- 2 days ago
Category
📺
TVTranscript
00:30Well, good afternoon and welcome to the Countdown studio at the start of Organ Donation Week, NHS campaign.
00:38Try and recruit people to donate their organs in the event of their death to all those people that really
00:45need them.
00:45But next year, next spring, Rachel, as you well know, the new opt-out system comes in when actually you're
00:52a donor unless you opt out.
00:53And you know, the stats are amazing. Three people a day die in need of an organ, and it's thought
01:00that the new system will save as many as 700 people a year.
01:03It's fantastic. And I think I'm right in saying, without burrowing into your privacy, that you are a donor.
01:10Yeah, I've been on the donors list for as long as I can remember. I've been given blood since I
01:14think I was 18 or something like that.
01:16Really?
01:17Yeah, so I've got my bronze badge. I'm in the teens. And when I'm gone, they can have whatever they
01:21like. I'm not taking it with me.
01:24No, indeed. I don't mean to laugh like that. It's terrible.
01:26But I'm not a donor, I'm ashamed to say. But soon, it won't matter. Because I'm certainly not opting out.
01:33How's that?
01:34Yeah, well done. Well done. Good decision by the NHS.
01:39Fiona, you're back.
01:40Yes.
01:41Engineering student at the University of Edinburgh from Dunning in Perthshire. She got a teapot, and you had a wonderful
01:46win on Friday, 98.
01:48Yeah.
01:48First time out. Brilliant. You're very relaxed.
01:51Yeah, yeah, I've really enjoyed it.
01:52Excellent. You're joined by Liam Bastic.
01:55Now, Liam is a management consultant from Derby, but he lives in Victoria, in Australia. And you appeared on the
02:03sort of Australian countdown. And how did you get on when you played in Australia?
02:07Oh, God, I don't really want to admit to that. I did okay. I did the equivalent of what they
02:11call the Octachamp thing over here.
02:13Excellent. And it's popular in Australia?
02:15It is. It's very popular. It still plays on repeat over there now.
02:19Yeah, you were saying that they recorded a number of series, and then they keep rolling it around.
02:24It was weird. It was going all right, and in the middle of the fourth series, they just pulled it
02:29and had, like, a champion of champions, and that was it. I don't know if the budget ran out or
02:33what, but they still keep repeating it. It's on every night.
02:37What about your maths genius down there?
02:39Oh, my daughter, yes. I'm sorry, Rachel, but my daughter is after your job.
02:44Oh, okay. How old is she?
02:45She's ten.
02:46Right, so I've got a few years.
02:47When you retire, she would like to take over, so next time you're recruiting or you need an assistant, she's
02:52up for it.
02:53Okey-dokey. On the list.
02:55All right.
02:55Well, well done.
02:56All right, big round of applause for Liam and Fiona. Good luck to you both.
03:04Good luck to you both.
03:05And over in the corner, Susie's there, having had a peaceful weekend, joined once again by that wonderful money-saving
03:11expert, Martin Lewis.
03:12Welcome back, Martin.
03:17Fiona?
03:18Off we go.
03:19Lesson's game.
03:20Hi, Rachel.
03:20Hi, Fiona.
03:21Can I have a consonant, please?
03:22Start the week with M.
03:25And another.
03:27S.
03:28And another.
03:30B.
03:31And a vowel.
03:33E.
03:34And another.
03:35O.
03:36And another.
03:38A.
03:39And a consonant.
03:41C.
03:42And another.
03:45N.
03:46And a vowel, please.
03:48And the last one.
03:49E.
03:50And here's the countdown clock.
04:23Fiona.
04:24Seven.
04:25Liam.
04:26Seven.
04:27Thank you, Fiona.
04:28The comms.
04:29And?
04:30Bemoans.
04:31And bemoans.
04:32Happy enough?
04:33Yes, happy.
04:34Martin.
04:35Yeah, lots of B7s in there, bemoans, becomes, beacons also in there.
04:40Yeah.
04:40We couldn't find an eight.
04:41No.
04:42Nothing else?
04:42Nothing else.
04:44Off we go, Liam.
04:45Hi, Rachel.
04:45Oh, hi, Liam.
04:46Can I have a consonant, please?
04:48You can indeed.
04:49M.
04:50And another.
04:53F.
04:54And another.
04:56R.
04:57And a vowel, please.
04:59O.
05:00And another vowel.
05:01I.
05:02And a consonant.
05:05N.
05:06And a vowel, please.
05:08U.
05:10And a consonant.
