16You know, incredible.
02:18I mean, I did love Wendy Craig as well in Butterflies.
02:21Oh, great shout.
02:22Amazing.
02:22Yes.
02:23Amazing.
02:24I thought you were going to say, I thought about it.
02:26I'd probably go with Mrs. Hussain, because I'm brilliant.
02:30I'll tell you who he is.
02:31Absolutely stealing the show.
02:33Three in a row as our Patrick Thompson, our champion.
02:36Nina, you've arrived in the midst of a really special player.
02:39They're 115, 105 and 124.
02:44What?
02:45Like, just very special indeed.
02:46And you're taking on the lovely Helen Humby, a Londoner by birth, living in Bournemouth now.
02:51But, well, travelled, Helen, and you worked out at a church in Spain, learned the language, everything.
02:56That must have been an amazing experience.
02:58Tell us about it.
02:59It was interesting.
03:00Yeah, we went out in the late 80s to early 90s, about six years.
03:05Kids were small then, and so they learned Spanish in six months.
03:09Mum and Dad were struggling.
03:11But we stayed out there six years.
03:12We were working with the Protestant church out in a little town called Medina del Campo.
03:17No other English people.
03:19So it was a really wonderful time, really.
03:22So, yeah.
03:23Well, listen, I'm warning you.
03:24English only today.
03:25Yes, only in.
03:26Let's see what happens.
03:27Helen Patrick, best of luck.
03:32OK, let's see if he is Ab Fab today.
03:35Patrick.
03:35Good afternoon, Rachel.
03:36Good afternoon, Patrick.
03:37Have a consonant, please.
03:38We start the week with S.
03:40And another.
03:42G.
03:43And another.
03:45W.
03:46And another.
03:47R.
03:48And a vowel.
03:49I.
03:50And another.
03:51E.
03:52And another.
03:54O.
03:55And a consonant, please.
03:57N.
03:58And one more consonant, please.
04:00Lastly, F.
04:02Atom and in the studio.
04:04Let's play Countdown.
04:06MUSIC PLAYS
04:36Patrick.
04:36Seven.
04:37Seven from you.
04:38And Helen.
04:38Five.
04:39The five is?
04:40Swing.
04:41Yes.
04:41And the seven, Patrick?
04:43Wingers.
04:44Wingers.
04:45Let's head over to Dictionary Corner,
04:46because I like these letters.
04:47I wonder, are you going to have a great start to the week?
04:49Possibly.
04:50Yes, we have got a nine, actually, to kick off.
04:53Four wings.
04:54Yes.
04:55And insects, four wings.
04:56That's amazing.
04:57APPLAUSE
05:00What a start for Dictionary Corner.
05:02Helen, let's get more letters from you.
05:03Hi, Rachel.
05:04Hi, Helen.
05:04Could I have a consonant, please?
05:06Yeah, indeed.
05:07R.
05:08And another, please.
05:10P.
05:11And another.
05:13C.
05:14And a vowel, please.
05:16I.
05:17And another vowel.
05:19O.
05:20And another vowel.
05:22U.
05:23And a consonant, please.
05:25T.
05:27And a vowel, please.
05:29E.
05:31And a consonant.
05:33Lastly, S.
05:35Perfect.
05:3630 seconds.
05:37MUSIC PLAYS
06:06Helen.
06:08An eight, I think.
06:09An eight.
06:10And Patrick?
06:11An eight as well.
06:12Helen?
06:12Precious.
06:13Patrick?
06:14Pictures.
06:15A precious picture has been painted here.
06:17Perfect, perfect.
06:18Very good indeed.
06:20We have one more to add to the list, which is crepitus,
06:24which is kind of crackling.
06:25You can get crepitus in your lungs or in your joints.
06:27Yes, indeed.
06:27Yes.
06:28Again, flirting with back-to-back nines.
06:30You know, really nice letters.
06:32Yeah, really nice letters.
06:33Loads of endings and prefixes and all sorts going on again.
06:36What a lovely start.
06:36Well done, Helen.
06:37Eight points on the board this early is great.
06:40And, Patrick, are you choosing the first numbers?
06:42Four lives, please, Rachel.
06:43Thank you, Patrick.
06:43Don't need to ask.
06:44That's your favourite.
06:45You're an expert.
06:46You're a pro.
06:46You're practised.
06:47Two little ones to start the week.
06:49Eight and six.
06:50And the big ones.
06:5125, 75, 50 and 100.