05:12Z.
05:14And another consonant.
05:16And lastly, D.
05:18Stand by.
05:29.
05:30And another.
05:45.
05:45honour.
05:47There you go.
05:48well Liam seven yes Fiona four you're for find now then Liam uniform well
05:59spotted accent and what about the corner there Martin the inform and other forms
06:04but nothing beating uniform thank you 14 plays seven Fiona here we go your
06:12numbers game can I have two large and four small please you can indeed thank
06:16you and a two from the top four little and the first one of the week is six five
06:23nine one and a large to 50 and 25 and the target 862 862
07:03Fiona no I'm too far away too far how about Liam no I think I'm too far away as well
07:08all right
07:10let's see whether uh Rachel can unpick this for us Rachel 862 I think I've found a way if you
07:18say
07:1925 times 5 is 125 minus 9 is 116 6 plus 1 is 7 times those together for 812 and
07:32add on the 50 862
07:38thank you Rachel thanks and now it's time for our first tea time teaser which is alias coup and the
07:46clue her home was vast and she lived like a crystal queen her home was vast and she lived like
07:52a crystal
08:00queen
08:08welcome back I left you with the clue her home was vast and she lived like a crystal
08:12queen the answer that is palacious which presumably is the same as palatial Susie exactly the same just a bit
08:20rarer
08:20delicious okay 14 plays seven Liam in the lead and it's Liam's letters game
08:25thanks can I get a consonant please thank you Liam s and another t and a third consonant
08:38y vowel please e another vowel o another vowel a and a consonant
08:51f and a consonant f and a consonant m and a vowel please and the last one i stand by
09:07so
09:31Well, Liam?
09:33Five.
09:34Five.
09:35Fiona?
09:36Maybe an eight.
09:39That's a maybe.
09:39Liam?
09:41Just moist.
09:42Now then, Fiona?
09:44Foamiest.
09:46Well done, Fiona.
09:46It's brilliant.
09:47Very good.
09:53Neat.
09:5415 plays 14.
09:56Fiona in the lead.
09:57Now, Martin?
09:59No, there was moist, there was foamy, there was foami-us.
10:02Nothing longer, nothing wetter.
10:05All right.
10:0515 to 14.
10:06Fiona?
10:07Your letters game.
10:09Can I have a consonant, please?
10:10Thank you, Fiona.
10:12S.
10:12And another.
10:15T.
10:16And a vowel.
10:18U.
10:19And another.
10:20I.
10:22And a consonant.
10:24D.
10:25And another.
10:27N.
10:28And another.
10:30W.
10:30U.
10:31And a vowel.
10:33A.
10:34And a consonant, please.
10:36And lastly, D.
10:39Stand by.
10:40And a vowel.
10:59And a vowel.
10:59And a vowel.
11:00And a vowel.
11:00And a vowel.
11:00And a vowel.
11:00And a vowel.
11:00And a vowel.
11:01and a vowel.
11:10Fiona. Just a five. A five, yes, Liam. Five as well. Fiona. Steen. Yes, Liam. Twins. Yes. There we go.
11:20Can we beat five, Martin?
11:22Well, there's a couple of sixes in there, one from my profession and one from Susie's, so I'll have audits
11:27and you can have...
11:27Nudist. My, Susie. 19 to 20. Now, Liam, your numbers game now. Thanks. May I have one large and five
11:40small, please?
11:41You may. One large, five, little. And this time they are one, nine, eight, six, three, and a large one,
11:5175. And the target, 611.
11:55Six, one, one.
12:28Liam. 611. Fiona. 611. Thank you, Liam. Eight times 75 is 600. 600. Six divided by three is two. Yep.
12:41And add the nine as well.
12:42Lovely. 611. Well done. Fiona. Yeah, similar. Similar? There it is. I'm looking at it.
12:53So, we're up and running and there's only one point in it, Fiona, one point in the leads. We turn
12:58to Martin. What have you got for us, Martin?
13:01I thought I would talk about consumer rights today. Now, I have a mnemonic for remembering what your consumer rights
13:07are, which is sad fart. Not looking at you when I say it, Nick. I could be looking anywhere.
13:13And that stands for goods must be satisfactory quality as described, that's your sad, fit for purpose, and, cheated slightly
13:23there, that's your A, last a reasonable length of time.
13:26Satisfactory quality as described, fit for purpose, and last a reasonable length of time.
13:29And I remember in the early days when I just got engaged to the woman who is now Mrs. Money
13:34Saving Expert, I bought her a ring and she bought me a very nice watch.