06:55And you need to find 455.
06:58Four, five, five.
06:59Numbers up.
07:01Two, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five,
07:12five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five,
07:14five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five,
07:14five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five,
07:14five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five,
07:14five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five
07:304-5-5, Patrick.
07:32Yeah, 4-5-5.
07:33Helen?
07:34I haven't got anything.
07:35You and me both.
07:36I'm really intrigued.
07:37I wonder what he's going to do.
07:38Off you go.
07:3950 minus 6.
07:4050 minus 6, 44.
07:42Times the 8.
07:43Times the 8 for 352.
07:48Add the 100.
07:50452.
07:50And then add the 75 over 25.
07:52Add 75 over 25 is 3.
07:5410 points.
07:55Well done.
07:58Wonderful again in the numbers from Patrick.
08:00A joy to watch as we get this Tea Time teaser.
08:03Arty sign.
08:04Arty sign.
08:05The copper with the kink sounds fishy to me.
08:08The copper with the kink sounds fishy to me.
08:27Welcome back.
08:28Another one of those Tea Time teasers where the clue is much more fun than the answer.
08:32So we get to Stingray.
08:33Obviously, it sounds fishy to me.
08:35But you're going to try and work this out.
08:37The copper with the kink.
08:39So?
08:40Sting.
08:41Sting.
08:42Brilliant.
08:42From the police.
08:43And what's the kink?
08:45Someone in the kinks.
08:46Sting Davies from the kink.
08:48Brilliant.
08:49Very good.
08:50Oh, excellent.
08:51Excellent.
08:52Right, let's get back to it.
08:53Helen, let's see these nine letters throw up.
08:56Consonant, please.
08:57Thank you, Helen.
08:59And another one.
09:01And another, please.
09:05And a vowel, please.
09:08Another one.
09:12Another one.
09:14A consonant, please.
09:19Another vowel, please.
09:23O.
09:25And a consonant.
09:27Lastly, P.
09:29Here we go.
10:01Helen.
10:02Just a five.
10:03And for you, Patrick?
10:04Seven.
10:05The five, Helen?
10:06Maids.
10:06And the seven, Mr Thompson?
10:08Stadium.
10:09Stadium.
10:10There's just wingers and stadiums and all sorts going on here.
10:14Inspired by the sport.
10:15Nina, what can we add to that, if anything?
10:18Is there a plural of utopia?
10:21Yes, utopias.
10:22You can say that?
10:23You can.
10:23That will give you a lovely seven.
10:25Oh.
10:25And podiums as well.
10:27Oh, there you go.
10:28Sport again.
10:28You would settle for one utopia, though, wouldn't you?
10:31That's great.
10:32Anyone will do.
10:33Two seems greedy to me.
10:35More letters, Patrick.
10:37A consonant, please, Rachel.
10:38Thank you, Patrick.
10:39G.
10:40And another.
10:42L.
10:43And another.
10:44T.
10:45And another.
10:47R.
10:48And a vowel.
10:49E.
10:50And another.
10:51O.
10:52And another.
10:54A.
10:56And a consonant.
10:57Q.
10:59And a final consonant, please.
11:00And a final L.
11:02Let's do it.
11:04And a consonant.
11:12And a Việt.
11:13And a Portuguese.
11:13I.
11:13And a consonant.
11:34Patrick?
11:35Seven.
11:35Yep, and Helen?
11:37Yeah, I've got a seven.
11:38Yes.
11:38Patrick?
11:39Glowter.
11:40Yes.
11:40I've got the same.
11:41Pass it on over.
11:42Don't gloat, just pass.
11:44There you go, two sevens, Nina?
11:45Same.
11:46I'm a gloater too.
11:47Right, yeah.
11:48Just jumped out, didn't it?
11:49And we're all very happy with ourselves for about 25 seconds.
11:53And nothing beyond it.
11:54The cue made it a lot more straightforward, didn't it?
11:57So let's get back to the numbers.
11:59I mean, Patrick likes his four large,
12:01but Helen, you do whatever you want.
12:03Let's find out.
12:04I'll have one large and the rest small, please.
12:07A more traditional choice.
12:08Yes, more popular, you might say.
12:10Let's have a look.
12:11Five little ones.
12:13Two, one, three, four, ten,
12:17and the larger one, 25.
12:19And the target to reach 839.
12:23839.
12:24Numbers up.
12:56The one large wasn't large at all, the 25.
12:59Helen?
13:00No, I didn't.