13:38And after a couple of years with the watch, the watch had some of the hands broken. It was an
13:43expensive watch, so under my view, it hadn't lasted a reasonable length of time.
13:47This is one people don't get. They say, how long should goods last? Some people think there's a six-year
13:51rule there isn't. That's a statute of limitations.
13:54When you buy it, at the point you buy it, it should have been made to last a reasonable length
13:58of time.
13:59Clearly, if a 50p whistle breaks down after two years, you would say that was reasonable.
14:04But if an expensive watch breaks down after two years, I would argue that's not reasonable.
14:09So she said she would take it to be repaired and she would take it back and she went back
14:12and she called and she said, no, they're going to charge.
14:14And I went, oh, they're not. They can't. She said, well, I'll charge. I said, they're not. Give me the
14:18number. I'm a professional.
14:20I'll call up and I got on the phone and I spoke to the assistant there and she told me
14:23that they're charged.
14:24And I said, I'm sorry. Look, satisfactory quality has described fit for purpose.
14:28It hasn't lasted a reasonable length of time. She said she couldn't do it. I asked, can I go through
14:32to the supervisor?
14:33Put me through to the supervisor. Same thing. Still weren't going to do it. I want to speak to the
14:37manager.
14:38Always polite, always smiling, but firm. And I went through and I spoke to the management and I said, look,
14:44it's your responsibility.
14:44It hasn't lasted a reasonable length of time. I want you to mend it and you're not going to charge
14:48me.
14:48And he eventually said, all right, fine, we'll do it. We'll mend it without charging.
14:52And I went back home to my wife and said, sorted it out. They're going to mend it.
14:58You know, your responsibility, it is the firm that you buy it off, not the manufacturer who your legal rights
15:03are with.
15:04And I told them to mend it. She said, but what do you mean? I just took it back to
15:08the nearest shop.
15:08That's not where I bought it. And I'd pushed so hard for these poor people that they were going to
15:15repair it for free,
15:16even though it wasn't their responsibility. Thankfully, that it was in her name and her maiden name.
15:20So they didn't know it was me. And I said, just take it somewhere else and we'll leave it.
15:22And we took it away and I didn't make them do it at all. But at least knowing your consumer
15:26rights means you can tool up and get a decent bargain occasionally.
15:34Very good. I was unaware of all that, actually. I always thought it was a guarantee for two years or
15:40something.
15:40No, a guarantee is entirely separate from your statutory rights, which means if goods are faulty when you bought them,
15:46and the definition of that, the place you bought them from, not the manufacturer, not the guarantee person,
15:51it's legally responsible and it's their job to sort it out.
15:54Interesting. Thanks, Martin. So, one point in it. 30 plays 29. Fiona in the lead. Fiona's letters game.
16:01Can I have a consonant, please? Thank you, Fiona.
16:04T. And another.
16:07V. And another.
16:10S. And a vowel.
16:13E. And another.
16:15U. And another.
16:18O. And a consonant.
16:21P. And another.
16:24S.
16:26S. And another consonant, please.
16:28And lastly, C.
16:31Stand by.
16:31C.
16:32C.
16:33C.
16:34C.
16:34C.
16:36C.
16:37C.
16:38C.
16:39C.
16:42C.
16:43C.
17:01Fiona.
17:02Six.
17:03Liam.
17:04Six.
17:05Yes, Fiona.
17:06Scoops.
17:07Liam.
17:08Upsets.
17:09Sixes, apparently.
17:11Martin and Susie.
17:12Yeah, there were quite a few sixes in there.
17:15There was one seven hiding in there.
17:17The suspect.
17:19Suspect.
17:20Suspect.
17:21Very good.
17:22Susie?
17:23Yeah, give the seven.
17:25Still a point in it.
17:26And Liam, your letters came.
17:28May I have a consonant, please?
17:31You may.
17:31Thank you, Liam.
17:32M.
17:32And another.
17:35T.
17:35And another.
17:37G.
17:38And another, please.
17:41Q.
17:42Excellent.
17:43Vowel, please.
17:44A.
17:45Vowel.
17:46I.
17:47Vowel.
17:49E.
17:50Consonant.
17:52S.
17:53R.
17:55And a vowel, please.
17:58And the last one.
17:59O.
18:00And it's countdown.
18:02Countdown.
18:09And a vowel, please.
18:15And a vowel, please.
18:15And a vowel, please.
18:16And a vowel, please.