13:01810.
13:02Yeah.
13:02Always difficult with a high number in the 25.
13:05Patrick, our numbers, Wiz.
13:07840.
13:08Well, he's missed it by one.
13:09Off you go for seven points.
13:1025 times three.
13:1225 times three, 75.
13:14Two times four.
13:15Two times four, eight.
13:17Add that on.
13:1883.
13:19And the one.
13:2084.
13:21Times it by the ten.
13:22Yep.
13:23One away.
13:24Now, is that as good as it gets, Rachel,
13:26or can we get to 839?
13:28This one was possible.
13:29If you say 10 plus one is 11,
13:32times 25, 275.
13:36Add four for 279.
13:38Times that by three for 837.
13:41And you have a two left over for 839.
13:44Magic.
13:46Lovely.
13:4846.15 as we get over to Nina for her first chat of the week.
13:52Do you enjoy doing Countdown in terms of, like,
13:55when you look at your diary, you go,
13:56oh, that's a little something different, isn't it?
13:58Yeah, it's fun.
13:59I like doing different things, you know.
14:02And this, I watched Countdown growing up as a kid,
14:05so when I got on this, I thought if my mum had still been around,
14:08she would have absolutely loved it.
14:10She'd be like, I can't believe it.
14:11She wouldn't have watched anything else I did.
14:13It would have just been Countdown.
14:15So, yeah, but I just like to do different things.
14:19And it's, you know, I do a lot of workshops with young people,
14:21and they always say, so how are you still relevant?
14:24Because you get to a certain point in your career,
14:26and people go, oh, she's been around for years, you know,
14:28why do we bother anymore?
14:29So I got offered a musical last year,
14:31and I've never done a musical before,
14:33so I took a chance and did it.
14:34And it was called Now That's What I Call a Musical,
14:37based on the Now CDs and things from the 80s.
14:40Oh, wow, yes.
14:40Craig Revel Hall were directed, which was hilarious.
14:43And then we had every single pop star that I grew up with,
14:46who I loved.
14:47So I had Sunita on one week, we had Carol Decker,
14:50Jay Osmond, can I just tell you, weirdest moment of my life,
14:54in a Bradford in Nando's with Jay Osmond,
14:57while we were up there, instead of working for the week,
15:00and I just thought, what's happened to my life?
15:03It was very, very bizarre and strange.
15:05Did you sing before, professionally?
15:08No, never sung professionally.
15:10And I've turned down musicals before,
15:11because I've never been trained professionally.
15:13But I can hold a note, I love to sing.
15:14Yes.
15:15So, and I thought, it's my genre, it's the stuff I loved,
15:18you know, growing up with the 80s.
15:19So I thought, yeah, let's give that a go.
15:21I think when I got my first record player,
15:24I think it would have been like, I don't know,
15:26like 1979, 1980, and then like the now albums
15:30were always part of the Christmas package.
15:33Completely.
15:33And, you know, taking it out, and just that whole mix,
15:35there was no like scene, or like, you didn't have to be cool.
15:39No.
15:39You know, and you'd take it out, and oh, there's Boris Gardner.
15:43There's a whole mix of music in together.
15:46It's true, we used to have a fight about like,
15:47why are they on there?
15:48No, they shouldn't be on there.
15:49No, they should be number one to all of that,
15:52but I absolutely love it.
15:53I still think the 80s were actually a really pure time.
15:57Yeah.
15:57You know, that's why I think TV shows that are also set,
16:00like in the 80s, like Stranger Things,
16:02one of the reasons it's successful is it was a time
16:04where you didn't have mobile phones dominating
16:07most of the storyline.
16:08You know, you didn't have that kind of communication.
16:10You had to wait till you got home to make a phone call
16:12or to communicate with other people.
16:14And so I just, I loved that era.
16:16I always have done.
16:17And also 75 to sort of maybe say 95,
16:20there was just so many new genres of music.
16:22And music was reinvented so many times.
16:25Very much so.
16:25And it was so exciting.
16:27And I also think we never pay enough credit
16:29to what you were involved with,
16:31which is the now that's what I call music,
16:33which is in that musical,
16:35like there was just such great pop music.
16:37Yes.
16:37It came out of the 80s as well.
16:39Whether it was manufactured or written by someone else
16:41or written by the band,
16:42it was a great era for pop as well.
16:43Yeah, very much so.
16:45And it was nice to actually work with these people,
16:47you know, being on stage with someone like Sonia,
16:49who, by the way, still looks 14.
16:51You know, she's, and she's so cute.
16:53She's so lovely.
16:54We, when we would work in different sort of cities
16:57all over the UK,
16:58wherever we walked down,
17:00people would go crazy,
17:01like absolutely crazy,
17:02going, oh my gosh, it's her.
17:03And we went to a little charity shop
17:04and I said, hey, let's look through the records.
17:07And there she was going, there's me, there's me.
17:09I'm going, this is wild.
17:11This is absolutely wild.
17:12Lovely. Thank you, Nina.
17:13No worries.
17:16Right back to the game.
17:17Patrick, that's what I call countdown.
17:19Off you go.
17:20Consonant, please, Rachel.
17:21Thank you, Patrick.
17:23H.
17:24And another.
17:26N.
17:26And another.
17:28M.
17:29And another.
17:30B.
17:33Vowel, please.
17:34E.
17:36And another.
17:36A.
17:37And another.
17:38O.
17:39And another.
17:41E.
17:43And one more, please.
17:45Lastly, I.
17:47Start the clock.
18:19Patrick? Eight. And for you, Helen? I've got an eight. Excellent stuff. Patrick? Bohemian. Bohemian. Pass it on over there
18:27and then we'll be in Rhapsody. Excellent work. Eight points. And I can't remember Bohemian coming out in my time
18:35here, Susie. No, not me, actually. It's a lovely, lovely spot and we can't top that one. We just had
18:39one seven otherwise. Hambone. Hambone? Yes. An inferior actor. Right. Helen, let's do the Fandango again.
18:48Consonant, please, Rachel. Thank you, Helen. N. And another. R. And another, please. T. Vowel. A. Another vowel. U. Consonant.
19:06D.
19:07G. A vowel, please. O. Consonant. G. And the final vowel, please. And the final. A.
19:20Half a minute.
19:21T. Vowel. A vowel, please.
19:52Helen? A six. Patrick? Eight. An eight. Where have you got an eight in there? Let's find out. Helen?
19:58Outran. And for you? Argonaut. Oh, my goodness me. It's a small floating octopus and the female has webbed sail
20:06-like arms and secretes this sort of shell in which she lays her eggs.
20:11Yeah. Lovely. So, that's sensational. I'm guessing... Beat us.
20:15You're all at sea. We are. Great stuff. Patrick, let's get the numbers.
20:19Four lives, please, Rachel. Thank you, Patrick. Four from the top row and two others.
20:24This time, your little numbers. Three and six. Big ones.
20:29One hundred. Seventy-five. Fifty and twenty-five.
20:34And the target?
20:35Nine hundred and sixty-three.
20:36Nine hundred and sixty-three. Nine-six-three. Numbers up.
21:08At 9-6-3, Patrick?
21:119-6-6.
21:12Three away. Helen?
21:14Nowhere near. Patrick, off you go.
21:16So 75 plus the 6.
21:1981.
21:20Times that by the 100.
21:22Times that by the 100.
21:23Take off the 50.
21:258,100 minus 50.
21:27Divided by the 25.
21:28Divided by the 25 for 322.
21:35And then times that by the 3 for 9-6-6.
21:379-6-6.
21:39Seven points.
21:40I try to learn from Rachel every single day when she does the numbers.
21:44I know it's a multiple of nine, and that's as far as I managed to get.
21:47I don't know if that's going to help us, is it?
21:49Well, not with this one.
21:51But what you could have said is 100 divided by 25 is 4.
21:5650 times 6 is 300.
22:00Take away the 4 for 296.
22:02Times it by 3 for 888.
22:05And then add on the 75.
22:079-6-3.
22:07Oh, yes!
22:09Come on!
22:10Oh!
22:12She's had two belters today.
22:14Fantastic, Rachel.
22:15Let's get this Tea Time teaser.
22:17I love this one as well.
22:18Reclaims.
22:19Reclaims.
22:20We're going to jiggle that about.
22:21And the clue is...
22:22They're beyond belief.
22:23It's getting smoky in here.
22:24They're beyond belief.
22:26It's getting smoky in here.
22:43Hello again.
22:44Yes, the smoky reference, of course, was Robinson and the miracles.
22:47The miracles.
22:48And I think a challenger's going to need a minor miracle to topple our Patrick Thompson.
22:53But there's six rounds left.
22:54You never know.
22:55And, Helen, we're just going to enjoy every single one.
22:57And you're picking these letters.