18:16And a vowel, please.
18:17And a vowel, please.
18:19And a vowel, please.
18:19And a vowel, please.
18:20And a vowel, please.
18:21And a vowel, please.
18:21And a vowel, please.
18:21And a vowel, please.
18:22And a vowel, please.
18:22And a vowel, please.
18:23And a vowel, please.
18:31What do you make of that, Liam?
18:33Seven.
18:34Yes, Fiona.
18:36A five.
18:37And your five is?
18:39Stormer.
18:40Liam.
18:41Gameest.
18:42Very good.
18:43Yes.
18:44Gameest meat.
18:46Martin and Susie?
18:48A couple more sevens in there.
18:49Couldn't beat a seven.
18:51Atomise.
18:52Atomise and?
18:53Egotism is there as well.
18:55And egotism.
18:5742 to 36.
18:59Liam's back in charge.
19:01Fiona.
19:01Numbers game.
19:03Can I have two large and four small, please?
19:05You can indeed.
19:06Thank you, Fiona.
19:06Sticking to the plan, two from the top, four little.
19:09And these four little ones are nine, eight, four and two.
19:14And the big ones, 25 and 50.
19:17And the target, 786.
19:20786.
19:21786.
19:24786.
19:49786.
19:49686.
19:50686.
19:53Fiona?
19:547, 8, 3.
19:567, 8, 3. Liam?
19:577, 8, 6.
19:58Liam?
20:0050 plus 25 is 75.
20:0350 plus 25 is 75.
20:04And then 8 plus 2 is 10.
20:06Multiply that together.
20:08750.
20:09And 9 times 4 is 36.
20:11It is indeed.
20:12Well done.
20:17And now it's time for our second Tea Time teaser.
20:20Which is Ring Clues.
20:22And the clue.
20:23It sounds like the man has no partner.
20:25But to fit this, he has to have a stable relationship.
20:29It sounds like the man has no partner.
20:31But to fit this, he has to have a stable relationship.
20:51Welcome back.
20:52I left with the clue.
20:52So it sounds like the man has no partner.
20:55But to fit this, he has to have a stable relationship.
20:58And the answer to this, Susie, is Sir Single.
21:01Hmm.
21:02Something to do with horses.
21:03Yeah.
21:03It's a strap that goes over the back and the belly of a horse.
21:07And it keeps a rug or other equipment in place.
21:11Believe it or not, it's linked to succinct, which was a garment in Roman times that enabled you to...
21:18It was like a belt, really, that enabled the tunic to be tucked in neatly.
21:21Okay.
21:21So it's not the girth.
21:23It's a separate thing.
21:25It's a separate thing.
21:25And I think normally, you know, when they sort of wear rugs in the winter, you'll find that kind of
21:29leather strap.
21:30That's a Sir Single.
21:31A Sir Single.
21:32Well, I don't think we've got a useful one of those at the moment.
21:36Now, if you'd like to become a Countdown contestant, you can email Countdown at Channel4.com to request an application
21:43form or write to us at Contestants Applications, Countdown Leads, LS31JS.
21:5252 to 36, Liam in the lead.
21:56Hmm.
21:56Liam, your letters game.
21:58Consonant, please.
22:00Thank you, Liam.
22:00B.
22:01And another?
22:04S.
22:04And another consonant?
22:07R.
22:08And a vowel, please.
22:10I.
22:11And a vowel?
22:12A.
22:13And a vowel?
22:14E.
22:16And a consonant, please.
22:18C.
22:19And a consonant?
22:21N.
22:24And a consonant, please.
22:26And lastly, R.
22:27And here's the Countdown Clock.
23:00Well, Liam, might risk a seven.
23:03Fiona?
23:04Seven.
23:05Firm seven.
23:06Liam?
23:06Carbines.
23:07And Fiona?
23:08Carries.
23:11Um, yes.
23:12Carries is great.
23:12For seven carbines, it's actually eight, rather than seven.
23:16Excellent.
23:17Ah.
23:18Which means, I have to disallow it, because you didn't have it on the end, sorry.
23:22Bad luck.
23:22Yeah.
23:23Martin, what news?
23:24No, well, there was the eight of carbines in there.
23:27I asked Susie, think if brainer, which is a seven, was a word thinking no brainer, but
23:33apparently no brainer.
23:35It's not allowed.
23:3752 to 43.
23:38Fiona, let us go.
23:39Can I have a consonant, please?
23:41Thank you, Fiona.
23:43N.
23:44And another?