22:59Consonant, please, Rachel.
23:00Thank you, Helen.
23:02T.
23:03And another one.
23:05J.
23:06And another, please.
23:08P.
23:09And vowel, please.
23:11E.
23:12Another vowel.
23:14U.
23:15Another vowel.
23:17I.
23:19Consonant.
23:20T.
23:22Vowel.
23:25A.
23:27And a final consonant, please.
23:29Final R.
23:30Let's play.
23:55Let's play.
24:01Helen.
24:02I'm dodgy seven.
24:04Dodgy seven.
24:05Patrick.
24:05I'll try seven as well.
24:06OK.
24:07What's the word, Helen?
24:08Jupiter.
24:09Jupiter.
24:09Can you have a small J?
24:11We'll find out.
24:12Patrick.
24:13Apartheid.
24:14Yes.
24:15We were scurrying away on both those words, actually, because Nina asked about Jupiter.
24:18Sadly, it is just a capital J, so it's a proper noun.
24:22Sorry.
24:23Apartheid is in there.
24:24Back to insect's wings, actually, because it means divided nearly to the base, apartheid.
24:28OK.
24:29Anything else?
24:30That was it.
24:30So, there you go.
24:31Helen, you and I cast adrift in that round.
24:34Patrick, let's get more letters from you.
24:36A consonant, please, Rachel.
24:37Thank you, Patrick.
24:38C.
24:39And another.
24:41S.
24:41And another.
24:43G.
24:43And another.
24:45P.
24:46And a vowel.
24:47O.
24:48And another.
24:48A.
24:49And another.
24:51E.
24:52A consonant.
24:54N.
24:55And final consonant, please.
24:59Final W.
25:01Kind dine.
25:04DIN Agency.
25:15DIN CAO.
25:15No, no.
25:16No, no.
25:17No, no.
25:17No, no.
25:26No, no.
25:26No, no.
25:27No, no.
25:28No, no.
25:30No, no.
25:31No, no.
25:31No, no.
25:32Patrick? A seven. A seven from you. And Helen?
25:35Risky seven. Let's throw caution to the wind.
25:38Patrick, what's yours? Cowpeas.
25:40Spell that for me. C-O-W-P-E-A-S.
25:43Thank you. And what's dodgy, Helen?
25:45Snow cap. Oh, like a snow-capped mountain.
25:48Wow, I like the sound of it. So do I.
25:52It's there. Yes. Very nice.
25:55Beautiful. Love that. Beautiful.
25:57There you go. So, all good with Patrick as well?
25:59Very good indeed. Yes, both of them planted the pea family, a cowpea.
26:04Simple as that. And we had another plant.
26:06Cowages. Yes. Cowages there for seven.
26:09It's a climbing plant this time, but beware,
26:11because it causes stinging and itching.
26:12There you go. Sevens all round.
26:14If you've got one of them at home, well done.
26:15As we head over for Origins Awards, Susie.
26:18So, let's start the week strong.
26:20Who's been emailing you? Graham Baker.
26:22Hello, Graham. From Norfolk.
26:24Just the other day, Graham writes,
26:25I used the expression, sent him off with a flea in his ear.
26:28Yeah. Where does that expression come from?
26:32So, to give someone a flea in their ear,
26:34it's to give them a sort of lecture
26:36and a right sort of talking to, if you like.
26:39And it's a really powerful image that goes back a very long way,
26:42and you'll find it in lots of European languages as well.
26:45So, you'll find it in French, you'll find it in German.
26:47And it's a particular kind of discomfort if you have a fly or a flea in your ear.
26:51It's a kind of buzzing, irritating, inescapable and really persistent.
26:56And obviously, also, if you have a flea bite, that's incredibly painful as well.
27:00So, someone who has received a kind of stinging rebuke,
27:04it's quite a nice metaphor for that,
27:06because you just can't, you can't shift it.
27:09And the flea as a source of kind of really irritating closeness
27:13is a sort of image that you'll find throughout medieval and renaissance literature,
27:18actually, in lots and lots of different things.
27:20And it's always a nuisance.
27:23And the ear is the sort of, you know, the way you receive advice,
27:27often unwanted advice.
27:28You can lend someone an ear.
27:30You can have something whispered in your ear.
27:32It's something that is, again, stands for something that is very close and intimate,
27:36even if you don't want this particular advice.
27:38But it made me think also about how fleas pop up in unexpected places.
27:42So, Colin, you know famously that the ukulele is from the Hawaiian for jumping flea
27:47because of the sort of rapid sound of its notes.
27:50You can be as fit as a flea because the flea jumps around, looks very athletic.
27:55And also the adjective puce.
27:57If you go puce, you go a particular kind of red.
27:59And actually that goes all the way back to the French for a flea
28:03because it's the colour of a flea, particularly after it has drawn blood, I hate to say.
28:07But we have flea pits and flea markets, et cetera.
28:10So fleas actually have a pretty big role in language.
28:12Yeah, absolutely.
28:13A tiny, brilliant start to the week.
28:18All right, four rounds from now, we'll be fleeing the studio.
28:2183.30.
28:23Patrick looking to hit his fourth century.
28:27In a row, not a single person in Britain is betting against that right now.
28:32Helen, a really impressive 30 against the onslaught of our champion, Thompson.
28:37So let's keep it up and let's get more letters from you.
28:40OK, consonant, please.
28:41Thank you, Helen.
28:42C.
28:42And another.
28:44T.
28:46And another.
28:47S.
28:48And another, please.
28:50R.
28:52Vowel, please.
28:53O.
28:54And another.
28:55E.
28:57And another, please.
28:59O.
29:01And a consonant, please.
29:04K.
29:05And a final vowel.
29:07Final I.
29:09Good luck.
29:10Nothing.
29:12Nothing.
29:25But.
29:34They're not here.
29:34Okay.
29:34How nice.
29:35Bye.
29:36Bye.
29:36Bye.
29:37Bye.
29:38Bye.
29:39Bye.
29:39Bye.
29:40Helen a very dodgy nine yeah Patrick I'll stick with an eight oh he's not going for it oh I
29:49would
29:49have went for it we are going for it Patrick rockiest okay he's stuck with Rockies just
29:55confirm Helen crookiest the most crooked person is the crookiest come on come on say
30:09exactly that Nina exactly that of course you know you're here you go for it and have fun with it
30:16yeah it felt dodgy as we wrote it down really good fun to go go for it so rockiest is
30:23the road taken
30:24and that gets eight points for Patrick anything else you can't be corkiest well something can be
30:29corkiest yes that kind of thing so that's an alternative eight goodness me last letters
30:35Patrick constantly Rachel thank you Patrick L and another s another L and another n a vowel e and
30:49another I and another a consonant please d and one more please lastly t lost letters
31:05so
31:31time's up Patrick and nine yes Helen and
31:36six the six says island Patrick installed all that that's yeah
31:44any others no other nines no land ties for eight etc but installed is the end one account well listen
31:51Patrick there's been some quite difficult rounds and even with that you could beat your top score so
31:57far of 124 let's see how pans out Helen you're in charge of these last numbers I'll have one large
32:03and
32:03the rest small please thank you Helen one large five little final numbers today are seven nine seven
32:11five one and 100 and the target
32:16eight hundred and ninety nine eight nine eight nine nine last numbers
32:21you
32:51eight nine nine Helen even I can do that what do you mean don't you say that no you're really
32:56good
32:57Patrick yeah off you go Helen nine times 100 minus the one thought you might say that better be the
33:04same
33:04way Patrick yeah same way well look at that Patrick could post his highest score he's on 119 at the
33:14moment Helen could get her half century up there's still something to play for here fingers on the
33:18buzzers please let's reveal today's countdown conundrum Patrick
33:28collabing let's find out yes
33:34collabing is like collaboration and it's just it's on collabing with somebody it's used a lot in PR
33:40isn't it exactly right yeah it's good stuff disappointed that it took Patrick nearly three
33:44seconds to get that one he's slipping he's slipping um Helen listen you've already seen Patrick at work
33:51you knew what you were walking into today I think you did great with 40 and did you enjoy the
33:56whole
33:56experience yeah it's been wonderful thank you very much it's been great thanks you'd have beaten
34:00them in Spanish oh yeah without doubt
34:03rubbish in Spanish anything beyond hola he's getting no chance
34:08Patrick you're getting better and better it's a joy to watch
34:10see you tomorrow well done back of the net again Nina Susie see you tomorrow
34:15and we are all done Rachel have a good night
34:17see you tomorrow listen I wish we were open all hours but we have to make do with Monday to
34:21Friday
34:21same time same place back tomorrow you can count on us
34:26you can contact the program by email at countdown at channel 4.com
34:30you can also find our webpage at channel 4.com forward slash countdown
34:42you
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