23:46C.
23:47And another?
23:49N.
23:50And a vowel, please?
23:51I.
23:52And another?
23:54O.
23:55And another?
23:56A.
23:57And a consonant, please?
23:59L.
24:00And another?
24:02R.
24:04And a vowel, please?
24:06And lastly, E.
24:07Stand by.
24:08Stand by.
24:09Stand by.
24:11Stand by.
24:24Stand by.
24:27Stand by.
24:39Fiona.
24:40Five.
24:41Yes, Liam.
24:42I've counted this time, but it's still risky.
24:45Seven.
24:46Fiona.
24:47Clear.
24:49Clear and cannier?
24:52With the two ends, very good.
24:54Yeah, excellent.
24:55Now, over in the corner, Martin.
24:58There is an eight in there which proves Susie is cannier than I am,
25:01so I'll leave it to her.
25:03It's Lonicera, L-O-N-I-C-E-R-A,
25:05plant of a family that includes honeysuckles.
25:08Lonicera.
25:09Mm.
25:13Honeysuckle, there it is.
25:15Lonicera.
25:1559 to 43.
25:19Susie, let's give them a rest.
25:20What have you got for us today by way of your origins of words?
25:24Well, I've become aware recently of a great charity that operates,
25:28I think, across the UK, but essentially it's called Dogs on the Streets,
25:30and they look after and provides mobile veterinary care for dogs that belong to homeless people,
25:36so they look after them and do a fantastic job.
25:38So shout out to them, but it got me thinking about all the expressions in English to do with dogs,
25:43and there are many.
25:45Famously, no one knows where the word dog comes from.
25:48It's a real etymological mystery, because there's only one record of dog in any Anglo-Saxon document,
25:57just one, a single one, and nothing else, no hint as to where it came from,
26:00because the normal word in those days was hound, which is Germanic, related to hund in German.
26:07So it's a bit of a mystery, but as I say, so, so many expressions to do with dogs.
26:11Talk about a dog's life.
26:13Dogs might have a cushy time these days, or some of them at least,
26:17but the expression was born at a time when dogs actually were pretty roughly treated,
26:22kept as working animals, regularly beaten, regularly hanged for so-called crimes,
26:27so if they stole an apple from an apple cart from a medieval market,
26:31chances are they would be tried in a kind of, not even a mock court, and then hanged.
26:35So it was all pretty gruesome in those days,
26:37which is why going to the dogs meant sliding into ruin, and still does.
26:42And a dog's body, somebody who performs all the kind of menial tasks,
26:45actually started off on board ships where a dog's body was kind of peas boiled in a can,
26:52or some other kind of mush, biscuits that were kind of soaked in milk, etc.,
26:56really not very nice.
26:57So from there, perhaps the person who made the dog's body was then called a dog's body,
27:01because it was a pretty rough task.
27:03To be in the doghouse, you're in a place of disgrace.
27:06Dog's breakfast, total mess.
27:08If you're dressed up like a dog's dinner, you've gone completely over the top.
27:13Dog in a manger, that goes back to one of Aesop's fables.
27:15So somebody who's got a dog in a manger attitude
27:18is pretty unlikely to want to give somebody something,
27:22even though it's no skin off their nose at all.
27:25They just want to hold on to it in a begrudging sort of way.
27:27And in the fable, a dog is asleep in a manger, is woken up by the cattle,
27:33is pretty cross and snaps and snarls,
27:35and doesn't let the cattle or the sheep come in to graze,
27:37and eventually shooed away by his master, it has to be said.
27:40But that's the dog in the manger attitude.
27:42And finally, dog eats dog seems a curious one.
27:45But as far back as Roman times, you'll find the proverb,
27:47the idea that two of a kind would never harm each other.
27:50But then the exception became mankind.
27:53And the 19th century clergyman wrote,
27:54Dog won't eat dog, but men will eat each other up like cannibals.
27:58So dog eat dog now means the more ruthless side of human nature.
28:08Thank you for that.
28:0959 to 43.
28:12Liam, your letters go.
28:15May I have a consonant, please?
28:17You may. Thank you, Liam.
28:18D.
28:19And another.
28:20G.
28:21And another.
28:23P.
28:24And a vowel, please.
28:26O.
28:26And a vowel, please.
28:28I.
28:29And a vowel.
28:30U.
28:32Consonant.
28:33S.
28:35Consonant.
28:36T.
28:37And a vowel to finish, please.
28:38And lastly, A.
28:40Stand by.
28:41B.
28:42B.
28:42B.
28:43C.
28:44C.
28:49C.
28:49B.
29:12Liam, I'll keep my run going of risky sevens.
29:16And Fiona?
29:17Five.
29:17And your five is?
29:19Togas.
29:22Liam, agoutis?
29:23Agoutis, yes.
29:24I thought you were going to say something else there, but agoutis is good.
29:27It's a large burrowing rodent related to the guinea pig.
29:30Very good.
29:31And from the corner, what news?
29:34Nothing to beat that.
29:35We tried to have a pig out or pig outs, but hyphenated.
29:40Anything else, Susie?
29:40No, that's what I thought Liam was going to go for, but agoutis is a single seven.
29:43Agoutis takes it.
29:44All right, 66 to 43.
29:46Fiona, final letters game for you.
29:48Can I have a consonant, please?
29:50Thank you, Fiona.
29:51H.
29:52And another?
29:54R.
29:55And another?
29:56T.
29:57And a vowel?
29:59I.
30:00And another?
30:01E.
30:03And a consonant?
30:05V.
30:06And another?
30:08R.
30:08And a vowel?
30:11And a vowel?
30:12And a final consonant, please.
30:14A final N.
30:16And the clock starts now.
30:17And a vowel?
30:32And a vowel?
30:36And a vowel?
30:37And a vowel?
30:38And a vowel?
30:38And a vowel?
30:39And a vowel?
30:39And a vowel?
30:39And a vowel?
30:39And a vowel?
30:39And a vowel?
30:39And a vowel?
30:40And a vowel?
30:42and a vowel?
30:43And a vowel?
30:48Fiona?
30:50Er, a seven, but it's not written down.
30:52What about Liam?
30:53Try an eight.
30:55So, Fiona?
30:56Er, a thriver.
30:59Liam?
31:00Inverter?
31:01Er, OK, thriver, unfortunately not in Fiona, sorry.
31:04Er, an inverter is, it's a term from electronics,
31:07and it's an apparatus that converts direct current
31:09into alternating current.
31:11Yes, that'll do.
31:14That'll do.
31:1674 to 43.
31:17Liam, it's your numbers game.
31:19Er, one large and five small, please.
31:21Thank you, Liam.
31:22One big five little to finish the day.
31:25And the final selection is seven, four, six, three, two,
31:32and the big one, 50.
31:34And your last target, 299.
31:37299.
32:10299, I think so.
32:11Yes, Fiona.
32:12299.
32:13Off we go, Liam.
32:15Six times 50 is 300.
32:18Three minus two is one.
32:20Straightforward, that one.
32:22And Fiona, same way?
32:23Yeah, the same.
32:24There we go.
32:2684 to 53, final round.
32:28Things on buzzers?
32:31Good luck to you both.
32:32Let's roll today's Countdown Conundrum.
32:34unterschied by you.
33:02MUSIC PLAYS
33:05Well, we're stumped. I can see Liam shaking his head.
33:08Anybody in the audience? No? No?
33:11I see a hand. Now, Rachel.
33:13Is it mismanage?
33:16Mismanage. I have a little doubt. Here it comes.
33:19Mismanage. Well done.
33:24Well done, Rachel. Well done.
33:26And so, Liam. Liam takes the day. Well done indeed.
33:29Worth coming from Australia for?
33:30But of course.
33:31Excellent. Well done. I'll come back to you in a second.
33:34Fiona, you got your teapot.
33:36You had a great win on Friday, 98.
33:38So you go home to Dunning in Perthshire with our very best wishes.
33:42Thank you very much.
33:43Thanks for coming. Well done.
33:45And Liam, see you tomorrow.
33:47Will do.
33:48There we are.
33:49Back in Australia, you were our version of an OctoChamp.
33:53Oh, don't bring that up.
33:55Yes.
33:56No pressure at all.
33:58I can't even count to eight.
34:00Listen, we'll see you tomorrow.
34:02Well done. We'll see you tomorrow.
34:03I'm Martin and Susie, too. See you tomorrow.
34:05Certainly.
34:06Excellent stuff.
34:07And Rachel, see you tomorrow.
34:08You will indeed.
34:10Join us then. Same time, same place.
34:11You'll be sure of it.
34:12A very good afternoon to you.
34:14You can contact the programme by email at countdown at channel4.com,
34:18by Twitter at C4Countdown,
34:21or write to us at countdownleadsLS31JS.
34:24You can also find our webpage at channel4.com forward slash countdown.